NECROPOLIS COMES TO LIFE IN PRINT B1
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Kamloops
Kamloops
Thompson Rivers University has ceased enrollment in its bachelor of fine arts program, with plans to end the program in three years, prompting a petition from faculty to allow the program to continue.
Donald Lawrence, a longtime faculty member with the program, called the decision disappointing, discouraging and somewhat shocking.
“Depending on who you’re talking to, you’ll hear ranging stories about the program, either it’s not financially viable or a hugely successful program,” Lawrence said.
Lawrence, who has worked with his students inside and outside of the classroom, said the community is losing a program that has dispersed artists out in the community and across the world as ambassadors.
“I suppose if I’m disappointed or shocked about something, it’s that long legacy
of success, which precedes me in the department,” he said.
TRU dean of arts Rick McCutcheon said the program, which includes visual arts courses, are being cut because of consistently low enrolment and financial pressures, citing higher costs than other disciplines.
“The resources that are going into this particular program far exceed, by an incredible amount, anything else we do,” McCutcheon said, citing a decade of “very low” course enrollment, which he said is unsustainable.
Lawrence acknowledged that enrolment has fluctuated and has dipped as low as four students in a year, but also as high as 26.
Despite the numbers, Lawrence said, the program has produced highly engaged and successful students, including artists who have gone on to show their work internationally.
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Apr 26, 2023
The public, media, delegations, and staff are encouraged to par ticipate in meetings vir tually through Zoom or to observe through the City YouTube channel.
May 2, 2023
1:30 pm - Regular Council Meeting
May 2, 2023 (Cancelled)
2:00 pm - Community Relations and Reconciliation Committee
May 3, 2023
5:30 pm - Council and School District No 73
May 9, 2023
1:30 pm - Regular Council Meeting
May 11, 2023
9:00 am - Council Committee Governance
Select Committee
May 16, 2023
10:00 am - Committee of the Whole
May 30, 2023
1:30 pm - Regular Council Meeting
May 30, 2023
7:00 pm - Public Hearing
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Please use caution when driving in the vicinity and obey all traffic control personnel, signs, and devices in the following areas:
• For tune Drive
Oak Road to Overlanders Bridge
• Singh Street
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Mount Paul Way to 10th Avenue
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Tranquille Road to Kenora Road
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As bears emerge from hibernation, they will be hungr y Unmanaged bear attractants around our homes can unintentionally attract bears to our neighbourhoods as they sniff out food sources.
Remember, a fed bear is a dead bear Your actions can save a bear ’s life
Under the Solid Waste and Rec yclables Bylaw No 40-67:
• Residents must ensure that solid waste car ts are stored securely and made inaccessible to wildlife
• Car ts must not be placed at the curb earlier than 4:00 am on collection day between April 1 and November 30.
• No proper ty owner or occupier shall accumulate, store, or collect any wildlife attractants unless stored in an enclosed structure or closed container.
• Infractions may result in a $100 fine
Did you k now? K amloops is one of only 10 BC communities that has achieved official “Bear Smar t ” status Thank you for helping K amloops remain a Bear Smar t Community!
Learn more, at: Kamloops.ca/BearSmar t
The City of K amloops, Tkemlúps te Sec wépemc, and the Thompson-Nicola Regional District ( TNRD) are encouraging all residents to register for Voyent Aler t! in advance of the 2023 flood and wildfire seasons
All three local governments utilize Voyent Aler t!, an emergenc y notification system that allows residents to register for emergenc y updates via SMS text, phone call, email, or app notification, mak ing the system accessible in both urban and rural settings A recent update to the app now allows residents to seamlessly register any proper ty within the City, Tkemlúps te Sec wépemc, or TNRD boundaries to the same account and receive notifications from the appropriate local government.
As some devices automatically offload unused apps, registered app users are encouraged to verify that the app is active on their devices
Registration for Voyent Aler t! is free, easy to use, and anonymous, and you can unsubscribe at any time. Download the free Voyent Aler t! app or register online today
Kamloops.ca/Voyent
Do you have an older, uncer tified wood-burning appliance? Upgrade it and you may be eligible for rebates.
Get fired up about electric! Upgrade your wood-burning fireplace to an electric fireplace inser t or replace your gas fireplace inser t with an electric inser t and get up to $1,000 in rebates.
For details, visit:
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School District 73 has chosen an architect and struck a committee in connection with the new elementary school that will rise in Pineview Valley.
The board of education has approved the establishment of the Pineview Valley Engagement Committee, which will be com-
posed of community members, district and school staff and parents. They will provide input on early designs of the new school and provide input into the educational value of certain design features.
Station One Architects has been hired to support the district in design of the plans
April 26:
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for the school, landscaping of the school grounds or landscape architecture, project management and interior design.
The company is no stranger to local capital projects, having worked on the Valleyview secondary expansion and the current rebuild of Parkcrest elementary.
KAMLOOPS THISWEEK
Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc and the City of Kamloops hosted four delegates from the North American Indigenous Games (NAIG) on the weekend,
From Friday, April 21, to Sunday, April 23, NAIG delegates from Eastern Canada and the United States came to assess and evaluate Tk’emlúps/Kamloops sport and cultural facilities and hosting capacity.
Tk’emlúps/Kamloops is up against Calgary for the right to host the 2027 Games, which will feature more than 6,000 participants from 756 Indigenous Nations in Canada and the United States, ages 13 to 19, competing in 16 sports over an eight-day period. Tk’emlúps/Kamloops is the lone Indigenous-led bid.
NAIG delegates were welcomed by Tk’emlúps chief and council, City of Kamloops mayor and councillors and a delegation of 50-plus bid committee and community members at the airport when delegates arrived.
Tk’emlúps Kúkpi7 (Chief) Rosanne Casimir led a tour that brought NAIG delegates to various venues on the weekend, including local schools, Thompson Rivers University, Shumway Lake, McArthur Island, Tournament Capital Ranch, Rocky Mountain Rangers Armoury, Tk’emlúps Powwow Grounds and the Kamloops Target Sports Association range.
A reception was held on Saturday at the TCC, with speeches from various politicians and dignitaries, followed by a demonstration in the TCC fieldhouse of traditional NAIG events, led by Buzz Manuel, Jr., a member of the Pacific Sport Interior BC board.
At the reception, Kamloops Mayor Reid Hamer-Jackson offered a verbal joust toward Kamloops-Tk’emlúps’ Alberta competitor for the Games.
“I just want to say I’ve been to Calgary in July when it snowed,” he quipped as he addressed the four NAIG delegates, his comment eliciting a roar of laughter.
At the TCC, NAIG delegate Virgil Morgan
of the Southern Ute tribe of Colorado told KTW he was duly impressed during his visit to Kamloops, which included a discussion on Saturday with Nancy Greene-Raine.
Morgan was even more impressed when told he had just spoken to Canada’s female athlete of the 20th century.
When asked about his impression of Tk’emlúps/Kamloops, Morgan said the sports facilities were impressive, while he lauded the area’s beauty.
“We received photos and video, but they really don’t do it justice when you visit,” he said, adding he was most taken aback by the mountains and hillls, noting his home reservation in southern Colorado is also surrounded by peaks.
The NAIG delegates visited Calgary before arriving in Kamloops and Morgan said the two locales have many positives, but are different bids from different-sized communities, with the southern Alberta city reminding him of Denver.
On Saturday at the Tk’emlúps Moccasin Square Garden, the local Games bid got a powerful political boost with the appearance of B.C. Premier David Eby and Tourism Minister
Lana Popham, both of whom teamed up with Tk’emlúps council for a basketball game against the Sk’elep School of Excellence.
“We at Tk’emlúps appreciate the partnership and support of the City of Kamloops, the province, the chiefs of B.C. and our community,” Casimir said on behalf of Tk’emlúps and the Shuswap Nation Tribal Council, for which she is tribal chief. “It was our intention to showcase to our four NAIG representatives that we not only had the capacity to host an amazing sporting event, but we had the support of community, Indigenous leaders and government on every level to ensure we could bring about a cultural experience that would create a legacy for all participants for years to come.”
The bid committee, led by Casimir, will present to a panel of 26 NAIG council members in Dartmouth, N.S. on May 17. The successful proponent will be announced during the 2023 NAIG in Halifax in July.
The quadrennial North American Indigenous Games is the largest international, multi-sport and cultural event for Indigenous youth in North America.
A forward-looking community health panel is planned for next week by Kamloops members of the Green Party of British Columbia.
The panel will be composed of seven health professionals, including doctors, nurses, pharmacists and government officials.
Organizer and local Green Party member David Sedgman said the event won’t be political, beyond a Green Party booth, and will focus on solutions to problems in health care.
“The idea is not to look in the past. I think everybody has horror stories,” Sedgman said. “And it’s not a political bashing because I don’t think any political party has
figured it out.”
The free event will take place at Thompson Rivers University in the Campus Activity Centre’s Mountain Room on Wednesday, May 3, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Sedgman said he has a family doctor, but like two in five Kamloopsians ‚ about 40,000 of
the city’s 100,000 residents — his wife does not.
Among the seven panellists is Christine Matuschewski, the CEO of STEPS, a community health centre with five locations in Kamloops that offers wraparound health services, including access to doctors, nurses, dieticians and support services.
STEPS, or Supporting Team Excellence with Patients Society, started in Valleyview and has expanded across the city. Sedgman said the clinics now serve 20,000 patients in Kamloops.
“The benefit of the community health clinic to the doctors is that the clinic runs the business and bills on behalf of the doctor,” Sedgman said, noting the model takes the burden off of doctors in terms of having to set up and run their
own businesses.
“We’re thinking, why aren’t there more of them? Because it sounds great,” Sedgman said.
Another panelist is Julie Ford, a pharmacist of 25 years who runs the Pharmasave location in Aberdeen. Ford obtained a master’s in business
administration while working as a pharmacist and also served as an administrator at the BC Cancer Agency.
Sedgman said Ford will speak about other duties health-care professionals might be able to take on, such as pharmacists having more power to prescribe and nurse practitioners taking on some work of doctors.
“We need more people who can do things that their doctors are having a hard time doing,” Sedgman said.
As for Green Party solutions, Sedgman said the party is supportive of the community health clinic model and also adamant about keeping health care within the public realm, rather than a private/public system,
“I don’t think there’s a magic bullet, but it could be run a lot smoother,” he said.
Supported by
Day One Society
Kamloops Society for Alcohol and Drug Services has changed its name to Day One Society.
“Day one is simply an event on a particular moment in time when a person recognizes that they can’t stop this negative behaviour; that they have tried; that they are serious about this particular moment and they recognize that they need help,” said Stan Fike.
Day One Society helps those struggling with addiction on their journey to wellness and recovery.
“The next step is to reach out for help.”
Dr. Stan Fike Board Member,
However, beyond the farreaching standouts, there are also a number of artists who have stayed local, especially those who have worked with the Kamloops Art Gallery, which saw a number of alumni take on work there or show their work in The Cube gallery.
“Over the years, the Kamloops Art Gallery has gone from not having much involvement with the program to having alumni in key positions at the gallery,” Lawrence said.
Among the standout artists the program has produced is Casey Koyczan, whose work was shown at the Venice Biennale in 2022 as part of his work with artist group ARCTIC XR. Lawrence compared the event to the Olympics as one of the premiere art events in the world.
“So, from the local to the international, it’s compelling,” Lawrence said.
McCutcheon acknowledged the work of students from TRU and the loss that would come from shuttering the program.
“I’m not going to try and sugarcoat that. There is a loss.
We grieve that, in fact. We’re losing something that has been important in the community,” he told KTW.
“But like everything, there’s a time and a place for all sorts of things and we’re looking at this and, based on what the students are asking for, we need to go in a different direction.”
Part of that different direction is more emphasis on the school’s theatre program, which he said has managed to go from a similar low-enrolment position to a more popular program, now combined with the English department.
Under the new format, McCutcheon said, the theatre program will be reviewed in five years.
He said a similar attempt was made at reforming the fine arts program, but couldn’t say why it didn’t materialize.
“We did try. We’ve been trying to offer this program for a long time,” he said.
“What we’ve seen is a consistent, but small, group of people who want to do this.”
McCutcheon also cited high attrition rates, with many more first-year students than fourthyear students.
Lawrence raised the concern that some faculty were not replaced after retiring and hires were made in other departments instead.
McCutcheon acknowledged that the number of visual arts faculty has gone from 10 to five
over the past decade, but said it has had no effect on enrollment.
“I understand the concern, but there is a truth to this, as well,” he said.
A change.org petition was created by Darlene Kalynka and, as of KTW press deadline on Tuesday, April 25, it totalled nearly 500 signatures.
The petition can be found online at change.org by searching “Save the BFA at Thompson Rivers University, Kamloops, B.C.”
McCutcheon said the plan to end the program still has to be presented to the university senate and board — something that will happen over the next six months.
We need approximately 1,500 sq. ft. of flat, dry space one night a week to receive a 53’ trailer, offload skid cages of newspapers and transfer loads to our local drivers in smaller delivery vehicles. We typically receive between 16 and 18 skids. We have an onsite supervisor who co-ordinates the unloading and loading.
Typically the work happens between midnight Tuesday and 10:00 am Wednesday but it can go longer if we have bad weather, highway closures or heavier papers.
We are open to renting or subletting space in a suitable location or subcontracting the receiving operation to a logistics operator.
We store a forklift and a skid of stacked pallets on the site.
For more information contact Ray Jolicoeur at: 250-371-1333
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“When I do a puzzle with my daughters, there is usually an elephant next to a giraffe next to a rhino,” said professor Ron Milo of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel.
“But if I was trying to give them a more realistic sense of the world, it would be a cow next to a cow next to a cow — and then a chicken.”
Milo didn’t mention the fact that the cows sometimes explode.
Well, not exactly, but earlier this month, on April 10, an industrial-scale dairy farm in Texas had a barn explosion that killed 18,000 cows. Cows belch methane as they digest their fodder and, above a concentration of five per cent, methane becomes explosive.
Apparently, nobody explained to the folks at the South Fork Dairy (near Dimmit, Tex.) that proper ventilation will prevent methane from building up like that. However, explosions are the least of our cow problems. There are at least one-billion cows in the world and the average cow produces 100 kilograms of methane per year.
That’s most unfortunate because methane is a powerful greenhouse gas, responsible for between a quarter and one-third of the warming that is playing havoc with our climate today.
Morever, more than half of agricultural land on the planet is used to feed not people, but all those cattle.
Early farmers domesticated cattle at least 8,000 years ago and even that had an impact on the
planet. Over a few thousand years, the extra methane emitted by the relatively small number of tame cattle those farmers kept — probably only a few million — was enough to turn the climate trend completely around.
The normal pattern since long before human beings appeared on the planet has been 100,000 years of deep freeze, then a 10,000-year inter-glacial warm period like the present and repeat ad nauseam.
The current inter-glacial period started 11,900 years ago, so we should be sliding down into the next major glaciation by now, but we’re not.
The Ice Ages were cancelled permanently about 5,000 years ago. A few million extra cattle belching methane for 3,000 years put enough methane into the air to stop the cooling trend. Even before the Industrial Revolution, the average global temperature was a full degree Celsius higher than you would normally expect at this point in the cycle.
The fundamental issue is land
use. Human beings have appropriated 40 per cent of the land surface of the planet for our agriculture (up from seven per cent in 1700), removing trees and most of the original wildlife and replacing them with our own crops and food animals.
If you count managed forests, roads, buildings, ski runs and everything in between, we actually control 75 per cent of the ice-free land surface. Much of the rest is bare rock, tending toward the vertical.
We have increased the mass of animal life on the land four-fold (mostly cattle), but removed twothirds of the mass of vegetable matter (the forests). In fact, the bodies of living human beings now account for 36 per cent of the total weight of land mammals on Earth. Our farm animals account for 60
per cent and wild animals for only four per cent.
This has to stop. At least half of the agricultural land on the planet — and more likely two-thirds of it — has to be “rewilded” in order to restore the world’s principal carbon sink and to preserve the biodiversity on which the entire ecosystem depends.
This doesn’t all have to happen right away, but it has to happen in the next 30 to 50 years.
As a transitional measure, we will feed the domestic animals with food from the air (precision fermentation of selected bacteria, a rapidly developing technology), and give the farmland we used to grow their fodder on (half of all farmland) back to nature.
We can cut the emissions of our animals a bit by the clever use of food additives, but most of them
will eventually have to go, too.
What will we eat instead? The plants we grow on the remaining farmland and the thousand varieties of convincing meat, fish and vegetable substitutes that we can make with the astoundingly flexible fermentation technology.
And what about the two-billion people who make their living from farming? That is a very large question, but most of them will have to find other employment within the next two generations.
Why haven’t you heard about this before? Because most of those who know it believe you aren’t ready to hear it yet.
You might think they are crazy, but in 10 or 15 years, almost everybody will know it.
Editor:
Sometimes people simply give up and feel like throwing in the towel.
Early one August morning last year, I was walking our dog, Buddy, along Rivers Trail by Westmount Park when something shiny caught my attention.
Editor:
I would like to thank B.C. Parks staff for implementing a new commitment to inclusion policy. Readers can access and review the policy online at tinyurl.com/4ytu5rak.
The new policy will hopefully address inclusion and access issues for the public at large and, in particular, seniors and people with physical disabilities and/or physical challenges.
I would particularly like to see this new policy applied to the management of the boat launch in Paul Lake Provincial Park.
The boat launch includes steel bollards to prevent people from launching their boats into the lake using their boat trailers. Seniors and physically challenged/disabled individuals simply cannot lift their fishing boats on and off a boat rack from the roof of their vehicles.
Using a boat trailer is the only practical way for these folks to launch their boats into Paul
Lake and it is a travesty of responsible and fair management when a grandfather or physically challenged person cannot take their grandchildren or children fishing or boating on Paul Lake because of the bollards.
I strongly encourage B.C. Parks staff to manage the boat launch at Paul Lake in the same manner as they manage the boat launch at Lac Le Jeune Provincial Park. Lac Le Jeune — smaller than, but similar to, Paul Lake — has a boating speed limit of 20 km/h in place to address safety and shoreline environmental concerns and this management approach has worked extremely well over many years.
If you would like to be able to use your boat trailer to launch your fishing boat into Paul Lake, send your feedback to B.C. Parks staff using the website link above.
Elmer Fast Kamloops
It was a plastic Ziploc bag that contained three other small Ziploc bags. On one bag were symbols of the old peace sign. On a second bag were symbols of human skulls. On the third bag was the pink residue from some kind of powder.
The material ended up inside a plastic doggie bag and was discarded into a garbage container.
We used to have a reasonably safe community, but drug use has taken over and permeates almost every aspect of our day-to-day lives.
A lot of us don’t venture out after dark. We may fear what our kids or grandchildren may contact when
playing in a park or even walking along a city street or Rivers Trail.
Even walking our dogs has become a risk to the animals who do not have the capacity to recognize threats to their well-being.
Thanks to Coun. Katie Neustaeter for stepping outside of her comfort zone and proposing a bylaw amendment to ban drug use in parks and other public spaces.
Maybe being a mom lets
her recognize that steps need to be taken, steps that are not easy ones to tread. And dare I thank Mayor Reid Hamer-Jackson for coming out of the sea of people inexperienced in politics to try to make a difference to our community?
Surely Neustaeter and Hamer-Jackson can find some common ground to at least start to understand each other.
John Noakes KamloopsKamloops This Week is a member of the National Newsmedia Council, which is an independent organization established to deal with acceptable journalistic practices and ethical behaviour. If you have concerns about editorial content, please email editor@kamloopsthisweek.com or call 250-374-7467
If you are not satisfied with the response and wish to file a formal complaint, visit the website at mediacouncil.ca or call toll-free 1-844-877-1163
The former home of the man who attacked then-teenager Jessie Simpson is now on the market.
In February, B.C. Supreme Court Justice Joel Groves ruled that Kristopher Teichrieb deliberately sold his home to his parents for a dollar after the attack in an effort to hide his assets from a potential lawsuit.
As a result, Groves ordered the sale of the house in Brocklehurst be done by the mother of the victim, Sue Simpson, who will receive the proceeds to help care for injured son. The home’s latest assessed value according to BC Assessment is $973,000 and the riverfront home at 1715 Clifford Ave. in Brocklehurst is now on the market with an asking price of $850,000.
While the proceeds of the sale will go to Sue Simpson, how much that ends up being is unknown as Justice Groves noted the home is heavily mortgaged and requires extensive renovation work.
Teichrieb beat Jessie Simpson with a bat in June 2016, leaving the then-18-year-old in a coma and with serious, lifelong brain damage. For the past six years, Jessie Simpson has been confined to a wheelchair, will likely never walk again and will require 24-hour care for the rest of his life.
In 2021, a civil suit awarded Jessie Simpson nearly $7 million from Teichrieb after he was found civilly responsible for damages, though the victim has yet to receive any money.
Lawyers representing the Simpson family accused Teichrieb of hiding assets after
The former home of the man who attacked then-teenager Jessie Simpson is now on the market.
In February, B.C. Supreme Court Justice Joel Groves ruled that Kristopher Teichrieb deliberately sold his home to his parents for a dollar after the attack in an effort to hide his assets from a potential lawsuit.
As a result, Groves ordered the sale of the house in Brocklehurst be done by the mother of the victim, Sue Simpson, who will receive the proceeds to help care for injured son. The home’s latest assessed value according to BC Assessment is $973,000 and the riverfront home at 1715 Clifford Ave. in Brocklehurst is now on the market with an asking price of $850,000.
the attack in anticipation of that lawsuit. Teichrieb sold his $587,000 house to his parents for $1 seven months after the assault while he was in pretrial custody. In 2016, prior to the assault, Teichrieb, who owned two-thirds of the home, paid his parents $100,000 for the one-third of the property they owned to become the sole owner before selling it back to them after the assault.
While the proceeds of the sale will go to Sue Simpson, how much that ends up being is unknown as Justice Groves noted the home is heavily mortgaged and requires extensive renovation work.
Court heard the house is Teichrieb’s lone asset, with his company, KCR Construction, being taken over by his father after the attack and eventually collapsing.
told police they could hear the teen crying and saw him covered in blood. When police arrived on scene minutes later, they found Teichrieb standing over a bloodied, motionless Jessie Simpson, saying, “I got him.”
In the weeks leading up to the attack, Teichrieb had threatened vigilante action after calling police to report a number of incidents of theft and trespassing. Police warned him not to take matters into his own hands.
Sue Simpson, along with friends of the family, continues to organize various fundraising activities to help pay for her son’s care costs.
told police they could hear the teen crying and saw him covered in blood. When police arrived on scene minutes later, they found Teichrieb standing over a bloodied, motionless Jessie Simpson, saying, “I got him.”
In the weeks leading up to the attack, Teichrieb had threatened vigilante action after calling police to report a number of incidents of theft and trespassing. Police warned him not to take matters into his own hands.
Sue Simpson, along with friends of the family, continues to organize various fundraising activities to help pay for her son’s care costs.
In his ruling of Feb. 16, Justice Groves ordered that Teichrieb’s parents must be out of the home by April 30. Court heard Teichrieb’s parents moved into the ground floor of the house, with the upper floor under renovation, almost immediately after the attack to run their son’s business.
Teichrieb beat Jessie Simpson with a bat in June 2016, leaving the then-18-year-old in a coma and with serious, lifelong brain damage. For the past six years, Jessie Simpson has been confined to a wheelchair, will likely never walk again and will require 24-hour care for the rest of his life.
Teichrieb pleaded guilty to aggravated assault and began serving a seven-year sentence in 2018. He had originally been charged with attempted murder. In the spring of 2021, he was granted statutory release and moved to a halfway house.
the attack in anticipation of that lawsuit. Teichrieb sold his $587,000 house to his parents for $1 seven months after the assault while he was in pretrial custody. In 2016, prior to the assault, Teichrieb, who owned two-thirds of the home, paid his parents $100,000 for the one-third of the property they owned to become the sole owner before selling it back to them after the assault.
“Court Ordered Sale, this stunning waterfront property has a huge detached garage/ shop plus 2nd detached double garage. Comes with private moorage shown on Kamloops property report but no dock.
Court heard the house is Teichrieb’s lone asset, with his company, KCR Construction, being taken over by his father after the attack and eventually collapsing.
Jessie Simpson, then 18, was celebrating high school graduation on June 19, 2016. He became separated from friends and ended up on Teichrieb’s property, near the corner of Holt Street and Clifford Avenue in Brocklehurst, in the early morning hours.
In 2021, a civil suit awarded Jessie Simpson nearly $7 million from Teichrieb after he was found civilly responsible for damages, though the victim has yet to receive any money.
Court heard Teichrieb’s mother, Cheryl, was caring for her husband, Cornelius, who is infirm after suffering a stroke in 2018. Teichrieb was last known to be residing in a halfway house as part of his sentence for assaulting Jessie Simpson.
Lawyers representing the Simpson family accused Teichrieb of hiding assets after
In his ruling of Feb. 16, Justice Groves ordered that Teichrieb’s parents must be out of the home by April 30. Court heard Teichrieb’s parents moved into the ground floor of the house, with the upper floor under renovation, almost immediately after the attack to run their son’s business.
Teichrieb attacked the teen with his fists and a metal baseball bat. Teichrieb’s neighbours called 911 to report the June 19, 2016, attack, the bulk of which took place in the middle of the street after Jessie Simpson attempted to flee. Neighbours
House needs work as renovation was started and top floor stripped down to studs in kitchen, bath and ensuite. 3 bedrooms up and large enclosed sunroom off the dining area. Main opens to huge deck with yard access & river view.
Teichrieb pleaded guilty to aggravated assault and began serving a seven-year sentence in 2018. He had originally been charged with attempted murder. In the spring of 2021, he was granted statutory release and moved to a halfway house.
Jessie Simpson, then 18, was celebrating high school graduation on June 19, 2016. He became separated from friends and ended up on Teichrieb’s property, near the corner of Holt Street and Clifford Avenue in Brocklehurst, in the early morning hours.
Detached shop has storage or office with access to the newer elaborate shop with garage doors front & back. Concrete driveways for parking longest RV and toys. Second driveway to the carport and older double garage gives ample off road parking for the inlaw suite. Full kitchen with living room and 2 bedrooms, laundry and 4pc bath.
Court heard Teichrieb’s mother, Cheryl, was caring for her husband, Cornelius, who is infirm after suffering a stroke in 2018. Teichrieb was last known to be residing in a halfway house as part of his sentence for assaulting Jessie Simpson.
Stay in the suite while you renovate. Level walk out to the covered patio and yard. Fenced 1/2 acre lot runs to the river.”
Teichrieb attacked the teen with his fists and a metal baseball bat. Teichrieb’s neighbours called 911 to report the June 19, 2016, attack, the bulk of which took place in the middle of the street after Jessie Simpson attempted to flee. Neighbours
“Court Ordered Sale, this stunning waterfront property has a huge detached garage/ shop plus 2nd detached double garage. Comes with private moorage shown on Kamloops property report but no dock.
House needs work as renovation was started and top floor stripped down to studs in kitchen, bath and ensuite. 3 bedrooms up and large enclosed sunroom off the dining area. Main opens to huge deck with yard access & river view.
Detached shop has storage or office with access to the newer elaborate shop with garage doors front & back. Concrete driveways for parking longest RV and toys. Second driveway to the carport and older double garage gives ample off road parking for the inlaw suite. Full kitchen with living room and 2 bedrooms, laundry and 4pc bath.
Stay in the suite while you renovate. Level walk out to the covered patio and yard. Fenced 1/2 acre lot runs to the river.”
Police have released the name and photograph of the man whose body was found in a dumpster in Valleyview on April 20.
Kamloops RCMP has identified the deceased as Gregory Troy Hamilton and police are hoping the release of his name and photo will aid in their investigation.
Hamilton’s body was found at about 11:30 p.m. in a dumpster in the 1900-block of Curlew Drive, between two apartment buildings.
Sgt. Nestor Baird of the Kamloops RCMP’s serious crime unit said Hamilton went by the nickname of “Monster” and was a transient resident in both Kamloops and 100 Mile House.
Baird said police are interested in any information
related to Hamilton’s recent movements or anyone who recognizes him and saw him around their neighbourhood.
“Collecting as much information as possible from the days leading up to his death will help us timeline his last movements as part of the investigation into what transpired,” Baird said.
Police are asking residents in the Valleyview area to review dash-cam or security camera footage to see if Hamilton was captured.
Police say the BC Coroners Service is also conducting an investigation and an autopsy is scheduled to help determine a cause of death.
Anyone with information is asked to contact the Kamloops RCMP at 250-828-3000 and reference file 2023-13551.
The dumpster in which Hamilton’s body was found is
one that is often used by the area’s homeless population to search for items, according to a resident who lives in the area.
Bob Wong and Catherine Phillippe, who live across the street from where the body was found, were surprised to hear the news.
“Crime so close to me, that’s
a first,” Wong told Kamloops This Week , noting he has seen some “shady”-looking people who hang out in the parking lot.
“There’s homeless people going through that [dumpster] all the time,” Wong said, adding he was home all day on April 20 and did not notice any unusual activity in the neighbourhood.
“It was pretty peaceful, as usual,” Wong said, noting he had his curtains drawn. He said there are a few “shady motels” nearby, but added he has not had any issues with crime in the two years he has lived in the neighbourhood.
Philippe said she did not notice anything untoward in the neighbourhood on Thursday, but added she did see a suspicious person around the dumpster across the street on April 17.
“I noticed a man who kept walking to the dumpster and
looking in and climbing in,” Phillippe said.
She said she was folding laundry at the time and looked out her bedroom window to see the man, who appeared to be in his 60s, walking back and forth from the dumpster in the parking lot, pulling a small travel suitcase.
“Then he climbed out and kept checking around the area, walking back and forth,” Phillippe said.
She said she assumed he was a homeless man looking for bottles, but noted she did not see him grab anything from the dumpster. She said he was in the area for about an hour before leaving.
The dumpster is located directly behind the Lamplighter Motel, which BC Housing purchased recently to maintain as a shelter for the homeless population.
This weekend will see the arrival of the warmest temperatures of the year, readings that may set records if the forecast is accurate.
Environment Canada is calling for the mercury to rise to 27 C on Friday, April 28, followed by 28 C on Saturday and 26 C on Sunday before cooling to the low 20s on Monday.
After weeks of belowseasonal temperatures across the Kamloops region, this will be the first significant stretch of above-seasonal temperatures since January.
“The warming we’re seeing towards the end of the week and into the weekend is definitely
above normal, even for spring temperatures,” Environment and Climate Change Canada meteorologist Derek Lee told KTW , noting the pending period of warmth is going to be “quite anomalous.”
The weather pattern will shift again next week as cooler temperatures are expected to return.
“That’s not to say it’s going to be below normal, but it definitely won’t be 30 degrees every day going ahead,” Lee said.
In the month of May, Lee said there is an above-normal trend for warmer temperatures for all of the province.
With the effects of La Niña ending in March, Lee said we are in a neutral state, a transition period before El Niño returns.
Lee said with a “probability
of 62 per cent,” the chance of El Niño returning gets higher and higher and could arrive as early as June.
While Environment Canada is predicting a high of 28 C on Saturday, the Weather Network is calling for a peak of 30 C.
In the days leading up to the deadly heat dome of late June 2021, the Weather Network was more accurate than Environment Canada in forecasting the temperatures. Kamloops set an all-time heat record in June 29, 2021, with a temperature of 47.3 C.
Lee conceded the heat dome was “maybe a little bit underforecast for some places.”
“Moving ahead, we’re very alert on major heat events because it’s turned into such a big response from all over the province,” he said.
Generally, Lee said, weather modelling works by looking at current conditions.
“If the current conditions are right and correct now, then the model will likely be better and correct in the next few days,” he said.
“If the model is wrong right now, we can intervene and change things as we go along, even if we’re looking at five days, because whatever happens now is very important to what happens in the five-day [forecast].”
Lee said the United Kingdom, United States and all of Europe each have their own system of weather modelling.
The Canadian model uses both regional deterministic prediction system and global deterministic prediction system displayed in three
different resolutions.
Lee said the benefit of the Canadian model is that it has “much higher resolution than the other weather models out there.”
Lee said Environment Canada can do post-processing, adding one or more scientific software processes that capture the output from a numerical weather prediction system to enhance its value.
Lee said most other weather models lack this feature, which he said is especially useful for seven-day forecast weather modelling. Essentially, it allows for intervention to create more accurate weather data.
For example, it can take into account prevailing wind patterns at a particular location, such as a valley, and analyze historical weather data.
One of the largest strikes in Canadian history entered its second week on Wednesday, April 26 as Public Service Alliance of Canada workers remain on picket lines across the country, including in Kamloops.
The bargaining groups involve about 155,000 federal public servants, including 35,000 Canada Revenue Agency employees. About 120,000 employees can legally strike as they are not deemed to be of essential service.
Among the issues are wages, rules around working remotely and job security. The union wants a three-year deal with annual raises of 4.5 per cent, while the Treasury Board has offered the union a nine per cent raise over three years.
Since the strike involves nearly one-third of all federal public servants, both the union and the government have warned of disruptions, including with tax returns, border traffic and applications for employment insurance, immigration and passports.
Beginning this week, Public Service Alliance of Canada National President Chris Aylward said, the union will be ramping up its ongoing strike by moving picket lines to strategic locations, such as ports, in an effort to pressure the federal government .
Negotiations on a new contract began in June 2021.
To find out if a government department you need to access is impacted, go online to tinyurl.com/ym57eaud and do a search for the applicable government department.
Workers in Kamloops have joined the more than 100,000 federal public servants who are on strike across the country after the federal government and the Public Service Alliance of Canada failed to reach a deal before an April 18 deadline. The strike began on April 19, with wages, working remotely and job security among the issues cited by the union.
As the number of people opting for selfrepresentation in court continues to rise in Kamloops due to both the cost and lack of available lawyers, community advocates are encouraging the public to educate themselves about support services available.
Kamloops and District Elizabeth Fry Society senior lawyer Odette DempseyCaputo and her team are urging the community to learn more about the benefits of having a McKenzie friend for support and assistance in court proceedings.
A McKenzie friend is a support person who sits alongside someone appearing in court without a lawyer. The name is tied to a divorce court case in England in 1970, when Levine McKenzie appealed the decision of a judge who disallowed his having a friend sit beside him during a previous trial.
“Generally, you’re not allowed to speak, so normally you have to sit behind the bench, but you can ask for that [support person] the day of the trial,” Dempsey Caputo said.
While anyone can act as a McKenzie friend, the decision about their presence in the courtroom is ultimately at the judge’s discretion to ensure equality
among both parties.
If a judge gives permission to a trusted family member, friend or social agency representative, a McKenzie friend can sit at the front of the courtroom to take notes, organize documents, make suggestions, provide emotional support, listen to the courtroom discussion and do any other tasks approved by the judge. However, their roles and expectations must clearly be defined and approved by the judge in advance.
“There are no guidelines about how to self-represent in court,” said Elizabeth Fry family law advocate Stephanie Ostojic.
“You don’t train to become a lawyer or expect to speak to a judge, so it just provokes more anxiety and fear. There’s pressure to say the right thing. There’s pressure to say which way your course is going to go.”
At Elizabeth Fry in Kamloops, clients are scheduled for a free intake appointment to gather information about their situation, income and employment. Afterwards, legal advocates in Kamloops and Kelowna may review and provide suggestions on legal documents before they are filed.
Ostojic said that backups at legal aid have resulted in a greater need for support in navigating the legal system, especially in family law matters.
“Lots of people can’t afford a lawyer,” Ostojic said. “Everybody has other things going on. If another lawyer is involved, we do try to help, especially with legal aid because they only have so many hours. So I’ll help with paperwork. I’m the third party that can provide that sort of information and service. If they have retained a lawyer, they should always speak to me. We don’t want them to lose their lawyer due to lack of
trustand confidence.”
Ted Murray, executive director of the TRU Community Legal Clinic, said it can fill a McKenzie Friend role for people dealing with small claims matters, but added that, because the clinic has article students, it usually provides full representation.
However, Murray said the clinic offers very limited services for family matters due to the funding structure of the model.
Early-Bird registration: $185 until April 30th, 202 3
Regular registration: $2 35
League games will be played on weeknight evenings (anticipated 6 p.m., 6:30 p.m., 7 p.m. or 8 p.m f irst pitch times).
Games are played at Norbrock S tadium or Canada Games Field
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LOCAL NEWS
DAVE EAGLES/KTW
CAMPFIRE CAUSED BLAZE
At about 2:45 p.m., firefighters, Mounties and city community service officers responded to the blaze in the area of Powers Road and
Strathcona Terrace. Flames rose to an estimated 30 feet in the air at one point, while smoke from the fire could be seen across the city.
Firefighters from Kamloops Fire Rescue and the BC Wildfire Service managed to suppress the flames in short order, while about 4,000 BC Hydro customers were without power through the afternoon.
Kamloops RCMP Supt. Jeff Pelley said the origin of the fire has been established as a campfire, noting a criminal investigation is underway.
Those with information are asked to call Kamloops RCMP at 250-828-3000 and reference file 2023-13341.
Christine Matuschewski: CEO STEPS (Supporting Team Excellence with Patients Society), a community health centre with multiple clinic locations caring for over 20,000 people in the Kamloops region
Dr. Rani Srivastava RN, PhD, FCAN: Dean of Nursing TRU Patient centered care and cultural competence
Julie Ford BSc (Pharmacy), MBA: Pharmacist Owner/Operator Pharmasave Aberdeen
4
May
Date: Wednesday, May 3
Time: Doors open at 6:30pm Panel 7:00pm-9:00pm
MICHAEL POTESTIO STAFF REPORTER michael@kamloopsthisweek.com
The convention will be held in Vernon from April 25 to 28 and the City of Kamloops is co-sponsoring a pair of resolutions this year with the City of Kelowna.
Kamloops Coun. Bill Sarai, who is vice-president of the SILGA board of directors, told KTW getting the joint resolutions approved would be “huge” accomplishments.
Under the first resolution, the two cities call on the Union of BC Municipalities (UBCM) to lobby the province to increase funding for on-demand mental health
treatment, withdrawal management and substance use programs throughout the province to meet the needs of people suffering from substance abuse and mental health challenges. The resolution also asks Victoria to update its A Pathway to Hope strategy to include a plan to fully fund and establish regional campuses of care.
“That’s a win if we can get that,” Sarai said, noting there are people in Kamloops so heavily entrenched in drug use and mental health issues that they are a danger to themselves and others and need help.
Kamloops and Kelowna also have a transient housing resolution calling on UBCM to lobby the province to “urgently” provide “substantial” increased funding for on-demand withdrawal management and substance abuse treatment programs with diverse, culturally appropriate, recovery-driven transitional
housing options.
If the resolutions pass at SILGA, they will be put to a vote at the UBCM convention in September. If the resolutions pass there, they would likely get the attention of the province, Sarai said, allowing the city to lobby the government, noting the support the resolutions have behind them.
“Nothing says they’ll jump all over it, but it sure will get their attention,” he said.
Sarai said he is also interested in discussing housing issues and watching the outcome of a resolution from Barriere. That resolution calls for the UBCM to ask the province to review the feasibility of requiring all commercial semi-trucks travelling in B.C. to have dash-cams to encourage driver accountability.
Six of nine members of Kamloops council are attending the SILGA convention, with councillors Nancy Bepple, Kelly Hall and Margot Middleton not going.
Dr. Selena Lawrie:
One of the original founders of STEPS and the first site director for the UBC Family Practice Residency Program in Kamloops
Tanya Sanders RN MSN PhD(c): Associate Teaching Professor Nursing TRU, Community Health
Sara Goddard RNc: Outreach nurse, Remote Nursing, Doctors without Borders
1. 2. 3. 5. 6.The Kamloops RCMP has created two sites where people can meet to buy and sell goods via online transactions.
Residents are urged to complete transactions at either of the new Buy and Sell Exchange Zones, which are located inside the main Kamloops RCMP detachment downtown at 560 Battle St. and at the North Shore Community Policing Office at 915 Seventh St. in North Kamloops.
The Buy and Sell Exchange Zones are open weekdays from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. and are under 24/7 surveillance.
“The goal of this new project is to provide locations where people can choose to complete their online transactions in a safer and monitored environment, in an effort to
help reduce theft, robbery and fraud,” said Const. Justice Lesuk, the officer responsible for implementing the zones locally.
Lesuk proposed bringing the initiative to Kamloops in recognition of some of the safety concerns online buy-and-sell consumers can sometimes have.
“It’s a simple and straightforward solution that will, hopefully, provide buy-andsell shoppers with more comfort when they get to the actual physical exchange of cash and product,” Lesuk said.
Although the site offers a safer place to exchange goods, it should be noted that police will not be assisting or mediating exchanges and that the surveillance won’t be actively monitored. The Kamloops RCMP added that it will not take any financial responsibil-
ity for trades completed or provide any assurance in the validity of items purchased.
If people buying and selling items online are unable to meet at the two Buy and Sell Exchange Zones, police have the following tips for conducting transactions:
• Conduct the exchange in the daytime;
• Don’t go alone. Bring a friend or family member with you;
• Go to a public place that has plenty of foot traffic;
• Limit the personal information you give out;
• On either side of the exchange, inspect the items and money to ensure they are not fraudulent
• Check with this website — https://www.cpic-cipc.ca/ index-eng.htm — to ensure the items being traded are not stolen.
We remember workers who lost their lives on the job, and we stand with those suffering workplace injury or illness.
The Tour of Honour arrived in Kamloops on April 19 to promote awareness and raise money for two of its programs — Honour House and Honour Ranch — for first responders and Canadian military members suffering illnesses and injuries.
Arriving at Kamloops Legion in a donated Humvee and trailer, the Tour of Honour brought a message of healing and wellness to the River City.
The two-month B.C.and Yukon tour is a grassroots effort to bring attention to illnesses and injuries that face those who put on a uniform, to keep communities safe — first responders, veterans, police and members of the Canadian military.
Having begun in Chilliwack on April 3, the tour is visiting communities to get the word out before wrapping up in the Lower Mainland on June 10.
“If every first responder and Canadian Armed Forces member, past or present, was aware that this is available to their families and themselves, our main goal is accomplished with our Tour of Honour,” volunteer Justin De Genova said.
As well, $500,000 is the fundraising goal for both Honour House and Honour Ranch, money that would help build 10 additional cabins at the latter location.
Honour House is located in New Westminster, offering a safe haven for Canadian Armed Forces, veterans, emergency services personnel and their families who are battling illness or debilitating operational stress injuries.
The 12,000-square-foot home offers 11 bedrooms, each with a private washroom. The home is fully accessible with an elevator.
De Genova said first responders or military veterans, active or retired, who are seeking medical treatment in the Lower Mainland can stay at Honour House.
“We house families there and we
provide support programs out of the Honour House,” De Genova said.
Honour Ranch, which is a 48-hectare (120-acre) ranch near Ashcroft, opened in 2019 and provides 10 private cabins and a family-style lodge in a serene retreat setting.
“We have some mental-wellness programs that we run there, so it’s more catered to Afghan veterans with PTSD or first responders, which have suffered some physical or mental trauma and who need some time to heal,” De Genova said.
The private, secluded property is offered free of charge and clients can stay as long as is needed.
“It could be anywhere from one to 100-plus days,” De Genova said.
At the ranch, supportive, research-based programming is offered by mental-health experts and other specialists.
For more about the Honour House Society, go online to, honourhouse.ca.
To make a donation go online to admin@honourhouse.ca.
An original play from a local playwright will be presented on stage by South Kamloops secondary students in early May.
Kamloops playwright and actor Cheyenne Scott wrote Keeper of the Forest for Amy Fonseca’s drama class, which is preparing for the play’s run from May 4 to May 6 at Sagebrush Theatre.
The action/adventure play includes a cast of Grade 11 and Grade 12 students from the school, led by Fonseca, who connected with Scott before the pandemic, hoping she would speak to the class.
Although the collaboration didn’t happen until three years later, the two connected and Scott ended up writing an original play for the class. Scott’s work includes local flora and fauna, as well as the forces
that disturb it, such as the pine beetle and forest fires.
In the play, a teenager has been gifted with powers as keeper of the forest, charged with protecting the land from a raging inferno.
Fonseca said the play leans on themes of friendship and community to tell its story.
“Not only do I have a community in my cast, but it’s like being represented locally in the play itself,” Fonseca said.
Grade 12 actor Deidrich Orton, 17, plays Hawk, who protects the valley and serves as the right-hand-man for an army. While Orton has a role on stage, he is also the play’s fight choreographer.
“I’ve been trained in how to use a lot of weapons,” Orton told KTW. “I do a lot of martial arts and also a lot of stage fighting. It’s right up my alley, I’ve just never taught it before.”
Orton has the acting down, first taking the stage at age five. What’s new for
him is the choreography and teaching his fellow classmates — something he has found fulfilling.
“Seeing it take shape was like an epiphany for me, like, it’s coming together. This is going to be spectacular,” he said.
Kathleen Loughton, 18, will play one of the play’s main characters, Chick.
“Chick is very passion-
ate, I would say, compared to Chuck, who is very timid,” Loughton said.
Loughton plays the more boisterous half of a pair of twins, convincing her sibling to come along on an adventure. Now in Grade 12, Loughton said she wanted to push herself in her final year, taking on one of the main characters in the spring production.
“You practise when you’re in school, in class, and then after class, at home. It’s a lot,” she said. “But still really fun.”
Grace Cassidy, 16, plays the other half of the pair of twins.
“Chuck wants to be a jokester, but isn’t really very good at it. Chuck has a tendency to use humour as a coping mechanism,” she said.
On top of steering a
character trying to prove herself, Cassidy is also working on sets and costumes for Keeper of the Forest, including a leveractivated growing plant, a pair of papier-mâché snake heads and a trio of skirts for witches.
“It’s the first production I’ve been in that my little cousins can see and they’re always asking me about theatre and stuff, so I’m really excited,” Cassidy said.
Tickets for the world premiere of Keeper of the Forest are $15 for adults, $12 for students and $12 for seniors.
They can be purchased at the South Kamloops front office at Munro Street and Ninth Avenue in Sagebrush or online by emailing keeperoftheforesttickets@gmail. com. Showtime each night is 7 p.m., with a matinee on May 6 at 2 p.m.
• For more Community news, turn to page B1 and go online to kamloopsthisweek. com and click on the Community tab.
Pursuant to Sec tions 26(3) and 94 of the Community Char ter, S.B.C. 2003, Ch. 26, the City of K amloops (the “City ”) is disposing of 372.9 m2 of surplus road adjacent to 320 Tranquille Road, legally described as: Road to be closed shown on Bylaw Plan EPP122055, dedicated on Plan 1169, DL D, Gp 2, K (Formerly Lytton) DYD (the “Proper ty ”).
The City is transferring fee simple title of the Proper ty to 320 Tranquille Developments Ltd , to be consolidated with 320 Tranquille Road, for consideration in the amount of $205,450. For more information, please contac t David W. Freeman, RI(BC ), Assistant Development, Engineering, and Sustainability Direc tor/Real Estate Manager, at 250-828-3548.
Saturday, April 29
Vaisakhi is a Sikh holiday that celebrates the creation of the Khalsa order dating back to a harvest festival born in the Punjabi region of northern India.
Sikh communities around the world celebrate Vaisakhi in April.
“It’s open to all ages, everyone from different faiths and backgrounds is welcome to come and enjoy,” said Pav Gill, Kamloops Sikh Cultural Society member and spokesman.
At the Kamloops-based event this weekend — Saturday, April 29 —the Kamloops Sikh Cultural Society is inviting everyone from the Kamloops area to join in the celebration, which promotes justice and equality in society.
“Locally for the community, since we have a large Sikh population, it’s a celebration of the creation of Khalsa and the five beloved ones,” Gill said.
“It’s a time of everybody coming together to celebrate, also people who are non-Sikhs to come out and celebrate, as well.”
The day-long celebration, which began in 1869 with Guru Gobind Singh Ji, will begin with a flag ceremony on Saturday between 10 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. at the Sikh Cultural Society Gurudwara in Brocklehurst, at 700 Cambridge Cres.
The holy flag — known as Nishan Sahib — is taken down and replaced with a new flag during this process, which includes washing the flag pole in milk and yogurt, then in water to symbolize cleanliness and purity.
The community — Sikh and non-Sikh alike — are welcome to meet outside the Gurudwara to witness the event.
“We just keep getting bigger and bigger every year,” Gill said, noting about 1,000 people attend annually in Kamloops.
“What I’m seeing is that people who are not necessarily part of the Sikh community are coming out to meet people to learn what the faith is about.:
Afterwards, there will be a parade, known as Nagar Kirtan, with participants singing religious hymns and walking a route that starts at the Gurudwara and winds its way through Nicolani Drive, Lethbridge Avenue, Ollek Street, 14th Street and 13th Street, with a break behind A.E. Perry elementary, where food stalls will be operating.
“This parade is open to everyone and that’s basically what our faith preaches,” Gill said. “Everyone is equal. We belong to one race, which is the human race.”
For more information about the event, contact Kamloops Sikh Cultural Society president Ranjiv Mattu at 250-879-0067 or event planner Inder Heer at 250-5749611.
An integral part of Vaisakhi is the replacement of the holy flag — known as Nishan Sahib — with a new banner, followed by the washing of the flag pole in milk and yogurt, then in water to symbolize cleanliness and purity.
Saturday, April 29
April 15, 1469:
The birth of Sikhism’s founder, Guru Nanak, at village Talwandi (Punjab, India; now in Pakistan).
1507:
Guru Nanak proclaims, “There is no Hindu, there is no Muslim” — and Sikhism is founded.
1522:
Guru Nanak establishes the town of Kartarpur (now in Pakistan) on the banks of the river Ravi and the first Sikh community begins to take shape.
1539:
Guru Angad (1504-1552) takes over and, given Guru Nanak’s eldest son Sri Chand’s claim on Kartarpur (Pakistan), decides to run affairs from his hometown of Khadur.
1552:
Guru Amardas (1479-1574) takes over and, with Kartarpur (Pakistan) still under Guru Nanak’s lineage, establishes the town and community of Goindval (also known as Gobindval or Govindval or Goindwal).
1574:
Guru Ramdas (1534-1581) takes over and establishes the town and community of Ramdaspur or Amritsar.
1581:
Guru Arjan (1563-1606) takes over and continues to run affairs from Amritsar. He also establishes the towns and communities of Kartarpur (Jalandhar) in 1593, Hargobindpur and Tarn Taran.
1601:
Guru Arjan completes the compilation of the Adi Granth (or the Guru Granth). Construction on the Darbar Sahib (or Harmandir, now also known as the Golden Temple) in Amritsar is completed.
1604:
The Adi Granth (or the Guru Granth) is installed at the Darbar Sahib (or Harmandir, now also known as the Golden Temple).
1606:
Following Guru Arjan’s execution and martyrdom in Lahore by Jahangir, Guru Hargobind (1595-1644) takes over and runs affairs from Amritsar (1606-1628) and Kartarpur, Jalandhar (1628-1634). Facing persecution from the Mughals, in 1634 he establishes the town and community of
Kiratpur in the Shivalik foothills and remains there until his death.
1644:
Guru Har Rai (1630-1661) takes over and runs affairs from Kiratpur.
1661:
Guru Harkrishan (1656-1664) takes over at the age of five and remains in Kiratpur until his untimely death from smallpox at the location now marked by Gurdwara Bangla Sahib in Delhi, where he was staying following a summons from Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb.
1666:
Guru Tegh Bahadur (1621-1675) founds the city of Anandpur (near Kiratpur) in 1664.
1675:
Guru Gobind Singh (1666-1708) takes over, following Guru Tegh Bahadur’s execution and martyrdom in Delhi.
April 13, 1699:
Sikhism’s 10th and final personal guru, Gobind Singh, inaugurates Sikhism’s orthodox Khalsa order on Vaisakhi Day (marking the annual harvest season) at Anandpur.
Saturday, April 29
The Sikh religion is the fifth-largest in the world, with as many as 30-million adherents.
There have been Sikhs in Canada since the late 1880s, when hundreds arrived from the Punjab, seeking a new life and employment in mines, mills and construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway.
Today, according to the 2021 census, there are 770,000 Canadian Sikhs, a marked increase from 469,000 Sikhs documented in the 2011 census. More than 300,000 live in British Columbia.
The basic tenet of Sikhism is expressed in the words “Ik Onkar” (One God).
Guru Nanak Dev founded Sikhism in the Punjab in the 15th century, though at the time it was not his intention to form a standalone new religion.
He preached the equality of all humans and spoke against tyranny, social injustice, and religious hypocrisy.
Sikhism advocates equality for men and women of every race and religion.
The Guru Granth Sahib is a compilation of the teachings of all of the early Gurus and is the main scriptural source.
Worship is conducted in a place known as the gurudwara — doorway to God.
The Five Ks are the articles of faith worn by Sikhs.
Most wear one or more, although those who have taken amrit — similar to baptism — wear them all:
• Kesh, unshorn long hair, protected by a dastaar, better known as a turban;
• Kangha is a small wooden comb used to comb the hair twice a day;
• Kara is an iron bangle worn on the dominant hand;
• Kachera is an undergarment;
• Kirpan is a short dagger.
In addition to worship, there are other important rites and rituals within Sikhism.
The Sikh Rehat Maryada is the Sikh Code of Conduct, giving instructions for all ceremonies:
BAPTISM-AMRIT
Initiation into the Sikh religion is called the Amrit ceremony.
Sikhs undertake the Amrit ceremony when they are ready to do so and understand the commitment they are making to the religion.
The ceremony is held in the presence of the Guru Granth Sahib. It is conducted by five baptized Sikhs, called Panj Pyare, who wear the five Sikh symbols.
The five Sikhs prepare the Amrit (holy water) in a round iron-vessel containing fresh water and sweets called patasas.
They recite the five Banis (Japji Sahib, Jaap Sahib, Ten Swayyas, Chaupai Sahib and Anand Sahib) and stir the water with a double-edged sword, called a khanda.
After preparation, the Amrit is drunk by the initiation candidates, then sprinkled on their eyes and hair.
The ceremony concludes with the eating of the ceremonial karah parshad.
Saturday, April 29
MARRIAGE-ANAND KARAJ:
The Sikh marriage is called Anand Karaj, meaning “blissful union.”
Sikh weddings take place in the presence of the Guru Granth Sahib.
Anand Karaj consists of the couple revolving around Guru Granth Sahib four times as the Lavan (marriage hymns) are being recited.
The marriage ceremony may be performed by any Sikh, male or female, who has undergone the Amrit initiation.
Sikhs practise monogamy. Widows or widowers may remarry. Child marriage is forbidden.
After a child is born, the baby is often taken to a gurudwara for a naming ceremony.
Prayers (ardas) are recited for the newborn child.
After reciting ardas, the Guru Granth Sahib is opened at random. The hymn on the opened page is recited.
The first letter of the first word of the hymn is selected as the first letter of the child’s name.
The word “Kaur,” meaning “princess,” is added after a girl’s name; the name “Singh,” meaning “lion,” after a boy’s.
kamloopsthisweek.com | 778-471-7536
ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTWSeattle Thunderbirds’ head coach Matt O’Dette offered his take on what is likely to be a classic Western Hockey League postseason series featuring his club and the Kamloops Blazers.
The best-of-seven Western Conference Championship grudge match pits against each other two loaded teams with Memorial Cup aspirations.
Kamloops, which is this year hosting the national championship tournament, is looking for revenge on Seattle, which bounced the Blazers last year in Game 7 of the conference final, a 3-2 triumph at Sandman Centre.
Both teams are all-in for 2023, having made blockbuster trades and acquisitions to add to drafted-and-developed talent, moves
that have made this series mustwatch for hockey fans, with 19 NHL-drafted players, eight players in NHL Central Scouting final rankings ahead of the 2023 draft and nine players who won World
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Junior gold for Canada this year set to square off in the conference final.
Blazers’ head coach and GM Shaun Clouston and team captain Logan Stankoven joined Kamloops Last Week in studio this week for an interview.
Subscribe to KLW and follow along through your favourite podcast provider.
Below is the question-andanswer session, with Marty Hastings [MH] of KTW doing the asking and Seattle coach O’Dette [MO] responding. It has been edited for length.
Game 1 is slated for Saturday, April 29, in Kent, Wash.
THE INTERVIEW
MH: What’s it like to be involved
in a series like this, with two juggernauts going head to head?
MO: It’s exciting, for sure. Two excellent teams matching up in a conference final. What’s not to get excited about? There’s going to be some really good hockey on display, obviously, hotly contested, a really good matchup. It should be good for everyone involved, especially the fans.
MH: Nineteen NHL-drafted players, eight in NHL Central Scouting final rankings and nine who won World Junior gold this year — what jumps to mind when you hear that?
MO: I mean, you’re speechless, I guess. Rarely do you see that much talent on the ice at the same time in a junior hockey game. I
think it speaks to both organizations and what they’re doing to get themselves here.
MH: As a coach, how are you coping with the stress and pressure that comes along with having such a great team and the expectations to win?
MO: You try not to think about it. You focus on the job you have to do and tackle each challenge and each game as you get to it. Certainly, there is more pressure, with the moves that we’ve made and the expectations this year. Pressure comes with it, but you try and go about your business and it hasn’t really been at the forefront of my mind.
T-BIRDS, A26
MH: What constitutes success this season for the Seattle Thunderbirds?
MO: Well, I think a championship. We fell short last year. We made it to the final and fell two games short. From the time that buzzer went in Game 6 in Edmonton, our goal has been to come back and win a championship. The goal is to get two wins further.
MH: It’s no secret Kamloops wants revenge on Seattle and this is the series the Blazers wanted. Fraser Minten talked about it before the Vancouver series. Is this the series the T-Birds have wanted all along, too?
MO: I think it’s no secret that our path was going to go through Kamloops.
I’m sure they’re saying the same thing. Their path was going to go through Seattle. In order to get to where we want to go, which
is the championship, odds are we were going to face Kamloops. There was some excitement looking forward to that matchup. From a competitive side, you want to play against the best. That’s part of it. You want to stay in the moment. One of our messages has been, “Be where your feet are,” and try not to look ahead so far. With human nature, it’s hard. I’m sure Kamloops’ message was probably the same — it’s take care of business
first and when we get to the conference final, we can tackle that then. I think everyone is relieved it’s finally here and we can fully put our attention to it.
MH: So let’s talk about Kamloops. What are the challenges that stand out most about facing the Blazers?
MO: The talent. That goes without saying. I don’t know if it goes unnoticed, but Kamloops is a workethic-based team. They’re
one of the hardest-working teams in the league, with excellent habits. I think that’s kind of gotten them where they are, combined with the elite skill. We like to see ourselves the same way. A lot of the things we do are work-ethic based. We pride ourselves on some of those good habits. It allows our talent to shine from there.
MH: Kamloops made a big splash at the deadline. How did that move change their team?
MO: Obviously a big move. Both excellent players. When you can put a guy like [Olen] Zellweger on the ice for 30 minutes a game, that’s a big factor, a guy that competitive who plays both ends of the ice and is that dangerous, especially on the offensive side. He’s clearly had a big impact for the Blazers. You get a big, heavy, 200foot centreman like [Ryan]
Hofer, he’s just a playoff type of guy. Those are the types of guys that you need in the playoffs.
MH: I don’t imagine you will offer specifics, but do you see areas for exploitation when you look at the Blazers?
MO: Not really, no. If you look at the lineup, it’s pretty solid, top to bottom. All four lines are dangerous. Their back end’s got a bit of everything. They’ve got elite, offensive-minded defencemen and some high-quality 200-foot guys, and their goaltending has been solid all year. Not a lot of weakness there to exploit. We see a lot of similarities between the two lineups and I don’t know what they would say about us, but I think two pretty evenly matched teams, to be honest.
MH: How do you see the goaltending matchup?
MO: Ernst has had an excellent year. Milic has had an excellent year.
I think Milic probably has more experience, being in the playoff run last year and his experience with the World Junior team this year. Milic has that on his side, but I think both goalies have had excellent years and have been pretty stout so far in the playoffs. We expect a tough goaltending matchup.
MH: What type of player is Tij Iginla and what traits does he share with his father [Blazers’ part-owner Jarome Iginla]?
MO: Tij is an excellent young player. He’s played some really good hockey for us this year. He’s playing behind a lot of depth up front, but the times he’s been in the lineup for us in the playoffs, he’s played real well.
2023 Memorial Cup presented by Kia promises to be an actionpacked tournament in Kamloops with many activities and events off-ice for fans of all ages.
Leading the way are two fantastic events!
He’s got high-end skill, he’s got a heaviness and a grit to his game to go with it. High, high hockey IQ, as well, and strong work ethic.
Compared to his dad, he’s got similar, power-forward type characteristics, a guy that can put the puck in the back of net and also play with that edge and that sandpaper element.
Tij is going to be a hell of a player for us for years to come. This experience he’s getting now, just being around and getting to practise and play with all these high-end players every day, is huge for him. He’ll be the guy running things here sooner than later.
MH: Which areas of Sawyer Mynio’s game have you seen develop most this season? [Mynio is a drafteligible defenceman from Kamloops].
MO: He’s rounded out his game. Every aspect of his game has improved. His biggest strength is his skating. He’s such a good skater for a guy on the back end and for his size. He gets around the ice effortlessly. He hasn’t had the offensive opportunities to kind of pad the stats, playing behind [Kevin] Korchinski and [Jeremy] Hanzel. He hasn’t had the power play time.
ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTWThat being said, he’s still got 30-plus points and I think he was a plus-50 on the season. Two-hundred-foot player, defends really hard, really good on the penalty kill. In the second half of the season, he’s really come into his own, come out of his shell a little bit. He’s playing with a lot of confidence and getting more and more attention from the scouts.
People forget he was a 16-year-old last year playing a decent amount of minutes in the [WHL] final. He’s used that experience and carried that into this year. He’s a really big part of our back end. He kind of gets forgotten sometimes, playing behind some of those first-round NHL draft picks. There are some nights where he’s our best
defenceman, some nights where he’s logging some of the most minutes on the back end, so he’s a very valuable piece of our team.
MH: What will be the difference in the series?
MO: It’s going to be tight. There’s no doubt. Whatever team can execute their game plan and be able to handle the momentum swings of the series. There’s going to be, I’m sure, highs and lows for both sides. Whoever can kind of respond to those situations the best and who can be more resilient when their backs are up against the wall. It’s going to be such a tight series. The way the teams handle those situations will be the difference.
From A27
MH: Neither team has faced any real adversity in these playoffs. You kind of touched on it there, but how important will that aspect of the series be?
MO: It’s interesting. Both teams haven’t faced it in the playoffs yet. And this is a new year. We can look back at our experience last year, facing elimination so many times and battling through it. (Seattle won six elimination games in the 2022 WHL post-season and became the first team in league history to win two Game 7s on the road in the same playoffs.
Edmonton bested Seattle in six games in the league final.)
A lot of guys have experienced that first-hand, but this is a new season. It’s a new group of players. We can tap into that experience, but ultimately we have to show it again this year when we face those situations.
Fans are in for a treat.
The Western Hockey League Western Conference final — Kamloops Blazers versus Seattle Thunderbirds — will showcase prodigious pro-level talent.
Games 1 and 2 will take place in Kent, Wash., on Saturday (April 29) and Sunday, with games 3 and 4 scheduled for Tuesday, May 2, and Thursday, May 4, at Sandman Centre.
Game time is 7 p.m. in Kamloops both nights.
The T-Birds have 10 NHL-drafted players on their roster, including forwards Jared Davidson (Montreal Canadiens), Reid Schaefer (drafted by Edmonton Oilers, traded to Nashville Predators), Dylan Guenther (Arizona Coyotes), Colton Dach (Chicago Blackhawks), Brad Lambert (Winnipeg Jets), Jordan Gustafson
(Vegas Golden Knights) and Lucas
Ciona (Calgary Flames), and defencemen Luke Prokop (Nashville Predators), Kevin Korchinski (Chicago) and Nolan Allan (Chicago). The Blazers have nine NHL-drafted players on their roster, including forwards Logan Stankoven (Dallas Stars), Ryan Hofer (Washington Capitals), Matthew Seminoff (Dallas), Fraser Minten (Toronto Maple Leafs), Caedan
Bankier (Minnesota Wild), Daylan Kuefler (New York Islanders) and Jakub Demek (Vegas), and defencemen Kyle Masters (Minnesota) and Olen Zellweger (Anaheim Ducks).
Six T-Birds cracked NHL Central Scouting’s final rankings ahead of the 2023 NHL Draft.
Forward Gracyn Sawchyn, forward Nico Myatovic, defenceman Sawyer Mynio of Kamloops and defenceman
Jeremy Hanzel are ranked 24th, 26th, 62nd and 124th, respectively, among North American skaters.
Seattle’s backup netminder, Scott Ratzlaff, is pegged fourth among North American goaltenders, while starter Thomas Milic is ranked 28th among North American goaltenders. Two Blazers cracked the list, with Dylan Ernst ranked 26th among North American goalies and forward Connor Levis pegged 75th among North American skaters.
The series will feature nine players — three Blazers and six T-Birds — who won gold for Canada at the 2023 World Junior Hockey Championship in Halifax: Zellweger, Bankier and Stankoven of Kamloops, and Allan, Milic, Guenther, Korchinski, Dach and Schaefer of Seattle.
The Kamloops Youth Soccer Association and Kamloops Minor Baseball Association opened play for the outdoor season on Saturday. Kamloops This Week photographer Allen Douglas took in the action. Find more of his photos online at kamloopsthisweek.com.
Team Brown wrapped its 2022-2023 curling season in style, winning gold at the SGI Canada Best of the West Tournament in Saskatoon. The Kamloops Curling Club rink topped Kelsey Rocque of Winnipeg 6-1 in the championship tilt on Sunday to claim a cheque for $10,000. Skip Corryn Brown (left), third Erin Pincott and lead Samantha Fisher (right) picked up second Rachel Erickson (second from right) for the tournament, which the team has won in back-to-back years.
Human resources manager at New Gold 10K
Congratulations to everyone who ran, walked, skipped, danced or strolled across the finish line on Sunday.
It was heartwarming on a chilly, wet day to see so many faces in Riverside Park. Even the beautiful chalk art along the route weathered the rain and kept the positive vibes going. On the course, it was definitely a party, with many musicians, DJs and cheer squads along making it impossible not to have a smile on your face — or, like me, do a dance as you passed Nick Carter coming off the bridge.
Whether this was your first Boogie or your eighth event, I hope you had a wonderful time and are inspired to try another one of our great community runs this year or, at a minimum, commit to Boogie again next year.
Thank you to all the amazing volunteers. Your energy was contagious. It is not a small undertaking to execute an event like Boogie the Bridge and it would not be possible without all of your support. Thank you to the New Gold employees and family members who helped continue our 10-year legacy of having the largest corporate team. Thank you to Kamloops This Week for hosting this space to share my Boogie training and event experience with the community.
I loved hearing from all the people — from colleagues to neighbours to my dentist’s office — who followed along over the last eight weeks. It was a pleasure to share this experience with you.
Happy running!
Millwright at Teck Highland Valley Copper 21K
Red smiles for miles!
Just the way Boogie the Bridge is suppose to be, regardless of the weather and no matter the distance ran.
So, when the runner’s high wears off, what then? I encourage you to keep going. Use this Boogie as a launching board into a journey of climbing the next mountain, a mountain of personal bests or new distances. Perhaps use this drive for better fitness to explore a new sport, such as dragon boating, kayaking, soccer or lacrosse.
My next personal goals are the West Coast Trail at the end of May and the 125-kilometre, 24-hour Great Canadian Death Race. Yes, this Boogie has been part of my own training to go farther, but with a better attitude and appreciation of my own body’s limits and listening to its needs.
I hope you learned at Boogie how happy your body felt in the moment and learned in the midst of it the power of community in moving each other forward. I hope you learned that when you get stuck in a pit of shame, pity or defeat, there are people at the top edge screaming down to encourage you.
So, don’t sink into that mud. Look up and feel for those voices supporting you, just like on Boogie, and grab the greasy rope and start climbing. As you climb, it might never get easier, but at the top, you’ll see the destination you wanted to reach.
Long live Boogie red in Kamloops. May we all see each other again next year, filled with stories of our successes, big and small.
ACACIA PANGILINAN Executive director at Kamloops & District Chamber of Commerce 5KIt was incredible to be in the sea of red among nearly 3,000 people at this year’s Boogie the Bridge and I had a wonderful time on race day.
I can’t believe how quickly the eight weeks of training went and how fast race day felt. I woke up Sunday morning with nerves and reminded myself that I did the work during training to be ready for race day. Upon arrival at Riverside Park, seeing the community show up in such big and positive way turned those nerves into excitement.
It felt like it happened so fast. After visiting a few sponsor tents, it was time to start the warm-up. I made the mistake of making eye contact with Jo and, sure enough, ended up on the stage to help lead the activity. Looking into the crowd, it was great to see so many familiar, smiling faces getting ready to Boogie.
The race route was awesome and featured live music from different cultures and genres. The positivity on the route was amazing and you could hear people lifting up one another along the way.
My partner, brother and Lola (grandmother) were all there cheering for me, which made crossing the finish line even more special.
Participating in RunClub and training for Boogie the Bridge has been rewarding and I would like to extend my appreciation to all those who made it an unforgettable experience.
The morning started with the wet stuff and the forecast said it would rain for the entire morning.
As soon as the announcements and Boogie warm-up started, the rain was gone. Not a drop. The entire morning was perfect. It seemed to be the catalyst for the rest of the day. Boogie 2023 was a huge success — a perfect day in perfect harmony with everyone who attended.
The energy was exactly what Boogie is about: community love, kindness and connection. You could feel it everywhere. It was the real deal and it still takes my breath away.
It takes a whole community to raise a Boogie. Our team extends a heartfelt thank you to the individuals, sponsors, community partners and volunteers who have shared their time, talents and passion for community health.
Although words cannot express how appreciative we are, please know that your incredible efforts make Kamloops a healthier and happier community.
My heart is full. Tears of gratitude have been falling since Boogie wrapped up. My love and appreciation for the Boogie team (past, present and future) is immeasurable. I am one spoke in this amazing wheelhouse. Their dedication, work ethic and intentions are outstanding.
This team starts organizing Boogie in September and goes right through until June. They love Boogie and want to make a difference. As Margaret Mead said, “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.”
My two remarkable daughters have been involved in Boogie (and are part of the team) since they were little. Seeing them as young adults, so involved and loving their community, makes me incredibly proud of both of them.
I have big, big love for Kamloops. I love seeing everyone together on Boogie day. I love seeing all the little ones with their red Boogie shirts on. I love all the paces, ages, ethnicities, groups, families and co-workers, all smiling and happy. Nothing lights me up more.
Thank you, Kamloops, for a Boogie we will never forget. See you next year!
Boogie the Bridge returned to Riverside Park on Sunday, April 23, for its 2023 edition after being headquartered in McDonald Park in North Kamloops for the past few years. Boogie 2023 boasted 2,675 participants, with 1,475 in the 5K distance, 660 tackling the 10K route, 369 doing the Mini-Boogie and 171 running 21 kilometres.
• Great starter or downsizer with 3+1 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms
• Central location walking distance to Aberdeen Elementary School
• Good sized lot with flat and fenced yard
• Centrally located apartment in The Manor House with 2 bedrooms and 1 bathroom
• 55+ building with no pets allowed
• Quick possession possible
• Immaculately kept 2 bedroom 2 bathroom modular in Gateway Estates
• Low bareland strata fee of $110/month
• Move in ready
• Custom built 5 bedroom 4 bathroom home in the heart of downtown Kamloops
• Fully finished basement with separate entry
• Fenced yard with large covered deck
• Well cared for 1+2 bedroom 2 bathroom bareland strata in Glencairn Hill
• Lots of updated throughout
• Bareland strata fee of $160/month
• Immaculate and updated 2+2 bedroom 3 bathroom home
• Many updates done throughout including kitchen, flooring, bathrooms,
• Beautifully updated and maintained 2+1 bedroom 3 bathroom home
• Fully finished walk-out basement with separate entry
• Many updates through including furnace, hot water tank , flooring, and more
• Fabulous location in this 3+1 bedroom 3 bathroom home in Sahali
• Rancher style with main floor laundry
• Partially finished basement with separate entry
• Beautifully maintained 5+1 bedroom 4 bedroom home in great cul-de-sac location
• Centrally located close to schools and all downtown amenities
• Longtime owner with many updated throughout
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BUYING & SELLING: Vintage & mid-centur
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BigSteelBox Corp at 1284 Salish Road, Kamloops, BC. claims a PPSA Lien Against Seldeerg, Denice of Kamloops, BC for arrears of container rent amounting to $963.36 plus any additional costs of storage that accrue. If not paid in full, the contents of the storage container, filled with: furniture, totes, and other miscellaneous items. Will be sold online auction via Ibid4Storage.com on April 27, 2023.
Tsideldel First Nation is look ing to fill the position of Assistant to the Chief, who, under the direc tion of the Executive Administrative Suppor t Lead, will pr imar ily be responsible for administrative and cler ical ser vices relating to the Chief This position will be located at our Chilanko For ks, BC office. The successful incumbent will be responsible for ar ranging travel, to prepare, review, and/or edit var ious for ms of cor respondence for the Chief, and you may provide cler ical relief for the general office. Additionally, you are able to organize and wor k independently on several projec ts at one time under tight deadlines
The Assistant to the Chief must possess the following sk ills and abilities:
• Abilit y to deal with people sensitively, tac tfully, diplomatically, and professionally at all times
• Effec tive wr itten and ver bal communication
• Considerable k nowledge of general office procedures
• D emonstrated sk ill in minute tak ing and travel ar rangement while giving close attention to detail
• Have a proven track record of maintaining str ic t confidentialit y
We need approximately 1,500 sq ft of flat, dry space one night a week to receive a 53’ trailer, offload skid cages of newspapers and transfer loads to our local drivers in smaller delivery vehicles. We typically receive between 16 and 18 skids We have an onsite supervisor who co-ordinates the unloading and loading.
Typically the work happens between midnight Tuesday and 10:00 am Wednesday but it can go longer if we have bad weather, highway closures or heavier papers.
• Organized and be able to independently
We may consider a hybr id wor k ar rangement
Wage R ange: $22 00 per hour
Duration and Hours: 35 Hours per week
Deadline: Until the position is filled
To apply for this oppor tunit y, qualified applicants should submit a cover letter and resumé to Sher r y Westgarde Hepper at the email address listed below : Sher r y Westgarde Hepper, Executive Administrative Suppor t Lead, Tsideldel First Nation Email: execassistant@tsideldel.org
Since this position is engaged primarily in ser ving the interests of Aboriginal people, Tsideldel First Nation shall give preference to Aboriginal people who possess the requisite sk ill sets and experience.
We sincerely appreciate all applicants for their application, however, only those selec ted for an inter view will be contac ted
of 248 Sagewood Drive, Kamloops, BC, who died on or about September 5, 2022, are required to send them to the executor before the 31st day of May, 2023 After that date, the executor will distribute the estate among the parties entitled, having regard only to the claims of which the executor has notice
Joanne Patricia Baron, Executorc/o Gillespie & Company LLP
Lawyers 200 – 121 St Paul Street Kamloops, BC V2C 3K8
We are open to renting or subletting space in a suitable location or subcontracting the receiving operation to a logistics operator
We store a forklift and a skid of stacked pallets on the site.
For more information contact Ray Jolicoeur at: 250-371-1333
It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Wayne on February 11, 2023.
Wayne is survived by his loving family; his wife of 55 years, Bev, his daughter, Candace Cameron (Ron), and son, Cory King (Susie). His four grandchildren, Jennie Cameron, Jordan Cameron (Emma), Ciara King and Christy King.
He will be forever remembered by his sisters, Darlene Dance, Donalda Budai (Marvin Hoffman) and his brother, Ken King (Linda) and their families.
Wayne was predeceased by his parents Syd and Muriel King and his brother-in-law, George Dance.
“His memory is our keepsake With which we'll never part God has him in his keeping We have him in our hearts. “
He travelled the country With a smile of great pride Now he drives the streets of Heaven On the truckers last ride
October 12, 1933 - March 5, 2023
We lost our beloved Mom who passed away peacefully at McKinney Place in Oliver, BC on March 5, 2023 with her four children by her side. Mom was predeceased by her husband Theodore Fowler (Ted) who passed away March 28, 2020. She was also predeceased by her father Victor Murdock Chaffin, her Mother Elsie Florence Chaffin and her siblings Stan (Lee), Doug (Lynn), Marie (Marty) and Shirley
She is lovingly remembered by her four children; Angie Lock (Don), Mike Vogels, Patricia Potter (Fedel) and Linda Lowe (Arnie). Also mourning her loss are her grandchildren; Collin Lock (Gina), Niki Wright (Kyle), Trevor Lock (Susi), Brandi Twamley (Sean), Dustin Potter (Brandi), Lyndsay Schmutz (Nik), Alyssa Lowe and Kelsey Leier (Ryan). She was also a devoted and loving grandma to many great grandchildren and even a few great greats. Leah is also lovingly remembered by her three surviving siblings and spouses; Betty (George), Chan (Jan) and Gary
Leah was born in Cortez, Colorado and spent her childhood on the family's acreage. Her childhood was a time of many happy memories and as the oldest of eight children, also a lot of work! Leah worked for a time at Spears Hospital in Denver as a nursing assistant and also at Memorial Hospital in Cortez, where she was an asset with her good common sense and empathetic way of dealing with patients.
Leah and Ted met at dance in Cortez in 1958 and were married there in 1959. They owned and worked on the family’s cattle ranch in Mancos, Colorado where they raised championship Hereford bulls.
In 1964, Leah and Ted made a trip to Canada after hearing how beautiful and green it was. They both loved the area of Little Fort and made the big decision to move the family there. In 1965, they bought a ranch in Little Fort where they raised their family and were members of their community for over fifty years. Leah worked the ranch side by side with Ted and she was an integral part of every aspect of the farm. She excelled at whatever she put her hand to; whether it was delicious meals, canning all of her homegrown veggies and fruits, her beautiful gardens, hand-sewing clothes, quilting, crafts and all the many and varied chores involved with running a family farm.
Leah was a member of the Little Fort Women's Institute and made life-long connections with many other women in the community She and Ted square danced for many years and she was always beautifully dressed in her own hand-sewn dresses! Leah and Ted were snowbirds for a number of years, making wonderful memories along the way In her retirement years, Leah and Ted carpet bowled in Little Fort and went all over BC for tournaments. They were very happy to be part of the Little Fort team who won the BC Senior ’s games in 2009.
Mom was such an amazing Mother who always put the needs and wants of her family first. It seemed she never stopped working, unless it was to play cards, games, or to host a family or friends gathering. Leah loved her grandchildren with all of her heart and spent as much time as she could with them. We will miss her loving hugs and her funny sense of humour as we carry on. Her memory will be forever cherished.
A celebration of life for both Leah and Ted Fowler will be held in Little Fort on Sunday, May 21, 2023 at 1:00 pm at the Little Fort Community Hall. Please join the family there to remember and celebrate these two wonderful people.
Condolences and tributes may be directed to the family by visiting www.nunes-pottinger.com
October 4, 1937 - Meadow Lake, Saskatchewan
April 16, 2023 - Calgar y, Alber ta
Or ville Tourand of Calgar y, AB, passed away on Sunday, April 16, 2023, at the age of 85 years.
Or ville was born in Meadow Lake, SK, on October 4, 1937 Leaving Saskatchewan at a young age with his family, he spent his years in Blue River, BC, Pember ton, BC, and Kamloops, BC, and lastly in Calgar y, AB. He was a member of the IWA for over twenty years Or ville spent his working life in the bush and backroads of BC driving trucks, hauling logs, felling trees, and operating heavy equipment as a lifelong logger. Or ville had many a close calls and stories to tell, including those shared logging with his son Phillip in Nor thern BC
Or ville enjoyed gardening in his later years, meticulously tending his backyard vegetable patch throughout the seasons with his daughter Judy. He was skilled with his hands, always busy fixing, repairing, and bringing life to old objects and furniture
“Dad’s” or “Grandpa’s” home -brewed, neighbourhood-sourced crab apple, rhubarb, and apple wines were well known throughout his extended family, spreading gallons of good cheer across Western Canada
Or ville is sur vived by his two daughters, Debbie McClelland of Kamloops, BC, and Judy Tourand of Calgar y, AB; son Phillip (Donna) Tourand of Por t Alberni, BC; four grandchildren, Ashley, Lindsey, Janna, and Devon; four great-grandchildren, Caiman, Olive, Aver y, and Mila; as well as numerous
nieces, nephews, cousins, and friends Or ville was predeceased by his wife Mar y Tourand ( Thompson), parents, Mar y and Fred Tourand, and great-grandson River Tourand
A family celebration of life will be arranged in the coming months in honour of Or ville’s life and memor y In living memor y of Joseph Or ville Victor Tourand, a tree will be planted in the Ann & Sandy Cross Conser vation Area by McInnis & Holloway Funeral Homes, Eastside, 5388 Memorial Drive NE, Calgar y, AB T2A 3V9, Telephone: 403-248-8585
You may wish to email your family and friends to let them know that the above obituar y may be viewed online at: www mcinnisandholloway com
Wayne, 73, passed away on April 17, 2023, in Kamloops, BC. He was born on August 29, 1949, in New Westminster, BC to Chester and Kathleen Cutting.
He is survived by his partner Noreen Dorais and his three daughters, Michelle Yakemchuk (Kevin), Angela Lyall (Jason), and Amy Cutting (Allan). Grandchildren, Brenden, Brielle, Kalina, Jade, Maya and Aiden and stepsons, Riley and Brian Dorais and sister-in-law Linda Lindenbach.
Wayne was predeceased by his wife Marjorie, and his parents Chester and Kathleen.
Wayne was a longtime resident of Surrey, BC. His first home was the old Brownstone school in North Surrey, that his father renovated. They lived there until Chester passed and Kathleen sold the home.
Wayne, Marjorie, Michelle, Angela and Amy spent many happy weekends in Point Roberts, on the family boat, crabbing and fishing. Huge feasts of crab were enjoyed by all.
Wayne was known in Surrey for his successful business “Ultrasheen Carpet and Upholstery Cleaning”. Marjorie and Wayne built the business from the ground up starting in the early 80s. Marjorie looked after the administration and Wayne did the business of carpet cleaning. He was known for his dedication to going beyond for his customers and took great pride in his work. He made all his customers feel like his best friend, along with Marjorie’s tremendous talent for making Wayne “invaluable”. He is also known for his unfailing integrity and eternal optimism.
Wayne was a wonderful Husband, Father and Grandfather He always readily hosted all the family holiday get-togethers and looked after the planning and cooking of the many delicious meals.
Wayne and Noreen started sharing their lives together in 2013. They moved to Kamloops in 2016 and made a lovely garden and home and enjoyed yearly winter trips to Wayne’s beloved Jibacoa, Cuba.
His interests included cooking, baking and food preservation. He particularly enjoyed ‘tweaking’ recipes that he found on Utube, in hopes of creating a cookbook one day His love of gardening showed through yearly in his unbelievable crop of vegetables. His specialty was his enormous and multiple tomatoes. He is also known for his love of fig trees and managed to propagate a lot of trees in the last few years.
The family wishes to thank the angels at the Marjorie Willoughby Snowden Memorial Hospice, for their loving care.
A private service is being planned for a later date. Please contact wayneservice@gmail.com if you would like to receive information.
We will remember you and honour you always. The light you left behind will never burn out.
Condolences may be expressed to the family by emailing kamloops@cypressfuneral.ca
August 10, 1945 - April 11, 2023
It is with the heaviest of hearts and the deepest of sadness that we announce the passing of Linda van Hoof - Wife, Mother, Sister, Oma, Aunt, Niece and Friend.
Surviving Linda is her beloved husband and best friend, Peter Her brother Les (Debbie) Hiebert, her children Dianne (Craig) Simmons, Trevor (Fawn) van Hoof, Ali (Jory) Maki, Megan (Keith) Daye, Joanne (Gabriel) Brownlee, Maria (Dennis) Maki and seven loving grandchildren. Predeceased by her parents Walter and Helen Hiebert and her younger brothers Lance and Larry
Linda was born in Kitchener, Ontario on August 10, 1945 and was raised a proud Mennonite. She spent her childhood moving from town to town and enjoyed sitting on the edge of the highway naming the make, model and year of the passing cars with her brothers. She could name any car!
Graduating from teacher's college at 18, and spent many years as a teacher in Ontario which she loved very much. Linda moved to Kamloops, BC in 1977 and raised her family in Westsyde - "Greenacres" was the place to be. Their family home was her treasure. Teaching catechism and being the Coordinator of Faith Formation for Children at St. John Vianney brought her so much joy and kindred friendships.
Linda's favourite thing in life was spending time with her family, listening to her brother play music, and going for walks with her beloved dog Rusty and with her "bestie" Joan Her children and grandchildren were most important in her life, family was everything to her, and because of that she fought cancer for 15 years, with her soulmate at her side, losing her brave and courageous battle on April 11, 2023.
The family held a beautiful, private graveside service and small celebration of life with loved ones on April 21, 2023 in Chase, BC.
In lieu of flowers, the family asks that you consider donating blood, "the liquid of life", on Linda's behalf or to the Marjorie Willoughby Snowden Hospice in Kamloops, a non-profit organization dear to Linda's heart. Kamloops Hospice Association, 72 Whiteshield Crescent South, Kamloops, BC V2E 2S9.
We are very saddened to announce the passing of Mike Winstanley of Vancouver formerly of Kamloops.
Mike passed away at the Vancouver Hospice on April 12, 2023 of congestive heart failure with his family by his side. Mike was 72 years old.
He is survived by his loving wife Myrna, his 2 sons Peter (Charlene) and Jeff (Charlie), and 3 grandchildren Owen, Kai, and Andrew His 2 sisters Cathy (Bob) and Margy (Don) and 4 nieces.
Mike worked for the Royal Bank for many years as well as Continental Bank. He also worked for Kamloops School District as an Educational Assistant.
His true passion was coaching high school football at NorKam Secondary School where he coached for over 20 years.
Mike and Myrna moved to Vancouver in 2015 to be with his son Peter and grandson Owen when he was born. Mike enjoyed being in Owen’s life on a daily basis and Owen loved his Bubba dearly Mike will also be missed by his best buddy “Aussie”.
We miss you Mike and you will not be forgotten.
There will be a memorial for Mike in Vancouver on June 24, 2023. Please contact Myrna Winstanley for location information. In lieu of flowers if you wish, you can donate to the Vancouver Hospice Society (4615 Granville Street, Vancouver, B.C., V6H 3M1) who took such good care of Mike in his final days.
We lost someone special today, April 12, 2023. Our mom Evelyn (Sandy) Biagioni has been reunited with our dad Elmo, our brother Mark, many beloved family members and dear friends to continue her journey Although she is gone, her thoughts will continue to be with us. She will remind us to love, be kind and to feel for others less fortunate and to always do the right thing.
Mom was born in Mission, BC, on April 2nd, 1929 as the only child of Cameron and Myrtle Alexander She spent her formative years in Mission accumulating lifelong friends before moving to Kamloops in her early teens. After finishing high school, Mom joined the workforce with jobs at BC Tel, Eatons and Woodwards.
It was in her early twenties that she met a young Italian stallion named Elmo and convinced him that his life would be better enhanced if he became her forever partner Dad did not need much convincing. They married in September 1949. They were still going strong 69 years later until Dad’s passing.
Mom started her family with the birth of their first child Sherry, then Robbie and to show that God has a sense of humour, along came Mark, 19 years later! Oops, how did that happen was her many friends laughing reaction to her news.
Mom had some unique parenting skills. From going full samurai warrior, flipping Mark on his back on the kitchen floor (Mark was 6’5” at the time) demanding he give her back the $20 he had taken from her purse, to being Susie Homemaker, sewing sequins on Sherry’s skating dress (Sherry was still in the dress) as she was about to take the ice for her warmup. Definitely old school. Those were some of the many memories often fondly recalled around Sunday dinners.
Ah, Sunday dinners. The lifeblood of our home. Mom was a fantastic cook. She provided dinner for anyone who was around on Sunday, from family, friends and the odd stray It didn’t matter, you were welcome in her home. Always encouraging you to have seconds but save room for dessert. Besides Sunday dinners, Mom also operated the Biagioni Bistro which was open every day to anyone who was in need of coffee or conversation.
In addition to being a wife and mother, Mom found time to be a secretary, seamstress, costume designer and event coordinator for Kamicecades with the Mount Paul Skating Club (now Kamloops Skating Club). She also volunteered at St. Anne’s School Academy Mom also contributed to many pot luck dinners and other social functions over the years to help others.
Mom had a wonderful sense of humour When she got back her DNA results she couldn’t wait to tease her lifelong friend Doris, the self-proclaimed Queen of Norway, that she, herself was 10% Norwegian and Doris now had competition for the title of Queen.
Further to being a wife to Elmo, she was a mother to Sherry, Robbie and Mark. She was a mother-in-law to John and Laura, a nana to Jesse, Casey (Brian), Steve (Jessica), Kurt (Maggie), and Mark (Megan), a great nana to Abigail, Andrew, Allison, Avery, Barrett, Brooklyn, Tala, Kona, Theo and Penny, and of course her favorite, Reacher There are also many loved ones in her extended family and friends that are mourning her loss but rejoicing in the memory of being enriched by her presence in their lives.
Losing a loved one like Mom makes you realize that without love there would be no grief. The grief we are feeling now is the result of the unconditional love we have for our Mom. RIP Mom, we’ll miss you but will be thinking of you every day
The family would like to thank Dr Loland for his kindness and empathy not only in this trying time but for his ongoing care for Mom through the years. Also, a shout out and thank you to the emergency staff, the nurses, care aids and LPN’s on 7th North at Kamloops RIH during her stay, your care and compassion did not go unappreciated. Also, thank you to the staff of Marjorie Willoughby Snowden Memorial Hospice, even though Mom was not there very long, they provided a warm and homey resting place for Mom in her final hours.
Goodbye Mom, until we meet again.
There will not be a service as per Mom’s wishes but we will have a celebration of her life with an Irish wake at a later date.
1932 - 2023
May Rowlett of Kamloops, BC passed away on April 21, 2023 at 90 years of age. May was born east of Sheho, Sask. on May 17, 1932. She was the youngest of 9 children She moved to Flin Flon, MB at age 11, where she received her education.
She met Emery and married on August 7, 1951 and had two children (Jim and Joe). They moved to Kamloops in 1975.
She is survived by sons, Jim (Marg), Joe (Rona), grandchildren Dayna, Ian (Jacqueline), Chris (Vanessa), Mike, great grandchildren Emmett and Ivy, sister in law Shirley Lyon of Red Deer, AB, and many family members. She was predeceased by her husband Emery, her parents Tom and Mary, her 5 sisters, and 3 brothers.
May was kind to all people, she loved her family, and loved all animals, great and small. She loved cooking and baking. She thought it was wonderful to aid people in need, and she was proud to wear the Salvation Army uniform for many years. May was blessed with a great memory especially people's birthdays.
May joined the Salvation Army in 1960 the same year she was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis (MS). May was legally blind, and in her later years appreciated people reading to her She appreciated people identifying who they were prior to talking, because of her very limited vision.
A very special thank you to staff at Riverbend Manor for all their kindness. Also, a thank you to staff at Royal Inland Hospital who showed her kindness and love during her last days.
May’s Motto was: The
No formal service by request.
As expressions of sympathy, donations may be made to the Salvation Army in memory of May
Condolences may be sent to the family at DrakeCremation.com
A celebration of Jean Knox’s life will take place Saturday, May 6, 2023 at 11:00am at St. Paul’s Cathedral, reception to follow in the parish hall.
Fond memories linger every day, Remembrance keeps them near.
July 8, 1944 - April 5, 2033
Jeannie passed away peacefully on April 5, 2023, with her family by her side after a long and courageous battle with cancer
She was predeceased by her husband Milton, her younger sister Maureen, and her sister-in-law Mugsy
Jeannie leaves to mourn her son Tom (Michelle) and three grandchildren, Carter, Paige, and McKenna. She will also be greatly missed by her brother Garry (Myrna), niece Lisa (Ray), brother-in-law Don, nephew David (Alyssa), niece Katherine, great-niece Olivia, great-nephews Theo and Thomas, brother-in-law Ray, the Gilroy Sunday Night Dinner Crew, her best friend Sue, and many other special family members and friends.
Jeannie loved to curl, play golf, and spend time with her grandchildren. She looked forward to their annual summer trip to Idabel Lake where countless memories were made.
Jeannie had a great love for her family, a zest for life, and a spunky adventurous spirit which led to some wonderful memories in her final year A bucket list trip to Whistler, BC last summer where she “conquered” the Eagle Zipline, and a fun-filled road trip with her best friend Sue where they visited Drumheller and her childhood hometown of Meadow Lake, Saskatchewan.
Special thanks to her beautiful Theresa, and all the wonderful nurses and staff at the Marjorie Willoughby Snowden Hospice for their compassionate care.
As per her wishes, there will not be a service.
If desired, donations can be made to the Marjorie Willoughby Snowden Hospice in her memory A truly beautiful place.
We will miss you Gran. Hope you are having a dance party in Heaven.
Condolences may be sent to the family from www.kamloopsfuneralhome.com 250-554-2577
It is with much sadness that we announce the sudden passing of Ross “Doogie” Anderson on April 11, 2023. He leaves behind his wife Diana, son Rogan (Keri), Krystal (Mike Pearson), Christopher (Joey) along with grandchildren, Naveed, Jeevan, Kurtis, Taylor, Gracie, Avery and Izzy
Doogie was larger-than-life! He was happiest spending time with his family and friends, at the lake or with his newfound tribe in his piece of paradise, Yuma Arizona.
He was “living the dream” and loved spending time with his friends.
Doogie’s smile and laugh were infectious to all who met him!
His work life was spent in the insurance industry, where he was considered one of the “best in the business”. He mentored many young men and woman throughout his career and enjoyed his work and colleagues.
Doogie was the best husband, father and Papa. He had a very special love for his grandchildren, nothing meant more to him than spending time with all of them.
There will be a Celebration of Life on May 7 from 1-4 pm at TRU Mountain Room.
Scatter me not to restless winds, Nor toss my ashes to the sea. Remember now those years gone by When loving gifts I gave to thee.
Remember now the happy times The family ties we shared. Don’t leave my resting place unmarked As though you never cared.
Deny me not one final gift For all who come to see A single lasting proof that says I loved... & you loved me.
by DJ KramerApril 3, 1961 - April 15, 2023
Karen Louise Statsmann passed away peacefully in her son's home on Saturday, April 15, 2023. Just shortly after her 62nd birthday Karen had a passion for quilting and spending time with her family
Karen is survived by her son Peter Statsmann, daughter-in-law Shanelle Toews and granddaughter Windsor Statsmann, sister Lorraine Cornell, and brothers Derrick and Allan Statsmann. Karen was tragically pre-deceased by her son Paul TangasStatsmann in 2006. Her husband Emmanuel (Mano) Tangas in 2008, mother Joyce Statsmann in 2015 and father William Statsmann in 2020. We will forever treasure the moments we had with her She will be truly missed by all of her family and friends.
A funeral service will be held at the Kamloops Funeral Home, on Saturday, April 29, 2023 at 11:00am.
Condolences may be sent to the family from www.kamloopsfuneralhome.com 250-554-2577
November 16, 1923 - April 19, 2023
It is with profound sadness that the family of Rosaria Caputo announces her passing in her 100th year, with her family surrounding her Rosaria was born in Aiello Calabro, Cosenza, Italy on November 16, 1923. She was the oldest daughter of Pietro and Anna Caputo. Rosaria married Francesco in 1945 and they immigrated to Canada and made their home in Kamloops in October of 1961, joining her brother Guerino.
Rosaria was predeceased by her husband Francesco in 2012, her siblings Guerino, Erminia, Almerinda, Maria, Carmela, and her daughter-in-law Rose. She is survived by her sons, Joe (Alba) and John, her brother Alfredo, her grandchildren Rosie, Ellie, Frank, Mary, Fran and Michael, as well as her 12 great grandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews.
The family is extremely grateful for the compassion and care shown by Dr Wynne and the incredible staff at Senior ’s Village.
Mass of Christian Burial was held at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church on Monday, April 24, 2023. Entombment followed at Evergreen Mausoleum.
Should anyone desire, donations may be made to Diabetes Canada.
Condolences may be expressed at: www.schoeningfuneralservice.com
Kim loved a gathering. In his memory we will gather and celebrate his life, and his many interests, tell a few stories and share some memories and refreshments.
Saturday, May 13, 2:00 pm Delta Hotel 540 540 Victoria Street, Kamloops
common these days, but a style that holds his attention.
standing there, flexing,” he said.
became really more adult-oriented,” he said.
Anew self-published comic book has made its print debut, created by High Octane comics manager Nick Klie, who wrote, drew and inked the book himself.
Klie is longtime manager at High Octane Comics , downtown at 250 Third Ave. He started publishing the comic in a web format online in 2015. Taking on all the roles himself, Klie said he managed about two pages per month working evenings and weekends.
Life The Necropolis follows main character Life on a gunslinging science fiction adventure that spans multiple planets.
Klie, who described his main character as Conan the Barbarian in space, chose a retro1970s art style — something he said is not too
“Modern comics are great, but I really prefer the older stuff and I thought it’d be a lot of fun to draw and play in that world,” he told KTW Klie developed the character for a local art project, taking inspiration from other movies and comics and giving the gun-wielding adventurer the ironic name of Life.
The 38-year-old has been working at High Octane for the past 20 years, but his love of comics and drawing began in his early years, until high school, when, he said “they kind of beat it out of me.”
After a 15-year break, Klie took up his pencil once again and started drawing casually with friends. He said it wasn’t long until he got the bug once again.
“I had to relearn everything and then learn things I’d never done before, like background. I’d only drawn superheroes
For Life The Necropolis, Klie decided to take on every role of creating a comic book himself. That means the writing, the drawing and the inking, or outline, and colouring.
“I guess it’s just a personal passion project. I wanted to control everything. I wanted to control the story, I wanted to control the drawing, but I wanted to do all of it myself, above all else,” he said.
Klie’s life has been largely rooted in comics. In fact, it was a shared interest in comics and a stop at High Octane that introduced him to his wife, Alison, who he credits for encouraging him and giving him space to work.
Klie said comics have grown with him since the 1990s, noting the industry overall tried to grow with the young audience it hooked into during that decade.
“So, as that audience started getting older and going to college, superhero comics
However, with the emergence of multifilm franchises like The Avengers and Spider-Man, Klie said kids started being left behind.
“So now it’s come full circle and they’re trying to make a little bit of everything now and serve all audiences,” he said.
One thing Klie misses, however, is comic book stands at grocery stores, which he said is a missed opportunity to bring more kids into the world of comics.
As a hobby store, Klie said High Octane did well throughout the pandemic, which saw people rediscovering their hobbies.
“And it’s still full-speed ahead,” he said.
While the shop is busy, Klie will be busy, too, continuing to produce his comic online and planning a new print run for next year.
Find Life The Necropolis on sale at High Octane Comics and online at lifethen.com.
dance to collect the prize).
The annual Mother’s Day Mela and Teeyan will be held on Saturday May 13, at Our Lady of Perpetual Help, at 635 Tranquille Rd. in North Kamloops.
The women’s event will begin at 6 p.m. and will feature dinner, tea and sweets, entertainment, door prizes and a grand prize draw for gold jewelry (with the winner needing to be in atten-
Teeyan is a traditional dance festival that began in ancient times in India, a time when young married women would return each spring to their parents’ homes for reunions with family and friends.
Teeyan Da Mela is organized by members of the Punjabi community and involves mothers and daughters from all ethnic groups taking part. Teeyan, also known as Teej, is an
important festival for the women of Punjab.
Tickets are $20 in advance and $25 at the door. Children under the age of five are admitted free of charge.
To buy tickets, call Jessie Sangha at 250-3191985 , Gurjit Takhar at 250-819-7077, Rajinder Lotay at 250-828-6746, Fortune Health Foods at 250-554-1255 or Kamloops Immigrant Services at 778-470-6101.
Get your Luv’n the Loops pass from Tourism Kamloops for a free serving of ice cream on Wednesday, April 26.
The pass, which is good for a plethora of local deals, can be obtained by going online to tourismkamloops.com.
Once the pass is activated, it can be taken to Scoopz (downtown in the Sandman Signature Hotel, at Lorne Street and Third Avenue) or the Ice Cream Social (in North Kamloops at 388 Tranquille Rd.).
And, with this week being National Tourism Week, Tourism Kamloops has unveiled its ‘Loops Explorer VIP Pass, which can be found on the Tourism Kamloops website.
Effective Sept. 1 municipalities in B.C. are required to develop an accessibility plan and establish an accessibility engagement group, under
the Accessible BC Act.
The City of Kamloops has initiated a review and update of the existing 2018 Accessibility and Inclusion Plan. The updated plan aims to further reduce barriers that hinder the full participation of individuals with visual and invisible impairments.
Residents and caregivers who experience accessibility barriers are encouraged to participate in a survey that is open through May 7.
The survey is online at letstalk.kamloops.ca/accessibilityplan, while paper versions can be found at city hall (downtown at Victoria Street and First Avenue), at the Kamloops Museum and Archives (downtown at Seymour Street and Second Avenue), at the Tournament
Capital Centre (next to TRU at 910 McGill Rd.) and at the Westsyde Pool and Fitness Centre, (859 Bebek Rd.).
In addition, city staff will have surveys at the Kamloops Regional Farmers’ Market downtown on April 29 and May 3
CLIMATE ACTION
FEST THIS WEEKEND
Climate Action Fest will take place on Saturday, April 29, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., at Kamloops United Church, downtown at St. Paul Street and Fourth Avenue.
The day-long workshop, organized by Transition Kamloops, will look at ways to take knowledge to action on climate change-related issues.
Participants are asked to attend for the full day. Pre-registration is required and a light lunch will be served.
More details are available online at transitionkamloops. net.
TOP ROW: Kamloops RCMP Cpl. Crystal Evelyn, Robert Gill, Brian Ross, Kamloops Mayor Reid HamerJackson, Cindy Logan, Lyn Arikado and Kamloops RCMP Const. Dana Napier BOTTOM ROW: Deanna Hurstfield, Dominique Baird, George Campbell, Cassie McNutt and Roger Parkes.
PETER OLSEN PHOTOGRAPHYNine Kamloops residents were honoured recently with Exemplary Service Awards, handed out to those who have dedicated their time and service to the city.
The recipients include:
• Brian Ross has donated countless volunteer hours to coaching and legal expertise to various groups.
• Cassie McNutt is the only candidate to be honoured in the under-30 age group. McNutt has spent plenty of time rais-
ing money for the Kamloops Hospice Association and collecting donations of items for those in need.
• Cindy Logan volunteers locally and abroad and spearheads the volunteer committee for the annual Developing World Connections golf tournament, which raises money for critical infrastructure in developing nations.
• Deanna Hurtsfield volunteers for many causes and has been involved in coordinating a book club and promoting attendance at Western
Canadian Theatre for Secular Homeschoolers of Kamloops.
• Dominique Baird has advocated for those with disabilities and, in 2019, was recipient of the Y Peace Medal.
• George Campbell dedicates his time to myriad causes, including Kamloops Rotary Club, Camp Grafton and Scouts Canada.
• Lyn Arikado is best known for volunteering as the city’s emergency support services director in 2008.
• Robert Gill is a leader in the taekwon-do community and
has dedicated the last 50 years to the teachings of the sport.
• Roger Parkes has worked alongside People in Motion for the Kiwanis Club and supported the Christmas Amalgamated Toy Run, Bailey’s Pub meat draws, and various 50/50 fundraisers. For more information on the background of each recipient, go online to kamloopsthisweek. com and read the story under the Community tab.
To view a list of past recipients, visit the Exemplary Service Award page on the city’s website at kamloops.ca.
THE ANNUAL FREE EVENT WILL TAKE PLACE ON APRIL 29 AND APRIL 30 IN RIVERSIDE PARK
KAMLOOPS THISWEEK
The Riverside Lawn Bowling Club is offering a chance to try the game, free of charge, on Saturday, April 29, and Sunday, April 30, at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. during the Try it Days event in Riverside Park.
Anyone from ages 12 to 99 can take part and receive a short lesson and play a game.
Club members are hoping to generate more interest and more members.
The 101-year-old club has about 50 members, operating on prime real estate downtown at Riverside Park. Its clubhouse is on the bottom floor of Heritage House.
To register for this weekend’s Try It Days, or for more information on the club, call Bruce or Laurel at 250-554-5177, email bclary@hotmail.com or go online to kamloopsriversidelawnbowlingclub.com.
Two teams of one to four players earn points by rolling bowls — biased balls — closest to a smaller ball, called a jack.
It’s mostly played outside on grass or turf.
Though it sounds a bit like bocce, it’s more like curling without the ice. The games are similar in how the balls curl, ends are structured and points are tallied.
Originating in England, lawn
bowling is popular in places like Australia, where the game can be played while sharing a bevy — or two.
A coin flip determines who throws the jack. It must be centred just right, so after it is tossed, the jack is adjusted.
One side of the ball is rounder than the other. Each player has a set of four bowls that should fit comfortably in the hand. Stepping one foot onto the mat, players line it up with the jack and let it fly.
Logos on the side of the bowl help to identify which way the bowl will curl, a slight bias barely noticeable when looking at its curved sides.
Alternating shots down the
rink, the closest to the jack gets the point, with more points awarded for bowls on the same team closer than the opposing team.
Flat shoes are all one needs to get started. The Riverside Lawn Bowling Club features casual drop-in nights and league play. Some players compete in tournaments at the club throughout the season and go on to provincials. A novice tournament is held in the fall. Another club meets on McArthur Island.
Membership fees are $130 for the year, but youth members, ages 18 and younger, pay $50. Renting bowls is $20 for the year, compared to a new set of four that costs about $500.
City of Kamloops
Sound Bath Club 1/$140
Join Kate and the crystal singing bowls for an 8-week sound bath series! Each week the group will meet connect with one another experience a 60-minute sound bath and have the option to share what comes up Weekly sound baths help release pain and tension assist with sleep, make it easier to go with the flow and feel flexible, increase focus the benefits are endless! Please bring a water bottle a mat items to make yourself cozy and wear comfortable clothing Old Courthouse
Thurs May 3 - June 22
6:30 PM -8:00 PM
Art Blast
Ignite your creativity and explore shape, colour, abstract, impression, and portrait in this program In this fun environment you will learn techniques to help you get more out of your artwork Materials included Kamloops Performance Company
Ages 4-6 8/$108
Sat May 6 - June 24
12:00 PM -12:45 PM
Ages 7-12 8/$120
Sat May 6 - June 24
1:00 PM -2:00 PM
XploreSportz Summer Camps
Visit PacificSport Interior BC website to learn more about the camps that are being offer this summer pacificsportinteriorbc com/ $195/week & $175/week for second child
Ages, 4-6, 6-10 and 7-12
July 2023 – August 2023
Mother Day/Wedding Fabulace Cake 1/$35
Join Shirley the Cake Lady as she teaches you new techniques to develop your skills for enhancing celebration cakes which are much more elaborate Some supplies required Norkam Secondary School
Thurs May 11 6:30 PM -8:30 PM
Kamloops.ca
A message from the Kamloops and District Labour Council:
April 28 marks the National Day of Mourning, a day to remember and honour workers who have been killed or injured on the job.
This year, the Kamloops and District Labour Council pays tribute to the workers who have lost their lives or have been injured in the Thompson-Okanagan region and across Canada in 2023.
Every year, thousands of Canadian workers are injured or killed on the job and this number continues to rise.
The National Day of Mourning is an important reminder that more must be done to protect the health and safety of workers and to ensure that every worker comes home safely at the end of the day.
“One workplace death is already too many,” said Lois Rugg, president of the Kamloops and District Labour Council.
“Workers deserve to arrive home safely at the end of their workday and to live a life free from workplace injuries. Employers are responsible for upholding health and safety standards in the workplace, including providing necessary equipment and training,” Rugg said.
“But workers have rights to know about hazards in their work, to participate in decisions that affect their health and safety and to ultimately
refuse unsafe work. We won current health and safety measures through years of hard work and advocacy. I want every worker to know if they see unsafe work, how to refuse and how to report and how to use their voice to help prevent unsafe work before someone is harmed,” Rugg said.
“We have won rights that can make us safer, but we need to know those rights and use those rights.”
On this National Day of Mourning, we remember these workers and their families and we renew our commitment to making workplaces safer.
It is important that employers take every necessary step to ensure workers are provided with a safe and healthy working environment and that workers are trained and equipped with the knowledge and tools to stay safe on the job.
“Canada’s unions are committed to empowering workers to continue fighting for better workplace protections,”
Rugg said. “This starts with knowing your rights, applying and defending them and continuing to advocate for better.”
Every worker deserves to come home safely at the end of the workday. The nature of work and workplaces have changed drastically in recent years and workers must be supported in adapting to their changing environments.
Canada’s unions support workers in creating a culture of safety and prevention and demanding that employers and governments respect their own duty to create safe work, call out unsafe work and be part of a culture of safety and prevention.
The Kamloops and District Labour Council represents roughly 13,000 unionized workers in the Kamloops area, from Merritt to Valemount and from Chase to Lillooet. The Council is a member of the BC Federation of Labour and the Canadian Labour Congress.
The writings of Paul are sometimes hard to understand, as Peter writes in 2 Peter 3:16. We read in verse 15 of second Peter 3 that wisdom was given Paul to fulfil his part of the inspired scriptures.
It is very interesting to look at the different times that those who God used to write the New Testament scriptures spoke of others who were also being used by God to do this work.
Sometimes they wrote to correct false teaching or wrong practices or, on a more positive note, a word of encouragement for those who were suffering under persecution. The scriptures are a great help to those who are in difficult and various trials. In fact, there is not one of us who are not dealing with some kind of difficulty at one time or another.
I would like to look at a portion of scripture that would be a help to us in many ways — 1 Corinthians 15:3-4.
In this chapter are a number of places that would need some
instruction to explain what is being written. We would not have time or space to go over all of chapter 15 in this column, but we can look at the two verses mentioned above.
It would be good to look at the context of these verses. There is a question raised by Paul in verse 12.
The question is: “Now if Christ be preached that He rose from the dead, how say some among you that there is
no resurrection from the dead?”
There were false teachers among the believers in the Corinthian assembly who were teaching that there is no resurrection of the dead. In the verses prior to verse 12, Paul writes of the many people who actually saw Christ after he was raised from the dead.
There were not simply a few people here and there, but many who also testified to the actual resurrection of Jesus. In the early part of this portion, Paul also reminds them of the message he preached to them in verses 3 and 4. Paul preaches that “Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures; and that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day according to the scriptures.”
Now, that’s not hard to understand or difficult to grasp. It is deadly teaching that would deny the bodily resurrection of Christ.
It would take away the hope that all believers have of ever being in heaven.
Then, after verse 12, Paul brings out the consequences of
this false teaching. Paul explains that if there is no resurrection from the dead, it would mean that Christ had not risen.
Also in verse 14, we read that another consequence is the believer’s faith is empty or vain. Another is that the believer is still in their sins, as we read in verse 17. Verse 18 says if there is no resurrection, then all those who had already died were perished.
In verse 19, the consequence of no resurrection is that the believer is of all men “most miserable.” And on and on it goes.
The truth of the matter is that Christ did die for our sins and that he was buried and that he was gloriously raised from the dead.
It is no secret what God has done for the human race. There is room for all in God’s salvation that he offers. Even Paul, who was a persecutor of the early Christians, came to trust Jesus as his saviour.
Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 15:10 that “by the grace of God I am what I am” and in verse 57 “but thanks be to God, which gives us the victory
through our Lord Jesus Christ”.
John Eggers is an elder in the assembly that meets in Westsyde Gospel Hall in Kamloops. KTW welcomes submissions to its Faith page. Columns should be about 700 words in length and can be emailed to editor@kamloops thisweek.com. Please include a very short bio and a photo.
Aries, figure out where your priorities lie, then position yourself in the right corner to get things done effectively It could take some time before you see progress Remain patient
It ’s best if you can keep tight control of your emotions and not let others see what is brewing behind your stoic demeanour, Taurus This will give you an advantage in negotiations
Gemini, if you’re too pragmatic this week, you may miss the oppor tunity to do something spontaneous and really enjoyable with friends Don’t think; jump in this one time
The week may star t off sluggishly, Cancer Give yourself permission to star t off slowly and build up as you get enough energy and motivation to move along
Leo, rather than being ready to roar at the world, you can barely let pass a meow You’re more than happy to roll back over in bed most days Search for an energy boost
Virgo, early on in the week you may feel disorganized and out of sor ts But soon enough you will find your stride Once you’re in a groove it will be smooth sailing
Libra, if someone at work has been holding you back or seems to be standing in your way, it ’s justifiable to feel resentment Take the high road and remain pleasant and positive
Scorpio, don’t ignore your responsibilities, no matter how mundane they may seem Completing small tasks will help you set the course for more success
Your judgement may be clouded by some lofty dreams you have been having, Sagittarius Separate the whimsy from what you actually may be able to transfer to real life
APRIL 26, 2023 - MAY 2, 2023
You may be tempted to butt heads with authority figures in the days to come, but you’ll catch more flies with honey, Capricorn Get your frustrations out another way
Relationship issues come to the forefront, Aquarius This can be any relationship, be it personal or professional Sit down with this person and flesh things out
The current cosmic climate has you a tad restless, Pisces You’re ready to stretch your fins, so to say Set off on a grand adventure
ZITS by Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman SHOE by Gary Brookins & Susie Macnelly HAGAR THE HORRIBLE by Chris Browne PARDON MY PLANET by Vic Lee ARCTIC CIRCLE by Alex Hallatt4 The time machine on ‘‘Doctor Who’
5 ‘‘Toy Story’’ antagonist
6 What makes creamer creamier?
7 What Beethoven did in his 30s and 40s
8 Use as a rendezvous point
9 Essen exclamation
10 What an ‘‘@’’ might signify
11 Word with ear or peace
12 Confuse
13 Like swimming and surfing
14 It’s worth one point in cricket
15 With Desmond Tutu, coauthor of the 2016 best seller ‘‘The Book of Joy’’
16 Complete, as a pdf contract
17 Au naturel
18 Canopy makeup
20 British draft horse
23 English dos 28 Four to five spaces, typically
31 Police operation requiring patience
32 Rose gold, e g
34 ‘‘It’s ? ? OK’’
35 Family member that’s also a letter in the NATO
BY JOHN EWBANKCROSSWORD ANSWERS FOUND ON B3
1
2
Rearrange the letters to spell something pertaining to Lyme disease.
ANSWER: CHESA
J o i n t h e A M A Z I N G R A C E C H A L L E N G E
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