VALLEY NEWS
Chronic wasting disease worries RDEK
By Lyonel Doherty editor@columbiavalleypioneer.comA fatal, infectious disease among deer, elk, moose and caribou is concerning biologists and East Kootenay regional directors.
After hearing a presentation about chronic wasting disease on March 8, board members expressed worry about its potential spread.
Holger Bohm from the Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship spoke on behalf of wildlife health biologist Cait Nelson. He noted the disease, caused by an abnormal protein (prion), accumulates in the body and attacks the central nervous system which leads to neurological disease and death. It particularly threatens conservation values in cervids, such as white-tail and mule deer.
“Most affected animals look normal . . . it takes a while for the protein to get a hold of the host,” Bohm said, adding the disease weakens the animal and makes it slower. But the problem is hard to detect and you rarely see the effects in the wild, he pointed out.
“The message is we need all the samples we can get our hands on to detect where the disease is sitting.”
-Holger Bohm
Bohm said the disease has been in the US and Canada for a while, and if left unchecked, its prevalence will definitely increase.
In a free range population there can be up to 25 per cent prevalence, and in high density pockets it can jump to 50 per cent, he explained.
Bohm reported there were two confirmed cases of the disease in the Kootenay region on January 31: a mule deer that was harvested by a hunter, and a white-tail deer that was killed on a roadway.
As a result, an incident management team was established to assess the risk and monitor the movement of the disease, he said.
“We’re keeping a very close eye on that to assess the risk of that disease spreading from those two first positives we found.”
Bohm said that under the Animal Health Act there will be increased mandatory testing and a restriction of the transfer of carcasses. Disposal sites will also be designated.
He said the next steps include testing roadkill and getting hunters on board to submit samples (heads).
“The message is we need all the samples we can get our hands on to detect where the disease is sitting,” Bohm
told directors, adding that early detection will help address the problem.
He noted there are three options available to the ministry: eliminate, suppress, and monitor. But he admitted that trying to get rid of the disease doesn’t work since it’s “almost impossible to kill” because the prion can survive in grass (that deer eat) for many years.
Suppressing the disease seems to work better, Bohm pointed out, adding that it will increase dramatically if nothing is done.
He stressed they must “listen to the experts” and apply effective strategies.
“Hunters are a key demographic that we need to work with,” he noted, citing that public support is critical.
In her report, Nelson said if nothing is done to curtail the disease there will be long-term irreversible impacts, such as fewer animals and decreased hunting opportunities.
“The medicine doesn’t taste good but it (our strategies) could work,” she said.
Regional director Steve Fairbairn, mayor of Elkford, commented the issue is “terribly important” and a “critical time in history.” He then asked if urban deer culls are worthwhile as a preventative measure to help control the potential spread of the disease in the southeast Kootenays.
Bohm said yes, noting the urban deer population is at greater risk, pointing to white-tail and mule deer. “I think it’s more of an issue of which animals group up more.”
Another board director admitted it is a “sad day for wildlife” in the east Kootenays.
Bohn was asked if range cattle can pick up the disease. The answer was no; it does not spread to livestock which has its own disease called “mad cow.”
Area F director Susan Clovechok asked if the disease is always fatal. Again, Bohm said yes.
“It takes a while but it’s almost absolutely fatal,” he stated, adding it can take two or three years before the animal dies. Totally healthy-looking animals can carry it.”
Another director asked if the disease can move through the food chain, via wolves, for example.
Bohm said trappers like to use road kill as bait, and if the diseased meat is eaten, the disease can spread. He also noted that deer and elk can get the disease through nose contact and by eating prion infected grass.
It is even possible for turkey vultures to spread the disease from disposal sites, Bohm said.
Board chair Rob Gay admitted that what he heard during the presentation was “scary,” adding that he became very concerned when he read about the two first confirmed cases.
This past week, March 4 to March 11, the Columbia Valley RCMP responded to 50 calls for service. The following is a summary of some of the files our officers responded to:
On March 7 police were called to the 1000 block of 13th Street for a vehicle that had driven into a building and had struck a male.
Upon arrival, police were able to determine the driver was impaired by alcohol and was operating a vehicle without adequate brakes.
The 35-year-old female driver was arrested for impaired driving and brought back to the detachment for breath samples. She is now facing impaired operation
of a motor vehicle charges. The male was taken to hospital for treatment of non life-threatening injuries.
On March 10 the Columbia Valley RCMP were called to a disturbance in Invermere. When police arrived, they located a female and a male who had been bear sprayed. The investigation led police to arrest a 28-year-old male in Edgewater. Charges of assault with a weapon have been recommended to Crown.
As spring and warmer weather are quickly approaching, I would like to remind drivers to ensure they are slowing down to 30 km/h in our playground zones between dawn and dusk, as well as the school zones from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on school days.
The warmer weather and longer days will bring more kids outside to play.
Shipka concludes SD#6 role
Columbia Valley Pioneer staff
Rocky Mountain School District No. 6 has announced that senior administrator Karen Shipka has concluded her duties as superintendent. But the reason behind her leaving is not being disclosed.
Shipka held the position since 2020.
Board chair Amber Byklum thanked Shipka for her many years of service in public education, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Under her leadership the district showed in-
creased student achievement and a commitment to early learning and childcare, Byklum said.
Acting Superintendent Steve Wyer told the Pioneer that he is not able to comment on the reason why people’s employment relationship with the district change.
Wyer, whose previous title was assistant superintendent, will remain as acting superintendent until further notice. He stated that more information will likely be forthcoming regarding the search for a new superintendent.
AKBLG comes to Radium
By Steve Hubrecht steve@columbiavalleypioneer.comThe Association of Kootenay and Boundary Local Governments (AKBLG) meeting is coming to the Village of Radium Hot Springs in little more than a month’s time, bringing an influx of municipal government officials to the Columbia Valley and giving the village an economic boost during the typically quiet shoulder season.
This annual convention of regional officials takes place in a different Kootenay community each year. This year Radium hosts the event, which will see 150 delegates from local governments descend on the village, along with 14 exhibitors and several special speakers. It runs from Friday, April 19 to Sunday, April 21 at the Radium Hot Springs Centre.
The AKBLG meeting was last in the Columbia Valley a decade ago, when it was hosted by Copper Point Resort near the Highway 95/93 crossroads. You could say the valley is overdue to have the AKBLG meeting come back. That’s because Radium was originally scheduled to host the event in spring 2020.
The AKBLG organizing committee was making its final inspection of the Radium Hot Springs Centre in late March 2020, just as the COVID-19 pandemic was breaking across Canada.
“Everything was starting to shut down at the very same time the committee was here,” said Radium Hot Springs Mayor Mike Gray. (Gray was a Radium councillor back in 2020.)
Obviously the meeting, along with almost every other aspect of public life, was put on hold.
“We did some quick shifting on the fly, and the plan was that we would host it in 2021,” recalled Gray.
“Well, that didn’t turn out either. So we (the village) thought we’d take a break and let another community take a stab at hosting it the following year (in 2022).”
By spring 2022, things were back to normal enough that the meeting went ahead in Nelson, then in spring 2023 it was in Cranbrook. Now it’s finally Ra dium’s turn.
“The third time’s the charm for Radium,” said Gray, wryly, referencing the cancelled 2020 and 2021 versions of the event.
The village is excited, he explained. “It’s a great chance to showcase our community, and showcase the Radium Hot Springs Centre . . . it’s also a nice economic boost to the community. Much of the benefit of the conference will be to local accommodators, local suppliers, local caterers, and event staff who are local.”
Gray is particularly enthusiastic to take meeting delegates on tours to Columbia Valley Local Conservation Fund sites, to the Canfor sawmill in Radium, and to the Radium water system.
“The AKBLG is a good opportunity to learn about what other municipalities are doing, what’s working well for them. As a delegate you get a lot of ideas about what’s happening in other (Kootenay) communities, and how those ideas could work in your community,” he said.
Invermere Mayor Al Miller said the meeting, although not directly impacting his community, will be good for the Columbia Valley as a whole, “showing off” what makes this area special.
“It’s in shoulder season, when tourism usually tapers off. So having the extra visitors will be a boost to the hospitality industry,” said Miller. He was also happy that travel expenses for Invermere officials attending the AKBLG will be cheaper than normal.
THAT PART OF
QUARTER OF SECTION 28 LYING NORTH AND EAST OF THE RIGHT OF WAY OF THE KOOTENAY CENTRAL RAILWAY AS SHOWN ON PLAN 1155 TOWNSHIP 23 RANGE 18 WEST OF THE 5TH MERIDIAN KOOTENAY DISTRICT EXCEPT (1) PARCEL A (REFERENCE PLAN 74066I) AND (2) PART INCLUDED IN PLAN 6516 AND (3) EPP74485.
Inquiries/comments to this proposal must be submitted to William (Bill) Prytula, 4419 13 St NE, Salmon Arm, BC V1E 1C9 by April 14, 2024.
Only written inquiries received by the above date will be responded to.
Information about this proposal can be obtained by contacting William (Bill) Prytula, 250-344-8183, wprytula@gmail.com.
THANKS FOR YOUR suppORT!
The Radium Hot Springs Volunteer Fire Department would like to thank all the individuals who have helped us throughout the year by donating their recyclable containers. Your support enables us to put on our anual fireworks display on New Year’s Eve, and without your donations, this annual festive event wouldn’t be the same.
Huge thanks to Bighorn Meadows Resort and the Springs Golf Course for their continued support.
The Radium Hot Springs Volunteer Fire Department would like to thank the following for their help and support for our annual Kids’ Christmas Party:
• Mike Gray
• Judy & Rick Fowler
• Rory Hromadnik
• Radium BC Liquor Store
• Marlis Hes, Melva Barrault
• Nick, for his dedication in making this event a success
• And especially to all the kids and parents who came out for a fun time.
Thanks to all the firefighters who helped with the setup, and to Nick for his music.
See you next year!
Sincerely,
Radium Hot Springs Volunteer Fire Department
Not in this life
What some people wouldn’t give to be young again — to ride the wings of that sweet bird of youth, to be a teenager once more.
On second thought . . . not in this life!
That blasted time machine screwed up and should have been set to the early 1970s, not the 21st century. Why, the biggest youth dilemma back then was what TV show to watch on Saturday morning; it was either Tarzan or Adventures in Rainbow Country in between commercials of “I’d like to buy the world a Coke.”
Yes, one truly has to empathize with today’s youth and the pressures placed upon them by society and their peers. And after reading about the waning mental health of teenagers, according to the BC Adolescent Health Survey, it makes one a little sad, particularly if you’re a parent or an educator.
Growing up 30 years ago, teens didn’t have to fret about social media or online threats from bullies or predators. If you had a beef with someone, you settled it in the school yard and there was a chance that you became friends after that. If it did come to a fist fight, it was one on one; there was none of this 10 on one (like today). And when someone went down, it was over; you walked away without having to worry about the whole school seeing the video that night.
With the advent of Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat, anxiety levels among teens have shot through the gymnasium roof. Who cares if you have 50,000 likes; it doesn’t make you a better person. You’ve been unfriended or blocked? Big deal; there are many other people who would love to have a new friend to confide in without being judged or juried.
Kudos to Keira Neal and Daven McMurray from David Thompson Secondary School for trying to convince their peers to give up Snapchat in order to reclaim their lives and stop being slaves to that psychologically debilitating platform.
Hats off also goes to Rocky Mountain School District No. 6 for exploring and initiating programs to improve the mental health of students suffering from stress and depression.
The board is preparing to look at a policy on cell phone restrictions in schools following the provincial government’s announcement in January that it will limit cell phone use by students in class starting this fall. In addition, it will pass legislation to hold companies accountable for their addictive social media platforms that harm youth. Furthermore, the government will introduce services to remove intimate images online and go after the predators who post them.
Well, it’s about time. In fact, what took them so long to act? Another suicide? Namely 12-year-old Carson Cleland who was the victim of online sextortion in October 2023.
These new measures by the BC government are commendable, but one has to wonder how it is going to hold these predators accountable on the deep, dark web, which is getting darker by the minute.
Lyonel Doherty, editorCouncil missing opportunity
I was so excited to fill out the recent Columbia Valley Chamber of Commerce survey regarding a pedestrian-only main street feature on Saturdays and/or Fridays and Saturdays.
I was overwhelmingly in favour of Invermere trying some plan of this nature, but the businesses have spoken, and for the third time have shot down any willingness to approach this subject as a collective Chamber of Commerce initiative, rather than a main street exclusive initiative.
I believe this is a missed opportunity and quite frankly shortsighted. I have visited farmer/artist markets in locations around the world, and the use of a pedestrian-only main street is common for the duration of the market hours for the season.
In my view, it only adds to the vibrancy of the street level business community on those days. In Invermere, there are some market days that are so busy that the sidewalks on main are so crowded. I simply go home, not venturing in to one shop.
Invermere seems like the ideal setting for a pedestrian-only initiative.
Since we have moved here we often remark about the activeness of community members and we should
want to enhance that any way we can.
I think most people would agree that the proposal tried to be flexible enough (offering several options that could be tweaked) and that most residents and visitors alike would be amenable to parking in the designated parking lots as they do for, say, the Remembrance Day ceremony every year.
I might add that the Chamber of Commerce and the District of Invermere also represent the businesses that are not located on main street.
By trying something new, and redirecting traffic for one day per week in the summer season, perhaps their businesses might gain some exposure that they would gladly welcome.
Lastly, why is it so easily dismissed by the District of Invermere? As stated, “the results showed a clear majority of local residents either strongly agree or somewhat agree with creating a vehicle-free pedestrian area in downtown Invermere on some days…” And yet, business gets to decide this for everyone; no compromise, no cooperation, no time limited pilot project to see the results, make adjustments and create something that would benefit all users.
Lori Czoba, InvermereLETTERS
Save bats before it’s too late
I read the article in the March 7 edition of the Pioneer, ‘Barn bats seek new home in Fairmont’, with great disappointment that this colony is facing homelessness unless a location can be found for their new roost.
So many good points are made in the article to offer them a new location when their home of many years is demolished this spring. With the imminent threat of white nose syndrome in our area, a disease that has already killed millions of bats worldwide, bats are already facing serious threats to their populations.
These bats will be returning soon and need somewhere to raise their pups, which they only have one of per year.
When a project is funded and offered to the Fairmont Hot Springs Resort as an alternative to save the bats, it is hard to fathom why they would not take advantage of it. I hope they will see the merits of offering a new location so these protected species of bats can be saved before it is too late.
Linda Pfeiffer, Fairmont Hot Springs
New home needed for colony
The Kootenay Community Bat Project (KCBP), a group dedicated to bat conservation, has secured funding to build a bat condo to replace the barn.
This specialized structure would provide a safe roost for the bats, ensuring their continued presence in the area. However, despite the generous offer of using the old barn wood for the condo, the Fairmont Resort has declined to provide a location for its construction on their property.
"This is a critical situation for the bat colony," explains Elodie Kuhnert, a bat biologist with the KCBP. "Without a new roosting site, these bats will be forced to find shelter elsewhere, which could lead to a decline in their numbers."
Kuhnert also mentioned, "DNA tests have shown that the barn is used by two different species, and we suspect a third one."
The resort's decision comes as a surprise to many, given their initial willingness to contribute to the conservation effort. However, their concerns about noise and disruption to guests have led them to decline the
offer of hosting the bat condo on their grounds.
“While we acknowledge the resort's concerns, it's important to note that not providing the condo on their property won't necessarily deter the bats from seeking shelter elsewhere. They may end up in other buildings where they might not be as welcome, causing more concerns to the resort’s guests,” says Kuhnert. "We are exploring other options for the bat condo. Our priority is to find a suitable location before the demolition begins in April."
With the deadline approaching, the KCBP is urging community members to suggest potential locations for the bat condo. Ideally, the site should be within the bats' foraging range (within one kilometre from the barn would be ideal, the closer the better) and provide protection from predators and the elements.
"We're hopeful we can find a new home for these bats," says Kuhnert. "Their presence indicates a healthy ecosystem, and preserving them is crucial for natural pest control."
Kootenay Community Bat Project
The Kootenay Community Bat Project (KCBP) is working hard to find a new location to house the local bat colony in Fairmont. “This is a critical situation for the bat colony,” explains Elodie Kuhnert, a bat biologist with the KCBP. “Without a new roosting site, these bats will be forced to find shelter elsewhere, which could lead to a decline in their numbers.”
PHOTO SUBMITTED
NEWSPAPER
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
Notice of Application to the Comptroller of Water Rights under the Water Utility Act and the Utilities Commission Act
Notice is hereby given by Fairmont Hot Springs Utilities Ltd. that an application has been made to the Comptroller of Water Rights for a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity for the proposed construction and operation of a waterworks distribution system to serve the following land:
Civic Address: 4893 Wills Road
Legal Description: Lot 1, District Lot 138, Kootenay District Plan 18183
Except Plan NEP 88642
Parcel ID: 013-087-568
Any person wishing further information in connection with this application should apply directly to:
Fairmont Hot Springs Utilities Ltd.
5225 Fairmont Hot Springs Road
Fairmont Hot Springs, BC V0B 1L1
Any objections to this application are to be forwarded to the Secretary to the Comptroller of Water Rights, Ministry of Forests, Lands & Natural Resource Operations, PO Box 9340 Stn Prov Govt, Victoria, BC V8W 9M1 (chris.mcmillan@gov. bc.ca) and should be received on or before: April 15th, 2024
Fairmont Hot Springs Utilities Ltd.
BC Timber Sales
Forest Stewardship Plan #914
East Kootenay Operating Area
The public is invited to review and comment on the Forest Stewardship Plan (FSP) #914 amendment being prepared by BC Timber Sales. Comments will be accepted on or before March 28, 2024.
In the case of Visual Sensitivity Unit #412, #417 and #418 in the Rocky Mountain Forest District, West of the Village of Radium, BC, the Holders of this FSP will adopt as a result or strategy, a lower Visual Quality Objective (VQO) than the one defined by the District Manager on March 14, 2003 for that VSU as follows:
• A Partial Retention VQO may be temporarily exceeded and achievement of a Maximum Modification VQO will be acceptable for VSU #412, #417 and #418. This reduced VQO achievement is intended to facilitate wildfire salvage logging within the Invermere Landscape Unit.
Bruce Creek – Invermere TSA
Maps can be viewed online at: https://bit.ly/3Iv46vz
Comments must be submitted in writing to:
Inga Smith-Bailey, RPF, Planning Forester
East Kootenay Field Team
1902 Theatre Rd, Cranbrook, BC, V1C 7G1
Inga.Smith-Bailey@gov.bc.ca 778-520-2784
Toby Creek Nordic Ski Club thanks our community sponsors who supported club athletes to attend the 2024 Nordiq Canada Ski Nationals in Nakkertok, Quebec, March 9-16!
First Prize: RK Heli Ski awarded to: Helga Shield
Second Prize: Energy Advise, thinkBright Homes Ltd awarded to: Stephanie Borland
Third Prize: awarded to: Bruce Hamstead
Local officials have mixed views on Bill 44
By Steve Hubrecht steve@columbiavalleypioneer.comA provincial bill that prohibits municipal governments in B.C. from holding public hearings on development proposals already consistent with their official community plans (OCP) has been getting a lot of attention lately.
Bill 44 was introduced last fall by the B.C. government, and ever since one aspect of it has come under heavy criticism — that if a development proposal (even one that requests a zoning change) is consistent with an existing OCP, then municipal governments are no longer legally allowed to have a public hearing on the matter.
The bill is intended to streamline housing creation, and help tackle the province-wide housing crisis.
Here in the Columbia Valley local officials offered mixed views on the new bill.
Invermere Mayor Al Miller said he understands the intent of the bill “but I do think it’s very important for our local citizens to have a say . . . I don’t like the idea that they may not have a say, or at least feel like they don’t have a say. We value citizen input on most subjects, and that holds true for development proposals.”
Miller noted that even though a proposed development may align with Invermere’s OCP, and indeed may even already be allowed under current zoning bylaws, it can still have impacts on neighbourhoods and generate controversy. These impacts may not have been thought of when the OCP and zoning bylaws were initially put in place, the mayor noted.
He gave several examples of properties in Invermere — one at the south end of Westside Park that is already zoned for a “gas bar” (a very small gas service station), for instance, or the one downtown that once was to be the site of a large resort-style convention centre and hotel. Both those developments were initially proposed more than a decade ago, but neither ultimately came to fruition. In both these instances, zoning is already in place for these properties allowing development (although the zoning for the resort-convention centre was ‘down-zoned’ — i.e. somewhat scaled back — several years ago), and theoretically a developer could now come and revive long dormant plans for these properties — and the District of Invermere would not be allowed to hold a public hearing about it.
Miller is not sure that’s right. “I think there should be at the very least an opportunity for the public to have specific input.”
Radium Mayor Mike Gray sees the issue a bit differently, although he did agree that development proposals in Radium typically don’t stir controversy as much as those in Invermere seem to.
Invermere Mayor Al Miller is concerned that Bill 44 may not give the public enough input on developments. FILE PHOTO
“There’s still public consultation on what type of development residents want or don’t want. It’s just that the timeline for it has shifted, to when the OCP is being done. It’s a shift to proactive public feedback,” said Gray. “The bill also doesn’t stop public consultation on very controversial things. If someone proposed setting up, say, a nuclear reactor in town or a pig farm, there would still need to be a public hearing.”
He pointed out that, in the past, Radium has held many public hearings on relatively mundane development proposals which drew only one or two curious residents. Cutting that out, and saving on the bureaucracy entailed is not necessarily a bad thing, according to Gray, “as long as you play within the OCP guidelines.”
Gray noted the Village of Radium Hot Springs is currently in the process of re-doing its OCP, so Radium residents here will have plenty of chances to make their voices heard on development as the village creates its new plan. He also said that if Radium residents do have strong concerns about Bill 44, he will gladly bring them to provincial officials.
The Regional District of East Kootenay (RDEK) has already addressed the topic, with RDEK planning supervisor Karen MacLeod explaining in a press release in January that Bill 44 impacts “not only how the (RDEK) board considers the applications, but also the timing of the public’s ability to comment on affected applications.”
In the future, when development zoning amendment proposals that are consistent with the OCP come forward to the RDEK board, instead of a public hearing, the RDEK will “provide a notice prior to the board meeting where the application will be considered,” outlined MacLeod. These notices will be posted on the RDEK’s website (on the ‘meetings and notices page’).
“The important thing for the public to know is that while the process might look a little different for some applications, the ability for the public to engage and provide comment remains available,” added MacLeod.
Panorama gears up for Pride, ski festival
By Steve Hubrecht steve@columbiavalleypioneer.comPanorama Mountain Resort will host its first ever Pride and Ski Festival in a week’s time.
The inaugural edition of what the resort plans to be an annual event will run from Friday, March 22 to Sunday, March 24.
“Diversity and inclusivity have always been encouraged at the resort. The Pride and Ski Festival is just another way to showcase that to our guests, to our staff, and to the whole Columbia Valley,” said Panorama food and beverage manager and festival organizer Cory Archer. “We were looking at what we were missing as a resort and we thought this was something we could add. It’s something to celebrate the LGBTQIA2S+ community.”
Panorama’s Pride and Ski Festival joins a growing number of ski resort-based Pride festivals in B.C., some of which have very long histories (such as the one at Whistler, which dates back more than three decades) and others which are brand new.
Adding a Pride festival at Panorama is important, outlined Archer, even though there is already a Pride Festival hosted by Columbia Valley Pride in Invermere each June. That’s in part because the resort is closed when the mid-June Columbia Valley Pride Festival happens, Archer told the Pioneer, but also in part because “at the resort we might be capturing a completely different demographic . . . resorts (having Pride festivals) adds another layer to help generate awareness of the LGBTQIA2S+ community and the Pride community. It is important that, as a resort, we promote that Pride is for everyone.”
The festival is headlined by a drag ball on Sunday, March 23 featuring world-famous drag performer Miss Vanjie. Locally famous drag performer April Storm (also known as Tim Richards) will open. But there’s plenty more, as the festival also encompasses several on-mountain events, including a Pride guided mountain tour, an Amazing Race-style scavenger hunt across the entire resort, and a Showoff Your Pride ski that will see participants dressed in their Pride finest rip down the Showoff
run. The off-mountain events include a welcome party, a guided snowshoe tour, an apres ski party and disco, a wine and paint afternoon, an after-party (following the ball), morning-after yoga, and a sparkling breakfast.
“As a born-and-raised local, it’s almost overwhelming to see this come to life. I’m definitely proud of what we’ve put together,” said Archer.
Miss Vanjie has featured for two seasons as a contestant on the popular reality television show RuPaul’s Drag Race, and has toured and performed around the world.
Asked how a performer of her renown decided to perform at a ski resort in a rural part of B.C, Vanjie told the Pioneer, “Girl, I don’t know, my agent calls and I answer. Did I have to Google where this was? Yes. Am I excited to be performing somewhere I haven't been? Yes. Can I ski? No.”
She added that it is important to support Pride events in small, rural and remote areas, such as Invermere and Panorama Mountain Resort, just as much as in larger urban centres “be cause Pride is everyday, like anyone can and should celebrate.”
What can drag ball goers expect from Miss Vanjie’s performance?
“I’m gonna bring some heat to the snow town, so take them puffer coats off,” she said.
When the Pioneer asked Vanjie if she wanted to add any further comment on the upcoming Pride and Ski Festival, she was quick to quip: “Yeah, where do they keep those hot French ski instruc tors?”
April Storm, who will open for Van jie, told the Pioneer that “it’s pretty excit ing to see support for a local Pride festi val from someone of this magnitude . . . Miss Vanjie is a high energy performer.”
Panorama president and chief ex ecutive officer Steve Paccagnan said Panorama Mountain and ski resorts can support Pride events and the 2SLGBTQIA+ community through ac tively promoting inclusivity. “By show casing support through Pride-themed events, creating safe spaces, offering diversity training for staff and collab orating with local LGBTQ+ organiza tions, mountain resorts can foster and strengthen a welcoming environment in the outdoor community.”
OUT OF OFFICE…
The Outdoor Learning Store’s Guide to Spring Break
The recent emergence of sunny blue skies throughout the Columbia Valley signals the end of hibernation and the arrival of spring break. If you’re pondering ways to keep your kids entertained, The Outdoor Learning Store offers a wide selection of resources to encourage the whole family to step into spring together.
Fostering a spirit of outdoor learning, here are our top resources for spring break:
1. A Walk In Nature Journal:
Local children’s book author Jen Baker, set to release her debut chapter book this spring, has crafted a nature journal brimming with quotes, facts, writing prompts, and ample space to record sketches, field notes, and
species observations. This journal sparks the imagination and establishes strong connections to nature and each other.
2. The Big Book Of Nature Activities:
A resource perfect for families in the Columbia Valley, ‘The Big Book of Nature Activities is a comprehensive guide featuring nature-based skills and seasonal activities. It’s packed with crafts, stories, and inspiration to make outdoor learning fun.
3. The Book of Nature Connection: Considered a valuable resource for parents, ‘The Book of Nature Connection’ contains 70 sensory-rich activities. From crafting acorn whistles to scent scavenger hunts, this book
provides hands-on, accessible activities that contribute to an immersive nature experience amidst the stunning landscapes of the Columbia Valley.
Need More? Try our Nature Explorer Pack: Inspire outdoor exploration with our Nature Explorer Backpack, including National Geographic Binoculars, a Handheld Field Magnifier, Two-way Nature Viewer, and guides. It’s the perfect add-on to help kids discover our local flora and fauna.
The Outdoor Learning Store has the tools to create a memorable spring break. Explore all of our nature-based resources at www. outdoorlearningstore.com and make this break a time of shared discovery in the outdoors.
Thursday, March 14
• 10:15am-1:00pm: Tech Tutors. Invermere Public Library
• 2:00pm-4:00pm: Tech Tutors. Radium Public Library Free one-on-one help with your computer, phone or tablet! Assistance with websites or electronic forms. Learn about games on your phone or iPad. Please book an appointment with the library you would like to attend. By Columbia Basin Alliance for Literacy.
• 10:30am-11:30am: Senior’s Fitness Columbia Valley Centre, $2 drop-in. **please note that this week this event will take place at the Invermere Seniors Hall**
• 11:30am-12:00pm: Little Lambs – Baby Program. Radium Public Library. Join us for songs, rhymes, and stories with your babies! No registration required.
• 2:00pm-3:00pm: Seniors Tea. Invermere Public Library. Join us for a cup of tea and a chat on the 2nd & 4th Thursday of each month. All welcome!
• 6:45pm: Texas Hold ‘Em Poker Invermere Legion. $30 buy-in. 7:30pm: Families Housing that Fits. Zoom meeting with host Ben Postmus. Inclusive and supportive housing in your community. diversefamilyroots@gmail.com
• 7:30pm: Trivia Night Windermere Whitehouse Pub. Host Mandi Cox $3/ person, teams of more than 6 will be split into two groups. Ages 19+
Friday, March 15
• 9:00pm: BC/DC – High Voltage Rock & Roll. Ullr welcomes back BC/ DC! This is the biggest show of the year and is not to be missed. An all AC/DC tribute band that has sold out every year. Get your tickets now on eventbrite. $30 in advance or $35 at the door if there are any left.
• 10:30am-11:00am: Family Storytime. Invermere Public Library. Join us weekly on Fridays for Family Storytime at the library! With stories, songs & a craft. Geared towards preschool age (2-5) but all welcome.
• 2:00pm-3:00pm: Friday Funday. Invermere Public Library. Crafternoon: fun new craft each session. Drop-in programming. Drop-off for ages 7+. Younger children are more than welcome to join with a grown-up.
• 2:00pm-4:30pm: Wild Woolies. Radium Hot Springs Public Library. Join our fibre arts circle! Everyone and every skill level welcome. No registration required.
• 6:30pm - close: Meat Draw and 50/50 in the Legion! Members and guests welcome!
Saturday, March 16
• 2:00pm-3:00pm: Seedy Saturday. Invermere Public Library. Join us to launch our Seed Library for the 2024 growing season! Learn seed saving tips and tricks with local enthusiast and take-home info sheets.
Bring seeds to swap with others & to donate to our collection! We have envelopes available for donations going into our seed library. All welcome!
• 10:30am-11:00am: Family Storytime. Invermere Public Library. Join us weekly on Saturdays for Family Storytime at the library! With stories, songs & a craft. Geared towards preschool age (2-5) but all welcome.
• 11:00am-12:30pm: LEGO/Duplo Club Invermere Public Library. We'll have Lego, Duplo, big blocks & more out to play with on Saturday mornings! All ages welcome.
• 2:00pm-4:00pm: Buddy Reading. Invermere Public Library. Contact us to book a 30 minute session to read with a librarian. Practice reading aloud one-on-one to build skill, confidence & a love of reading! Open to all ages and reading abilities.
• 6:30pm: Meat Draw and 50/50 in the Legion! Members and guests welcome!
Sunday, March 17
• 7:00pm: St. Patrick’s Day with the O’Sullivans. Ullr Bar. Sunday March 17th Ullr Bar celebrates St Patrick's Day with local Irish band The O’Sullivans. Guinness, whisky and authentic Irish live band that starts at 7:00pm. This is a free event so show up early and make sure you don't miss out!
• 2:00pm: Cards, Cribbage and Darts Come to the Legion and have some fun! Members and guests welcome.
• 7:00pm: Live Music Horsethief Creek Pub & Eatery. Accompanied minors are permitted. No cover.
• 7:30pm: Dads Matter. Zoom meeting with host Ben Postmus. Dads connecting, Dads Supporting, Dads Inspiring. Do you have a son or daughter with Diverse Abilities? So do I. diversefamilyroots@gmail.com
Monday, March 18
• 10:00am-11:00am: Senior's Yoga Columbia Valley Centre, Invermere. $2 drop in, open to all seniors.
• 10:15am-11:15am: Baby Goose. Invermere Public Library. Learn new songs and rhymes to share with your baby and meet other parents/ caregivers with young children. Drop-in program. Hosted by Columbia Basin Alliance for Literacy- Windermere Valley. Six-week session from Feb. 12-March 18.
• 6:30pm: Poker (Chip up for Charity). The Station Pub $20 buy-in. Every Monday.
Tuesday, March 19
• 3:00pm-5:00pm: Seniors’ Game Days. Invermere Seniors’ Hall. Come out to the Invermere Seniors' Hall for an afternoon of playing board
games and connecting! Snacks and beverages will be provided. This is a free event and pre-registration is encouraged: wvcoordinator@cbal. org or call/text 250-409-4251.
• 10:30am-11:30am: Senior’s Fitness Columbia Valley Centre, $2 drop-in.
• 1:00pm-3:30pm: Art in the Afternoon. Radium Public Library. A free program for local artists and art enthusiasts! Whether you sketch, paint, carve, knit or crochet, bring your supplies and work alongside fellow artists.
• 2:00pm-3:00pm: Novel Idea. Invermere Public Library. This month we are reading What the Wind Knows by Amy Harmon. Copies of the book are available at the front desk. Contact us to reserve a copy or to request large print. All welcome to attend!
• 5:30pm: Bingo. Invermere Seniors Hall. $300 Jackpot, all over 19 welcome. Only cash prizes. 11 games for $20 (6 cards). Lucky 7 & diamond extra games $2.
• 6:30pm-8:00pm: Second Winds Community Band. We are looking for new band members! Play an instrument? Practice at Invermere Catholic Church Annex. For info please email dalvande@shaw.ca
• 7:00pm: Ullr Presents: Musical Bingo with Tim Richards. Ullr Bar. Every Tuesday - $5 per card.
• 7:30pm: Families on Tuesday. Zoom meeting with host Ben Postmus. Families connecting, Families Sharing, Families Supporting Families: Support, Listening, Sharing, Connecting. diversefamilyroots@gmail.com
• Wednesday, March 20
• 10:15am-11:15am: Baby Talk. Invermere Library Mezzanine. A FREE drop-in program for caregivers of infants 0-12. Bring your baby for fun, informative sessions and meet with other new parents. Please bring a blanket to sit on.
Todays Topic: Physical Growth and Development
• 6:00pm-7:00pm: Write On! Writing group at the Invermere Library. 6:00 pm - How to write a mystery with local author, Juanita Violini! 6:40 pm (approximately) - Project sharing and feedback. Email the Invermere Library to get on the writing group chain to share your work and see other submissions. All welcome to join at the library or on Zoom.
• 10:00am-11:00am: Senior's Yoga Columbia Valley Centre, $2 dropin.
• 11:30am-12:00pm: Story Time. Radium Public Library - preschool & all ages.
• 2:00pm-3:30pm: Wholesome Hobbies. Radium Public Library. Every third Wednesday join us for a rotating series of projects and activities for adults 50+. Registration required and limited.
• 6:00pm-9:00pm: Wednesday Dinners & Meat Draw & 50/50 Invermere Legion. All welcome.
A look back in history: John George Adami
By Dorothy Isted Special to the PioneerWhen Dr. John George Adami died in 1926 the British Medical Journal published a three-page obituary detailing his impressive career. Such big news at the time was even reported in the Adelaide Advertiser in Australia.
Adami was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Liverpool and prior to that, for 25 years, Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology at McGill University in Montreal. He also had an impressive summer home in the Columbia Valley, where present day Timber Ridge is located.
Born in 1862 in Manchester, England, George, as he was known, went to Cambridge University where he received double first-class honours in natural sciences. After graduating in 1884, he began post graduate studies. He nearly died when he was studying rabid deer, cutting himself badly and developing a severe infection. He was urgently transported to Paris to be treated by none other than Louis Pasteur, and lived only after undergoing a painful treatment. He later worked with Pasteur and Nobel-prize-winning biologist Elie Mechnikov who pioneered work in immunology.
In 1892 he accepted the first Professor of Pathology position at McGill. He married a Montreal-born woman in 1894, Mary Stuart Cantlie, and they had a son and a daughter.
R. Randolph Bruce attained his mining engineering degree in 1896 at McGill. Perhaps he visited the Adamis while studying in Montreal, as Mrs. Adami was rumoured to have been his cousin. Vague local museum records note that Bruce ‘built’ their valley summer home named Edenhowe in 1907/08. More likely he oversaw the construction of it. It was a large and elaborate vacation property, with guest cottages, stables and gardens.
Bruce was a local mine engineer and land promoter who grew up in the same Scottish town that Mrs. Adami’s maternal uncle had. Lord Mt. Stephen was brother to Mrs. Adami’s mother and started out life as a stable boy but ended up the financial genius and first president of the Canadian Pacific Railroad. When he retired he was the richest man in Canada. Their cousin, Lord Strathcona, another philanthropist, endowed the pathology chair at McGill University.
Mrs. Adami’s father, James Alexander Cantlie was a successful Montreal businessman. There is a hotel in Montreal built on the Cantlie lands, named after the family.
The home where John George Adami lived.
PHOTO WINDERMERE DISTRICT HISTORICAL SOCIETY
Furniture was shipped by train to Golden and then by riverboat down to Lake Windermere. Mrs. Adami and their children came every summer and when his schedule allowed, Dr. Adami joined them. He often brought illustrious guests such as Governor General Earl Grey, Lord Lascelles and well-known Parisian artist Frank Armington. Armington was the illustrator for the Columbia Valley Irrigated Fruitlands pamphlet that flooded Great Britain, bringing settlers to the valley.
When Dr. Adami arrived in Montreal, he found the McGill Pathological Museum in disarray and created logical order to the chaos, which then became a useful teaching tool. In 1898 he hired Maude Abbott as assistant curator and saw that she was trained fully by sending her to study the methods of the Washington Army Medical Museum in order to best use her skills. It was not the only instance of going against the flow, in a time when women weren’t easily promoted to important positions, in spite of their competence. McGill awarded her an honorary MD in 1910 and a Canadian postal stamp was later created in recognition of her contributions.
Adami remained the titular head of the museum. Specimens went back as far as the 1820s and the museum thereafter became heavily used by many generations of student doctors.
Adami was described as easy-going but driven and hard working. He was considered occasionally impulsive and indiscreet, but he was full of life and his students loved him, as he inspired them and enthusiastically joined in with their fun. This popularity attracted many students to his programs. In 1919 he
wrote a paper for British Medical Journal on venereal disease among enlisted men - a topic not generally considered appropriate to discuss. He entitled it “The Policy of the Ostrich.” He was also a much sought-after speaker and wrote many medical articles.
Outside of medicine he collected china and drawings, exhibited his own watercolours, had comprehensive knowledge of continental art galleries and took an interest in Christian faith, writing for the Anglican Evangelical Group a pamphlet called The Unity of Faith and Science.
One noteworthy contribution to medicine was the publication in 1912 of his 904-paged A Textbook of Pathology for Students of Medicine, co-written with Canadian doctor John McCrae, who is more well-known today for his In Flanders Fields poem. This work was a result of the recognition that his earlier over 2000page, two-volumed book The Principles of Pathology was difficult for average students. Both books were widely used wherever English-speaking medicine was practised. In reviewing the earlier book, a leading science journal congratulated Adami on the exhaustive work which had been published after he lost his library and final book chapters in a fire that raged through McGill’s medical buildings in 1907.
Mrs. Adami was chronically ill and died in Montreal in 1916. By then, Dr. Adami was in England, having volunteered for the First World War in 1914. He was quickly promoted to Colonel and worked in the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps. He was awarded a CBE (Commander of the Most Excellent Order of British Empire) for his war contributions by King George V. As his children were now in England with him, he reluctantly gave up Canada and accepted the Vice-Chancellor position for the University of Liverpool.
In 1924 Dr. Adami remarried an English woman, Marie Wilkinson, who wrote his biography, which can be viewed in the McGill University library. While in Montreal, Dr. Adami served as president of the Association of American Physicians as well as president of the Royal Society of Canada and the Canadian Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis. On reviewing Marie Adami’s biography in 1931, an article published by the American College of Physicians stated, “Adami became widely known and beloved in the States. He was a potent factor in the development of pathology in this country.”
Aside from a few pictures of the family’s time at Edenhowe in our museum, there is little trace of the man who made such significant contributions to medicine the world over.
SPORTS BEY ND THE BLUE LINE
Rockies playing hard in round two vs Riders
By Stephanie StevensNobody’s giving anything away, but hesitation has taken its toll.
The second round of the Eddie Mountain Division playoffs has seen both the Columbia Valley Rockies and the Fernie Ghostriders leaving it all on the ice despite the first game going to the Riders in their home barn.
The first two games of the round were played March 8 and 9 in Fernie, with game one going to the Riders 6-2
and the Rockies finding their stride in the second game, taking it 4-1.
In the March 8 opener Kaelan Shelton opened up the scoring unassisted in the first, followed by Teo Fath (assist from Carter Velker).
The March 9 tilt saw goals from Fath in the second (assists from Kyran Gromnisky and Oleg Bitus) and the third featured Bryan Kim (assist from Kobe Mason), Bitus unassisted, and Mason with an empty netter for good measure.
Game three was played at home in
the Eddie Mountain Memorial Arena and while the play was intense, the Riders took it 2-1 in overtime.
“Games one and three we played like a team afraid to make mistakes,” said head coach Tayler Sincennes.
“In game two we just went out and played with confidence. We’ll have to find a way to do that for the rest of the series.”
Scoring in game three didn’t open up until the third period, with Gromnisky teaming up with Fath and Bitus
again for the lone Columbia Valley goal.
“We’ve had some ups and down, playing against some injuries and suspensions,” said associate coach Tucker Braund. “But we have a good chance. We can make it a heck of a series.”
Game four was played March 12 in the Eddie prior to press time and game five will be in Fernie tonight March 14.
If the series goes to seven games, Saturday will see the Riders back in the Eddie and Monday will be played out in Fernie.
H ERE TO S ERVE Y OU
Columbia Valley Pride gets substantial grant
Submitted
The Columbia Valley Pride Society is pleased to announce a significant milestone in its ongoing mission to promote inclusivity and gender equality within the Columbia Valley community.
Thanks to the generous support from the Government of Canada, Pride has been awarded a substantial grant to further our efforts in advancing gender equality initiatives through March 2026.
This funding will enable Columbia Valley Pride to expand programming and outreach activities aimed at fostering a more equitable and inclusive environment for individuals of all gender identities and expressions. Through education, awareness campaigns, and community engagement events, Pride will continue to advocate for the rights and dignity of 2SLGBTQI+ individuals, particularly those facing intersecting forms of discrimination.
"We are immensely grateful to the Government of Canada, specifically Women and Gender Equality Canada and Minister Marci Ien, for their investment
in our vision of a society where everyone, regardless of gender identity or expression, can thrive and live authentically," said Gemma Beierback, president of Columbia Valley Pride Society. "This grant will empower us to amplify our impact and create tangible change within our local community."
The initiatives supported by this funding will address various aspects of gender equality, including funds dedicated to ensuring the future sustainability of the organization. By collaborating with local stakeholders, community members and volunteers, and leveraging the expertise of consultants, Pride aims to create a more inclusive and welcoming environment for all.
"We are committed to building a future where diversity is celebrated, and every individual feels valued and respected," added Beirerback. "This grant represents a significant step forward in our journey towards achieving that goal, and we look forward to working alongside our community partners to create lasting change."
Columbia Valley Pride extends its heartfelt thanks
to all its members, volunteers, and local businesses for their continued commitment to advancing gender equality and supporting the vital work of 2SLGBTQI+ organizations.
Together, Pride will continue to strive for a more just and inclusive society where everyone can live authentically and without fear of discrimination.
www.columbiavalleypioneer.com
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Al-Anon. Are you concerned about or affected by someone else’s drinking? Meeting
Mondays 7:15 pm, at Canadian Martyrs Parish front side door. 712 12 Ave. Invermere. For more information or to speak with someone from our fellowship, please call 250878-2448 or 250-342-8392
Alcoholics Anonymous. If alcohol is causing problems or conflict in your life, AA can help. All meetings are at 7 pm. Columbia United AA, Invermere: Saturday, Sunday, Tuesday and Wednesday at the BC Service Building, South End-624 4th St. Invermere. Please call 250-3422424 for more information or to speak with someone from our fellowship.
Narcotics Anonymous. Open meeting.
Mondays 7 pm at the BC Service Building, South End. 624-4th St. Invermere
Valley Fitness Society AGM
March 21, 2024 6:00 pm
Invermere Inn Boardroom
All are welcome!
OBITUARY
BIRKETT, Joan Louise
March 27, 1929 - Feb 8, 2024
Joan grew up in Montreal before relocating to Invermere, BC (1993), having lived an amazing, long, adventuresome life. In youth, Joan captained the ski team at Middlebury College (1951 Fine Arts) where she was known as “speedster Macklaier”. Joan traveled far and wide; to India as a school volunteer, to the Arctic circle working for Sesame Street, cycling through Europe, and hiking in China along the Great Wall. Joan canoed some mighty rivers and climbed many a mountain (including reaching the upper slopes of Mount Everest in Nepal).
Joan was a thoughtful and playful soul who always gave way more than she took. Joan cherished good people and adventure her whole life.
Joan was at home and surrounded by her children when she slipped away so gently. Joan is survived by her brother Ian Macklaier, her children; Jennifer(Clay), Tim (Lyn, grandson Jonathan, great granddaughter Brooklyn), Elisa(Ted). Joan was predeceased by husband John Birkett, son Peter Birkett and sister Elise McGregor. There will be a family celebration of life at a later date to be announced.
A special note of thank you goes out to the home care nurses that came over each day - Bless you all.
Cheers to Dr. Karen, chiro extraordinaire for the good care you give me. I always feel better when I leave your clinic.
Cheers to the nurses, doctors and staff at Invermere Hospital for their cheerful care. Especially Shayla. D. P.
Cheers to the medical folks in the valley for putting Humpty Davey back together in one piece. Big cheers as well to my amazing wife for her insane caretaking of me during this trying time. You rock baby!!
Cheers to Jessie at POW. Exactly as described, pizza was first rate and you’ll never go wrong with Patti helping out! We’ll be back for more.
Cheers to Rosanna and Shane G. for your hospitality. The meal was excellent and the company was even better. What an enjoyable evening!
Cheers to Tish and the women of the Shuswap Band Office for hosting our Grade 3 class visit! ‘Kukstsemc’ and much gratitude for sharing your knowledge and culture with us.
Outstanding Cheers to our wonderful caregivers and volunteers in this valley. J.A.
B. B.’s Home and Design Services Renovations, Masonry & Handyman Services, Blinds, House checks, eavestrough/ yard cleaning/dump runs.
250-688-2897 or 403-861-8782
Doug’s Small Engine Tune-ups and repairs. Chainsaws, mowers and much more.
For professional service call 250-342-6068
Get-ER-Done Handyman
Landscaping, Asphalt Pads, General Contracting, Cleaning Gutters, House Checks, Pressure Washing. Call Ryan 604-346-5087
THE HEARTFELT COMPANION Services for Seniors. Since 2014 we’ve provided kind and compassionate non-medical care, transportation to Cranbrook, overnight care, meal prep, grocery shopping and more. Excellent local references. 250-341-5683 Heartfeltcompanionservices. com
Celebration of Life for Monty Anderson
Please feel invited to remember Monty’s life and say good-bye with us on Saturday, March 16, 2024 at 11 am at the Catholic Church, 712-12 Ave in Invermere, followed by refreshments in the Parish Hall.
If you knew Monty, we would appreciate seeing you.
- Monty’s family
Produces up to 12 litres of water per hour. Compact, light-weight, effective, simple to use, simple to maintain, inexpensive, no electricity required, no replacement parts, lasts a lifetime. Treat unsafe piped water, lake, river and stream, rain water, and canal water. See www.cabincleanwaterfilter.com
Local Electrical Contractor looking for Journeyman Electrician. Wage DOE. Email resume to: ekelectric@telus.net.
Help Wanted: Cross River Education and Retreat Centre www.crossriver.ca Seasonal cook required, May 15 - September 30, 2024 Email resume and salary expectations to: rob@crossriver.ca Parttime housekeeping required for various times during summer Part-time maintenance/ carpenter helper required for various times during summer rob@crossriver.ca
PASSION FOR CANNABIS?
In front of Canadian Tire is accepting resumes.
We are looking for a great individual to join our team as a
BUDTENDER
The successful applicant will:
• Assist store management and work as a team with staff
• Perform all duties within the store, receiving, cash and customer service
• Work quickly and efficiently with attention to detail
• Be able to work weekends
• Be available to work days or evenings
• Take pride in great customer service - knowledge of Cannabis products an asset
• Training and education available
Must obtain Selling it Right Certification as required to work with cannabis. (Costs reimbursed). Must be 19 years+ to apply.
If you are interested in working in a fun and productive work environment with competitive wages, submit resume to: Bob Benvenuti, invermerecannabisstore@gmail.com or hand deliver to: Invermere Cannabis Store (in front of Canadian Tire) Attn: Bob Benvenuti
Summer Students
The District of Invermere has openings for Summer Students in the Parks Labourer, Garden Labourer and Events Labourer positions in the Public Works Department. This is a temporary full-time or part-time position within the CUPE Local 2982 bargaining unit starting in May until the end of August. Students will be able to work up to 40 hours per week, however we will also consider students for temporary part-time positions for less than 40 hours per week.
DESCRIPTION
Parks Labourers
Under general supervision, the Student Labourer performs a variety of semiskilled and manual labouring duties. Work typically involves tasks such as parks and cemetery landscaping, garbage pick-up, painting, pothole filling, driving, graffiti removal and other tasks as assigned. The days will consist of 8 hour days, with a typical start time of 8 am, however start time may be as early as 6:00am. Typical work days are Monday to Friday, however some weekend shifts will be required.
Gardeners
Look to a higher standard with our classified ads.
Under general supervision, the Student Gardener is primarily focused on flowerbed planting and maintenance. Work typically involves helping with the preparation of flowerbeds, gardening tasks involving the cultivation of a variety of flowers and plants in large garden areas, planting, weeding, fertilizing, and pruning numerous varieties of plants, flowers, shrubs, bushes, and trees. The days will consist of 8 hour days, with a typical start time is between 6:00am and 8:00 am depending on activities and weather. Typical work days are Monday to Friday; however some weekend shifts will be required.
Events
Under general supervision, the Student Event will assist with the set up and take down of Movies in the Mountains every Monday evening in July and August between the hours of 4:00 pm-1:00 am. These hours will vary based on the movie start times and daylight hours. Other assigned duties could also include assisting with the set up and take down of other District of Invermere events during July and August.
EMPLOYMENT TERM:
Employment will commence in early May and will terminate in late August.
STARTING PAY RATE:
The current starting wage for a student is $19.65.
REQUIRED KNOWLEDGE, ABILITIES AND SKILLS
1. Must be enrolled in high school or post secondary school.
2. Some related experience or an equivalent combination of training and experience.
3. Knowledge of Occupational Health & Safety Regulations as related and appropriate.
4.Valid Class 5 BC Drivers License.
HOW TO APPLY:
If you are interested in this position, please send a cover letter and resume outlining your qualifications and experience to corporateservices@invermere. net or the address below quoting “Summer Student 2024 – the position you would like to apply for”.
District of Invermere
Attn: Kindry Luyendyk, Corporate Officer
Box 339, Invermere, BC, V0A 1K0
Tel: (250) 342-9281
Fax: (250) 342-2934
Email: corporateservices@invermere.net
This opportunity will remain open until it is filled.
We thank all applicants for their interest; however, only those considered for an interview will be contacted.
Additional information about this opportunity may be requested by contacting the District’s Corporate Officer.
Turn and Burn slalom race returns to valley
PHOTOS RYAN WATMOUGHInvermere
on the Lake
DISTRICT OF INVERMERE
914 – 8th Avenue, PO Box 339
Invermere, BC V0A 1K0
Tel: (250) 342-9281 Fax: (250) 342-2934
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
Environmental Planner (Temporary Part-Time Contract)
The District of lnvermere is seeking an experienced and customer service focused individual to join our team as Environmental Planner. Reporting to the Director of Development Services, the Environmental Planner is a member of the District’s planning and development team and plays a crucial role in reviewing and reporting on development applications, and identifying climate change risks and mitigation opportunities for action by the municipality.
THE POSITION:
We are seeking a proactive individual with superior verbal and written communication skills, exceptional project management skills, and highly effective decision-making skills. You should also have a successful track record of using your technical expertise and problem-solving abilities to find successful innovative solutions. You are also known for working collaboratively with all interested parties to find win-win solutions that protect community interests and make solid recommendations to District Council.
You will be working with a group of highly experienced staff who will be expecting you to bring energy and enthusiasm to the position, communicate effectively and positively, while being sensitive and respectful to differing opinions. Your collaborative work style will help sustain a positive and respectful workplace climate.
This is an excellent opportunity to join a team dedicated to creating a vibrant, sustainable, complete, and livable community.
HOW TO APPLY:
If you are interested in this position, please send a cover letter and resume outlining your qualifications and experience to the email or the address below by 4:00 pm (MT), April 4th, 2024 quoting “Environmental Planner 2024”.
District of Invermere
Kindry Luyendyk, Corporate Officer
Box 339, 914 – 8th Avenue
Invermere, BC, V0A 1K0
corporateservices@invermere.net
Tel: 250-342-9281
By Steve Hubrecht steve@columbiavalleypioneer.comIf you love ripping the slopes on one plank instead of two, and enjoy a banked slalom course to boot, then you’re in luck — the valley’s newest snowboard event is back.
The Turn and Burn banked slalom race was launched last year at Panorama Mountain Resort. It was a huge success, attracting 112 participants.
Organizers have made it an annual affair, and are hoping for an even bigger turnout for the second edition of the event, which is set to go ahead on Saturday, Mar. 23.
For many years the Easy Rider Snowboard Cup banked slalom race was held at Panorama, but six years ago it moved to Rabbit Hill near Edmonton. That left a void that was finally filled by the Turn and Burn in 2023.
“We saw a gap in events for snowboarders, and we wanted to bring back a race event that is inclusive and fun,” said Syndicate Board Shop owner and Turn and Burn organizer Eric Lange.
“There are a lot of skiing events, but not really a lot of snowboarding events. Hopefully this will help get kids stoked on snowboarding as a sport.”
There are prizes, and every kid who takes part will get one, but the Turn and Burn is not a truly competitive race, Lange told the Pioneer. “It’s not about
ability, it’s about coming out, participating and having fun.”
Snowboarders will get a chance to make two timed runs down a course, turning around gates on berms made of snow and going over other human-made snow features.
“The turns are banked, and you can use the banks to your advantage. You can interpret the course how you want to — you don’t have to try to stick as close to the gates as possible. The person who sticks closest to the gates is not necessarily always the fastest,” Lange said.
Last year for the inaugural Turn and Burn, organizers were hoping to attract 50, maybe even 60 participants, he explained. So to draw 112 snowboards “we were really happy with that. Clearly it was well received by the public. Hopefully it keeps on growing,” he said.
“If you are not experienced, it’s no problem, you can still get down the hill and have fun,” added Panorama senior mountain operations manager Ryan Stimming, who is helping with the event.
“We’ll have some fun categories too,” said Stimming. Last year that included categories for switch riding and for snow skate. Since the Turn and Burn this year coincides with Panorama’s first ever Pride and Ski Festival “there also will be a prize for Pride spirit,” Lange noted.
Drug crisis still plagues First Nations people
By: Julia Magsombol Local Initiative Reporter julia@columbiavalleypioneer.comAccording to the First Nations Health Authority (FNHA), Indigenous Peoples died at six times the rate compared to non-First Nations people in 2023.
The statistics showed that it had increased by 24.7 per cent compared to 2022.
Dr. Nel Wieman, chief medical officer for the FNHA, said more than 400 First Nations people died due to toxic drugs last year.
"It's painful to talk about these numbers because they're not just numbers; they're people who are loved and peo-
ple who have potential futures ahead of them," said Wieman.
Several factors lead Indigenous Peoples to use drugs - and one factor is childhood trauma.
Based on Canadian statistics, "Indigenous Peoples self-reported experiencing some form of childhood physical and sexual maltreatment before the age of 15." Read https://www.justice.gc.ca/ eng/rp-pr/jr/jf-pf/2017/docs/july03. pdf.
Another factor could be inter-generational trauma, which occurs in this situation when the effects of trauma are passed down among generations of different Indigenous families.
The historical trauma experienced by Indigenous Peoples is passed from generation to generation due to resi-
DTSS grad explores societal constraints
By: Julia Magsombol Local Initiative Reporter julia@columbiavalleypioneer.comBefore Erika Mathieu published her debut poetry book, she decided to incorporate her personal experiences into her poems, hoping that people would find comfort and empathy there.
"I think everyone, depending on their experiences, might be able to pull something different out of [my book]. I think it is a melancholic collection," Mathieu told the Pioneer
She spent her teenage years in Invermere and graduated from David Thompson Secondary School. She is now an Alberta-based poet and journalist. She works for a newspaper outside Lethbridge but also does creative work.
"Rhymes from a Jail Cell" is Mathieu's collection of poems exploring the definition of constraint and interconnected themes of identity, mental illness, and unexpected liberation —human shared experiences and emotions. It also explores the surface of societal expectations and the constraints that come with them —especially with the topic of mental illness.
Mathieu said the title of the book has something to do with jails, metaphorically.
"I think of a jail cell as a literal constraint. It's a barrier . . . something that's holding someone back. It's more about the metaphor of something keeping you constrained," she added.
"I can sort of appreciate how constraints of mental illness have shaped my voice as a writer and an artist. And through writing this book, I found there's also liberation in working under a set of rules, which is less limiting than I thought."
Mathieu noted the cover is actual-
dential schools, land dispossession, loss of spiritual practices, language and culture.
Most of the time, depression, anxiety, PTSD, and substance use “can be outward manifestations of inter-generational trauma and unresolved historical grief.”
According to the FNHA, First Nations people make up just over three per cent of the population of British Columbia, but there were 17.7 per cent of toxic drug deaths in the first six months of 2023.
Last year the BC Coroners Service said there were a total of 2,511 suspected illicit drug deaths, an average of nearly seven deaths per day.
Invermere on the Lake
The demographics of toxic drug deaths vary from men to women as well. First Nations women are impacted by the toxic drug crisis. The death rate is 11.9 times higher than non-First Nations women in B.C. The rate of toxic drug deaths among First Nations men was 4.6 times the rate for non-First Nations men.
Government of Alberta research indicates that from 2013 to 2017, females represented a higher proportion of opioid dispensing from community pharmacies in First Nations and non-First Nations people.
"We need to keep people alive so they can consider their choices," said Wieman.
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
ly a collage. The image of the earth, the woman, and the car were all made up of cuts from magazines, representing the limitations one has.
"I think that, in many ways, this book represents the idea of working with what you have regarding the constraints with each poem. And I think collage is very similar because you are working with images that are already made, and you have to assemble them in a particular way."
Each poem has certain limits and specific writing rules, such as sonnets and haikus.
"The constraint refers to the writing itself in terms of breaking free of other kinds of constraints. The idea of living with depression and anxiety and how that can be constraining for people like myself, who live with these conditions chronically. It is about overcoming constraint in writing and having to sort of work within constraints in writing and in life."
While writing her book, Mathieu's inspirations come from personal experiences, especially her vulnerabilities.
“It is vulnerable to have to share your story with people. But I also think it can build meaningful connections through art and storytelling."
She has been planning to write this collection of poetry since 2018.
Mathieu finished her manuscript by 2021, but because the poems were very personal, she decided to publish them this year instead.
"I think when you do creative work, that's really personal. It can be really scary because people will read it. They get to see an insight into how you think and things that you've experienced that maybe you wouldn't share with just any old stranger,” she explained.
Continued on page 20
Engineering/Planning Summer Student
The District of Invermere is accepting applications for an Engineering or Planning undergraduate student to work as part of our Public Works and Planning Departments. This is a temporary full-time or part-time position within the CUPE Local 2982 bargaining unit starting in May until the end of August. This position works 35 hours per week.
DESCRIPTION
Under general supervision, the Student Engineering position will work on a variety of projects including development of maintenance programs, assistance with development applications, sourcing quotations for projects, information research, records updates, involvement with civil construction project and other tasks as assigned. The days will consist of 7 hour days, with a start time of 8:30 am, Monday to Friday.
EMPLOYMENT TERM:
Employment will commence in early May and will terminate in late August.
STARTING PAY RATE:
The current starting wage for a student is $26.65
REQUIRED KNOWLEDGE, ABILITIES AND SKILLS:
1. You must be attending school, college or university and enrolled in a Civil Engineering or Planning undergraduate during the last school term and returning to your studies in the subsequent academic year.
2. Knowledge of word-processing, spreadsheets, desktop publishing, and records management would be an asset.
3. Knowledge of municipal operations would be an asset.
4.Knowledge of Occupational Health & Safety Regulations as related and appropriate.
HOW TO APPLY:
If you are interested in this position, please send a cover letter and resume outlining your qualifications and experience to corporateservices@invermere.net or the address below quoting “Summer Student 2024 – Engineering/Planning”.
District of Invermere
Attn: Kindry Luyendyk, Corporate Officer
Box 339, Invermere, BC, V0A 1K0
Tel: (250) 342-9281
Fax: (250) 342-2934
Email: corporateservices@invermere.net
This opportunity will remain open until it is filled.
We thank all applicants for their interest; however, only those considered for an interview will be contacted.
Additional information about this opportunity may be requested by contacting the District’s Corporate Officer.
FAITH
The short answer is true faith
By Pastor Wayne Frater Radium Christian Fellowship ChurchJohn 8:36 tells us if the Son (Jesus) therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed.
What are we free from? How about sin, or sickness, or fear?
How are we set free from these bondages of the world, those bondages that keep us from becoming the children of God, that we are called to be?
The short answer is faith.
Faith in what, or should I say who?
Let’s look at some of the things that hinder us from walking in true faith. True faith in the living God, true faith in Jesus, and what Jesus has done for us.
The greatest enemy or hindrance to faith is a lack of knowledge of God’s Word.
Romans 10:17: “So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God.”
If we have a knowledge of God’s Word, nothing in the flesh can keep it from working because it comes by hearing.
It is very, very simple, if we have heard the Word, we have it. You don’t get faith by praying for it. Faith comes only by hearing the Word of God. We each have been given a measurer of faith; it is up to us to make it
grow, by watering it, and feeding it with God’s Word.
But faith in who?
2 Corinthians 5:17,18: “Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things become new. And all things are of God, who hath reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ, and hath given to us the ministry of reconciliation.”
When we realize who we are in Christ, as we study His Word it will help us get rid of any sense of unworthiness, and when we are rid of unworthiness, our sense of lack of faith will also leave with it. Jesus Christ is our worthiness or our righteousness, or our rightness with God.
2 Cor 5:21: “For He hath made Him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him.”
Because we are in Him, we have become the righteousness of God, we are worthy in Christ, there is no need for us to feel unworthy.
And don’t waver, believe and receive.
James 1:6,7 King James: “But let him ask in faith nothing wavering. For he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed. For let not that man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord.”
“I believe, I receive.”
Hold fast, don’t waver.
God said it, I believe it, and that settles it. I believe, I receive.
Faith, if we let it, watered by God’s Word, will grow and flourish in our lives.
Grad publishes poetry book
Continued from page 19
“When you publish something like that, you don't have control over it anymore. It is really scary. But it's also really good not to have it, and it feels good to have it released from you."
Readers' expectations of the book can be subjective as it can be different for each of them. However, one of Mathieu's favourite parts of her work was about her sister, in which she talked about love and grief together. In the publication of her book, she had also learned something.
"I learned that rules and constraints can often lead to unexpected liberation. I have found myself working in modalities I never would have explored without
leaning into the idea of rules or giving myself these constraints.”
Mathieu hopes readers will be able to find bits of themselves in this collection.
“I think that it deals with a lot of difficult issues but I also think reading about other people's shared experiences can be validating for people to know that they're not alone."
Mathieu is currently working on future projects, including her second poetry collection "Origins," which she hopes to release in 2025.
Her poetry book is available at Amazon at
https://www.amazon.ca/Rhymes-Jail-Cell-ErikaMathieu/dp/B0CSB5H62G
Columbia Valley Churches
Erika Mathieu, a former DTSS grad, hopes people will find comfort and empathy in her newly published book of poems called Rhymes From a Jail Cell.
LAKE WINDERMERE ALLIANCE CHURCH
While you are with us, you are always welcome to join us.
Sunday at 10:30 am
326 10th Avenue, Invermere 250-342-9535 | www.lwac.ca
WINDERMERE VALLEY
SHARED MINISTRY ANGLICAN-UNITED
Minister: Brent Woodard
Sundays at 10:30 am, in-person or on Zoom.
For the Zoom link, please visit our website at wvsm.ca. 110 - 7th Ave. in Invermere.
VALLEY CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY
Pastor: Justin Furse
Sunday 10 a.m. Worship Service 4814 Highway Drive, Windermere 250-342-9511 | www.vcachurch.net
ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
St. Anthony’s, Canal Flats: Saturday, 4 pm
Canadian Martyrs’, Invermere: Saturday 5 pm, Sunday 9 am St. Joseph’s, Radium: Sunday 11 am
Father Francis Dela Cruz | 712 -12th Ave., Invermere 250-342-6167
ST. PETER’S LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday 1:30 p.m. Worship Service at Valley Christian 4814 Highway Drive, Windermere lutheranstpeter@gmail.com
RADIUM CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
Sunday 10 a.m. Worship service
Pastor Wayne and Linda Frater | 250-342-6633 #4, 7553 Main St. Radium | 250-347-9937
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS
Worship Service, Sunday, 10 a.m. Relief Society, 11:15 a.m.
President Kendyn Mackensie • Columbia Valley Branch • 5014 Fairway, Fairmont Hot Springs 250-439-9041
CHURCH OF CHRIST (Iglesia ni Cristo)
Worship Service: Sunday 9 a.m., Thursday 7:45 p.m. Chamber of Commerce (Lions Hall)
For inquiries: 250-688-1643 250-270-2208 or 250-688-0629
For more info about the church, you can Google online at incmedia.org or pasugo.com.ph