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Morgan elected LFN chief Citizens vote in all-new council after months-long election saga
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Spray paint the walls First Nations art front and centre during Whitehorse mural festival
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What a Krush Yukon Roller Girls host Fairbanks at Klondike Gold Krush bout
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Brent Handy tumbles in his Pitts Special biplane during the Whitehorse stop of the Canadian Arctic Aviation Tour June 4. The show also stopped in Dawson City June 5. For more photos see page 11.
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O
pposition Leader Stacey Hassard pressed the government May 31 to consider two changes to the territory’s liquor rules: eliminating the government markup on locally produced alcohol and allowing producers to sell directly to retailers. The changes were part of the Yukon Party’s election platform in 2016 and the elimination of tariffs is popular amongst local producers. The Yukon Liquor Corporation applies a 23 per cent markup on packaged beer produced by small brewers. This means that Whitehorse’s Winterlong Brewing Company has to sell their beer to the YLC and then buy it back at the markup so they can sell it in their own tasting room. “At the end of the month, we tell them how much we’ve sold and they apply a 23 per cent markup which we have to pay, even though they don’t touch it,” said Winterlong co-owner Marko Marjanovic. “It would definitely be nice to not have to pay that markup since the Yukon Liquor Corp isn’t involved except for a few hours of invoicing at the end of the month.”
Joel Krahn/Yukon News
Opposition Leader Stacey Hassard pours a beer at an election campaign event in 2016. Hassard has asked the government make changes the Yukon’s liquor rules. The markup also extends to the beer that Winterlong sends to the YLC for sale elsewhere, but this isn’t paid by Winterlong. “I know there was some talk of eliminating [the markup] for local producers which would certainly give us an advantage in terms of competing with out-of-province producers,” said Marjanovic. It’s not yet entirely clear, though, whether exempting local producers from the markup would be compatible with NAFTA
or the Canada Free Trade Agreement. Hassard, a main proponent of the changes, said “it’s nothing that should be indefensible” under current trade agreements. Jeff Erasmus, YLC’s director of operations, saidpricing was among several options the corporation is looking at to help local brewers. “We’re very mindful of the trade implications with respect to providing favourable markups to local producers and we’re going
to be looking at options that are available within the confines of these agreements.” On the other hand, allowing direct sales to retailers might be easier to implement, but is met more cautiously by Marjanovic. “That’s sort of a double-edged sword,” he said. “Right now YLC has a service where, for example, if I want to send a keg up to Dawson City, I just deliver it to the warehouse downtown here and they ship it up there for free as part of their service. I wouldn’t want to eliminate that portion of it.” Hassard is confident YLC’s services wouldn’t be impacted. “It’s all about reducing red tape,” he said. While direct sales would allow local producers to learn more about who is buying and drinking their beer, they would also have to hire more administrative staff. “It would be a bit more work, but I wouldn’t see the harm in having it as an option as long as it didn’t eliminate the other side of the service that YLC provides of shipping around the territory for basically nothing,” said Marjanovic. The YLC says it will review policies over the next year and consult with producers and the public. Contact Andrew Seal at andrew.seal@yukon-news.com
YG promises carbon tax consultations as Yukon Party pushes for GST rebate Ashley Joannou News Reporter
T
he Yukon government says it will consult with Yukoners on the upcoming federal carbon tax but details about when that might happen are still not available. Economic Development and Energy, Mines and Resources Minister Ranj Pillai said he’s planning more meetings with various organizations like the chambers of commerce and the chamber of mines sometime between now and the end of the month. “I’m going to be having conversations with groups that are under my responsibility, which includes many Yukoners, between now and June 30,” he said. That’s the deadline for Canadians to comment on the federal government’s technical paper, which lays
out plans for a carbon price “backstop” for jurisdictions that haven’t come up with their own plan by 2018. Yukoners can comment on the technical paper via the federal environment department’s website. The Yukon government will be holding broader public consultations on the topic, Pillai said. But according to cabinet officials that won’t be happening until some time after June. The federal government has promised to look at the North’s unique circumstances when it comes to a carbon tax and possibly implement “sector specific” exemptions. “Following this initial input phase (in June), the Yukon government will work with the federal government to give Yukoners an opportunity to provide input on the implementation of federal carbon
pricing,” Yukon government spokesperson Janine Workman said in an email. Pillai said the government will be having conversations throughout the year as information comes from Ottawa. “We’ve made that commitment, and we’ve been given that directive, that as we have information come in from Ottawa we take that back and consult to really understand how some of these strategies will affect sectors.” The Yukon Party has spent the majority of this first sitting of the legislative assembly pushing the government for more details on the carbon tax plan. The focus June 6 was on whether Yukoners would have GST they pay on carbon tax returned to them. “In January and again in April, we asked the government to confirm that they
will ensure Yukoners also get this money back, but we have not received an answer yet,” said Opposition Leader Stacey Hassard. “Can the government commit today that every single Yukoner will get (back) 100 per cent of the extra money they pay as a result of the carbon tax, including the increased amount they pay into the GST?” Pillai replied that the government is still working with Ottawa. “As this process continues on, we continue to work with the federal government on the analysis, which is key to those questions that have been asked today and to the future implementation of this carbon-pricing backstop.” Contact Ashley Joannou at ashleyj@yukon-news.com
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Morgan elected as LFN chief ending months-long election saga Lori Garrison News Reporter
G
eorge Morgan is the new chief of the Liard First Nation, ending one chapter in the long, fraught and often contentious leadership debate for this Kaska nation. Morgan defeated incumbent Chief Daniel Morris by a margin of 203 votes to 102. Don Magun recieievd 80 votes, while Dorothy Hayes took six. “It’s a relief,” said Morgan. “I’m glad that this is over.” “The immediate plan is for chief and council to convene,” he said. “We have some financial and administrative details to sort out.” The vote comes after a six-month delay amid allegations of financial mismanagement and questionable electoral and leadership practices by Morris. The First Nation has been under third-party management since 2014 by Vancouver-based Ganhada Management Group. “This is a victory for our democracy. This was really about defending our democracy,” said Morgan. “We have to sit down as a community and look at our election law to make sure this never happens again.” Morris could not be reached for comment by press time. Morris was elected as chief in 2013. Morgan ran against Morris in that race, and lost by a slim margin. Former chief Liard McMillan, whom Morris replaced, and whose decade-long run as chief was also marred by complaints about mismanagement and corruption, issued a
Joel Krahn/Yukon News
Outgoing chief Daniel Morris was first elected in 2013.
Submitted Photo/Paul A. Tubb
George Morgan has been elected chief of the Liard First Nation. statement supporting the new chief and council. “I didn’t want to say too much with an election underway, but now that it is over I want to publicly express my congratulations to the new government and to express my hope that the nation can now begin to heal and move forward together,” McMillan said in his statement. Morris’s official term as chief expired Dec. 14, 2016, without an election being called. The election was originally scheduled
for Dec. 15 but never took place. A group of LFN citizens took the First Nation to court over the delay. That prompted Morris to hold a community meeting in early February to appoint an election committee. The meeting descended into a shouting match but the committee was successfully created. The vote was rescheduled for April 10, but was delayed again after chief returning officer Lois Moorcroft, a former NDP MLA and cabinet minister,
abruptly resigned amid claims of legal threats against her. “She (Moorcroft) said somebody was saying something to her,” election co-chair Emma Donnessy told the News at the time. “She resigned because she thought it would be best for everyone if we did it in a fair and open transparent manner. Some of the people didn’t like the way things were run.” Questions about the state of the First Nation’s finances have hung over
Morris’s term as chief. Morgan couldn’t say why he thought Morris worked so hard to cling to his position even after his official term was over. “I have no idea the machinations of his mind … there’s been no financial transparency for three and a half years — maybe that’s the reason,” he said. “We are currently suffering a financial crisis here and we have millions and millions of dollars that have not been reported on.” This week’s results mean all of the First Nation’s elected officials are new. Fred Lutz won the race for deputy chief. Alfred Chief, Dawn McDonald, Kathy Magun and Travis Stewart were elected as Yukon councillors. Malcolm Groat and Harlan Schilling were elected as councillors in Lower Post, B.C. Hayes, a candidate for chief, said there were
attempts at electoral fraud during this week’s vote, including intimidation. She also said someone tried to make off with a ballot box in Watson Lake. Morgan said that didn’t happen, although rumours were circulating in the community. Morgan said he felt there was “lateral violence” and social division within the community as a result of the election. “It’s hard to get people to speak out about it, I will agree with that,” he said. “If your family doesn’t support a candidate and you do … there’s all kinds of lateral violence.” “This (election was) all about fairness, transparency and leadership accountability,” Morgan said. With files from Pierre Chauvin Contact Lori Garrison at lori.garrison@yukon-news.com
Taxpayers on hook for $1.8 million to shut down Kotaneelee well Lori Garrison News Reporter
Y
ukon taxpayers are on the hook for $1.8 million to fully abandon a gas well at the now-defunct Kotaneelee plant. Minister of Energy Mines and Resources Ranj Pillai said in the legislative assembly June 5 that the estimated cost of abandonment for the well is $2.4 million. The original owner, EFLO Energy Inc.,
left a security deposit for $625,000 with the government of Yukon, not nearly enough to cover the full cost. The Kotaneelee plant, located north of Watson Lake, first opened in 1977. It ceased production in 2012 and has been mothballed ever since. It was the site of a spill of wastewater and lubricants in August 2015. When the government ordered ELFO to clean up the spill, it was discovered to be insolvent.
Three wells at the plant were turned over to Houston-based energy company, Apache, who was a shareholder in the wells. The fourth and final well, however, was fully owned by EFLO, and therefore became the property of the Yukon government. Pillai admits this is a “significant cost to taxpayers … and significant cost to government.” Abandonment is the process of fully shutting down a well to meet en-
vironmental and remediation standards, with the intention that it never be used again. “It’s a shame that the public will have to pay at least $1.8 million to clean up what was a private industrial operation,” said NPD Leader Liz Hanson in a press release. Pillai told the house that the government needs to ensure its oil and gas industry puts the proper security in place. “I think that going
through the process in the Kotaneelee is going to give us a really a good runthrough of the process — making sure, seeing what costing looks like and then taking a look at what’s happening in north Yukon,” Pillai said. In an interview Hansen said she has concerns about how this event will affect future mining and gas abandonments, such as the Eagle Plains operation by Northern Cross. She said this kind
of problem, where taxpayers are left holding the bag for clean ups by failed companies, is endemic in provinces where oil and gas extraction is well-established, such as Alberta. “Companies have taken advantage of resources and leave the taxpayers with the bill … they walk away with the money and leave the mess,” she said. “Hopefully the government realizes they have to do more due diligence.” Contact Lori Garrison at lori.garrison@yukon-news.com
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The Skookum Jim Friendship Centre will be hosting a Indigenous Early Learning and Child Care Town Hall meeting on June 15, 2017. The Government of Canada made a commitment in the Budget 2016 to engage with Indigenous organizations and parents to determine the best approach to delivering high quality early learning and child care for Indigenous children and families. The town hall meeting is an engagement session that will help shape the development of an Indigenous Early Learning and Child Care Framework. Have your say in how Canada should be addressing the child care priorities of Inuit, Métis, and First Nation peoples. For advanced copies of the questions that will be explored at the meeting, please email sjfcfriends@northwestel.net. Town Hall Meeting on Indigenous Early Learning and Child Care June 15, 2017 6 - 8pm. Food and beverages provided. Transportation is available if required (please call 633-7680 at least two days prior to arrange). Child minders on site. For more information, please contact Tammy at 633-7688.
WildWise project urges tourists against feeding bears Lori Garrison News Reporter
A
new report from a Yukon group devoted to reducing conflicts between wildlife and people offers suggestions on how to prevent run-ins with bears. The recommendations are part of WildWise Yukon’s 2017 annual progress report issued May 31. “It’s a short read, but a worthwhile read,” Heather Ashthorn, executive director for WildWise said. One of the biggest upcoming initiatives, Ashthorn said, is WildWise’s Skagway Road education project, which seeks to educate tourists about bears and safe and ethical bear viewing. WildWise will put up signs along the road and the distribution of information pamphlets. Wildwise will also have people on the highway stopping at “places where we know tourists stop, where there are tour buses” to talk to
Whitehorse RCMP officer to face sexual assault charge A male RCMP officer faces a charge of sexual assault after allegedly touching a female RCMP employee without consent. The alleged assault took place Jan. 4 at RCMP headquarters in Whitehorse. The officer, who has 17 years of experience with the RCMP, was charged Wed, June 7 & Thurs, June 8 Whitehorse Yukon Cinema 304 Wood Street Ph: 668-6644
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A grizzly bear feeds by the side of the South Klondike Highway near Carcross. WildWise Yukon released a report May 31 which contained information on how to prevent run-ins with bears them about bear safety and not feeding bears said Ashthorn. The program was developed after concerns were raised about bears being food-conditioned in the area. “This is our first project aimed at people who don’t live here,” she said. “We don’t know exactly where the problem is, but we are confident bears are being
fed in that area.” Feeding bears is extremely dangerous for both the animals and people, she said, something tourists — who often come from areas where bears do not live in direct proximity to people — might not know. “Tourists just don’t know,” she said. “If I were a tourist, I’d want to see a bear too.”
May 25 and is expected to appear in court June 14. He was suspended with pay in February. Crown prosecutor Noel Sinclair said the Public Prosecuction Service of Canada appointed an independent Crown counsel in order to avoid a conflict of interest. The incident was reported to senior managers at Yukon RCMP shortly after it occurred, prompting a criminal investigation and an internal review by the RCMP. Police have yet to release the officer’s name. An RCMP spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In a news release, police said they would not release more information because the matter is before the courts. (Sharon Nadeem)
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A 58-year-old man from Carcross died from injuries sustained after debris from a passing transport truck hit his westbound vehicle June 4 on the Alaska Highway, near Squanga Lake. A passenger in the westbound vehicle, a 65-yearold man from Whitehorse, was taken to Whitehorse General Hospital with minor injuries. The vehicle was hit by debris from a tractor trailer driving in the opposite direction. Cpl. Geoffrey Peters of the Teslin RCMP said the tractor trailer was likely a flat-deck truck and the debris was a piece of metal used to secure the strap on the side of the truck. RCMP officials are still
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It is also thought that some tour operators may be feeding bears in order to induce viewing opportunities, Ashthorn said. “There’s a lot of tour operators and you’re going to get a few bad eggs, but there are lots of ethical operators,” she said. The document offers a summary of the the organization’s most recent initiatives, including their trail sign project, electric fencing education and the development of bear teaching materials for public school students. “Food conditioning is an ongoing problem,” Ashthorn said. Food conditioned bears often lose their fear of people and are killed for safety reasons. “Every time a bear is destroyed or seriously damages property, it’s a big event, it’s a big deal,” she said. The complete WildWise Yukon report is available online at wildwise.ca. Contact Lori Garrison at lori.garrison@gmail.com
looking for the transport truck in question but said the driver may not even know about the incident. A RCMP collision analyst was on scene along with the Yukon Coroner’s Service. RCMP are continuing to investigate. (Sharon Nadeem)
Woman dead in crash on Robert Campbell Highway A 40-year-old woman died in a single vehicle car crash May 31 on the Robert Campbell Highway, RCMP said June 5. The woman, from Inuvik, was headed to Carmacks when the fatal crash occurred. Police said her white truck veered off the road and suffered extensive damage. The victim was found dead at the scene of the crash by the RCMP. They believe she was thrown from her car upon impact and that alcohol may have been a factor in the crash. RCMP have not identified the woman yet and are still investigating the incident with Yukon’s Coroner Service. (Sharon Nadeem)
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Whitehorse eyes new cycling infrastructure plan Lori Garrison News Reporter
C
onnectivity and safety were among the biggest issues cited by Whitehorse cyclists at a bicycle network meeting June 5. Cyclists, many of whom were members of the Facebook group Whitehorse Urban Cycling Coalition, met at the Frank Slim Building with members of city staff and representatives from the Vancouver-based consulting group Urban Systems to discuss the future of the city’s cycling infrastructure. They were invited to share their concerns, likes and dislikes about cycling in the city and participate in planning exercises to help build a cycling plan for the city. Other issues identified included safety concerns, making biking more appealing to more people, negative interactions with drivers and Two Mile Hill, which several people said “dumps” riders out into heavy traffic on Fourth
Avenue. The goal of the plan is to make cycling more accessible and appealing, to increase the number of cyclists in the city and reduce traffic. “The purpose of this is to help identify a long-term cycling plan for Whitehorse,” said Sarah Freigang of Urban Systems. “There is just not enough room for everyone to bring a car downtown,” said acting city manager of planning and sustainability, and avid cyclist, Mike Ellis. “Bikes on roads cause a lot less wear and tear … there are huge economic incentives (to encourage cycling). In 2011, cycling accounted for approximately three per cent of all commutes to work and school, said Glenda Koh, an environmental coordinator for the city. Koh said she believes those numbers are still accurate for 2016. The City of Whitehorse hopes to double that figure to six per cent by 2026. Ellis said the city has identified three key areas as
Joel Krahn/Yukon News
Whitehorse cyclists held a meeting with city staff and Urban Systems, a Vancouverbased consulting group, to discuss the city’s cycling infrastructure. potential sites for improvement that act as corridors to sections of the city: the Black Street stairs, Two Mile Hill, and the Riverdale bridge. All three corridors connect to residential areas that are home to
many people who could be encouraged to bike into the downtown core more if the system were made more accessible to them, relieving congestion and parking issues, he said. Cycling development has been stalled in the city
since 2004, when the city installed the existing bike lanes, said Forest Pearson, an avid cycler and member of the coalition. “Since then, there’s not a lot going on,” he said. “We had the bridge expanded and that’s been great, but
everything else has been done in ad hoc pieces since then.” Some of the conflicts that arise between cyclists and drivers have to do with the way space has been traditionally allocated within the city, said Ellis. “Roads are public land,” he said. “I think there is an argument to be made that there is unequal use of public land which is just treated as normal … cars have been traditionally given a huge amount of space. It’s really easy to get around downtown in car.” “There’s a certain status quo about how we divvy up our roads and having a (cycling) plan like this one challenges that.” The total budget to develop the plan, which is city-funded, is $15,000. The city hopes to have a draft plan for the end of June and a final plan ready for September that will tie into the larger downtown and Marwell-area planning initiatives already underway. Contact Lori Garrison at lori.garrison@yukon-news.com
Seven garden army: nasty species of cutworm attacking Yukon gardens Lori Garrison News Reporter
A
n infestation of black army cutworms in the Takhini River valley and Lake Laberge area has some residents keeping a close eye on their gardens. There are several species of cutworm native to the Yukon, said Randy Lamb, an agrologist and insect specialist with the Yukon government’s agriculture branch. The worms target leafy plants and earn their name through their destructive
habit of feeding. They cut seedlings off at the base and devour them, leaving only a little green nub poking up out of the soil. “That’s why they call them army cutworms … they move en masse,” he said. Most species feed independently but black army cutworms have an unusual quirk. The pests can amass by the thousands in a squirming black mass, feeding and moving together, like an actual army. This unusual behaviour is a protective adaptation against
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predators such as robins. Moving in such huge numbers reduces an individual’s chance of being eaten, said Lamb, because even a very hungry bird can only eat 20 or 30 bugs at one time. “People with market gardens should be on the lookout,” he said. Black army cutworms do not always amass in this way, said Lamb, but only when there is a sudden increase in the population, similar to lemmings or locusts. The insects have exhausted their usual food source — precisely what
they eat in non-swarm years is not entirely known — and are on the move in order to feed. “Pest of the year, that’s what I’m calling it,” said Lamb. These population increases are part of a natural cycle, said Lamb, occurring every every five to 10 years. The last reported cases of outbreaks like this were in the late 1990s. “(The cutworms) have been there all along,” he said. “It’s just that you don’t usually see more than five or 10 at a time.”
“If you find a hot spot, there can be thousands.” The worms emerge in late April or early May and finish their feeding in mid-June. Lamb expects the cutworms to be finished their feeding cycle in the next week or so. Lamb said there are environmentally-friendly options for pest control, such as specialized bacteria that only target moth larvae. He warns against using standard pesticides, because by the time they are applied the worms will either have moved on or pupated. Black army cutworms are
black with a grey stripe and active during the day. What plants the insects find most attractive during this swarming period is unknown, said Lamb. The worms seem to prefer the Takhini and Shallow Bay areas. If you find the worms in your garden, you can call Yukon Agriculture at 667-5838 to report what kind of plants they are feeding on. This information can be useful in predicting and managing future outbreaks of black army cutworms, said Lamb. Contact Lori Garrison at lori.garrison@yukon-news.com
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Quote of the Day “Don’t you love the smell of jet exhaust in the afternoon?” The announcer at the Canadian Arctic Aviation Tour airshow. Page 11. Published by Black Press Group Ltd.
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COMMENTARY Time for the Pope to apologize for residential schools
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T
he Catholic Church moves slowly, but it does move. It took the church more than half a century to say sorry for the complicity of some Christians in the Holocaust. It took 500 years for it to express regret for persecuting Protestants during the Reformation. And Pope John Paul II apologized for atrocities committed during the Crusaders’ attack on Constantinople almost eight centuries after they happened. By that glacial standard, Pope Francis appears to be moving at lightning speed toward a papal apology for the church’s role in Canada’s residential school tragedy. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau emerged from a meeting with the Pope at the Vatican this week to say that Francis seemed open to the idea and had offered to work with him on a “path forward” toward a formal apology. The prime minister deserves credit for pressing the Pope directly on this important issue, sensitive as it is for the church. And Canada’s Catholic bishops should do all they can to clear the way for the Pope to issue a public apology as soon as possible – if at all possible on Canadian soil. Such a move, however delayed, would carry great symbolic weight. Catholic organizations were responsible for running about three-quarters of the residential schools, whose legacy of sexual, physical and mental abuse still hangs heavily over Canada’s relations with its Indigenous peoples. Other churches — the Anglicans, Presbyterians and United Church — long ago made their formal apologies for taking part in the residential school system. But the Catholic Church has invoked a variety of legalistic excuses to avoid making the full, forthright, authoritative apology that is called for, considering the lasting damage wrought by the schools. Some 16 Catholic dioceses and several dozen religious communities were associated with residential schools in Canada going back to the late 19th century, as part of a government-sponsored effort to assimilate Indigenous people. But the bishops’ organization has emphasized that all those entities are legally responsible for their own actions. The church as a whole and the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, they say, were not associated
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with the schools. The Catholic groups involved with the schools issued their own apology for abuse way back in 1991. And in 2006 they were part of the class action settlement reached with survivors of the schools. The missing piece is a formal apology from the church as a whole, right from the top. The bishops may well be correct that the church cannot be held legally responsible. But they should look beyond that to the good they and the Pope could do by issuing a frank, public expression of remorse along with a pledge to help heal the wounds. The papacy has already taken a step along this road. In 2009 Pope Benedict, Francis’s predecessor, expressed “sorrow” for suffering in the residential school system, and offered his “sympathy and prayerful solidarity” for those who suffered abuse. That came during a private meeting with Canadian bishops and Indigenous leaders at the Vatican. It wasn’t the public apology that the 80,000 survivors of residential schools have long sought. Pope Francis should take a big step forward by complying with the recommendation of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission that a full papal apology be issued on Canadian soil, so that survivors and other Indigenous people can be present to witness it. Getting the Pope, of all people, to come all that way to make such a dramatic gesture sounds like a major undertaking. But if any Catholic leader might be prepared to do it, it would be Francis, who has shown particular
sensitivity to issues of social justice. He set an important precedent two years ago when he visited Bolivia and issued an historic apology for the “grave sins” of the church against Indigenous peoples during the colonization of the Americas. “I humbly ask forgiveness, not only for the offences of the church herself, but also for crimes committed against the native peoples during the so-called conquest of America,” he told a summit meeting of Indigenous leaders. It would be entirely in keeping with that statement for the Pope to express regret and apologize for the church’s role in Canada’s residential school system. In fact, CBC News reported late last year that some Catholic bishops and Indigenous leaders were working to bring Francis to Saskatchewan this year to issue such an apology for what happened in the residential schools. Archbishop Donald Bolen of Regina was part of that effort and told CBC at the time, “We need to heal and move on.” As it turned out, that visit never happened. But in light of Trudeau’s visit this week and Francis’s apparent willingness to consider an apology, it’s time for the bishops and others to revive efforts to right this historic wrong. The Catholic Church as a whole should move beyond arguments over who is legally responsible for past actions. For its own sake and the sake of the survivors, it should get on the right side of efforts to heal the wounds that still remain. Much better to do it late than to continue dodging an historic responsibility.
take priority over wild animals. Electric fencing needs to be mandatory — not a choice — if we truly don’t want to kill bears or other wildlife. But the very sad reality and hypocrisy here is that the Department of Environment issues permits for the legal destruction of both black and grizzly bears in the spring and fall every year. These bears that do not bother anyone and yet they are killed because the department
sees them as resources and not for who they truly are: sentient beings that deserve to have their own lives to themselves. Human-wildlife conflicts definitely need attention. End the hypocrisy as well, if we truly want to protect bears and other wildlife.
LETTERS Let bears be bears Re: “Bears, chickens a lethal mix, conservation officer says”, Yukon News, May 26: We are killing bears for being bears. The human behaviour that creates the very problem that leads to the destruction of even more bears continues. Exploiting chickens, goats, etc., should not
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Wednesday, June 7, 2017
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Simple narratives never tell the whole story
I
t seems like such a dreadfully obvious thing to point out, but some of the things that happen in the world happen for more than one reason. The cliche is that things happen for a reason. But things happen for rarely just one reason. The world is complicated — too complicated for us it seems — so we humans like narratives that compact a lot of information into simple formulations. We want to understand why certain things happen and we want it boiled down into a few sentences to maintain our short attention spans. Case in point: Hillary Clinton has been slowly emerging from the
shadows after months of maintaining a low profile since her inexplicable (and for some, unexpected) loss last November. Her re-emergence has led to a rehashing of her electoral post-mortem. There aren’t enough words available in this column to enumerate the myriad narratives that have sprung up to explain the results of that particularly bizarre election. Trump’s victory and Clinton’s loss have been attributed to fake news, Russian interference, voter suppression, James Comey’s November surprise, her emails, John Podesta’s emails, identity politics, the middle American backlash to identity politics, Wikileaks, Donald Trump’s celebrity, strategic errors by an overconfident Clinton campaign, economic malaise in the Rust Belt, a pathological hatred of the Democratic Party by the American right, sexism, a desire to preserve a certain ideological balance on
the Supreme Court, disgruntled Bernie Sanders supporters, and Clinton’s inherent weakness as a candidate. The reality — which ought to be self-evident — is that it was all of the above. Nate Silver of fivethirtyeight.com has constructed a pretty solid statistical argument that Comey’s announcement that the FBI was reopening its investigation into Clinton’s emails in the dying days of the campaign led to a swing in the vote that moved the needle enough to cost her the election. But critics of that theory note the announcement would not even have been an issue if Clinton hadn’t made the mistake of keeping her emails on an insecure home server in the first place. And things wouldn’t have been close enough for such a relatively mundane scandal to matter if the country wasn’t so intensely polarized that people would tolerate the likes
of Donald Trump. Nor would they be so close if voters — and particularly supporters of Bernie Sanders — didn’t perceive (rightly or wrongly) that she was too close with Wall Street’s monied elite. And perhaps Clinton could have pulled out a victory despite Comey’s intervention if her campaign hadn’t been so overconfident and moved resources out of states that she thought she had in the bag in hopes of enlarging what was expected to be a significant electoral college victory. Political outcomes are the products of a recipe. We can debate the importance of each ingredient, but, just as you can’t bake a loaf of bread with flour alone, you can’t attribute an electoral outcome to any one factor. There is nothing inherently wrong with the use of narratives to understand politics. There were 127 million people who voted in last November’s presidential election. Each of them went to the polls motivated by
their own assortment of thoughts about and assessments of the two candidacies. But if you interviewed each voter you aren’t going to get 127 million completely different answers either. Themes would emerge and the narratives I enumerated above serve a useful explanatory purpose. What bothers me is our tendency towards absolutism. It isn’t enough to see some narratives as being more compelling than others. Some are just all wrong and others are all right. When Clinton went on TV, as she did recently, and laid out a number of factors that she felt contributed to her loss she was accused of “blaming everyone but herself.” It couldn’t simply be that there were a lot of different factors at play. The only explanation for such a long laundry list, if you listen to Clinton’s critics, is sour grapes. To make matters worse we like to see these things through our own ideolog-
ical and partisan glasses. If you like Clinton and can’t see (as I admittedly don’t) how a Trump presidency could possibly be seen as preferable to a Clinton presidency, you might downplay her flaws — seeing them as mistaken perceptions created by decades of unfair media treatment rather than a reflection of reality. If, for whatever reason, you are one of those people who is satisfied with the results of last November’s vote, it is likely all about Clinton’s various character flaws and failures (that or you’re one of those people who just wants to see the whole thing burn to the ground). Russian hacking, sexism, and voter suppression are seen as the excuses losers make for putting forward a weak candidate. Conceding that the result was a complex mix of factors, for whatever reason, is unpopular. Kyle Carruthers is a born-and-raised Yukoner who lives and practises law in Whitehorse.
Joel Krahn/Yukon News
Students walk in during the First Nations graduation ceremony at the Kwanlin Dün Cultural Centre June 2. Over 100 grads representing 34 different First Nations made up the class of 2017.
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YUKON NEWS
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
THE ARTS
Mural festival to transform Whitehorse into one big art gallery
Sharon Nadeem News Reporter
T
urn onto Ogilvie Street and you’re greeted by the smell of burgers and hotdogs. Kids stand around a barbecue, listening to a rap song that just dropped and discuss their latest project. This is the scene at the Youth of Today Society every day of the week. The society, established in 1999 for high-risk youth, provides meals every day for anyone who shows up. It also offers laundry and shower facilities but its main goal is running an arts program to train youth in digital art, film and animation. Their latest project is taking on a whole new dimension. Along with InnerVibe, Youth Of Today is hosting the Yukon Heritage Mural Art Festival in Whitehorse from May 27 to July 14. The two-month festival involves 14 kids and five professional artists painting 11 murals around Whitehorse. Six of them will be painted downtown, including the Staples and Chamber of Mines buildings, and the other five will be in the Kwanlin Dün First Nation neighbourhood of McIntyre. These aren’t just any kind of murals. Each of them have been specifically designed with a theme in mind. Lancelot Burton, executive director of the society, is an artist himself and was involved in the planning process. “The mural festival is a celebration of First Nations art and culture. There is a lot going on right now with the MMIWG (inquiry) and problems of child abuse. Some of these issues are being touched on in the mural project,” he says. The goal of the festival is to get the youth involved, bringing attention to some of the issues they face by transforming the city into an open art gallery. “Most people don’t even know what truth and reconciliation is. Hopefully, this festival changes that and gets people to start asking questions,” Burton says. The project brings together both Indigenous and non-Indigenous artists, each bringing their own experience and style to the murals. Rebecca
Submitted photo illustration/Youth of Today Society
An artist’s rendition of a mural is seen on the side of Blood Ties Four Directions. The Youth of Today Society and InnerVibe is hosting the Yukon Heritage Mural Art Festival in Whitehorse from May 27th to July 14th. Kristen Law is a graphic designer and animator who has been mentoring the kids involved with the project. Working with Indigenous artists and kids has been a learning experience for her as well. “First Nations art is special to me because I don’t understand it and I don’t do it. So, I treasure it and honor it,” she says. Originally from Trinidad and Tobago, Law is inspired by the island’s style of art. She shares her art with the kids and in turn they teach her about their art. For her, this sharing and learning process is an integral part of her growth as an artist. Often, the kids she mentors end up being mentors themselves. Ali Khouda, a young artist, has been involved with several murals around the
Submitted photo/Youth of Today Society
Fourteen youth will paint 11 murals around the city during the festival.
city. He says he wouldn’t be where he is right now without the guidance of Indigenous artists. “I was trained by Tlingit artists,” he says. “They took me in like family and didn’t look at me like any other student.” Khouda moved to Whitehorse from Iran when he was 15. He works with traditional calligraphy that has been passed on to him by his family. To him, this is reminiscent of First Nations art and the reason it drew him in. “Art is our heritage and a way of communication our ancestors used to pass on the stories,” he says. He says it was an honour for him when his Tlingit teachers shared their art with him. It’s what drives him to teach what he learns to the children he works with. He thinks art is a way to keep the culture alive. “A lot of the [First Nations] culture was saved through the art. Art has been a huge part of reconciliation in terms of bringing the culture back. It’s a rope to the past that they still have their hands on and can pull it in,” he says. Daniel Benjamin Gribben is working closely with Khouda on the murals. Gribben is from the Talhtan First Nation and has been involved with multiple projects around the city, including carving totem poles and dugout canoes. But for him, the mural festival stands out in its way of bringing people together. “Nobody really comes and paints and carves with us in the other projects. With this one, anybody that feels like painting on the wall, they can,” he says. Members of the public are encouraged to come join the artists and students painting around the city. Gribben believes that it’s a way to build a community and unite people. He hopes that festivals like this one help to inspire hope and change. Law agrees that the project goes beyond just a painting on a wall. “We’re trying to create relationships that will continue past painting a wall,” she says. “You know, you paint a wall and then what’s next? For us, it’s each other.” Contact Sharon Nadeem at sharon.nadeem@yukon-news.com
YUKON NEWS
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
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YUKON NEWS
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
Families of missing, murdered Indigenous women share hopes for future of inquiry Laura Kane Canadian Press
WHITEHORSE elatives who poured out heart-wrenching stories of their missing or murdered loved ones in Yukon say the national inquiry must keep listening and adapting as it moves on to other communities. The National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls heard its first public testimony in Whitehorse last week and commissioners will spend the summer
R
preparing for the next hearings in the fall. The hearings, held inside a large white tent next to the Yukon River, were a “testing” to make sure the inquiry has it right when it goes elsewhere, said Chief Commissioner Marion Buller. Buller said it takes time to develop relationships with families, elders, traditional healers and support workers in each location. “It would be very unfair and very unrealistic of us to just arrive uninvited into a town or a city and set up for
a hearing. That would be so disrespectful of the people and their land,” she said in a recent interview. “There’s no such thing as an inquiry in a can that you just open up and it creates itself. It takes a lot of groundwork to do this right.” Shaun LaDue testified about his mother, who he said was beaten to death after he was taken from her as a baby. He said when the commissioners first came to Whitehorse in April for an advisory meeting, they were talking too much instead of
listening. He confronted them with the criticism, they thanked him and adapted, he said. “I think southern Canada, especially, is going to be pleasantly surprised when the commissioners get to their community and say, ‘OK, how would you like us to proceed?’ ” he said. “People will realize that they are being heard and it’s powerful.” Doris Anderson, president of the Yukon Aboriginal Women’s Council, said the commission needs to
meet first with local grassroots groups like hers and continue to seek their help. “They understand the families. They know the families. They’ve built trust with the families and that’s the first place they go,” she said. Lawyer Joan Jack, whose sister-in-law Barbara Jack was murdered, was among the inquiry’s most outspoken critics in Whitehorse. She said the inquiry should be based on Indigenous law and the lead lawyer should also be indigenous. “From what I’ve experi-
enced … they’ve got some internal developmental challenges that they need to reconcile before they hit the ground in the fall again,” she said. Inquiry spokeswoman Bernee Bolton said it’s critical that the inquiry hires the right people and it’s proud of its legal team, which has both Indigenous and non-Indigenous lawyers. She said the inquiry respects the ground work done by grassroots organizations and outreach to them is part of community relations efforts.
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
LIFE
YUKON NEWS
yukon-news.com
11
Crazy planes
Father-and-son duo Bud and Ross Granley fly in close formation.
Spectators gather at the Whitehorse airport to watch the show.
“D
on’t you love the smell of jet exhaust in the afternoon?” the announcer booms as a sleek, imposing plane taxis towards the runway. The CF-18 Hornet, dressed up in the red and white livery of the Canada 150 celebration, takes off over the skies of Whitehorse. Piloted by Matthew Kutryk, who spent part of his childhood in Whitehorse, the fighter jet swoops and banks like a supersonic bird of prey during the 20-minute demonstration. The Canadian Arctic Aviation Tour is travelling across the territories, stopping in 46 communities and performing fly-over shows in another 51 over the summer. It has already completed its Yukon leg, which started in Watson Lake June 3 and finished off in Old Crow June 6. The show features 11 performers, ranging from 1950s prop planes to the modern CF-18. See video of the show online at yukon-news.com
Photography by Joel Krahn Team Rocket, comprised of Eric Hansen and Ken Fowler, pass within metres of each other.
Left: The show’s signature CF-18 Hornet, piloted by former Yukoner Matthew Kutryk, swoops up over the crowd. Right: Kyle Fowler talks about his unique 1986 Long EZ to fans after the show.
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YUKON NEWS
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
YUKON NEWS
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
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YUKON NEWS
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
SPORTS AND RECREATION Yukon Roller Girls drop tight bout to Fairbanks
Joel Krahn/Yukon News
Yukon Roller Girls blocker Christy “Crack-Her” Huey, right, slams into Fairbanks jammer “Ella Vader.”
Joel Krahn/Yukon News
Yukon jammer Leah “Martha Blackout” Gillies looks for an opening in the Fairbanks defence.
Joel Krahn/Yukon News
Yukon Roller Girls jammer Codi “Baddie Banks” Ingram tries to break through the Fairbanks wall during the Klondike Gold Krush at the Mt. McIntyre Rec Centre on June 3. The Fairbanks Rollergirls won 157-116. Tom Patrick News Reporter
S
ix years ago the Yukon Roller Girls played their first bout in Whitehorse, beating the Fairbanks Rollergirls by over 50 points. The Fairbanks derby team returned to Whitehorse this past weekend and the outcome was noticeably different. The visiting team defeated the YRG 157-116 in a low-scoring bout called the Klondike Gold Krush at the Mt. McIntyre Rec Centre on June 3. “I think both teams really concentrated on defence instead of offence,”
said YRG president Christy “Crack-Her” Huey. “You could see that with the strong, solid walls where the jammers are getting tired having to push and you’re constantly reabsorbing them. If there’s a solid wall there’s not that franticness of having to hit people, where you get the injuries. “I think both teams concentrated on keeping everyone safe. It is a contact sport but you have to be mindful of your body.” Though the YRG didn’t log the win, they did showcase new talent. Five members of the team were competing in their first at-home bout, including
Huey and Codi “Baddie Banks” Ingram, who was named Yukon’s MVP jammer. “We were really excited,” said Ingram. “We had a lot of support from each other and our friends and it’s nice to see we can do these things here. “I feel like we won because we had fun and we played safe.” The Krush was closer than the final score indicates with Fairbanks up by 66-51 at half. Down 119-90 late in the game, Yukon jammer Andrea “Honey Badger” Badger scored 18 points to pull her team to within 11. YRG even closed the gap to 119-15,
but with three minutes left the wheels came off when the home team fell into penalty trouble, sending Fairbanks on a string of power jams. “There were some opportune times where not only was their jammer in the box, one of their blockers was in the box,” said Fairbanks assistant captain Katlian “Minifridge” Stark. “So our jammers didn’t have to deal with a full lineup of four … that definitely made those last couple of jams really beneficial to us.” “They got the power jam and that was the big difference,” said Huey. “They had a really solid jammer
that was really quick and she managed to squeeze by three lines and that’s 15 points right there.” Saturday’s bout was just the second in Whitehorse in over three years. The YRG lost 220-76 to the Sea to Sky Sirens from Squamish, B.C., last September in Whitehorse. But the YRG did notch a win a couple of weeks ago at a B.C. tournament/boot camp in Terrace. Seven Yukon rookies, all playing their first bouts, notched a win over Prince George but fell to Terrace and Quesnel at the event. “It was a rookie team; we had zero veterans with us,” said Huey, who was named the YRG’s MVP blocker on Saturday. “We got better. The first game we got slaughtered, the second game was close — within 10 or 20 points — and the last game we won.” The previous time Yukon and Fairbanks met
on the flat track was at the United We Roll Roller Derby Tournament — the Alaska state championship — in 2013. The YRG won the bout and went on to win the state championship. The next two years the YRG struggled to keep a team together and entered a period of inactivity. If anything, the Klondike Gold Krush confirmed the YRG are back and ready to go. They hope to host another bout by the end of summer, said Huey. “We came into the game knowing there were going to be a lot of new skaters on Yukon’s team, but we didn’t want to go in thinking we were going to win,” added Stark. “It was a much closer game than I thought it was going to be. I was super impressed by the Yukon ladies. They were great, really solid.” Contact Tom Patrick at tomp@yukon-news.com
YUKON NEWS
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
yukon-news.com
10-year-old climbs from under downed bike to race again at endurocross
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Expert riders leave the start line at the Mosquito Enduro-X race south of Whitehorse on June 4. A record 59 riders registered for the event hosted by the Yukon Cross Country Motorcycle Association. Tom Patrick News Reporter
M
otorcycle racing comes with inherent risks. Whitehorse’s Mia Raymond was reminded of that over the weekend. At the start of the mini bike race at the Mosquito Enduro-X event hosted by the Yukon Cross Country Motorcycle Association (YCCMA) south of Whitehorse on June 4, the 10-year-old ran into trouble. Metres from the start line Raymond toppled over and found herself trapped under a competitor’s bike. Spectators and organizers stormed the track to pull the bike off her as others stopped the race. But Raymond wasn’t done for the day. Just as the race was about to restart, she could be heard saying from the sideline: “I still want to race.” To the surprise of
seemingly everyone, she got back on her bike and did the race. “I didn’t want to stay out of the race because I still wanted to race,” said Raymond. “I hadn’t raced since last year so I was really looking forward to it. I didn’t want to wreck the first one, so I wanted to get back out again. It wasn’t my leg or anything, so I couldn’t not ride. I could still ride so I wanted to get up and do it again.” Raymond, who had on all the mandatory safety gear, set a good example for other young racers, said Raymond’s mom Laura Whitty. “She got back out right away and gave her — it’s all I could ask for,” she said. “You might fall down, but you get back up and finish the race.” The endurocross — a series of short races in which riders are awarded points for placements — was held at the Schirmer Family Ranch
38 Famous Video Super A Riverdale Tempo Gas Bar
DOWNTOWN:
Tom Patrick/Yukon News
Joey Chretien goes big off a jump in the expert division. off the South Klondike Highway. It was the YCCMA’s first event of the season and had record of 59 riders register over seven divisions. The YCCMA has three
more days of racing planned for the year with a harescramble race on Aug. 20, followed by a weekend of racing with another endurocross Sept. 16 and a second harescramble Sept. 17. Contact Tom Patrick at tomp@yukon-news.com
Results Peewee 1st Damen Tonner 2nd KJ Raymond 3rd Memphis Nolan Mini 1st Damen Tonner 2nd Seth Adams 3rd Aven Muir Junior under-15 1st Ken Stalder 2nd Coldby Hadley 3rd Ben Macpherson Junior over-15 1st Terje Kristensen 2nd Austin Larkin 3rd Ryder Burlotte Tom Patrick/Yukon News
Mia Raymond takes part in the mini race.
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YUKON NEWS
yukon-news.com
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
Carmacks school joins the action at track meet Tom Patrick News Reporter
T
he Yukon Elementary Track and Field Meet surpassed the 200 mark in registration thanks to one school willing to make the drive to town. Carmacksâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Tantalus Community School competed at the Yukon Schools Athletic Associationâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s meet for the first time on June 2 at F.H. Collins Secondary. Tantalus was the only community school at the meet that had 202 registered athletes including ones from Whitehorse Elementary, Jack Hulland, Takhini, Christ the King, Emilie-Tremblay and Elijah Smith schools. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s just a great event. We wanted to come last year but it was the same day as our grad, but this year it was different days so we had the opportunity to come and the students were excited,â&#x20AC;? said Tantalus coach Denine McDonald. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a great event to be at and we had Tom Patrick/Yukon News
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Runners approach the finish in the Grade 5/6 girls 4x100-metre relay during the Yukon Elementary Track and Field Meet on June 2 at F.H. Collins Secondary. Just over 200 students registered for the meet. a ton of fun.â&#x20AC;? Tantalus, which has a student body of about 110 students from kindergarten to Grade 12, sent a team of eight to the meet, and won seven
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ribbons for top-three finishes. In fact, twin sisters Winter and Autumn Tricker, and Tantalus schoolmate Jamie Skookum, swept the podium in the Grade 6 girls 1,500-metre. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We did pretty well for a small school,â&#x20AC;? said McDonald. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll be back. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s been wonderful.â&#x20AC;? Though it was Tantalusâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; first time at the fourth annual track meet,
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POST-SECONDARY STUDENTS
Financial assistance application deadline is
5IVSTEBZ +VOF You must be a Kwanlin DĂźn citizen to be eligible. Completed applications, along with the supporting documents (recent transcripts, letter of acceptance, etc.), must be received on or before this date. Late applications will be deferred to the next term.
For a copy of an application or for more information please visit the KDFN website or contact: Kwanlin DĂźn First Nation Post-Secondary & SpeciďŹ c Program Coordinator House of Learning (#5 Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Brien Place) Phone: (867) 633-8422 | Fax: (867) 633-7841 Email: education.reception@kdfn.net
Website: www.kwanlindun.com
the school has a long history of running. The school hosted the 40th annual Carmacks Ridge Run last month with 590 students from 19 Yukon schools participating. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Big thank you to the sports school students from F.H.C. who were the monitors at all stations for the elementary track meet,â&#x20AC;? said YSAA executive director Marc Senecal in an email to the News. Contact Tom Patrick at tomp@yukon-news.com
Tom Patrick/Yukon News
Above: Elijah Smith Elementaryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Ben Power leaves the start line in the boys 4x100-metre relay. Left: Whitehorse Elementaryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Lily Gingras takes part in the vertical jump.
YUKON NEWS
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
yukon-news.com
17
White Wolf slices up wins at world championships
Joel Krahn/Yukon News
Left: White Wolf engage in a melee fight demonstration June 3. Right: Two competitors duel it out June 3. only five of us, so we had no spares and everyone had to fight every round,” said Pearson. “And against Japan we had an epic six rounds.” Things looked grim for Canada in the melee when Hanuluk suffered a shoulder injury in an early round. “I think it popped out and back in — that sort of thing — and he got taken off the field,” said Pearson. “So our last round against Japan we only had four fighters. They met us on the field with only four fighters as well. They could have come with their full five, but it’s honourable in the group fights to meet your opponent with what they can present. In the final round we beat them, finally.” Canada dropped contests against Denmark, Mexico, and the U.S. in the melees. They also shed blood. “Against Mexico they were close fights. In the
Joel Krahn/Yukon News
Company of the White Wolf’s Land Pearson raises his axe in victory during a demonstration at the Yukon Roller Girls bout June 3. Pearson was one of five from White Wolf to compete at the medieval combat world championships in Denmark May 25-28. Tom Patrick News Reporter
I
f not for Yukon’s Company of the White Wolf, Canada would not likely be represented on the medieval combat world stage. For the second year in a row, White Wolf made up the vast majority of Team Canada at the International Medieval Combat Federation World Championships in Spottrup, Denmark, May 25-28. “I was quite pleased,” said White Wolf’s Land Pearson, president of the Yukon Medieval Combat Group. “We pretty much improved in every category. “I think everyone did
quite well. There was a lot of chatter on the internet back home in Canada, seeing it and being very excited, talking about wanting to be there next year.” Five members of the Yukon company competed at the championships. Mayo’s Jose Amoedo, who is the captain of White Wolf, represented his native Spain and took bronze in the polearm. The other four Yukoners — Pearson, Lance Gadsby, John Hanuluk and Dale Braga — joined forces with Alberta’s Sam Desaulniers to make up Team Canada. With a team of only five, the five-on-five melees (group fights) were a grind for Canada — especially against Team Japan. With
three rounds ending in ties, it took Canada six rounds to capture victory over the Japanese team. “This year there was
first round it was down to Dale versus one of the Mexican fighters and Dale was taken out of the fight because one of the straps had become undone on his shoulder. That’s considered armour failure and they don’t want to risk anyone getting hurt, so when they see that they sit you down,” said Pearson. “I think he could have taken that opponent. In the second round Dale got injured. His hand got split open and needed some stitches. There’s a video going around of two Mexicans beating up on him and him taking a knee, but it was more that he was injured, had lots of fights left, and needed to get that fixed.” Pearson and Desaulniers also competed in individual events. Pearson won his pool in sword and shield before losing against a Spaniard in the elimination round, placing eighth. He also won one
fight — against the only Australian at the worlds — and lost two in the men’s longsword competition. Desaulniers defeated a fighter from Japan for a win in polearm but dropped his other two fights in the event. “It was really good. It was in Denmark so I expected grey and rainy all the time but instead it was probably better weather than (last year in) Portugal,” said Pearson. “It was sunny most days, which could be a little hot for fighting, but we had to have good mental fortitude to deal with that.” Next year’s IMCF world championship will take place in Scotland in May. The Company of the White Wolf, which currently has about 25 members, will host the third annual Great Northern Tourney on Canada Day at the Biathlon Yukon range. Contact Tom Patrick at tomp@yukon-news.com
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www.yukon-news.com â&#x20AC;˘ 211 Wood Street, Whitehorse, YT Y1A 2E4 â&#x20AC;˘ Phone: (867) 667-6285 â&#x20AC;˘ Fax: (867) 668-3755 Rentals
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16â&#x20AC;&#x2122; tiny house, lots of unique features incl VIP panels, Lunos HRV, lightweight concrete countertop & quad pane windows, will deliver within reasonable distance in Yukon. 334-1859, www.tinyhousing.ca
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HOUSESITTER available yearround - Professional, non-smoking, non-partying, mature female, offering unequalled care for pets, plants, yards, and house. References. Call Tracy 334-2882
Homes for Rent Mobile home for rent, pets in home, no alcohol, all facilities shared, or for sale as is. 633-5023
OfďŹ ce/Retail OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT 2nd ďŹ&#x201A;oor of building on Gold Road in Marwell Size is 180 sq ft Quiet space with reasonable rent 667-2917 or 334-7000
Suites, Lower 1-bdrm basement suite in a house in Riverdale. Close to all amenities. Private parking, storage, N/P, N/S. Avail July 1, $1200/mon, inclâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;g all utils. 456-7397 3-bdrm 2-bath bsmt suite, Ingram, 9.25â&#x20AC;&#x2122; ceiling, sep entrance & electric meter, inďŹ&#x201A;oor heating, bright, large rooms, clean, tiled ďŹ&#x201A;oor, close to school/bus, $1,600/mon. 335-6886
2-bdrm 1-bath, #35 Takhini Trailer Court, Toyo stove, fenced yard, $49,000. Call 456-7327 from Noon to 3pm, or leave message Private sale, beautiful sandy lake front beach property, Army Beach, Marsh Lake, fenced, over 1/2 acre, super water break, dock, etc. 867667-2988 day, 867-633-3729 eves STAGE COACH INN & Strip Mall Duchess, Alberta. Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers Unreserved Auction, July 20 in Lethbridge. 16 room hotel, separate reception & managerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s residence and 4 Bay Commercial Strip Mall. Jerry Hodge: 780-7066652; Brokerage: All West Realty Ltd.; rbauction.com/realestate.
Career Opportunities
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES with Black Press (Yukon)
Black Press is Canadaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s leading private independent newspaper company with more than 170 community, daily and urban newspapers in Canada, Washington State, Hawaii, California and Ohio and has extensive digital and printing operations.
Advertising Sales Representative (Yukon): The Whitehorse-based Yukon News, a twice-weekly awardwinning newspaper has an outstanding opportunity for a full-time salesperson for print and digital advertising. We are part of Black Press Ltd. which has over 170 newspapers across Canada and the U.S. Post expires on Friday June 23rd, 2017
Wanted: 2-bdrm pet-friendly place, hard working, N/S, donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t party, have teenage son whoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s responsible, quiet and clean, ASAP please. 867689-9792
Real Estate Claims 22 placer claims, equivalent to 30, Victoria Creek, Mount Nanson, new 10-yr water license, some equipment included, $250,000 obo, serious inquiries only. 633-2218 for more info LARGE PLACER CLAIM For sale Atlin, B.C. Tested/Proven For information email: nuggets8888@gmail.com
Lots 2 serviced lots in Alsask, Saskatchewan, for sale, $5,000. Ken at 867689-2740 Haines Junction double lot, approx 100x100â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, serviced, no req to build, Alsek Cresc adj munip park, walk to rink, school, post ofďŹ ce, library, college, CAFN, restaurants, $59,999. (867) 634-5344
Real Estate 1,200 sq ft condo, downtown, quiet, economical, heated ďŹ&#x201A;oor, concrete, no shared walls, parking, storage, elevator, pets allowed, $330,000. 250-716-6190 eves only 5-bdrm house for sale, Porter Creek. 334-7313
Housekeepers Town & Mountain Hotel 401 Main Street, Whitehorse
Apply with resume and references to Kayle email: kayle@townmountain.com or 401 Main Street
For more information on these vacancies and other regions throughout B.C. visit:
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Want to Rent Friendly couple looking for pet/house sitting, both working full time, non-smokers, extremely clean, respectful, huge animal lovers, available June 7- July 14. Refs available. nauruan24@gmail.com
SEEKING FULL TIME & PART TIME
QUALITY CONTROL TECHNICIAN Whitehorse
Skookum Asphalt, a well-established company based in Whitehorse Yukon, has an immediate opening for a Quality Control Technician. Skookum Asphalt is part of the Terus Construction Ltd. group of companies, which is a leader in the construction industry in British Columbia and the Yukon Territory. This position will be based out of Whitehorse and will report to the Quality Control Supervisor. To succeed in this position you must have a good understanding of Quality Control and Assurance testing procedures used specifically in asphalt paving construction and aggregate crushing operations. You are also a self-starter, function well within a team environment while being capable of working independently. You must demonstrate strong problem solving and communications skills. Candidates must be flexible and mobile as per the nature of the work some travelling is required. Requirements/Skills O Good communication skills ( oral & written ) and team player O Accuracy in reporting O Excellent time management skills O Computer Literate O Driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s License Experience/Education O CET in Civil Construction with related experience to construction materials testing or 5 years directly related experience in construction materials testing.
Advertising Sales Representative The Whitehorse-based Yukon News, a twice-weekly awardwinning newspaper has an outstanding opportunity for a full-time salesperson for print and digital advertising. We are part of Black Press Ltd. which has over 170 newspapers across Canada and the U.S. Candidates must be a self-starter with the ability to communicate effectively and build relationships with clients. The winning candidate will be called upon to grow an account list with an aggressive cold-calling mandate. Qualifications: t .VTU CF B UFBN QMBZFS t #F BCMF UP QBZ BUUFOUJPO UP UIF EFUBJMT t 8PSL JO B GBTU QBDFE FOWJSPONFOU XJUI UJHIU EFBEMJOFT t #BTJD DPNQVUFS TLJMMT t .VTU IBWF WFIJDMF BOE WBMJE ESJWFST MJDFODF t &YDFMMFOU DPNNVOJDBUJPO TLJMMT t &YQFSJFODF JO BEWFSUJTJOH SFUBJM TBMFT PS TFSWJDF JOEVTUSZ JT an asset. $PNQFUJUJWF CBTF TBMBSZ DPNNJTTJPO HBT BMMPXBODF BOE B TUSPOH CFOFĂśU QBDLBHF 1MFBTF TVCNJU ZPVS SFTVNF BOE DPWFS MFUUFS CZ +VOF .JLF 5IPNBT 1VCMJTIFS :VLPO /FXT 8PPE 4USFFU 8IJUFIPSTF : 5 : " & NUIPNBT!ZVLPO OFXT DPN
We offer a competitive compensation package with a comprehensive benefit plan. For a complete job description and to submit your resume please visit our website at: www.terusconstruction.ca Terus Construction Ltd. would like to thank all applicants for submitting their resume. However, only applicants selected to be interviewed, will be contacted. Posting will remain open until position has been filled.
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Yukon Hospital Corporation has the following openings: Financial Analyst | Whitehorse General Hospital Regular Full Time, 75 hours Bi-weekly | Competition #2017-172
Payroll & Pension Plan Administrator | Whitehorse General Hospital Regular Full Time, 75 hours Bi-weekly | Competition #2017-061
Laboratory Assistant | Whitehorse General Hospital Term Full Time, 75 hours Bi-weekly | Competition #2017-170
Custodial Worker | Dawson City Community Hospital Casual on call, no guarantee of hours | Competition #2017-171
Ultrasound Technologist | Whitehorse General Hospital Term Part Time, 56.25 hours Bi-weekly | Competition #2017-173
Please email your resume/application quoting the appropriate competition number to: Human Resources Department, Whitehorse General Hospital Email: wghjobs@wgh.yk.ca Yukon Hospital Corporation is committed to employment equity. We thank all those who apply and advise that only those candidates selected for further consideration will be contacted.
JOB OPPORTUNITY Community Initiatives & Implementation Coordinator Competition # 17-18- 18 Employment Status: Regular Full Time Salary: $64,479.97 - Level 7A Location: Haines Junction (preferred) or Whitehorse, Yukon Job Summary: Reporting to the Director of Governance, this position provides coordination, research, communications, administrative and clerical support to the CAFN branches of government: including the Elders Senate, Youth Council, and General Assembly. This position will also be responsible for coordinating all activities/events assigned to them by the CAFN government departments. This position will also be responsible for daily posting on the website and all other social media. The successful candidate will also provide support to the Director and the Governance department and participate on the implementation working group and provide input and recommendations when required. For a complete job description please check the CAFN website at www.cafn.ca or contact below. Deadline: 4:30 pm on Wednesday, June 14, 2017
19
COYOTE ENTERTAINMENT Full-time Sales Clerk Wages $15.70/hr High School Graduate Operate computerized inventory system; Provide product advice; Prepare product sales; Process payments. Effective interpersonal skills & team player Resumes: coyotevideo007@gmail.com
Early Childhood Educator (NOC4214) Develop and implement child-care programs that support and promote the physical, cognitive and emotional and social development of children. The successful candidate must possess a diploma in early childhood education or equivalent education to qualify for a level three childhood education certificate in the Yukon. Full Time/ 40 hours per week. Wage $20.00/hour. Email resume: dreamersdaycare@gmail.com
FIL-CAN CLEANERS Light Duty Cleaner NOC 6731 Permanent full time $15.57/hour Criminal Record Check required Applicants with relevant experience preferred Apply by email: gayangosjubilee@yahoo.ca
Send current resumes and supporting documents to:
Visit our website at yukonhospitals.ca for more information on these and other job opportunities.
Capacity and Policy Development Department Fax: (867) 634-2108 Phone: (867) 634-4200 ext. 241 or ejackson@cafn.ca
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! In-demand career! Employers have workat-home positions available. Get online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855-768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career today!
Internal & External Posting PERMANENT, FULL TIME
Teslin Tlingit Council is inviting resumes for
Recruitment and Staff Relations Officer TTC hiring policy will be in effect
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Resumes must be received by the Workforce Development Department of the Teslin Tlingit Council by 4:00 p.m. on
Friday, June 16, 2017 For more information, contact Workforce Development at 390-2532. Ext 316 You may also fax your application to 390-2176 or Email to humanresources@teslin-ttc.com JOB DESCRIPTIONS ARE AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST
Reporting to the Workforce Development Director, the Recruitment & Staff Relations Officer is responsible for recruitment, developing, implementing, maintaining and reviewing the First Nation’s plans related to fair and equitable human resources policy development and administration. Providing support, guidance and advice to management and employees in matters relating to performance management and discipline; assisting and participating in the research and development of human resource management policies and procedures. The incumbent is responsible for conducting all recruitment for TTC and to ensure that competitions are conducted in accordance with policy and in keeping with the strategic direction of the Nation.
BOX 133 • TESLIN, YUKON Y0A 1B0 • 867·390·2532 • http://www.ttc-teslin.com/
Community Development and Planning Officer The City of Dawson is seeking a qualified applicant to fill the position of Community Development and Planning Officer. Under the direction of the Chief Administrative Officer (CAO), the Community Development & Planning Officer (CDO) performs a variety of community development and planning, economic development, and land administration functions. Qualifications: Please submit your resume clearly demonstrating how you meet the following qualifications: Knowledge and Skills: • Post-secondary education in the area of planning or a related field; • Minimum of three-years’ experience in a fast-paced, deadline oriented work environment where the provision of excellent service to the public was considered top priority; • Proficient computer skills in Microsoft Office Suite; • Experience in public relations, conflict management, negotiation, mediation and problem solving; • Excellent organizational and time management skills with ability to prioritize; • Effective written and verbal communication skills, presentation and listening communication skills; • Demonstrated exceptional work ethic, can-do attitude, the desire to learn and be a team player; • Discretion, tact, compassion, good judgement and cultural sensitivity; • Ability to plan, direct, develop, implement and evaluate programs, bylaws, policies and procedures; • Ability to establish and maintain professional working relationships with staff, and the public; • Ability to work flexible hours; • Ability to maintain confidentiality; • Eligibility for membership in the Canadian Institute of Planners; • Valid class 5 Drivers License; • Lands Viewer, GP and GIS experience would be an asset. A job description is available upon request or at www.cityofdawson.ca. Salary & Benefits: This is a Union position. Salary and benefits shall be in accordance with the Collective Agreement, and offers a salary range of $66,655 to $79,987 plus benefits. Closing Date: A current resume and cover letter must be received at the City of Dawson Office by 4:00 PM on Friday, June 16, 2017. Interested applicants may submit applications marked “Personal and Confidential” Attention: Anne Mendelsohn: by email to: seniorfinanceofficer@cityofdawson.ca or by mail to: City of Dawson Office 1336 Front Street Box 308, Dawson City, YT, Y0B 1G0 The City of Dawson thanks all applicants for their interest. Only those selected for further consideration will be contacted.
yukon-news.com
YUKON NEWS
Children
Help Wanted
Childcare Available
THE HUE OASIS RESTAURANT is looking for an experienced cook for full time work. NOC 6322 Wage is $17 per hour. Apply by email: thehueoasis@gmail.com or call:867-668-6440
Newest Child Care in Whitehorse open. 24-service. Now accepting infants, toddlers, preschool & school-age children. $100 discount for May & June enrolments. GROW WITH JOY CHILD CARE 4040-th Ave 334-9191 growwjoy@northwestel.net
classifieds Book on-line at
www.yukon-news.com
Daycare Centers
Large child stroller, Graco manufacturer, immaculate condition, $40. 633-2837
Volunteers
Volunteers
Children’s Misc
ACTIVE IN YOUR COMMUNITY Are you looking for volunteer opportunities? Please check www.volunteeryukon.ca to find more volunteer opportunities.
Victoria Faulkner Women’s Centre is Looking for Volunteers The Victoria Faulkner Women’s Centre is looking for enthusiastic and compassionate volunteers to help run our 2017 Mom and Kids Program. We are very excited to be offering this free program on behalf of the Victoria Faulkner Women’s Centre. This year we will be offering culturally diverse and rich experiences for childrend 0-8 and their mothers. Activities will include: • Live Music • Dancing • Yoga • Field Trips • Story Telling/Literacy • and more! Volunteers are needed for: Snack prep; Transportation; Monitoring safety; Interacting with families, etc. Driver’s license, First Aid, Food Safe and updated criminal record checks are assets. Lindsey Tyne Johnson, (867)667-2693, summerrec@vfwomenscentre.com
Yukon Council on Aging (YCOA): Sourdough Chronicle Newsletter Editor Task Description: The Sourdough Chronicle is one of the core activities for YCOA, and is published quarterly. (published June, Septemeber, December, and March). The newsletter provides information of activities, pending issues and general interest articles to seniors both in the territory and outside. Responsibilities: Collect potential information/articles for the newsletter; review submissions for publication and selecting material; edit submissions for elements of grammar, style, spelling and punctuation. Skills Needed: Self starter; able to work to deadlines; able to work with a team; has strong writing skills. Time Commitment: Approximately 20 hours - quarterly Elaine Kimball, ycoa@yknet.ca, (867)668-3383 You work for a non-profit organization and you would like to add your volunteer opportunities? Please click on http://www.volunteeryukon.ca/.
Community Services
Heavy Duty Machinery
Trucks & Vans
79,650.00
$
CATERPILLAR D-8K (1978)
c/w ripper, two blades, angle + “c” frame & straight with hardware
Tel: (867) 667-7777
Merchandise for Sale
Merchandise for Sale
Merchandise for Sale
Appliances
Firearms
Firewood/Fuel
Firewood/Fuel
18 cu ft refrigerator & electric range with convection oven, great working order, stove needs cleaning, both for $150. 633-2837
303 sporterized Enfield rifle, $320 obo, nice Parker hale stock with ten round mag; Ruger 338 RCM stainless steel, $900, c/w new box of ammo. 334-5666
GE washer/dryer, great working order, both $200. 633-2837 Washer, dryer, fridge, portable dishwasher, all white, $50 ea or $200 takes all. 333-9400
Computer Equipment 22” HP monitor, $10. 336-1084
MARANATHA PRE-SCHOOL DAYCARE NOC#4214 is looking for Early Childhood Educator full time, permanent, with ECE Level 3. Wage is $22 per hour. Email resume to maranathawhitehorse@gmail.com or call 668-7937
Children
Merchandise for Sale
1999 TOYOTA HIACE 3Y RWD, JDM, 62,000KM, Great reliable vehicle, New muffler, wearables $7,500 OBO
Call 334-1859
Wireless computer speaker, exc cond, $250; wireless keyboard like new $60; wireless touchpad like new $45; TI 89 Titanium graphing calculator $100; new computer system $195 obo. 668-4186
Estate Sales
Store (867) 633-3276
LICENSED TO BUY, SELL & CONSIGN rifles & ammo at G&R NEW & USED 1612-D Centennial St. 393-2274 BUY * SELL
Savage lever action model 99F in 250-3000, 22” barrel, checkered walnut stock, rotary mag, tank safety, steel buttplate, made in 50s, $695 obo. 668-2396 Savage lever action model 99F in 308 Winchester, 22” barrel, checkered walnut stock, jewelled bolt, rotary mag, tank safety, steel buttplate, made in 50s, $695 obo. 6682396
Dev (867) 335-5192 Carl (867) 334-3782
Beetle-killed spruce from Haines Junction, quality guaranteed Everything over 8" split Prices as low as $245 per cord Single and emergency half cord deliveries Scheduled or next day delivery
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ESTATE Sale: Snap-On tools & toolboxes, master HD mechanic tools, boxes, machinist tools, etc., 3/16” - 2 1/4” sockets, wrenches, Replacement cost $40-$60,000. Selling all $12,000. OBO (250)8038744
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EVF FUELWOOD ENT Year Round Delivery * Dry accurate cords *1/2 Cord Orders Accepted *Clean shavings available *VISA/MC accepted Member of Yukon Wood Producers Assoc Costs will rise ORDER NOW 456-7432
Furniture Dining hutch, solid wood with glass shelves, immaculate condition. 86-3/4”high, 69”wide, 19”deep, $500 obo. 334-2149 Large burl coffee table, $300 obo. 633-9022 Large dresser with mirror, exc cond, matching headboard, $250. 6332602 Queen size sleigh bed frame, $100; 48” round glass table & 4 chairs, Country House, $550; 3-pc green sofa set incl full-size couch, love seat, high back arm chair, $500. 336-1084 Sealy king size mattress only, 768 coils, flipable, lux firm, no pillowtop, in plastic bag, you pick-up, vg cond, $100. 633-3114 lv msg
Heavy Duty Machinery 10x6 CORNELL PUMP MODEL: 6RBEM18 6 CYLINDER JD ENGINE ENGINE & PUMP JUST REBUILT; NEW SUCTION HOSE, SCREEN, FOOT VALVE. 3800 GALLONS PER MIN. AT 100 FT T.D.H. SEE PICTURES ON WEBSITE FOR RENT, SALE, OR RENTAL PURCHASE Email: a1cats@telus.net or call 780-538-1599 2007 Peterbilt 378 Tridem 1,000,000 km, 550 Cat 13 speed, air ride, $45,000 firm. 332-8337 3 D7 Cat rollers, 2 top rollers, 1 double flange track roller, $200 obo. 668-3675 42” Trommel, 4” diesel water pump, 12’ sluice run, located in Whitehorse. 780-915-3291 Complete portable Pioneer crusher, good for processing bed rock plaser, or processing hard rock for a mine; semi loads to move, $5,500 as is, where is. Peter @ 633-4606 Norwood portable edger with 13 hp Honda motor & portable rollers, $2,800 obo. Call 334-6101 after 6pm
Misc. for Sale 16’ Old Town Camper canoe, new, used once, $1,200; 2 sets of golf clubs & bags, $100 ea. 633-3113 250 sq ft thinstone ledgestone rock from Van Island, 3 pallets; 16 linear feet corners, 100 sq ft hanging mesh, for outside house accents, or inside feature wall/fireplace, great deal. 334-7635 4 rolls unused roll roofing, $60 each or all four for $40 each. 334-5168 or 633-4018 7-10 person screen tent, easy up, new, $50; air conditioner, fits in window, $50. 633-9022 9’ solid wood picnic table, $40; box of 33 VHS tapes, $20; 14’ Lund aluminum boat, $1,000. 667-2601 Awning window, wooden frame, 2 glass panes, 93.5”x12”, ideal for log cabin, $35. 456-4087 Bissell vacuum & shampooer, good condition, on wheels, $40. 334-8318 Cabin wood stove, 16”x29”Lx27”H, incl steel plate welded on, 20.5”x18”, $150. 456-4087 Canvas Tents & Wood Stoves Lowest Prices in Canada Tents will ship by Greyhound from Castlegar, BC Canvas Tent Shop www.canvastentshop.ca 1-800-234-1150 Call for Prices Coca-Cola memorabilia & collectibles, 1930-2000, by the piece or an entire collection. Lv msg 867334-7780 or 667-7478 Craftsman 30” snow blower, 10 hp $300; Blanco corner sink, with tap $60; Filing cabinet, 4-drawer, $35; 30” new interior door with 10 etched panes, $100. 334-5942 DeWalt 12V cordless drill with 1 battery, charger & case, good cond, $45. 668-5014
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
Merchandise for Sale
YUKON NEWS
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Misc. for Sale
Misc. Wanted
Cars - Domestic
Recreational/Sale
Sport Utility Vehicle
Trucks & Vans
Da-Lite heavy duty fast fold deluxe projection screen, 11’ wide x 7’ 6” high, exc cond, transport case included, $800. Call 668-5014 Entry doors, 80”x 36” with top window and 2 side panels 18”, $50 obo; sealed glass units, $3. 633-4375. Fax/scanner/copy machine, Brother 7220, $30. 633-6603 General Products manual deli meat slicer, industrial grade, for home use, exc cond, $150. 335-3589 Girl Guide Cookies still available. Buy your classic chocolate and vanilla cookies at the GG Office, Tuesday & Wednesday, 12-5 pm, TC Richards Bldg. Still just $5/box! Haier compact washing machine, 110, hooks up to sink, great for apts. or someone on water delivery, $325. 633-5177 Handheld shower & showerhead wall bar combo, brushed nickel, 5 spray settings, new, never used, paid $120 US, asking $120 Cdn. 668-7601 Hood for 2008 or older Argo, new $800, asking $300. 334-6101 after 6pm Husqvarna 357 chainsaw, $320. 633-6603 Indoor/outdoor plants. Call 668-4186 Iphone 5s Virgin Mobile 16gb with charge cord, good condition, $170. 334-6087 Iridium sat phone, new condition, comes with external antenna and other attachments, $800. 335-3331 Jim Robb signed limited edition print, $400. 668-5188 Kitchen cupboards complete with sink & taps, nice, $250; wood stove, $50. 250-488-4979 Faro NEW 2017 MANUFACTURED HOMES starting under $80,000 delivered! Best Buy Homes Kelowna www.bestbuyhousing.com Canada’s largest in-stock home selection, quick delivery, and custom factory orders! Text/call 250-7652223. One 150 gal. Tidy Tank $ electric pump, $600; locking Somona Job Box, 2’x2’x4’, $200. 334-6101 after 6pm One 5 fold-up camper step, $200 obo. 334-6101 after 6pm Pendleton pure wool jacket, cross design, extra large, worn twice, offers. 668-5188 Plastic water tank, never used, 30”Wx36”Hx56”L, $350; 1 300’ roll 2” blue lay-flat water hose, $150; 1 300’ roll 3” blue lay-flat water hose, $250, never used. 334-6101 Rockwell collectible plates: The Magician, Heavenly Dreams, A Time to Keep, $8 each or 3/$15; 336-1084
1-gal container for Proclosomles fish, soil & plants for cleaning 1-gal container. 668-5188
1979 Cadillac Sedan Coupe de Ville, A-1 condition, everything runs, 2-tone brown, view at #60 Northland Trailer Park or phone 668-2332
1979 28’ 5th wheel travel trailer, full bath, fridge, stove, sleeps 6, $3,500 obo. 633-9022
2000 Jeep Cherokee, Infinity Gold Limited Edition, $5,300. 667-7777
1995 Nissan 4x4, good running truck, just needs a new hub and it good to go. Located in Teslin, $1000 obo. 867-336-3922
Ron’s Small Engine Services Repairs to Snowmobiles, Chainsaws, Lawnmowers, ATV’s, Small industrial equipment. Light automotive & welding repairs available 867-332-2333 lv msg SAWMILLS from only $4,397 MAKE MONEY & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800566-6899 Ext:400OT. Solar panels, quality 250 watt panels selling for $290 each, 20 available, 10 year warranty. Call before June 7 or after June 25. Ph. 633-2533. Storage shed, 9’x12’, wood frame & floor, metal clad, $600; Lincoln 150 amp Power Weld welder on wheels, $250. 250-488-4979, Faro Taig micro lathe, 3 and 4 saw chucks, milling attachment, live centre, lots of tooling, threading attachment, $950. 456-2130 Underground miner’s lamp, new in box, $150 obo; 6 lamp charging station, $100 obo; backpack diamond drill, gas powered engine, 4 new bits incl, $700 obo. 668-3675 Viessmann Vitodens 200 Propane heating system, ultra efficient German made, 2 years old, excellent condition. Call/text 332-9292 Wall tent, 10’X12’, airtight stove piping, $1,200. 334-5168 or 633-4018 We will pay CASH for anything of value. Tools, electronics, gold & jewelry, chainsaws, camping & outdoor gear, hunting & fishing supplies, rifles & ammo. G&R New & Used 1612-D Centennial St. 393-2274 BUY * SELL
The Teen Parent Centre is hiring for 2 full time/1 part-time positions for Early Childhood Educators for the summer. Must have level designation from CCSU and required documentation. Level 3 starting wage $24.75. Wanted: 1958 Chevrolet car, running or not, or parts. 334-6087 Wanted: any left over wild meat or fish in your freezer from last year you want to get rid of, will take it off your hands. 335-2300 Wanted: Crab or Prawn traps. 6334493
2002 Dodge Stratus 2 door sports coupe, rear spoiler bar, runs great, pioneer stereo system, V6, $2,499 obo. 334-3456 2005 Mercedes-Benz, 248,649kms, loaded, all options, new snow tires, $6,500. 667-7777 2006 Ford Focus Wagon, set winter & summer tires (new) 4 cylinder, great gas mileage, hatchback with good storage, great condition, ready to drive away, $4,500 obo. 3343456
Wanted: Portable folding table with a solid wooden top, approx 3’x6’. 668-1944
2007 Chevy Cobalt LTE, 170,000kms, 4-dr, 5-spd, power locks & windows, cruise, remote start, good tires, $4,500 firm. 6686911
Wanted: small non shedding dog or puppy, willing to pay, prefer cross breed; also looking for house plants. Call 334-3774
2007 Dodge Caliber, hatchback, low miles at 40,000kms, good highway mileage, well maintained, P/S, P/B, $4,700. 667-2356
Yukon Learn is looking for Volunteers to sell Raffle Tickets. If you would like to volunteer, please call Yukon Learn at 668-6280.
2012 Dodge Gran Caravan, 187000Km, loaded, excellent condition, $13,999 obo. 322-2404
Musical Instruments Flute, Taylor James Privilege, used 1 year, $1,000 obo; 3/4 size violin, new, $500 obo. 633-9022 PIANO TUNING & REPAIR by certified piano technician Call Barry Kitchen @ 633-5191 Email: bfkitchen@hotmail.com
Sporting Goods Coleman Sundome tent, 12’x12’x6’, never used, like new, $100. 6687001 Double kayak, skirts and paddles not included, $350. 334-5297 Everlast heavy bag, as new, $120; speed bag w/gloves & hanger, as new, $120. 456-4927 Kayak, Wilderness Tsunami, 135 with rudder, skirt, $1,500 obo. 6339022 Norwegian 4-season tunnel tent, Helsport Isfjell 4, large entrance bell, snow flaps, roomy for 3 people fits 4, weight 5kg, $250. 668-5014. Tandem spraydeck for 17’ canoe by Totem Outfitters, rugged PVC coated polyester, large cargo hatch, fits Old Town/Prospector etc, good cond, $350. 668-5014
Stereo / DVD / TV Sharp 27” colour TV, 4-in-1 model, good condition, no remote, $35. 334-8318
Transportation
2013 Nissan Rogue SL AWD, black, one owner, 52,000kms, new cond, all maint records, loaded, new A/S radials, new battery, remote, heated seats, Bose, sunroof, $22,500. 6677501, 334-1258, or dom@northwestel.net
Motorcycles 1972 Triumph 650 Bonneville, hard tail frame, needs engine work & paint job, steering, tire. 332-3928 2003 V-star, 1100cc, 11,000kms, well kept, $3,100. 336-4887 2005 Harley Heritage Soft Tail Classic, 43,000kms, $12,500. 335-5442 2007 Suzuki RMZ 450, like new, one owner, $2,700. 333-0564 2009 Honda CRF150R Special Edition dirt bike, excellent condition, Pro Taper bars, FMF Power core II pipe, almost new tires, c/w stand and full parts bike, including plastics, $2,700 obo. 393-3564. 2009 Yamaha 1300cc street cruiser, low kms, serviced, last fall, new windshield, leather saddle bags, tires, plug in for heated accessory, reduced to $4,500. 333-9020 2011 HD Road King Classic, 103 engine, 6-spd, heated seats, back rest, luggage rack, 22” detachable windscreen, well maintained, service records, shop manual, 117,000 highway kms, $12,800. 332-4160 Suzuki 1500cc Boulevard. Windshield, saddle bags, less than 5000kms, $8500. 633-3638 Wanted: Motorcycle with side car in good condition. Call 334-8197
Aircraft
Off Road Vehicles
McCulloch 4318 Drone engine complete, 72hp, 77lbs, 4,100RPM, 4-cyl, 2-stroke, 20:1 mix, $550 obo. 6683675
2002 Argo Conquest, c/w canopy, window shield & tracks, 190 hrs on it, $14,000 obo. 332-3814
Auto Accessories/Parts 1996 Pontiac Transport for parts, car or fixer-upper, 3400 cc motor, $600 obo. 334-6101 after 6pm 2001 Volkswagen Golf for parts, $500. 335-1947 4 P185/70 R13-85T Toyo ultra, 2 new, 2-500 miles, $400; 4 tires & rims 205/70 R15 Evertrek tread, 5-hole fit Pontiac van ‘94-’98, 80% tread. Dave 393-4796 4 Wrangler Goodyear tires, LT 245/70 R17, 80% tread; 4 tires & rims, 205/50 R15, 86H Quatrac 2 4-hole, fit VW, ‘87-’90, 80 tread, $300. Dave at 393-4796 8’ truck canopy, sliding windows on sides, $275; four 18” truck tires, $80 for all 4. 334-5942 Sliding bed-extender for Frontier, $150. 668-5014
Nissan
Trailer hitch assembly for 2007 Subaru Forester, $25; full size Subaru spare tire, 215/60 R16, new, balanced on rim, $70. 633-6603 TRUCK CANOPIES in stock *New Dodge long/short box *New GM long/short box *New Ford long/short box Hi-Rise & Cab Hi several in stock View at centennialmotors.com 393-8100
2015 Polaris 325 Sportsman, like new, 400 kms, $4,500. 333-0564
Tenders
REQUEST FOR BIDS PARTIAL EXTERIOR REFINISH 201 Main Street building Whitehorse, Yukon Documents can be obtained by contacting: yukon.se80@gmail.com Bids may be emailed to the above email address.
Tender closing date: Wednesday June 14th, 2017
Tender closing time: 16H00 PDT UTC -7H
1980 Dodge high top camper van, 318 motor, 200,000kms, needs minor work, good for single person, $3,200 obo. 334-6101 after 6pm 1993 Coachmen 29’ Class A motor home. 454 Chev engine & chassis. four speed auto trans. Air ride new batteries. 85% tires, 148,230 kms, $12,500 ready to go. 633-3257 2002 22’ Streamline holiday trailer, island queen bed, refrigerator/freezer, 3-burner stove, oven/microwave, full bath, c/w 2 propane tanks, 2 batteries, also Toyota 4-Runner to pull trailer, $13,000 for both or priced separately. 668-2919 2004 Georgetown 30’ RV with slide, fully loaded, new tires, immaculate condition, $29,000. 667-6562 or 334-2277 to view 2006 19’ Wildwood travel trailer, full kitchen, toilet/shower, furnace,, new tires & bearings, well maintained, exc cond, $11,500 obo. 633-2318 2008 F350 Lariat Superduty 6.4 Diesel 4x4, auto, crew cab, 75,400kms, with Adventurer camper 86 SBS w/dinette slide, well maintained, fridge/freezer, bath/shower, stove/oxen sleeps 4, exc cond, $42,500. 335-1128. 2014 R Vision Trail-lite 21’, front queen bed, dinette slide, power awning, large bathroom, outside kitchen & shower, lots of storage, transferable warranty to 2021, $20,500. 334-1785 38’ Gulfstream travel trailer, tag, 2 slides, 110V full size fridge, freezer, office in front, shows new, low kms & use, great camp trailer, $20,000. 335-1845 5th wheel hitch, Hijacker, c/w rails, towing mirrors, 2 types, offers. 6334215 Hijacker 5th wheel trailer hitch, upper, no rails, $220; 130lb cast iron leg vice, $200; forge, $110. 4564927 btwn 10am & 12noon. Spacious, bright tiny house on wheels. 20 ft long and 10 ft wide. Lot of low-e windows, well insulated. Can’t compare it to other tiny houses. Must see. Priced to sell. 3353477
Tenders
PUBLIC TENDER STANDING OFFER AGREEMENT FOR COLD LAID PLANT MIX ASPHALTIC PATCHING MATERIAL FOR GOVERNMENT OF YUKON 2017/18
2015 Dodge Journey SUV, OEM tires replaced with Nokian, loaded, exc cond, reduced to $28,000. Kelly at 456-3373
Trucks & Vans 1955 Ford pick-up, good body panels with engine, needs restoring. 332-3928 1975 Dodge camper van, many new parts, ready to roll, have insurance inspection, $2,200. 333-0564 1994 Ford F-150 XLT 4X4 5L V8 p/u truck, $3,500, great cond, runs awesome, no rust clean, ready to drive. Come see it. 335-5843 1995 Chevrolet S10, automatic, no reverse, no rust, engine runs well, 259,780kms, canopy, c/w 2 sets of good tires, best offer. 633-4826 1995 Chevy, K-3500, 4x4, 180,000 km, many new parts, new tires, runs great, $5,500. 335-333119 1997 Toyota Tacoma extended cab, c/w canopy. 332-3814
Tenders
1999 Hiace Van with truck body, ex firetruck, 3y engine, RWD, great condition, 62kms on odometer but in reality less, little wheels, new muffler, wearable parts, $7,500, serious inquiries only. 334-1859 2008 Ram 3500, 127,000 kms, Cummins turbo diesel,12’ flat deck, pintle, dual wheels, new brakes, seals, rear tires, exc cond. Consider trade on 5ton+ truck, $22,000 obo. 332-0343 2009 Chev Uplander extended sports van, V6, FWD, keyless entry, p/windows & doors, tinted glass, a/c, cruise, 2nd & 3rd removable seats, onStar ready, low mileage 141,000km, $7,900 obo. 334-3456
Tenders
PUBLIC TENDER
PUBLIC TENDER
VILLAGE OF MAYO INFRASTRUCTURE UPGRADES - PHASE 3, AREA 1
CITY OF DAWSON FRONT STREET & TURNER STREET INFRASTRUCTURE UPGRADES
Project Description: Infrastructure Upgrades in the Village of Mayo including approximately 1150 meters of 150 diameter HDPE water main, 825 meters of 250 diameter HDPE ‘superpipe’ sewer main, 90 meters of 250 diameter HDPE sewer main, 192 meters of 600 diameter CSP storm sewer, 640 meters of 400 diameter CSP storm sewer and culverts, 21 manholes, 39 water and sewer service replacements, 1200 lineal meters of road reconstruction, groundwater dewatering/pumping, and restoration including road signs, fencing, landscape, topsoil and lawn seeding. Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is June 22, 2017. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Gareth Earl at Gareth.Earl@gov.yk.ca.
Project Description: City of Dawson, Front Street and Turner Street infrastructure upgrades including approximately 385 meters of 200 diameter gravity sewer main replacement, 435 meters of 200 diameter water main replacement, 190 meters of 600 diameter storm main replacement, 12 manholes, water and sewer services replacement to 12 buildings, 160 lineal meters of gravel road reconstruction, groundwater management, and all restoration including road signs replacement, boardwalk reconstruction and landscaping. Provisional items include 345 meters of 200 diameter twin (double pipe) raw water main installation, and 270 lineal meters of paved road reconstruction. Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is June 29, 2017. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Rick Kent at rick.kent@gov.yk.ca.
All tenders and proposals are subject to a Compliance Review performed by the Procurement Support Centre. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. View or download documents at: www.hpw.gov.yk.ca/tenders/
Project funding by CanadaYukon Clean Water & Wastewater Fund All tenders and proposals are subject to a Compliance Review performed by the Procurement Support Centre. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. Bidders and/or Proponents are advised to review documents to determine CertiÀcate of Recognition (COR) requirements for this project. View or download documents at: www.hpw.gov.yk.ca/tenders/
This project is being funded through the Canada-Yukon Clean Water and Wastewater Fund. A mandatory site visit will occur at 1:00 pm on June 15, 2017 at the Village of Mayo Town OfÀce (310 6th Ave, Mayo, YT). Attendees will be required to sign the site visit registry to be eligible for tender submission. All tenders and proposals are subject to a Compliance Review performed by the Procurement Support Centre. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. Bidders and/or Proponents are advised to review documents to determine CertiÀcate of Recognition (COR) requirements for this project. View or download documents at: www.hpw.gov.yk.ca/tenders/
Highways and Public Works
Community Services
Community Services
Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is June 27, 2017. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Mackenzie Ingram at Mackenzie.Ingram@gov.yk.ca.
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Transportation
YUKON NEWS
Transportation
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
Transportation
Services
Trucks & Vans
Boats
Boats
Contractors
2010 F350, crew cap, dually, white, auto, 8’ box, 165k, like new light bar, new tire & winter tires, DVD, navigation remote starter, tow pkg, awesome truck, 778-232-6188
PROFESSIONAL BOAT REPAIR Fiberglass Supplies Marine Accessories FAR NORTH FIBERGLASS 49 MacDonald Rd Whitehorse, Yukon 393-2467
Yukon Wood and Steel Contracting Construction, Renovations, Decks, Bathrooms, Flooring, Ceiling, Plumbing, Greenhouse. We offer a all inclusive home improvement service. Please call for a free estimate. 867-399-3671 sangerer@hotmail.com
14’ aluminum boat, 20hp Johnson outboard motor, $2,200 obo. 6683675
16’ Hourston Glasscraft. good condition, spare parts, reconditioned seats, 60hp motor in excellent condition, with EZload trailer, downriggers, 2 gas cans, $4,500. 335-3331 18’ square stern fibreglass canoe, $450; 4.5 hp Merc outboard motor, $400. 250-488-4979 Faro 1984 Zeta 24’ Hard Top, 350/260 leg, 15hp kicker, dingy, BBQ, galley, head, canvas enclosure, GPS chart plotter fishfinder, radio, sleeps 5, tandem trailer, rough water boat, bottom paint. Call for price. 3321374 or 633-6506 1998 Bayliner Capri 2050 LS, great shape, new 5.0 Mercery inboard motor, 4 blade prop, 2016 Garmin Striker 5 fish finder, seats 8, great family boat, $11,500. 334-1020 or 334-1019. 19’ Lymann motor boat, model Fisherman w/inboarder 150hp, 4,200 RPM, and 21’ trailer, $4,000 obo. 633-4826 20 Hourston cabin cruiser, ex-Tagish RCMP boat, nice condition, 140 hp Johnson 2-stroke, 1988, & 6 hp Evinrude, 1984, everything works well, $3,200. 333-0564 24’ Almar Jetboat, V-8 Redline Ford. Hamilton 211 Jet, extended range tanks, great boat for hunting, fishing, charter, $24,000 US. Dave in Haines, 1-907-305-0633 Kayak, 16’ Cosma TX Sea Kayak by Seaward, plastic thermoform construction with rudder, yellow and white, c/w sprayskirt and cockpit cover, responsive, maneuverable, suitable for experienced paddler. 332-4073 Mercury 25hp outboard, 2-stroke, 20” shaft, $1,500. 821-4429 Pontoon boat, propane fridge, stove, double bed, 28’, 14’ wide control inside cabin, new motor w/70 hrs on it, good price. 867-399-4002 Rangeley 17-foot square stern royalex recreation/fishing boat in olive by Esquif. 51” beam, 3 seats, comes with oars, rated for 8hp short shaft, excellent condition, $2,600. 6685014
Tenders
Tenders
2011 BMW X5, diesel, AWD SUV, command start, 4-way cameras, backup camera, panoramic sunroof, navigation, dual DVD players, reduced to $29,800. 333-9020 2011 F150 King Ranch, loaded, metallic black/gold, one owner, exc cond inside & out, all maintenance records, $26,000. 633-3388
Utility Trailers 2007 Cjay heavy duty enclosed trailer, 3-6000p axles, insulated, 110v electric wired heat/light, needs generator, new tires/rims all round, brake bearings serviced trailer in Whitehorse. 778-232-6188 30’ PJ fifth wheel trailer, 2-10,000 lb tandem axles with dual wheels, ready to haul, tires & brakes are good, $9,000 obo. 633-6502 4 ST235/85R-16/14 Geostar G574 trailer tires, 14 ply, steel belted sidewalls, 2 already on 16” trailer rims w/8 on 6-1/2” bolt pattern, $750, near McQuesten. email us3wards@q.com TAIT’S TRAILERS www.taittrailers.com taits@northwestel.net Quality new and used Horse * Cargo * Equipment trailers for sale or rent Call Anytime 334-2194 Southern prices delivered to the Yukon Trailer for ATVs or Ski-doos, $500 obo. 633-3388
Boats 1.2 hp Gamefisher gasoline-powered outboard motor, new, never used, suitable for canoe, inflatable boat, trolling, $400. 668-3532
Volvo Penta D-4 counter rotating props, $250. 633-6502 Wanted: Teslin freighter canoe, 22’ or 24’, preferably in poor condition. Tim @ 250-715-5109 or hcc.tom@me.com YUKAN CANOE Canoe Instruction Courses Learn to Canoe with Yukan Canoe. We provide a safe, supportive and fun environment for you to learn or perfect your paddling skills. Many courses available: Intro, Whitewater, Lapie River, Swift Water Rescue, solo or tandem. We provide all needed gear. Check out our schedule at WWW.YUKANCANOE.COM
Services Carpentry/ Woodwork JOSEF GRAF PAINTING Certified Journeyman for 20 seasons Residential & Commercial Free estimates & Consultations 335-2300 Master quality in the Yukon MC RENOVATION Construction & Renovations Laminated floor, siding, decks, tiles. Kitchen, bathroom, doors, cabinets, windows, framing, board, painting. Drop ceiling, fences No job too small Free estimates Michael 336-0468 yt.mcr@hotmail.com
Tenders
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL TECHNICAL ADVISORY SERVICES RELATED TO SURFACE AND GROUND WATER Project Description: The Government of Yukon is soliciting professionals to provide technical advisory services related to surface and ground water challenges for Yukon mine sites and mine remediation projects. Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is June 22, 2017. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Geena Grossinger at Geena.Grossinger@gov.yk.ca. All tenders and proposals are subject to a Compliance Review performed by the Procurement Support Centre. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. View or download documents at: www.hpw.gov.yk.ca/tenders/
Energy, Mines and Resources
The VILLAGE OF TESLIN, in conjunction with DEISLEEN DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION Are anticipating the construction of the 2017 BST Works project, as well as potential start-up of the Wpending Drainage Ditches and Connector Road projects.
Tenders
8203969
633-6019 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7
2017
HOURS OF OPERATION FOR THE SHELTER: Tues - Fri: 12:00pm-7:00pm Sat 10:00am-6:00pm CLOSED Sundays & Mondays
Help control the pet overpopulation problem have your pets SPAYED OR NEUTERED. FOR INFORMATION CALL
PUBLIC TENDER
633-6019
CULVERTS REPLACEMENT, VARIOUS LOCATIONS, DEMPSTER HIGHWAY #5, YUKON, 2017/18 Project Description: Work includes replacing 4 existing culverts, reconstructing 150 metres of highway and resurfacing 3 kilometres of highway between kilometre 228 and kilometre 378 on the Dempster Highway. Submissions must be clearly marked with the above project title. The closing date for submissions is June 29, 2017. Please refer to the procurement documents for the closing time and location. Documents may be obtained from the Procurement Support Centre, Department of Highways and Public Works, Suite 101 104 Elliott Street, Whitehorse, Yukon (867) 667-5385. Technical questions may be directed to Sandra MacDougall at Sandra.Macdougall@gov.yk.ca. All tenders and proposals are subject to a Compliance Review performed by the Procurement Support Centre. The highest ranked or lowest priced submission may not necessarily be accepted. This tender is subject to Chapter Five of the Agreement on Internal Trade. The Yukon Business Incentive Policy may apply to this project. Bidders and/or Proponents are advised to review documents to determine CertiÀcate of Recognition (COR) requirements for this project. View or download documents at: www.hpw.gov.yk.ca/tenders/
Test drive a new Ford vehicle during Whitehorse Motors’ Drive One event. For every eligible test drive Ford Canada will donate $20 to the Humane Society Yukon. Drive4UR Community with WHITEHORSE MOTORS LTD & Drive One for the HUMANE SOCIETY YUKON!
Saturday, June 10, 2017 + 11:00 AM - 3:00 PM at Canadian Tire Parking Lot, 1001 Lewes Blvd, Whitehorse, YT
+ To pre register please go to the following URL: www.forddrive4ur.ca/en/driveonefortheyukonhumanesociety/Register
AVAILABLE FOR ADOPTION
Mr. Einstein
Morris
James
Bunny
L.J.
Nala
Blackie Chan
Oscar
Max
Missy
Dale
Reba
Brennan
Emmie
Dayze
The Village of Teslin and Deisleen Development Corporation are seeking
EXPRESSIONS OF INTEREST (E.O.I.) FOR THE SUPPLY OF CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT For Full Expression of Interest packages, including response forms, and to access further information, please contact: Deborah Dupont Deisleen Development Corporation Box 190, Teslin Yukon Y0A 1B0 Email: deisleendevcorp@gmail.com Phone: 867-390-2310
Highways and Public Works
Looking for NEW Business / Clients? Advertise in The Yukon News Classifieds!
Technical questions can be directed to: Adam Grinde (867) 333-9268
Take Advantage of our 6 month Deal... Advertise for 5 Months and
And more...
Deadline for submissions will be 4:00 p.m. June 16th, 2017
Get 1 MONTH OF FREE ADVERTISING
Come for a visit and meet your next furry family member!
Submissions will be opened at the Village of Teslin Council Chambers on June 16th, 2017 at 4:01 p.m.; contractors who submitted information are welcome to attend
T: 667-6285 • F: 668-3755 E: wordads@yukon-news.com
The projects listed are being funded under the Building Canada Fund.
Book Your Ad Today!
www.yukon-news.com
Max
Lydia
RUNNING RUNN NING AT LAR N LARGE RGE... If you have lost a pet, remember to check with City Bylaw: 668-8382
Check out our website at:
WWW.HUMANESOCIETYYUKON.CA
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
Services
YUKON NEWS
Pets & Livestock
Announcements
yukon-news.com
Announcements
Home Repairs
Pet Services
Coming Events
Coming Events
HANDYMAN SERVICES 24-7 *Renovations * Repairs
CANINES & COMPANY Dog Obedience School Classes Starting: May 23 and June 27 Tracking & Dog Puller Intro May 20-21 Private Lessons School Rental for Groups For info call 867-333-0505 www.caninesandcompany.ca
Yukon Beer Festival Society AGM Wednesday, June 28, 5:30-6:30, Beer Taster’s Social Club, 102 Wood St. Last year’s festival and plans for 2017 discussed.
Line of Life Association Yukon, will hold its AGM on Monday, June 26, 2016 at 11:00 AM. at Greenwood Place, 3090 3rd Ave. Join us. Call 867-667-6945 for information
Live History presents: Robin’s Redemption - an interactive mystery theatre performance at the Old Log Church Museum, June 16th & 17th. Visit robinsredemptionolcm.eventbrite.ca for more info! LOOKING FOR donations of household items for Humane Society sale. Please drop off at the Shelter, 126 Tlingit Road, any day of the week. No televisions or computers please. Moving out sale, #26 Blaker Place, Wolf Creek North, 1st right turn after golf club, floor wall tent, wood stove, small kitchen appliances etc. 3321950 Porter Creek Secondary School Council regular council meeting is Wednesday, June 14, 2017 at 6:30pm in the school library. Everyone is welcome. R & B and Latin Jazz evening with Lucie D & the Immortals June 10th, 7:30pm. 517 Grove Street (Back yard tent). chezlucielifevie@gmail.com Reading & Talk: Berton House writer Drew Hayden Taylor at Whitehorse Public Library, Thursday June 8 at 5:00 p.m. Free. Seniors amateur dart shooting starting October 3, 2017. Bring your own beverage. For more info contact Allan at 867-689-4946, phone or text Summer Daycare Opening, Teen Parent Centre, for all parents of our community. We provide two snacks a day, open Monday to Friday 7:30am to 5:00pm, highly qualified and experienced staff, exploring the local community attractions. info@teenparentcentreyukon.ca or phone 667-8336 Teen Parent Centre summer daycare now has open registration for toddlers to school-age. Program pamphlets will be available soon. Fore more info call 667-3421 or email info@teenparentcentreyukon.ca The Outreach Van is looking for volunteer muffin bakers. For more information on how to get involved, please contact the Outreach Van Coordinator at (867) 667-2970 or outreachvan@manyrivers.yk.ca The Teen Parent Centre is now offering New Summer Childcare to the Whitehorse Community. Registration now open for preschool to school-age through June 15th to Aug 18th. For info: info@teenparentcentreyukon.ca Thursday June 29, Yukon Film Society AGM, YFS Office 212 Lambert Street 2nd Floor. Free BBQ 5pm, AGM 6pm. Info 393-3456 or email: gm@yukonfilmsociety.com. Whitehorse General Hospital Women’s Auxiliary Monthly meeting: Monday June 12th, 7:30 pm at WGH New members welcome! Info: 6672087 YRTA (Yukon Retired Teachers) Breakfast Tuesday June 13th, 9:30am at 506 Main St Grill. Guests welcome! Info: 667-2644 Yukon Kennel Club 46th Annual Dog Show & Trials June 9 - 11, 9:00 am - 3:00 pm daily at Mount McIntyre.
Information
Information
Information
*Restorations * Maintenance
*Furniture Repair *Small Appliance Repair *Interior/Exterior Painting *Gutter Cleaning *Pressure Washing *Window Washing
393-2275
Misc Services
Pets
FOR SALE NATIVE BRAIN-TANNED HIDES and Tanned Beaver Pelts at reasonable prices. Phone (780)355-3557 If no one available please leave message or call (780)461-9677
Medium to large size hard plastic dog crate, $50 obo. 334-1846
FROSTY’S PLUMBING, HEATING, GAS and FIREWOOD SERVICES Plumbing repairs and installations. Special on firewood: May 1 - July 31, $200 per cord, Fox Lake burn wood. Call Frosty @ 867-689-8671 frostysfirewood@gmail.com LOG CABINS: Professional Scribe Fit log buildings at affordable rates. Contact: PF Watson, Box 40187 Whitehorse, YT Y1A 6M9 668-3632 THOMAS’S ROOFING SERVICE *Shingle Replacement *Metal Roofs *Tile Installation *Repairs (867) 334-8263
Painting & Decorating PASCAL REGINE PAINTING PASCAL AND REGINE Residential - Commercial Interior - Exterior Ceilings, Walls Textures, Floors Spray work Small drywall repair Excellent quality workmanship Free estimates pascalreginepainting@northwestel.net 633-6368
Roofing & Skylights Need A Roof? ALPHA ROOFING CONTRACTOR Residential * Commercial New Roof * Shingles Roof Inspection Re-roof * Leak Repair Torch-on * Tin Roof Journeyman High Quality Workmanship 332-4076
Pets & Livestock
Livestock 2 electric fencers, 1 solar powered, one is 110V, includes lots of wire, $200 obo. 668-3675 Case David Brown 885 tractor, good cond, diesel, 47.3hp, PTO & drawbar, 3-pt hitch, quick detach Allied front end loader, incl John Deere 503 brush cutter, $8,000 obo. 6683675 HORSE HAVEN HAY RANCH Irrigated Timothy/Brome mix No weeds or sticks Small squares 60 lbs plus 4 ft x 5 ft rounds 800 lbs Free delivery for larger orders Straw square bales available 335-5192 * 668-7218 QUALITY YUKON MEAT No hormones, steroids or additives Grass raised grain finished. Hereford beef - $5.50/lb Domestic pork - $5/lb Domestic wild boar - $6/lb Order now for guaranteed spring or fall delivery. Whole, half or custom order. Samples available 668-7218 * 335-5192 Two x one-year-old black Orpington roosters, healthy birds, just too many, $25 ea or both for $40. 6672276
Announcements
Coming Events Attention Golfers: 2017 PGI Tournament for Literacy is June 17 at Mountain View Golf Club. Call 6686280 for tickets & info Attn: All artists and crafts people. Cranberry Fair is now accepting applications for Nov. 26th sale. Info and application: cranberryfair@live.com or visit our new website: www.cranberryfair.com Application deadline July 31st. Book launch of Patti Flather’s play Paradise. Readings by Flather and Lillian Nakamura Maguire. Music by Jordy Walker. Wednesday June 7, Baked Cafe. Mingle 6:30 pm, readings 7 pm. Free. Children’s Day program at the Church of the Nazarene. June 11 at 10:45 am. A special service planned for kids, followed by a BBQ on our deck. Speaker Rev Megan Polowski, 2111 Centennial St. www.whitehorsenazarene.org City of Whitehorse Downtown and Marwell Plan-a-Thon, June 7-8, The Old Fire Hall, 1105 Front Street. Visit www.whitehorse.ca/downtown or www.whitehorse.ca/marwell for more event details. Corey Hirsch, former NHL goaltender, now mental health advocate to speak at Mental Health Association Yukon annual dinner on Thursday, June 8. For tickets call 668-6429 GIANT GARAGE SALE: June 10 Vanier Catholic School cafeteria in support of Destination Imagination Team and School Band. Drop off items June 9 6-9. Great Canadian Ultimate day, June 10, 2017 from coast to coast at Takhini Soccer Field. Free clinic for beginners at 2:30pm, demo game at 3:30pm, BBQ at 4:30pm. morrmic@hotmail.com for info Kluane Mountain Bluegrass Festival. June 9-11, 2017. Haines Junction, YT. Tickets available at Dean’s Strings in Whitehorse, The Little Green Apple in Haines Junction, and on line at WWW.yukonbluegrass.com
Yukon Food for Learning Association AGM, Wednesday, June 14, noon at 2064 2nd Avenue, Whse. Everyone welcome. 633-5352 or email ykfoodforlearning@gmail.com
Information GET RESULTS! Post a classified in 104 newspapers in just a few clicks. Reach almost 2 million people for only $395 a week for 25-word text ad or $995 for small display ad. Choose your province or all across Canada. Best value. Save over 85% compared to booking individually. www.communityclassifieds.ca or 1866-669-9222
WHERE DO I GET THE NEWS?
The Yukon News is available at these wonderful stores in Whitehorse:
HILLCREST
GRANGER
Airport Chalet Airport Snacks & Gifts
Bernie’s Race-Trac Gas Bigway Foods
Personals CANADA BENEFIT GROUP - Attention British Columbia residents: Do you or someone you know suffer from a disability? Get up to $40,000 from the Canadian Government. Toll-free 1-888-511-2250 or www.canadabenefit.ca/free-assessment CRIMINAL RECORD? Why suffer Employment/Licensing loss? Travel/Business opportunities? Be embarrassed? Think: Criminal Pardon. US Entry Waiver. Record Purge. File Destruction. Free Consultation 1800-347-2540. N.A. Meetings - Wed 7pm-8:30pm 404A Ogilvie St, BYTE Office; Fri: 7pm-8:30pm - 6210 - 6th Ave; Sunday 7pm-8:30pm, BYTE Office, 404A Ogilvie St.
PORTER CREEK
RIVERDALE: Coyote Video 38 Famous Video Goody’s Gas Green Garden Restaurant Super A Riverdale Tempo Gas Bar Super A Porter Creek Trails North DOWNTOWN:
Found: Blue denim bag with leather straps left on the riverfront wharf downtown on Thursday, May 25. Bag contains mostly baby clothes and lunch bag. Pick up at the Yukon News, 211 Wood Street between 8am and 5pm Monday to Friday.
Canadian Tire Cashplan Coles (Chilkoot Mall) The Deli Edgewater Hotel Your Independent Grocer Fourth Avenue Petro Mac’s Fireweed Books Ricky’s Restaurant
LOST: Male tabby cat with white belly, paws, green eyes, Rowdy, approx 200 miles south of Whitehorse on Alaska Highway en route to Kenai Peninsula, Alaska. 907-3106688
AND …
N.A. Meetings - Wed 7pm-8:30pm 404A Ogilvie St, BYTE Office; Fri: 7pm-8:30pm - 6210 - 6th Ave; Sunday 7pm-8:30pm, BYTE Office, 404A Ogilvie St.
Lost & Found
Good Night! Wind up your day with
www.yukon-news.com everything you need.
Kopper King McCrae Petro Takhini Gas Yukon College Bookstore
Riverside Grocery Riverview Hotel Shoppers on Main Shoppers Qwanlin Mall Superstore Superstore Gas Bar Tags Walmart Well-Read Books Westmark Whitehorse Yukon Inn Yukon News Yukon Tire
Yukon Water Board – Application Notice Office des eaux du Yukon – Avis de demande Application Number Numéro de la demande
Applicant/Licensee Demandeur/Titulaire
Water Source Location Point d’eau/Lieu
Type of Undertaking Type d’entreprise
Deadline for Comments 4:00pm Date limite pour commentaires, avant 16 h
PM17-002
Joel Spurlock
20 Mile Creek, Tributary of 60 Mile Creek
Placer
July 4, 2017
PM17-036
Vencan Resources Ltd
Bruin Creek, Tributary of Forty Mile River
Placer
July 4, 2017
MS17-061
YG – Hwys and Public Works – TEB
Lucky Creek, Simpson Creek, Simpson Lake, Tuchitua River and Unnamed creek, Tributary of Simpson Lake and Frances River
Miscellaneous
June 21, 2017
MN10-86-4
Assignment to Government of Yukon from City of Dawson
Aquifer under City of Dawson
Municipal
June 21, 2017
Any person may submit comments or recommendations, in writing, by the deadline for notice. Applications are available for viewing on the Yukon Water Board’s online registry, WATERLINE at http://www.yukonwaterboard.ca or in person at the Yukon Water Board office. For more information, contact the Yukon Water Board Secretariat at 867-456-3980.
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Toute personne peut soumettre ses commentaires ou ses recommandations à l’Office avant la date limite indiquée sur le présent avis. Pour voir les demandes, consultez le registre en ligne WATERLINE au http://www.yukonwaterboard.ca ou rendez-vous au bureau de l’Office des eaux du Yukon. Pour de plus amples renseignements, veuillez communiquer avec le secrétariat de l’Office au 867-456-3980.
THE YUKON NEWS IS ALSO AVAILABLE AT NO CHARGE IN ALL YUKON COMMUNITIES AND ATLIN, B.C.
“YOUR COMMUNITY CONNECTION” WEDNESDAY • FRIDAY
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YUKON NEWS
yukon-news.com
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
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