Kamloops This Week November 1, 2019

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NOVEMBER 1, 2019 | Volume 32, No. 88

kamloopsthisweek.com

Page A23 is your guide to events in the city and region

kamloopsthisweek

kamthisweek

WHAT IS FAIR?

Domtar wants ‘fair’ taxation from city hall for heavy industry, while the Kamloops Voters Society is urging officials to proceed with caution at the risk of alienating ratepayers

TROUT TROUBLE Thompson steelhead numbers show alltime low population of just 86 fish

STORY/A6

NEWS/A11

ABERDEEN GROCERY Fresh Street Market confirmed for space left vacant when Sears was shuttered

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SIBLING ACT TRU basketball season begins with a pair of Rouaults suiting up for Pack

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ONLINE

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HOW TO REACH US: Kamloops This Week 1365-B Dalhousie Dr . Kamloops, B .C ., V2C 5P6 Switchboard 250-374-7467 Classifieds 250-371-4949 Classifieds Fax 250-374-1033 Circulation 250-374-0462 classifieds@kamloopsthisweek .com publisher@kamloopsthisweek .com editor@kamloopsthisweek .com

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DID YOU KNOW? North Kamloops became known as North Kamloops soon after the First World War. Prior to that, the North Shore, including Brocklehurst and Westsyde, were known as Fruitlands. — Kamloops Museum and Archives

Christmas Cheer money helping Kamloops survivors of brain injuries TODD SULLIVAN STAFF REPORTER tsullivan@kamloopsthisweek.com

A brain injury can be a traumatic, life-changing event, and because there’s no cure, prevention is absolutely vital. That’s one of the things that the Kamloops Brain Injury Association is focused on — reaching out to local groups like schools or workplaces or organizations like the Lions Club to talk about brain injury prevention. “If we can reach more people with prevention education, that’s a good thing,” said David Johnson, executive director for the KBIA. And Johnson stresses that they’re willing to come and talk with any group, completely free of charge. All you have to do is ask. But that’s only half of their focus. They also work directly with survivors of brain injury as well as those close to them with a variety of support groups and programs. “We’re trying to expand our caregiver support group,” Johnson said. “We’re not just here for the survivors. “We’d love to have more people join in on that.” All of this work takes money, and the KTW Christmas Cheer Fund was a vital part of the organization’s fundraising in 2019. The majority of the money went toward the basic costs of keeping the lights on and doors open. “It’s not very sexy,” Johnson said. “We focused on the basics, making sure there’s a place where survivors could come.” There were a few dollars available for some upgrades to their stained glass workshop, replacing some of the broken equipment and replacing a folding table with a proper table. They were also able to maintain some of their ongoing events like their annual trip to Paul Lake in the summer, which allows brain injury survivors who might

KAMLOOPS DL#8989

MA Z DA GO E S P R EMI U M

THE

TODD SULLIVAN/KTW David Johnson is the executive director of the Kamloops Brain Injury Association, one of the four charities receiving money from the KTW Christmas Cheer Fund this year.

have mobility issues the opportunity to get into the great outdoors.

Johnson said that the organization has similar plans for this year’s Christmas Cheer funds, with a focus on covering operating costs and ensuring that their doors stay open. Even with the money, the Kamloops Brain Injury Society still needs to fundraise throughout the year to keep things running. To that end, they have plans in place for a new fundraiser for the summer of 2020.

The idea is to build a fundraiser around a tour of the many beautiful gardens in the area. “Kamloops has a lot of beautiful homes and beautiful gardens,” Johnson said. If you’d like to find out more about any of the Kamloops Brain Injury Association’s programs, or invite them to come and speak, contact them by phone at 250-372-1799 or by email at djohnson@kbia.ca.

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FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

CITY PAGE Kamloops.ca

Stay Connected @CityofKamloops

SMASH IT, DON’T TRASH IT

Council Calendar

You and your Halloween pumpkins are invited to Kamloops’ first-ever Pumpkin Smash, 10:00 am–2:00 pm, on Saturday, November 2, at the parking lot for McArthur Island soccer fields 1 and 2.

November 5, 2019 1:30 pm - Regular Council Meeting Council Chambers, 7 Victoria Street West 7:00 pm - Public Hearing (NEW LOCATION) Valley First Lounge, Sandman Centre, 300 Lorne Street

Participants will be able to drop, smash, and roll their jack-o’-lanterns during this free, family-friendly event that promotes composting pumpkins after Halloween.

November 19, 2019 9:00 am - Committee of the Whole 1:30 pm - Regular Council Meeting 7:00 pm - Public Hearing (CANCELLED) Council Chambers, 7 Victoria Street West

Bring your largest pumpkin to drop from a great height and watch it smash! Stick around for a big drop by Kamloops Fire Rescue at 1:00 pm. Note: Minimum child height to participate in the pumpkin drop is four feet.

November 25, 2019 2:00 pm - Development and Sustainability Committee DES Boardroom, 105 Seymour Street

Preregistration for the free Pumpkin Smash is preferred. Register through Kamloops.ca/PerfectMind by using the search term “pumpkin smash”. Can’t make it to the event? Did you know it’s free to compost your pumpkins at all City compost sites? Learn more at:

November 26, 2019 9:00 am - Committee of the Whole 1:30 pm - Regular Council Meeting Council Chambers, 7 Victoria Street West

Kamloops.ca/Compost

Want a recap of Council Meetings? Sign up for the Council Highlights e-newsletter at: Kamloops.ca/Subscribe

Notice to Motorists Overlanders Bridge West Off-Ramp The west off-ramp of Overlanders Bridge, leading to Summit Drive and Mission Flats Road, will be closed from 11:00 pm on Saturday, November 2, until 7:00 am on Sunday, November 3, to repair the guard rail. Please use alternative routes. Remembrance Day Motorists are advised of a rolling closure for the Remembrance Day Parade on November 11, 11:00 am–12:00 pm. The parade will be moving west on Lorne Street to the 500 block of Victoria Street. Minor delays are anticipated, and transit will not be impacted.

Idle Reduction - Good Neighbour Bylaw Did you know that Good Neighbour Bylaw No. 49-1 prohibits all motor vehicles within city boundaries from idling for more than three consecutive minutes? Talk to your family, friends, and neighbours about the benefits of being idle free. Learn more at:

WHOOSH! PAY FOR PARKING BY MOBILE PHONE Winter is coming. Why wait in the cold at a pay station when you can pay for parking in the comfort of your vehicle? Whoosh! is available for downtown street parking as well as parking in City-owned downtown lots. How it works: 1. download the Whoosh! app and set up an account 2. park and open the Whoosh! app 3. start a parking session

Kamloop.ca/IdleReduction

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If you’re wondering if an item can be recycled or not, simply use the Waste Wizard to find out how to properly dispose of it. For details, visit:

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Kamloops.ca/WasteWise Report an issue: 250-828-3461 Emergency after hours: 250-372-1710

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GIVE A CITY EMPLOYEE A SHOUT OUT! City of Kamloops employees work hard to make our community a great place for everyone to live and work. We are pleased to pass along kudos from Kamloops residents to recognize City employees who are “Making Kamloops Shine.” “I’ve been doing more than a few dump runs the past couple of years and I have to say, the staff at the Mission Flats Landfill offer some of the best customer service. I don’t always know what I have to take where and they are helpful, patient and it’s service with a smile EVERY. SINGLE. TIME. We are so lucky to have this kind of service and I think little things like this go a long way to give Kamloops the sense of community that we have. People, including our City waste transfer workers, really care!” - Clare Adams, Resident Share your kudos and read others’ comments of recognition at: LetsTalk.Kamloops.ca/Staff-Shout-Outs

HEATING SAFETY There is something so cozy about curling up with a good book by the fireplace in the cooler months. But did you know that heating equipment is one of the leading causes of home fire deaths? With a few simple safety tips and precautions, you can prevent most heating fires from happening.

HEATING SAFETY TIPS: • Keep anything that can catch fire at least 1 m away from heating equipment, like a furnace, fireplace, wood stove, or portable space heater. • Never use your oven to heat your home. • Have heating equipment and chimneys cleaned and inspected every year by a qualified professional. • Remember to turn portable heaters off when leaving the room or going to bed. • Make sure the fireplace has a sturdy screen to stop sparks from flying into the room. • Test smoke alarms at least once a month. Learn about heating safety at: Kamloops.ca/HomeSafe

LET'S TALK KAMLOOPS Let's Talk Kamloops is our engagement website where you can share your voice and shape our city. We know you have ideas about our city, and we are committed to working more closely with you to improve engagement and better guide our planning and decision making.

ENGAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES

Sign up and speak up at

• Staff Shout Outs - Share your kudos • Victoria Street West - Project updates, Q&A

LetsTalk.Kamloops.ca

City Hall: 7 Victoria Street West, Kamloops, BC, V2C 1A2 | 250-828-3311


FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A5

LOCAL NEWS

Future of Hat Creek Ranch in jeopardy, group says

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Society that operates historic property west of Kamloops says it is being hamstrung by new steps taken by province JESSICA WALLACE STAFF REPORTER jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com

The society which has for nearly two decades run Hat Creek Ranch near Cache Creek is concerned about the heritage site’s long-term fate. Friends of the Historic Hat Creek Ranch board chair Robert Sharkey said more than $200,000 in bookings have been turned away and employee and volunteer morale are at an all-time low in the wake of soured negotiations with the province over site management. “If we are the operators say for 2021, we already know we have a hole in our revenues,” Sharkey told KTW. “Even if we continue and strike an amazing agreement, we’ve got to dig out of that hole.” Friends of the Historic Hat Creek Ranch formed in the 1990s to run as a heritage site an old ranch at the confluence of Hat Creek and the Bonaparte River with history dating back to the 1860s. Today, Hat Creek Ranch provides visitors insight into the gold rush, with original buildings and tour guides in period costumes. A 15-year agreement between the society and the province expired in 2018 and Sharkey said the society has since been provided a one-year conditional

If we “continued like

this, we’d have zero income and no employees.

— ROBERT SHARKEY Friends of Hat Creek Ranch Society

extension, with another oneyear contract on the horizon. Other heritage sites in B.C., such as Barkerville, have received five-year-agreements, he said. Without long-term security, countless bookings — the majority of which are made more than one year out — have been turned away and Hat Creek’s 40 employees are left wondering whether they will have jobs in the future, Sharkey said. “If we continued like this, we’d have zero income and no employees,” he said. Adding to the frustrations, Sharkey said, is the fact he doesn’t know why the province is limiting contracts to one year. He said he believes it could be linked to recent provincewide initiatives to reconcile with First Nations. The province last week announced it will implement the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People.

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Sharkey said the Bonaparte Indian Band also applied to manage the heritage site during the request for proposals stage, but was rejected. Calls from KTW to the band were not returned. “We just don’t understand what the management from the government is going on and why,” Sharkey said. “That’s where we sit.” Called for comment, Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource operations and Rural Development media relations officer Jeremy Uppenborn provided an email statement explaining the recent request for proposals sought to maintain current operations, ensure good value for public funds and “intertwined Indigenous and settler heritage” in interpretation and management. “None of the proposals offered this level of service, which is why we have asked the Friends of Historic Hat Creek Ranch Society to continue to operate the site for a further year under the terms of the present agreement,” the emails stated. Sharkey defended the board’s involvement of First Nations on the society board and in its content. Government officials refused to make anyone available to discuss the future of Hat Creek Ranch.

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LOCAL NEWS

Voters group urges caution to city hall when considering tax breaks Domtar, the city’s single largest taxpayer, is asking civic officials to implement fair heavy industry taxation rates JESSICA WALLACE STAFF REPORTER jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com

A group of concerned citizens urged civic officials on Wednesday to proceed with caution when considering tax breaks for heavy industry that could impact residents’ pocketbooks and the city’s overall cost of living. “You don’t want to be focussed on one tax group at the expense of other tax groups,” Kamloops Voters Society director Randy Sunderman told KTW. The city’s finance committee has been tasked by council with reviewing a policy that pushes down over time the heavy industry property tax rate, due to high taxes paid in Kamloops compared to other cities in the province. The Kamloops Voters Society presented somewhat unexpectedly during the delegation portion of Wednesday’s meeting, appearing on a day when Domtar — the city’s largest single taxpayer — was scheduled to present to the committee tasked with reviewing the policy. Sunderman called for a “holistic” review and stressed the importance of methodology. When comparing the city’s heavy industry tax rates with other communities, Sunderman said, it is more important to look at communities with similar heavy industry makeup, not just like-sized communities. According to Sunderman, Vernon was used in the city’s previous comparison but it

“doesn’t have any heavy industry left.” The group said any property tax tweak may have a trickle effect that could impact costs of living, attraction of professionals and employees, business growth and more. “What we want is the city to use good comparisons and sound methodology to do a review of comparable heavy industry tax rates, when they’re looking at other communities,” Sunderman said. “It’s about the methodology.” Meanwhile, Domtar general manager Jean-Claude Allaire advocated for “fair” heavy industry taxation. He said the Kamloops mill has the highest property tax rate among its B.C. competition. Furthermore, the council policy capping heavy industry tax rates provides stability, he said, allowing him to seek further investment in the Kamloops facility. The cap allows Domtar to make investments in its property without taxes increasing, despite its overall assessment increasing. Investments in the property provide long-term stability for the mill, Allaire said, which employs 340 people. He pointed to sawmill closures around the province and called property taxes in Kamloops a “huge constraint” in obtaining investment. Allaire cited two significant capital investments in recent years and more expected in the future. “What we’re asking is to pay our fair amount of tax,” he told KTW. “We want to work with the city in order to bring it down to an average. We’re so far ahead. When we’re talking with Kamloops Voters Society, we can agree or disagree, respectfully, about the argument. The thing is, we’re so far ahead. We just want to reduce that gap.” Domtar is increasingly focussed on the pulp aspect

of its business, as demand for paper declines. Challenges, Allaire told KTW, include pricey fibre — resulting from a fibre shortage and expensive logs — as the price of selling pulp declines. Asked what he would tell a Kamloops resident whose taxes rose on average about $4 in 2019 as Domtar’s rate decreased, Allaire said the two interests do not conflict and noted Venture Kamloops estimates the mill provides 1,300 direct and indirect jobs. Allaire also pointed out during the meeting myriad community groups and events the company supports including the Kamloops Hospice Association, the Kamloops Blazers, Kamloops Ribfest, Eureka Science Camps, Raise-A-Reader, the Kamloops Food Bank, the United Way Thompson Nicola Cariboo, Thompson Rivers University, PIT Stop and more. “When you’re talking about us,” he told the committee, pointing to the screen. “This is us.” In the end, the committee tasked staff with coming back to the committee next month with heavy industry tax rates in a variety of other communities. Also up for review is whether public delegations should be heard at the committee level or council as a whole. Coun. Mike O’Reilly said that while he found the Kamloops Voters Society presentation helpful, the scenario created a miniature council meeting, with information possibly better heard by all of council, which makes the final decision. Review of the new committee structure is expected in the near future. “To me, it doesn’t really matter whether there’s a delegation or not, it’s just knowing what the process is and how to get a delegation there or not and we can all play by the same rules,” O’Reilly said.

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A man on the street pulling a 20-foot train of four carts including a bicycle, furniture and clothing spoke with a city bylaws officer last week on Tranquille Road. Cooler weather — daytime highs not expected to reach double digits until next week — is making life harder for those who live on the city’s streets.

Police seek suspects in ATM thefts

Contact us for more information.

Incidents took place at Save-On Foods and Rexall drug store KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK

Kamloops Mounties are looking for a pair of robbery suspects who used a chainsaw to slice into a pair of ATM machines last week. The thefts occurred last Tuesday and Wednesday, both during early morning hours at a pair of retailers in the city. According to police, two masked suspects smashed open the front door of the Valleyview Save-On-Foods at 3:45 a.m. on Oct. 22 and broke

into the ATM machine using a Stihl gas-powered chainsaw, stealing cash from within. Surveillance video shows the suspects driving away in a white pick-up truck that was reported stolen later that morning. The next morning, at about 1:15 a.m., two people broke into the Rexall Store off Highway 5A in Aberdeen and cut open an ATM using the same type of saw, making off with money from within. Cpl. Jodi Shelkie said surveillance video from the store shows the suspects were responsible.

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FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

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OPINION

Kamloops This Week is a politically independent newspaper, published Wednesdays and Fridays at 1365-B Dalhousie Dr., Kamloops, B.C., V2C 5P6 Phone: 250-374-7467 | Fax: 250-374-1033 email: editor@kamloopsthisweek.com

Robert W. Doull President Aberdeen Publishing Inc. Tim Shoults Operations manager Aberdeen Publishing Inc.

BUY A POPPY AND REMEMBER It’s November, meaning the pillow cases are filled with treats and costumes and jack-o-lanterns are retired for another year. Now we turn our attention to a symbol of sacrifice, dedication and remembrance. For at least these next two weeks we should all take the time to think of the brave men and women who have fought for our country and remember to give back. Poppies are available all over the city at local retailers. Take the time to purchase one by donation from many fine veterans and cadets manning the tables. If your poppy should slip off your shirt and blow away in the wind, buy another one. If you have a friend, take two. If you have a poppy left over from years past, buy another one. Make sure you’re wearing a poppy over your heart come Remembrance Day, and wear it with pride. More importantly, don’t hesitate to donate generously when you get one. The money collected by the Legion from the sale of poppies goes to numerous worthwhile programs and services to assist our veterans. Through your donations the poppy funds are used for supports such as housing, transportation and health care for veterans. The money buys food, covers heating costs, medications and pays for accessibility modifications to assist veterans with disabilities, among a variety of other initiatives. The funds don’t only go to veterans, but also bursaries for children, grandchildren and great grandchildren of veterans and it supports cadet units. Last year the Kamloops branch of the Royal Canadian Legion raised $60,000 for veterans. This year let’s try to beat that number. It’s the least we can do for our veterans given the freedom they’ve ensured we have all year round. Lest we forget.

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Robert W. Doull President Aberdeen Publishing Inc. EDITORIAL Publisher: Robert W. Doull Editor: Christopher Foulds Newsroom staff: Dave Eagles Tim Petruk Marty Hastings Jessica Wallace Sean Brady Michael Potestio Todd Sullivan SALES STAFF: Don Levasseur Linda Skelly Kate Potter Jodi Lawrence Liz Spivey

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Wolf kill saving caribou

I

t would have come as a relief to many B.C. communities when Forests Minister Doug Donaldson told me in September his latest management plans for 20 endangered caribou herds will not require further industrial or backcountry bans. Now I understand why Donaldson was able to make that decision after intensive study and community meetings in the Cariboo, Kootenay and Peace regions, packed with people worried about the future of their already fragile resource economies. Plunging caribou populations are indeed a crisis, one that can be seen across Canada, all the way to the vast herds of Labrador and northern Quebec that are central to the traditional way of life of Indigenous people. That’s why the federal government is poised to invoke its species-at-risk legislation to impose further protection measures on B.C. It’s already too late for some of the 54 B.C. herds, despite protected areas, mothers and calves captured and held in maternity pens and an escalating program to control rising wolf populations by shooting them from the air. Donaldson acted on the latest report from ministry biologists, showing the first glimmer of hope. Three of B.C.’s largest herds in the South Peace have turned the corner from a steep decline toward extinction and are trending toward recovery. This is after the maternity

TOM FLETCHER Our Man In

VICTORIA penning program was extended from Kootenay herds to the South Peace and the wolf kill was stepped up over four years. “The decrease in wolf abundance across the South Peace area has shown conclusive evidence that intensive wolf reduction has halted and reversed the declining trends of the Klinse-Za, Kennedy Siding and Quintette caribou populations,” states the B.C. report submitted to Donaldson in August. The existing set aside areas are enormous and their effectiveness is questionable. By 2016, the area off limits to logging and road-building in South Selkirks was 2.2-million hectares, covering 95 per cent of prime mountain caribou habitat. The South Peace recovery plan covered 400,000 hectares of high-elevation winter habitat. As the B.C. Council of Forest Industries pointed out last year, banning forestry and mining is no magic answer. Caribou are declining in Wells Gray Provincial Park north of Kamloops and in Jasper National

Park in Alberta, where there has been no modern-day industrial disturbance. They’re gone from Banff National Park, which has been protected since 1885. Another strategy should be given credit — the efforts of local snowmobile and off-road clubs to keep prime habitat off-limits. This is backed up by Conservation Officer Service flights over key areas to enforce restrictions, a daunting task given the size and remoteness of regions. More people are becoming aware of the impact a single snowmobile track through deep snow can have, allowing wolves to quickly penetrate areas they could not otherwise reach. B.C.’s southern mountain herds have range extending into the United States and this region has had human settlement and industrial activity for longer than B.C.’s northern regions. The contrast between our efforts and those south of the border was highlighted by a sad news report earlier this month in the Revelstoke Review. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service finally declared the whole population of southern mountain caribou endangered, months after they became locally extinct in the U.S. The last three animals in the cross-border herd, known locally as the Grey Ghosts, were captured and relocated to protective pens north of Revelstoke in January. It is hoped they can bolster a small herd there. Tom Fletcher is B.C. legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press Media.


FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

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OPINION LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

READERS FED UP WITH CANADA’S FIRST-PAST-THE-POST SYSTEM Editor: Re: (‘Election results’, Wednesday, Oct. 23): We have an unfair winner and an exaggerated minority. The Conservatives had a higher portion of the popular vote, but the Liberals received the most seats. First past the post cheated in favour of the Liberals. Based on the popular vote, fair result for the Liberals is 111 seats, but first past the post gave them 157 seats, a bonus of 46 seats. A fair result for the Conservatives is 117 seats, but first past the post gave them 121 seats, a bonus of four seats. A fair result for the Bloc Quebecois is 28 seats, but first past the post gave them 32 seats, a bonus of four seats. A fair result for the NDP is 53 seats, but first past the post gave them 24 seats, a penalty of 29 seats. A fair result for the Greens is 22 seats, but first past the post gave them three seats, a penalty of 19 seats. A fair result for Independents is two seats, but first past the post gave them a penalty of one seat. A fair result for the People’s Party of Canada is five seats, but first past the post gave them a penalty of five seats. Why such a difference in ‘bonus’ and ‘penalty’? It’s not fair,

Royal Inland Hospital’s new parkade and clinical services building opened in 2016.

HOSPITAL PARKADE IN NEED OF A BIG CLEAN UP KTW readers Ray Jones and Heide Neighbor believe electoral reform will bring about future results that are more reflective of the desires of Canadian voters.

but that is how first past the post operates. Same old system, same old results. Ray Jones Kamloops ••• Editor: Re: (Editorial: ‘Will electoral reform ever arrive?’, Friday, Oct. 25): If 65 per cent of Canadians did not vote for the present government, it means 65 per cent of the votes cast were essentially of no value. That seems a strange version of what it should mean to live in a

so-called democratic country. Here’s a thought: One more referendum — groan! — to get voters’ opinion on a better system. Instead of the previous multiple choice questions, which were confusing and unnecessarily complicated, have only one question, as in: Do you, as a Canadian, want your vote to count? Yes or No? If such a referendum shows 65 per cent or more of voters want their ballots to count, then it should be time for political leaders to man up and make the decisions needed to implement political reform. Heide Neighbor Kamloops

Editor: I am concerned about the lack of cleanliness at the entrance to Royal Inland Hospital. Has anyone actually taken a good look at the new parkade? I was there last Sunday, when the facility was not very busy, and I made some surprising discoveries. It looks like the parkade has not been cleaned since it was built and put into operation. Sand and dirt can be seen everywhere, as well as spills and other stains. At the P4 entrance to the elevators and hallway, I saw a garbage can and a very large stain. People walk through all of this and track it into the hospital. Inside the hospital, there are many hand sanitation stations and signs warning people to clean

TALK BACK Q&A: kamloopsthisweek.com We asked:

What are your thoughts on the results of the country’s 43rd federal election?

Results: Was hoping for a Conservative majority

44% (406 votes)

Was hoping for more Green/NDP seats

22% (200 votes)

Minority government is good for Canada

19% (176 votes)

Was hoping for a Liberal majority

15% (133 votes)

What’s your take? What do you make of Western alienation and increasing talk of separatism following last week’s federal election?

Vote online:

kamloopsthisweek.com

their hands to prevent spreading germs. I could not help but wonder about the potential filth on their shoes. I have tried to call Interior Health and RIH, but the standard answer I get is to call maintenance. I don’t think maintenance is concerned, otherwise the facility wouldn’t be in the condition I saw. I believe a disease prevention official should tour the parkade and see for themselves I also think Interior Health should begin weekly pressure washing of the parkade and install more mats at entrances. I believe disease prevention starts outside the hospital. Dennis Vollans Kamloops

Kamloops 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.

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FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS

TNRD exploring grant options for broadband JESSICA WALLACE STAFF REPORTER jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com

Amid calls for improved cell and internet coverage, the Thompson Nicola Regional District is eyeing grant funding to assess broadband gaps throughout the region. TNRD director of community services Ron Storie said he will be bringing to the board in late 2019 or early 2020 an application for funding via Connecting British Columbia, a provincial program that helps pay for infrastructure to deliver high-speed internet to rural and remote areas. Storie said the board earlier this year identified broadband as a priority. Anecdotally, he said, rural services are lacking. Cities like Kamloops and Merritt are up to speed, whereas communities like Logan Lake, Pinantan, Clinton, Lytton, Paul Lake and Sun Peaks would benefit from improvements. “The CRTC has said thou shalt have a 50 megabyte upload speed and 10 megabyte download speed by such and such a time, or that’s what people should have now,” Storie said.

The CRTC has said thou shalt have a 50 “megabyte upload speed and 10 megabyte download speed by such and such a time, or that’s what people should have now.

— RON STORIE, TNRD director of community services

“I think at the end of the day, that’s what the board has said — let’s find out who’s got what, let’s come up with a strategy of who the service providers are, find out who’s got what, who needs what — what is it? Is it for emergency purposes? Is it for home-based businesses? Is it for Netflix? — and then come up with a strategy.” Calls for improvements can be heard throughout the region. BC Cattleman’s Association general manager Kevin Boon said the issue is widespread in B.C., worsening the farther one gets from major centres. Ranchers arguably feel it the most in rural, sparsely-populated areas. Boon detailed a situation wherein infrastructure is not keeping up with increasing digital demands. With more and more paperwork moving online, he said lengthy processes like water licensing applications are made

FEEDBACK What do you think about local Internet speeds? Do you live in an area with slow Internet? Let us know by emailing editor@kamloopsthisweek.com

longer when available only by dial-up. “To comply, they have to make some other services available,” Boon said. “Or we need better internet connections in these areas.” The mayors of Clearwater and Vavenby have also called for internet improvements as ways to diversify their economies at a time when the forestry sector has taken a hit. Meanwhile, TNRD director Mel Rothenburger said in his electoral area (rivers and the peaks) cell phone coverage is at issue, impacting safety and commerce for about 1,000 residents.

He has brought it up at the TNRD on numerous occasions, as members of the Heffley Lake Community Association continue to lobby for improvements. Association vice-president Jim Davies said the group has invested a significant amount of time into the issue in recent years and he doesn’t understand why the road to Big White in Kelowna has cell coverage, while the road to Sun Peaks near Kamloops has “very limited to no cell coverage on the road.” Letters of support provided to KTW from various interest groups date back to 2016. Tk’emlups rural RCMP detachment has said increased cell coverage would benefit policing, with calls for service inaccessible via police car computer systems in places without cell coverage. Instead, rural police rely on old school radio. Sun Peaks residents and visitors know dead zones on their way up to the ski hill, which can be dicey when driving amidst winter road conditions. Sun Peaks mayor Al Raine penned a letter to Telus in 2017 requesting service, estimating 500,000 trips are made annually between Sun Peaks and

Heffley Creek. “With this volume of travel, there is obviously a large demand for cell service,” Raine wrote. Short-range improvements have been made. Cell service via Telus, Koodo or other Telus Mobility providers is accessible to the Heffley Lake campground and some properties on Mill Bay and Heffley Lake Road. However, not all residents can access the service and during a summer meeting on the issue, the association said it will continue pushing for cell coverage for as many residents as possible in the area. Rothenburger said he has spoken multiple times with Telus. At its core, the issue comes down to cost. A lack of business case provides minimal incentive to make improvements. A meeting with the minister of citizens services last year during the Union of BC Municipalities conference was “encouraging,” Rothenburger said, though nothing has since been done. It is unclear whether or not a TNRD gap analysis would include cell phone coverage, as Storie could not say at the time when he spoke with KTW.


FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

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LOCAL NEWS

Thompson steelhead numbers New grocery store hit new all-time low of 86 fish confirmed for space ABERDEEN MALL

KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK

There are now fewer steelhead trout in the Thompson River system than there are letters in this sentence. An October update from the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations states that the current spawning population of the Thompson watershed is 86 fish. In the neighbouring Chilcotin watershed, 39 fish are expected to spawn. For the Thompson, that figure marks an all-time low in 43 years of data. For the Chilcotin, the number is an all-time low in 49 years of data. Each fish population remains in a state of extreme conservation concern. The previous low point was established in March 2018, prompting the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada — an advisory body to the government — to assess the populations as endangered. The body recommended an emergency order to place the fish on the endangered list under the

The most recent steelhead trout numbers for the Thompson watershed show a spawning population of just 86 fish, which is the lowest figure ever recorded.

federally controlled Species at Risk Act (SARA), which would stop fishing from recreational, commercial and First Nations sectors. But the government’s plan released in July stopped short of any such listing, pledging instead to increase fish survival through improving freshwater habitats

and conducting more science and monitoring activities. On Thursday, five interest groups penned a letter to Premier John Horgan, pleading for action to save Interior Fraser River steelhead. “Ocean survival, climate change and interception fisheries that use gill net are the three major factors attributed to the steep downward trend for Thompson and Chilcotin steelhead,” the letter reads, conceding that climate change and ocean survival are two factors that are beyond immediate control. “The non-selective gill net fishery on the lower Fraser River is something that can be regulated and must be done forthwith before IFS [Interior Fraser steelhead] become extinct,” the letter continues. The letter is signed by the BC Wildlife Federation, the British Columbia Federation of Drift Fishers, the British Columbia Federation of Fly Fishers, the Fraser Valley Angling Guides Association and the Steelhead Society of British Columbia.

left vacant by Sears KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK

A new grocery store will open in Aberdeen. Fresh Street Market has been confirmed as one of the new tenants in the former Sears space in Aberdeen Mall. The city received an application in September for a building permit to construct the grocery store, but it has yet to be formally issued. A call from KTW to the Fresh Street Market head office was not returned. The store’s website lists four locations in West Vancouver, Surrey and Whistler. Murmurs were previously heard throughout the city of Whole Foods opening in the mall. Also rumoured for the space is an Old Navy location. The city, however, has not received a building permit for the clothing store and a representative from Gap Inc., Old Navy’s parent

Fresh Street Market’s West Vancouver location.

company, told KTW there is nothing to announce at this time. Demolition and construction have occurred at the mall, ongoing in the 120,000-square space formerly occupied by Sears, which shuttered in 2017. Marshalls has also been confirmed for the space, which is being reconfigured and divvied up for multiple tenants. Other additions to Aberdeen Mall of late include Sunrise Records and Saje Natural Wellness.

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A12

FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS

City plans to smash pumpkins KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK

Don’t chuck your jack-o-lantern into the garbage after Halloween. Instead, chuck it off a truck. The city is taking additional steps this fall to keep jack-o-lanterns out of the landfill and its inaugural pumpkin smash event will take place on Nov. 2 on McArthur Island, where one can bowl with their pumpkin, smash it from the top of a bucket truck, get their face painted or strike a pumpkin piñata. City of Kamloops environmental services coordinator Emily Lomas said the event is part of the city’s continued efforts to decrease waste headed into the landfill. The city has always accepted pumpkins at its yard waste site to be composted for city parks and consumer use. In recent years, it has also set up designated pumpkin drop-off areas, a move Lomas said has worked well. The city averages more than 13,000 kilograms of pumpkins per year collected in November. However, it is unclear how many of jack-olanterns continue to be tossed in garbage bins after Halloween and, ultimately, take up room in city landfills. “We just thought that we could promote the composting process a little bit more,” Lomas said. The event on Saturday takes place from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the parking lot of soccer fields one and two on McArthur Island. Kamloops Fire Rescue will drop a jack-o-lantern from a substantial height at about 1 p.m.

A young Kamloops sex offender who violated conditions of his sentence barring him from visiting parks and libraries has been sentenced to spend seven months behind bars. But, after being given credit for time served, Jose Germain will be a free man by mid-November. The 21-year-old was arrested in June after a pair of incidents. On June 6, police found Germain in Riverside Park, violating a judge’s order prohibiting him from visiting parks or any places where young people might gather. On June 22, police were surveilling Germain when he entered the Thompson-Nicola Regional District Library on Victoria Street, violating the same order. He was subsequently arrested. Germain was handed a seven-month jail sentence, but will spend only 18 new days behind bars after being given credit for time served. Germain was convicted in 2016 of two counts of sexual assault and one count of making or publishing child pornography.

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Interior Health officials are urging Kamloops residents to get their flu shots. IHA medical health officer Dr. Silvana Mema said immunization

Donations will be collected on site for Kamloops Food Bank. Otherwise, the event is free and the city will compost the pumpkins after the event.

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A13

FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS

Food Hub group sets public meeting for next week The Kamloops Food Hub is looking to pick the public’s brain on the type of food hub model it wants to see rise in the Tournament Capital. People are invited to a meeting on

Wednesday at Mount Paul Community Food Centre,140 Laburnum Street, from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., to give their input. The Kamloops Food Policy Council is one of six organizations in B.C. that was

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awarded $50,000 from the Ministry of Agriculture earlier this year to study the feasibility of a food processing facility in the community and the Nov. 6 meeting is the latest step in the process.

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VICTORIA — British Columbia has introduced legislation that would eliminate the need to change the clocks twice a year with the creation of Pacific time. Attorney General David Eby said the Interpretation Amendment Act, if passed, would make daylight saving time permanent. He said the impetus for the change comes from a recent provincial government survey where more than 93 per cent of respondents, or almost 225,000 people, indicated their support for a permanent move to daylight time. But Eby said more consulting about the change is needed with its U.S. trading partners in the Pacific states of Washington, Oregon and California. The legislation does not change the schedule for the next time change this Sunday, when clocks fall back one hour to standard time. Researchers at Simon Fraser University and others are lobbying the government to consider making standard time permanent in B.C., saying it promotes healthy sleep and provides more morning daylight.

Cold-weather shelters slated to open soon KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK

Provincially funded extreme-weather shelters will soon begin to open across B.C., including more than two dozen beds in Kamloops. “During the colder months, it’s important that people experiencing homelessness in our province know that there is a place they can go to get warm and find supports and services that can help them stabilize their lives,” said Selina Robinson, Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing. “As we continue the work of building permanent housing, we’re proud to work in partner with communities and non-profit housing providers to provide these shelter spaces.” This winter season, the province plans to open almost 1,355 temporary shelter spaces and more than 820 extreme-weather response shelter spaces. In Kamloops, The Mustard Seed has 25 provincially funded extreme-weather shelter beds.

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A14

FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS

City weighing tax breaks for commercial builds JESSICA WALLACE STAFF REPORTER jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com

The city is mulling tax breaks for developers to build commercial office space, similar to incentives already offered for residential builds. Ten-year tax holidays are currently provided as an incentive to build housing in North Kamloops and downtown. It works by freezing for a decade the assessed property value prior to construction. Coun. Mike O’Reilly said Kamloops is among limited communities in the province not providing such incentives for commercial builds and called it a “big void” in the city’s development strategy. He first raised the idea about a year ago during the election campaign. “This is going to help get developments off the ground in the downtown and North Shore,” O’Reilly told KTW. “If you take one look around downtown and North Shore, you see multiple residential buildings everywhere. That’s what you see because that’s what the tax exemption applies to. It doesn’t apply to new office buildings and,

DAVE EAGLES/KTW FILE City council will consider whether to provide tax breaks for new commercial projects in downtown Kamloops, similar to a previous move made easing taxes for new residential construction in the city centre.

for new office [space], that means new jobs. That’s what this is about. It’s about getting jobs into our core areas.”

O’Reilly said the last major office building constructed downtown was Kelson Place, built more than two decades ago.

Asked about demand, he cited need for “high-quality” office space to attract out-of-town employers.

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He noted a Rogers call centre that bypassed the River City, instead taking hundreds of jobs to Kelowna. “We didn’t even make the short list,” O’Reilly said, calling it “heartbreaking.” “They came to town and said, ‘You don’t even have anywhere for us to open, so we’re not going to come to Kamloops.’” Furthermore, O’Reilly said when the revitalization tax exemption was previously altered to include hotels, the Sandman Signature hotel was built on Lorne Street. “We know they work,” he said. “Whatever we apply them to, they work, and we want to see new offices and jobs in our North Shore and downtown core, and that’s the only area that this applies to.” The city formed an engagement group to look at the issue of revitalization tax exemptions. In a memo to two city committees, it recommended the bylaw be revised this year to include provisions for commercial developments. It is unclear when exactly those changes could come into effect. Further changes to the bylaw will be explored in 2020.

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FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A15

LOCAL NEWS

City expects about two weeks of delays remaining for West Victoria construction KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK

The city expects West Victoria construction to wrap up in about two weeks time. City of Kamloops capital projects manager Darren Crundwell said phase four utility work is nearly complete and the final paving stretch of the year, about 75 metres from Sun Life beneath Overlanders Bridge toward the Summit Connector, is scheduled for Nov. 10. That day or two of work will mark the end of paving for the year, but construction will continue to cause traffic delays until that time. “Unfortunately, where you go down to one lane there — especially when we had to cut across the road with the utility work, because we can only do half at a time — then we’re

impacting the road,” Crundwell said. “That is one of the worst points in terms of a traffic delay because everything coming off of Summit and going to the North Shore and anybody heading from downtown, heading up Summit, is impacted because everything comes to that pinch point. We’re through the worst of it. Paving and the last bit of concrete, that’s what’s left. The deep utility work through there was also challenging.” Crundwell said the weather is looking good in the final work days of 2019 and he expects the project to wrap up five months early, in June of next year. It was originally expected to take two full construction seasons, wrapping up in the fall of 2020. However, Crundwell said a new procurement process utilized for

the project focussed not on the least expensive contract but best value. He credited that decision for the reduced timeline. “Low price is not the only value

to the taxpayer, city, residents,” Crundwell said. Electrical work and further landscaping will be completed next year. “We’re just about there,” he said.

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A16

FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

LOCAL NEWS FREE CONCERT

The Kamloops Art Gallery welcomed the UBC Contemporary Players Ensemble, who performed a 45-minute concert in the gallery’s main exhibit, Hexsa’am: To Be Here Always, last weekend. The event also featured an original commissioned work inspired by the exhibit by Leslie Opatril, a master’s student at the UBC School of Music. ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTW

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LinkUp looking toward future TODD SULLIVAN STAFF REPORTER tsullivan@kamloopsthisweek.com

LinkUp, the Venture Kamloops event that connects local entrepreneurs with a variety of resources and programs to help them succeed, is back for 2019 with a focus on the future. This year’s theme is Adapt and Innovate: The Future of Local Business. The keynote speaker will be Max Valiquette who is, according to Marketing Magazine, one of Canada’s most influential marketers. He is currently the Chief Strategy Officer at Diamond Integrated Marketing. “His background is marketing,” explained Jim Anderson, executive director of Venture Kamloops. “But he has a very sharp insight into the future of small business, and talking about innovation as a part of business in the future.”

But there’s a lot more to the day than the keynote, said Anderson. “There are three kind of facets to the day,” he said. “Panels, which have reps from different business organizations that have resources to offer. Round tables featuring entrepreneurs giving advice. “And then a trade show area where we’ll have a lot of the people who appear on the panels, as well as other business services” The first panel, called StartUp and Adapt, will feature Chelsea Hogan of Fern & Frond Floral Studio, Calli Duncan and Brianne Sheppard of Far & Wide and Franca Muraca, notary public. Next is the Entrepreneurial Innovation panel, with Lincoln Smith and John Zubak from Kamloops Innovation. The third and final roundtable, Expand & Innovate, will feature Colin Lyons of Lyons

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MEMORIES & MILESTONES HAPPY 60 THANNIVERSARY

James and Judy Brennan November 7, 2019

Love Patti, Sandy, Chuck, Michael, Wendy and all your grandchildren.

HAPPY 90TH BIRTHDAYS A family celebration of children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren and all their spouses was held in Kamloops to honor Roger and Lillian on their 90th Birthdays September 19th and September 20th, 2019. All three generations of our Schreiner family are very blessed and grateful for their ongoing love and support!

Landscaping, Nathan Froese of Joy Factory Films, Jason Paige from Acres Enterprises and Maeghan Summers of Forno on Fifth and The Noble Pig. This is the fourth year Venture Kamloops has put on LinkUp and it’s been consistently successful, with the event selling out in 2018. Anderson said it’s an event for anyone in business in Kamloops regardless of that business’s size. “If you’re trying to run a business in Kamloops, we’re trying to present you as much help as we possibly can,” he said. “It’s a really good opportunity come and get information you’re probably not going to come across otherwise.” LinkUp takes place on Nov. 20 and tickets are available at venturekamloops.com. They will get you access to the entire day of resources, roundtables, and networking opportunities, plus breakfast and lunch.


A17

FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

PROVINCIAL NEWS

Vancouver bus drivers plan strike action CANADIAN PRESS

VANCOUVER — The union representing 5,000 bus drivers in Metro Vancouver says contract talks have broken off, setting the stage for the start of labour disruptions on Friday. Unifor had set a deadline at midnight on Thursday before taking action to back contract demands. The union said all transit operators will refuse to wear uniforms on Friday, and technicians and skilled trades workers will not work overtime. Unifor said in a statement the job actions are aimed at bringing attention to the dispute while causing minimum disruption for commuters.

Coast Mountain Bus Company said it made a fair offer to the union before talks broke off. In a statement, it said without maintenance overtime there will be bus and SeaBus cancellations. The SeaBus connects downtown Vancouver with the North Shore across the Burrard Inlet. Wages, benefits and working conditions are key issues in the dispute. The union voted 99 per cent in favour of strike action. It gave 72-hour strike notice earlier this week. The last transit strike in Metro Vancouver was in 2001 when a fourmonth walkout crippled the commute for hundreds of thousands of people.

Mike Smith, president of Unifor Local 2200, said workers declining overtime will quickly increase pressure on bus and SeaBus services. “The system has normalized overtime, so without it, the turnaround for repairs and other maintenance will build up quickly,’’ he said in the news release. Coast Mountain president Michael McDaniel said the company asked the union to take part in third-party mediation, but it refused. McDaniel said the company is offering significantly better wages and benefits and is addressing working conditions. “This package would be greater than most other public sector settlements in B.C.,’’ he said in the company statement.

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Wildlife group raises pollution concerns after pelican hurt in B.C. lake CANADIAN PRESS

BURNABY — An endangered American white pelican faces a long recovery after being injured by some fishing line discarded in a British Columbia lake. The Wildlife Rescue Association says in a statement that the pelican, one of North America’s largest birds, was stranded on an Okanagan lake near Oliver when the rest of its flock flew south for the winter. The bird was unable to fly because the discarded fishing line had badly damaged its left wing, causing several punctures and a large tear in the skin. A team was able to capture the severely dehydrated and emaciated pelican, and Wildlife Rescue said its medical team has determined there is a good possibility for recovery with long-term care and treatment. Janelle Stephenson, hospital manager for the non-profit association, urged the public to learn how to recognize and reduce risks to animals from discarded items such as fishing line.

The American pelican is an endangered species.

“Wildlife Rescue’s help centre provides information to support the public by clarifying the steps needed,’’ Stephenson said in the statement. “The best outcome for wildlife is when rescue teams can respond quickly and provide immediate treatment to eliminate infection, starvation and potential death.’’

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FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

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NATIONAL NEWS

Anti-ISIL mission changes amid protests CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — The Canadian military is being forced to adjust and temporarily curtail some aspects of its anti-ISIL mission in Iraq and Lebanon as anti-government protests rock the two countries and threaten to further destabilize the Middle East. The protests began weeks ago as anger and frustration over endemic corruption, unemployment and a lack of basic services drove thousands of citizens into the streets to call for change, prompting the prime ministers of both countries to announce their resignations this week.

Yet the protests have also been marred by violence as clashes have erupted between pro-government supporters and protesters in Lebanon, while more than 200 protesters in Iraq have been killed and thousands more injured, many allegedly at the hands of local security forces. In an interview with the Canadian Press on Thursday, Brig.-Gen. MichelHenri St-Louis, Canada’s top commander in the region, said his troops continue to train and support their Iraqi and Lebanese counterparts as part of the global fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. Yet, he also admitted the protests have made it difficult at times for the

Canadians to move around, and forced them to occasionally pull back or suspend their work until they have a better understanding of the situation or the protests move on. “We have had to adjust some of our presence in the battlespace, or our road [movement] has had to be slightly adjusted at the peak of these demonstrations,” St-Louis said by telephone from his headquarters at the Ali Al Salem air base in Kuwait. “So just a matter of continuing to revise our force protection, our measures, the threat and then adjust ourselves accordingly to what’s transpiring on the ground.’’

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FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A19

WORLD NEWS

Fire on moving train kills 71 passengers in central Pakistan ASSOCIATED PRESS

MULTAN, Pakistan — A massive fire caused by a cooking gas stove erupted Thursday on a train travelling in Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province, killing at least 71 passengers, officials said. Flames roared through the train cars as the train approached the town of Liaquatpur in Punjab, they said, the latest tragedy to hit Pakistan’s dilapidated, poorly maintained and mismanaged rail system. Survivors recounted horrific scenes of fellow passengers screaming as they jumped through the windows and off the train, flames billowing from the carriages. “We could hear people crying and screaming for help,” said Chaudhry Shujaat who had boarded the train just a few hours earlier with his wife and two children. “I thought we would die. The next car was on fire. We felt so helpless.” Deputy Commissioner Jamil Ahmed said the fire broke out when a gas stove exploded as breakfast was being prepared on board. He added that the death toll had risen steadily since the early morning. Kaleem Ullah, an official with the district emergency services, says of

the 43 people injured, 11 were still in critical condition. Several of the injured had jumped off the train — many to their deaths — after the fire broke out and before it eventually screeched to a halt, said Ahmed. Survivors said it took the train nearly 20 minutes to come to a halt after the fire broke out and passengers began screaming for help. Some pulled at emergency cords that weave through the train to notify the conductor. Ghulam Abbas, a passenger who had gotten on the train in the town of Nawabshah in neighbouring Sindh province with his wife and two children, recounted watching panicked passengers jumping off. “We learned afterward that most of them had died,” he said. His wife, Sulai Khan Bibi, said she was horrified what would happen to their two small children. “We were so close to death, but Allah saved us,” she said, clutching the children. In Pakistan, poor passengers often bring their own small gas stoves on the trains to cook their meals, despite rules to the contrary, according to Railways Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed. Safety regulations are often ignored in the overcrowded trains.

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U.S. role in Syria grows more complex with Trump’s claim to region’s oil ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — By claiming a right to Syria’s oil, President Donald Trump has added more complexity — as well as additional U.S. forces and time — to an American military mission he has twice declared he was ending so that troops could come home. Extending the mission to secure eastern Syria’s oilfields happens to fit neatly with the Pentagon’s

UK platforms shown LONDON — Britain’s upcoming election is all about economic and social issues and is a oncein-a-generation chance to transform the country, Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said Thursday as he kicked off his party’s election campaign. Corbyn outlined the left-of-centre party’s plan to take on the “vested interests” that he said are hurting ordinary people, as he attempted to move the election battle away from the political turmoil swirling around Brexit.

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WorkSafeBC – Workers’ Compensation Board of B.C. Hereby gives notice of proposed amendments to the Occupational

Health and Safety Regulation (BC reg. 296/97, as amended)

WorkSafeBC is holding public hearings for proposed amendments to Parts 8, 16, 20, and 21 of the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation:

Public Hearings You are invited to provide feedback on the proposed amendments by oral presentation at the public hearings and/or in writing. Please register if you wish to make an oral presentation at the public hearings by telephoning 604-232-7744 or toll free in BC 1-866-614-7744 prior to the hearing. Information on the proposed amendments and the public hearings, including details of registration/participation procedures, are on WorkSafeBC’s website at worksafebc.com.

Public Hearing Details Date October 29, 2019 November 5, 2019 November 7, 2019

MONDAY - LADIES’ NIGHT

view that a full withdrawal now could hasten a revival of the Islamic State group. The military acknowledged on Thursday that an Army unit with armoured vehicles is now operating in Syria’s oil region. It did not say how many soldiers are being added there, but officials have said the eventual force there likely will be about 500. On Oct. 28, Trump said: “We’re keeping the oil — remember that.”

November 14, 2019 Session Times:

Location Ramada Plaza 444 George Street, Prince George, BC Coast Kamloops Hotel 1250 Rogers Way, Kamloops, BC Delta Hotels Victoria Ocean Pointe Resort 100 Harbour Road, Victoria, BC Pacific Gateway Hotel 3500 Cessna Drive, Richmond, BC 3:00 pm to 5:00 pm 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Written Submissions The deadline for receipt of written submissions is 4:30 p.m. on Friday, November 15, 2019. Written submissions can be made online or via e-mail, fax, mail, or delivered at the public hearings during the session times. via the WorkSafeBC website at worksafebc.com Online: E-mail: ohsregfeedback@worksafebc.com Fax: 604-279-7599; or toll free in BC: 1-877-279-7599 Mail: Policy, Regulation and Research Division Subject: Proposed Regulatory Amendments WorkSafeBC – Workers’ Compensation Board of B.C. P.O. Box 5350, Station Terminal Vancouver, BC V6B 5L5

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Notice of proposed amendments to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation and Notice of Public Hearings pursuant to sections 225 and 226 of the Workers Compensation Act of British Columbia.


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Getting schooled in the new Cambodia CHRIS MCBEATH

SPECIAL TO KTW

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E

dible tarantula, deep fried grasshoppers and crispy worms oozing a succulent liquid. This wasn’t exactly on my agenda but bug-infested foodie markets are just some of the unexpected pleasures in store when travelling through rural Cambodia. Along with the wonders of Angkor Wat, Bayon and other fabled temples, you’ll find clusters of clay-brick homes rooted among rice paddies, silk farms and hardworking fishing villages on stilts where low tides maroon fishing boats in the muddy quagmires. Temples and arachnids aside, my trip to this still-developing country actually involved a more personal mission: to understand the probable fate of Fila and Lily Tan. These delightful sisters had been my best friends at school in England. The gentleness of their names reflected their natures so sadness of their sudden disappearance from my life has stayed with me all these decades. By scanty accounts, they were becoming too westernized so had been repatriated before western values took hold. But this all happened during the lead-up years to the Pol Pot regime and the bloody violence of the Khmer Rouge so as Lily and Fila grew into womanhood, I often wonder how — and if — they survived. For anyone wanting to appreciate the vibe of today’s Cambodia, a visit to the Killing Fields is worthwhile, albeit haunting education, and Tuol Sleng prison, a school that the Khmer Rouge converted into a torture centre, is a gruelling witness to the regime’s cruelty. One of the original classrooms now exhibits photographs of for-

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: The Killing Fields Memorial of Skulls is a stark reminder of Cambodia’s past. Banteay Srei is a 10thcentury Cambodian temple dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva. Edible deep-fired tarantula are just some of the unexpected delicacies to explore at food markets. Join throngs of early risers to watch the sun rise over temples at Angkor Wat.

mer prisoners. I looked into their sunken eyes and thankfully none belonged to either Fila or Lily. I light a joss stick of remembrance and move on. To visit this side of Cambodia’s history is to explore the dynamics of a country that is only just now finding its footing as an independent nation free of despots and invasions. Tribunals involving the Cambodian genocide only came to a conclusion in 2014 with the conviction of Pol Pot’s high command.

Lesser known is the fact that, although deposed in 1979, Pol Pot himself remained an important member of Cambodia’s coalition government until 1993. Like many communist countries, politics of today and yesteryear are not openly discussed. It’s only against this backdrop that you can appreciate the resilience and happy generosity of the Cambodian spirit. Especially in the countryside where villagers still work co-operatively for the greater good of the

community and family holdings are still farmed in much the same way as in previous generations. Learning to speak English is seen as the passport to a better life and, as dusk falls, it’s not unusual to hear youngsters singing their numbers and nursery rhymes before supper. As a visitor, pack a deck of playing cards (and be ready to teach a game or two) as well as some children’s books. Although the countryside has yet to yield to the strains of tour-

Christmas onChristmas Vancouver 20 Dec 7 days $2385 onIsland Vancouver IslandEarlyDec 20 7 days $2385 Vancouver Island Getaways! Booking Discounts! Christmas at Christmas Harrison Hot Springs Dec 22 5 days $1535 at Harrison Hot Springs Dec 22 5 days $1535 Long Beach & Victoria Theatre Feb 21 6 days $1515 Group Tours! Tour 25 Small Group Small Tours! Tour Theatre on25 the Island Mar 8 5 days $1295 8 Seats left! Mar days 29 20 days $8850 $8850 Turkey 8&Seats Greece Turkey & Greece left! Mar 29 Victoria History & Mystery Mar 20 25 5 days $1135 1 Seat left! Mar 30 15 days $11,995 Majestic Japan Majestic Japan 1 Seat left! Mar 30 $11,995 Vancouver Island Gardens May 15 9 days6 days $1730 Cruises with Holland America Cruises with Holland America Vancouver Island from4Toe toleft! Tip Jun Jan 7 8 9 12 days Seats days$2655 from $4335 Mexican Riviera Cruise Mexican Riviera Cruise 4 Seats left! Jan 8 12 days fromfrom $4335 $8110 Panama Canal Cruise Feb 2 22 days Early Booking Discounts! 250-374-0831 Panama Canal Cruise Feb 2MarApr 22 $8110 10 3 7days daysfrom from $1950 Pacific Northwest Cruise EB Discounts! Harrison Hot Springs 6 days $515 Discounts! 20 5 13 days from $3805 San Diego to EB Vancouver Pacific Northwest Cruise Discounts! 10 729 days from $1950 Whistler Spring GetawayCruise EB Apr Apr Apr days $1425 250 Lansdowne Street EB Discounts! Jul 11 1717days days from $9635 Baltic Cruise New England May 31 $6180 San Diego to Vancouver Cruise EB Discounts! Apr 20 13 days from $3805 Lansdowne Street 800-667-9552 Unique Cruises, Early Booking Discounts Rails, Rivers & Roses Jun 5 7 days $2480 Baltic Cruise EB Discounts! Jul 11 17 days from $9635 800-667-9552 BC Reg #178 from $6570 Columbia River Cruise days$6985 Ireland Jun May 7 17 1811 days Unique Cruises, Early Booking Discounts from $5085 St. Lawrence & Ottawa Rivers Cruise Aug 24 10 days BC Reg #178 Les Misérables in Seattle Jun 11 15days4 days from $1165 wellsgraytours.com Columbia River Cruise May 17 $6570 from $9950 Great Lakes Cruise Aug 27 13 days New Orleans & Cajun Country Oct 22 10 days $3535 St. Lawrence & Ottawa Rivers Cruise Aug 24 10 days from $5085 Great Lakes Cruise Aug 27 13 days from $9950

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ism, evidence abounds that this is changing. Travelling the highways is to see a mess of construction be it hotels, homestays or souvenir supermarts with western toilets and plenty of parking for tour busses. Angkor Wat epitomizes the growing tourism picture. As the country’s number one draw, it attracts over one million visitors a year although the jungle-engulfed Ta Prohm is almost as popular — in large part because of the blockbuster movie, Tomb Raider. Filmed in 1991, it was the first movie to be shot here since Lord Jim in 1965 and it prompted a meteoric rise in Cambodia’s hitherto non-existent movie industry. Not only did Tomb Raider employ 400 locals as extras (including 100 Buddhist monks), the $10,000/day location fee contributed to the preservation of Angkor Wat. In terms of a more commercial legacy? Head for the nearest bar and enjoy a Tomb Raider cocktail — a blend of Cointreau, soda and lime, said to be Angelina Jolie’s favourite drink during filming. As for the famed Angkor Wat, the complex is filled with intriguing carvings, detailed reliefs and extraordinary ornamentation that reveal an antiquity of unheralded wisdom, history and storytelling. Be prepared to join the throngs of early risers to watch the sun come up over the temple tops. Get ready for long waits to climb the steepest stairs to the central tower. Then, follow the sound of Buddhist chants to where monks with perpetually happy faces will bless you with a corded bracelet for protection, joy and good luck. And with those sentiments tied around your wrist, how could you not try some toasted tarantula? Travel Writers’ Tales is an independent newspaper syndicate. For more information, go online to travelwriterstales.com.

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KTW’s Arts and Entertainment section is published on Fridays. A&E co-ordinator: Sean Brady Call 778-471-7521 or email sbrady@kamloopsthisweek.com

arts&entertainment

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Rock royalty to teach pop culture class at TRU Former Stones manager takes up teaching MICHAEL POTESTIO STAFF REPORTER michael@kamloopsthisweek.com

F

amed music manager Andrew Loog Oldham hopes to have another hit — this time in a Thompson Rivers University classroom. Oldham, who propelled the Rolling Stones into the spotlight as their first manager, will be guest lecturer of a new class on the evolution of pop culture this winter semester at TRU. Rock Dreams: A History, 1954 to 1984 – Up Close and Personal with Andrew Oldham, will run Thursdays from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. starting in January. In class, Oldham said, he will be talking mainly in parables. “The people that I’m talking about, the stories, will be applicable to the life students are going to have regardless of what they decide to do as work,” he said, relating his teaching of the class to putting a record together. Dean of arts Rich McCutcheon described the course as one of the most unique classes the university has ever put together, offering students a window into a period of pop culture Oldham helped influence. “Andrew has lived an extraordinary life. He’s walked in celebrity circles, he’s witnessed pop culture as it was unfolding and he was in the middle of it,” McCutcheon said. In the 1960s, Oldham did public relations for the Beatles and produced Stones hits like Paint it Black,

RED COLLAR CELEBRATES FIVE YEARS

Red Collar/A25

Get off My Cloud and (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction. The class he’ll now teach is a collaboration between TRU’s arts department and the culinary arts and tourism program, and involves 10 two-hour talks with Oldham during the 13-week program. TRU’s Bruce Baugh from the philosophy department and Billy Collins from tourism management will co-teach the class, which will involve elements of history, philosophy and music management. “We’re trying to avoid the straight historical narrative and will focus more on themes and ideas,” Collins said. The three-credit course, which will have assignments and grades, can also be audited, meaning interested students and members of the general public can sign up. Signup is first-come, first-served and capped at 100 seats, 12 of which have already been taken. Anyone interested in taking the $650 course can sign up online or via phone at 250-828-5200. Oldham, who has some previous experience and an interest in teaching, was connected with TRU through his business associate Gary Procknow, who attended NorKam senior secondary in the 1960s and has a sister working at the university. Oldham lives part-time in the Lower Mainland and will drive up weekly for classes at TRU, where he will also have an office.

VOX ON VOCALS

ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTW

Rascal Flatts vocalist Gary LeVox serenades a crowd at Sandman Centre on Tuesday, Oct. 29. The band stopped by Kamloops as part of its Forever Summer Playlist tour.

See STONES, A25

LOCAL EVENTS THIS WEEKEND AND BEYOND Local events/A24

COMIC KAM:

EXAMINING A WORK OF MADNESS Madness/A26

NEW VENUE FOR ALBUM RELEASE PARTY New venue/A25


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NOW LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED

$AVE BIG O T

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CELEBRATE DIWALI Nov. 2, 6 p.m., Coast Kamloops Hotel and Conference Centre, 1250 Rogers Way

The Kamloops Hindu Cultural Society will celebrate Diwali, featuring Bollywood dancing, door prizes and food. Tickets are $60 for non-members ($50 for members) or $40 for students. The event is open to the public and about 400 people are expected. Tickets can be purchased at Nandi’s Flavours of India, 610 West Columbia St., or by calling Yasmin at 250-571-7611.

with our demo BLOWOUT! LIMITED TIME ONLY

2019 BIG HORN CREW

AT CHAPTERS Various dates and times, Kamloops Chapters, 1395 Hillside Dr.

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On Nov. 2, Ian Ferguson will be signing his latest book, The Survival Guide to British Columbia. On Nov. 16, Kamloops author Lorna Carleton will sign her latest, the second book in a seven-book teen fantasy series. On Nov. 23, Hong Kong-born Wai Hung Ma will sign his latest motivational book The Journey: Always Breaking Limitations, co-written with fellow Kamloops authors Kirk Baethke and Corey Sigvaldason.

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HOUSE CONCERT Nov. 3, 8 p.m., The Bassment, 2095 Glenmohr Dr.

Adrian Chalifour is the former lead singer of indie band Towers and Trees. Now venturing out as a solo artist, he will play a house concert in his hometown Kamloops on Sunday, Nov. 3, touring in support of his new album Joy. Tickets are $20, available online at thebassmentkamloops.com. Stk# U607082

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KAMCON Nov. 2 to Nov. 3, Thompson Rivers University, Campus Activity Centre, 805 TRU Way

44,999

The KamCon tabletop gaming convention will return to Kamloops, featuring Dungeons and Dragons and other board games and all things video game and fantasy related. General admission is $5 and gaming passes start at $35. For tickets and more information, go online to kamloopsconvention.ca.

2018 JEEP COMPASS

ALEX CUBA Nov. 7, 7 p.m., Cactus Jack’s Nightclub, 130 Fifth Ave.

Stk#180193

MSRP

Latin Grammy and Juno Award winner Alex Cuba will play a show in Kamloops. The Cuban-Canadian singer-songwriter sings Afro-Cuban jazz and pop. Tickets are $15, available online at kamtix.ca.

$33,755

28% OFF <$9,780.00> DEMO $ SALE

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TRANQUILLE ESCAPE ROOM Until Nov. 7, Tranquille Farm Fresh, 4600 Tranquille Rd.

00*

The Enigma Women escape room continues until Nov. 7 and features a Second World War and Enigma machine theme, challenging participants to break the code. Tickets are $35, available online at tranquillefarmfresh.com/events.

2017 DODGE JOURNEY

FINE ARTS SHOW/SALE Nov. 8 to Nov. 10, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Japanese Cultural Centre, 160 Vernon Ave.

A fine arts show and sale presented by Kamloops Artists will feature original paintings, cards and boutique items. Stk#170231

MSRP

33% OFF DEMO $ SALE

$34,460 <$11,482.00>

CALEB HART Nov. 8, 9 p.m., The Blue Grotto Nightclub, 319 Victoria St.

22,97800

Reggae musicians Caleb Hart and The Royal Youths will perform soulful, funky tunes at the Grotto. For ticket information, go online to thebluegrotto.ca.

*

*PICTURES MAY NOT BE AS SHOWN. PLUS FEES AND TAXES.

PIFF THE MAGIC DRAGON Nov. 8, 8 p.m., Sagebrush Theatre, 821 Munro St.

Kamloops Dodge.com

250.374.4477

Piff the Magic Dragon will perform. Funnyman magician John van der Put is known for his appearance on shows like Penn and Teller: Fool Us and America’s Got Talent, and as a resident magician at The Flamingo hotel and casino in Las Vegas.

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FROM NOV. 1 PIANO QUINTET Nov. 9, 7:30 p.m., Kamloops United Church, 421 St. Paul St.

The Chamber Musicians of Kamloops will present the next event in their concert series, Heritage Piano Quintet. The event’s players include Catherine Dochstader on flute, Cvetozar Vutev on violin, Annette Dominik on viola, Laure Matiakh on cello and Curtis Howell on piano and harpsichord. They will be joined by Grade 12 Kamloops School of the Arts students Mandy Mahler and Ivan Vutev as soloists. Tickets are $25, available online at cmk.eventbrite.ca or at the door.

NORTHERN SINGER-SONGWRITERS Nov. 9, 7 p.m., The Art We Are, 246 Victoria St.

The Art We Are will feature two solo acts. First up will be Ryan McNally, an acoustic traditional blues, jazz and old-time artist from Whitehorse. Following up will be folk artist Evrytt Willow from Dawson. The door fee is $5 to $10.

SPICE GIRLS TRIBUTE Nov. 9, 7 p.m., Cactus Jack’s Nightclub, 130 Fifth Ave.

Wannabe, a Spice Girls tribute show, will be at Cactus Jack’s on Saturday, Nov. 9. Tickets are $15, available online at kamtix.ca.

ROCK AT THE KAMI Nov. 14, 8 p.m., Kami Inn, 354 Victoria St.

A duo of stoner riff rock bands is heading to the Kami Inn. Black Mastiff of Edmonton will be joined by Calgary’s Gone Cosmic. Local band Minx will support. Tickets are $10 at the door.

SANTA CLAUS PARADE Nov. 17, 4 p.m., downtown Kamloops, Second Avenue and St. Paul Street start

This year’s Santa Claus Parade will begin a little later at 4 p.m., but the route is the same, starting at Second Avenue and St. Paul Street and ending at Victoria Street and Sixth Avenue. A tree lighting is scheduled for 6:15 p.m.

RIA MAE Nov. 18, 7 p.m., Cactus Jack’s, 130 Fifth Ave.

Halifax singer-songwriter Ria Mae will return to Kamloops. It’s one stop on her 17-city cross-Canada tour. She will perform with Vancouver-based singer-songwriter Matthew V. For tickets, go online to kamtix.ca.

SMALL WORKS Nov. 23 to Dec. 22, Old Courthouse Cultural Centre, 7 West Seymour St.

The SMALL//works exhibit and sale will return. The annual Kamloops Arts Council fundraiser will feature local, small, original works of art. Prices range from under $100 to $300 and about 350 works will be available for sale. Proceeds will be split 50-50 between the Kamloops Arts Council and the artist. An opening reception is planned for 10 a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 23.

COMMUNITY BAND PERFORMANCE Nov. 27, Kamloops Full Gospel Tabernacle, 1550 Tranquille Rd.

The Kamloops Community Band will celebrate winter with Up to Snow Good, an upcoming performance featuring festive favourites. The Kamloops Choristers will join as special guests. Tickets are $15, available online at kamloopsband.eventbrite.ca or at the door.

ILLUSIONISTS Dec. 5, 4 p.m. and 7 p.m., The Rex, 417 Victoria St.

Victoria illusionists Murray Hatfield and Teresa will headline the Kamloops Shriners Variety Show. The duo, as seen on Penn and Teller: Fool Us, will perform magic, comedy and illusions. They will be joined by guest comedian and chainsaw juggler Aaron Gregg and bubble artist Geoff Akins-Hannah. Tickets are $25, available online at bcshrinersshow.com/buy-tickets.

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‘I had absolutely no desire to become a manager’: Andrew Loog Oldham From A23

DAVE EAGLES/KTW Andrew Loog Oldham, manager of the Rolling Stones from 1963 to 1967, will teach a course at Thompson Rivers University beginning in January.

In 1963, at the age of 19, Oldham began managing the Stones. He held the job until 1967. He met the band while working as a press agent. “I used to go and hustle a journalist in the pub in Soho,” Oldham said. “I had absolutely no desire to become a manager.” The journalist, who Oldham would encourage to write stories about his clients, told him about a group called the Rollin’ Stones who were causing weekly pandemonium at the Crawdaddy Club in the Richmond Station Hotel just outside of London, England. Going to see what all the fuss was about, Oldham was impressed, describing the feeling as a wave that came over him. A week later, he approached the

Stones with partner Eric Easton about managing them. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee is known for producing some of the Stones’ greatest hits and cultivating their bad boy image. He said he’s pleased the band is still touring today. “When you work with people between the age of 19 and 23, you really don’t know what the full shape of them is going to become,” he said. When it comes to successful music management, Oldham said, “there’s no rules, it’s magic, it’s a marriage,” and each group must find the person who works. “Some bands from the beginning require bean counters, other bands in one way or another need to be told who they are and then they hopefully become it,” Oldham said.

Red Collar pub to mark five years with birthday bash

New venue will host album release party for local band

Three days of events includes a brewery tour, brunch, three live acts and two DJs

STAFF REPORTER

KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK

Red Collar will expand its offerings — and its physical space — as part of its fiveyear anniversary. Up to 300 people can be admitted and parts of the brewery itself will be opened to those in attendance at a special event held over three days at 355 Lansdowne St. Things will start off on Friday with a special tasting of five years of Black Dog Quad. Tasting sessions include a brewery tour and will be one hour each and limited to 15

patrons at a time. They will run on the hour from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. A waiting list sign-up is available online at tinyurl.com/redcollar-tasting. The cost is $25. On Saturday, the birthday party will feature three live bands and two DJs, arcades, beer, carnival-themed food and offerings from Eats Amore. Bands include Kamloops’ At Mission Dolores, Jared Jackel’s Bad Vibrations of Penticton and Groceries from Victoria. DJs Ronan McGrath of Barnacle

Records and Geezbeats will also have sets. Entry to the Saturday event is free, with food and beer offered through tickets, beginning at 5 p.m. If you’re hungover on Sunday and craving a little hair of the dog that bit you, head in for a beer-paired brunch. Four beers will be paired with three courses of breakfast foods. Brunch will run from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. The cost is $45 per person. Sign-up is available online at tinyurl.com/red-collarbrunch.

SEAN BRADY

sbrady@kamloopsthisweek.com

M

other Sun released its debut album in August, but wanted to let the locals stew on it a little before marking the occasion with a release show. But now the time has come, and the band’s psychedelic sounds will soon be shared with a Kamloops audience at a venue that has just opened itself up to music acts. Mother Sun will play a release show for its debut 10-track album, Caramel Clouds, on Saturday, Nov. 9, at Blackwell Hall in the Plaza Hotel. Emilio Pagnotta,

one of the band’s guitarists and singers, said if things go well at the Plaza, it might turn into a new regular place for local bands to play. “Not that we don’t want to play at the Blue Grotto and everywhere else, because those places are great, but this will be like a breath of fresh air,” he said. “We’re trying to create a new scene to bring some new bands in.” Part of establishing that new scene will be Mother Sun’s psychedelic setup at this event, which will include stage projections and lighting. “Vancouver has so many of these venues that have projections and weird walls with velvet and stuff like

that. We’re not getting that, but we want to bring a little bit of it to Kamloops,” he said. The evening will also include live painter Kelly Wright, a Kamloops muralist whose most recently unveiled work was at McDonald Park on the North Shore. He will be marking up canvasses beginning at 7 p.m. A local DJ will also be performing. M.Naps will spin records from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Ghost Woman will also perform. Mother Sun connected with the Lethbridge-based band on their most recent tour, which took them to Banff, Calgary, Edmonton, Lethbridge and Lloydminster. The lack of overhead at the new venue is one

reason Mother Sun is able to bring in a band like Ghost Woman. Normally the up-front cost associated with renting out a venue like the Pavilion Theatre would make such a performance prohibitively expensive. Pagnotta said the band has been handed the reins to put on a good show at the Blackwell and is embracing the opportunity. “It’s giving us the chance to create a different vibe,” he said. Tickets are $5, available at Barnacle Records, 290 Third Ave., or $10 at the door. Entry to the show venue can be made off the 200-block of 4th avenue near the Plaza Barbershop.

FRIDAY, NOV 15 | 7 - 11 pm The Rex Hall | 417 Seymour St. • Local art show • Live music • Cash bar • Appies • Community inspiration IOSECURE

Tickets: www.ktwtimeraiser.ca


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FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

arts&entertainment

kamloopsthisweek.com @kamthisweek

Contenders are back on Friday The Contenders, a duo made up of Valdy and Gary Fjellgaard, will soon return for their 18th annual tour of the ThompsonOkanagan. The two Juno Award winners came together to release the first Contenders album in 1999 and followed up with a second volume in 2007. The two are long-celebrated Canadian folk musicians and each has also earned a spot in the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame.

Madness in The Night

P Playing a western, roots and folk style of music, Fjellgaard said the music “champions the vanishing values and frontier spirit” of the genre. Their tour is a string of five dates, including a Friday, Nov. 1, performance in Kamloops at Sagebrush Theatre, 1300 Ninth

Ave., beginning at 7:30 p.m. Other dates include Oct. 30 in Lake Country, Oct. 31 in Tappen, Nov. 2 in Summerland and Nov. 3 in Oliver. Tickets are available at the Kamloops Live box office, 1025 Lorne St., 250-374-5483 and online at kamloopslive.ca.

Thompson-Nicola Regional District The Region of BC’s Best

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NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

When? Thursday, November 7th, 2019 at 1:15 PM The Thompson-Nicola Regional District Board of Directors gives notice that it will hold a Public Hearing in the TNRD Boardroom, 4th Floor - 465 Victoria Street, Kamloops, BC, to consider proposed Bylaw Nos. 2694 and 2695. What is Land Use Contract Termination & Zoning Amendment Bylaw 2694, 2019? Proposed Bylaw 2694 would terminate Land Use Contract (LUC) Agreement Bylaw 240. It will shift land use regulation to Zoning Bylaw 2400, resulting in 1801 & 1805 Paul Lake Road, shown on map at right (legally described Lot 1, District Lot 4570, KDYD, Plan 39714; and Strata Lots 1-38, District Lot 4570, KDYD, Strata Plan K314 Together with an Interest in the Common Property in Proportion to the Unit Entitlement of the Strata Lot as Shown on Form 1) being rezoned to LR-2: Lakeshore Residential Multi-Family but with a site-specific amendment to allow a density of 1 unit per 625m2 (40 units). The particulars of Bylaw 2694 are available in our offices or on our website. The proposed Bylaw would implement the zone closest to the permitted uses and parcel area of LUC 240. What is Zoning Amendment Bylaw 2695, 2019? It amends Zoning Bylaw 2400 by rezoning vacant land near Kanaka Bar, ~10 km south of Lytton west of the Trans-Canada Highway on Kanaka Station Road (legally described District Lot 4, Kamloops (Formerly Lytton) Division Yale District, except Plan B726) as shown shaded on map at right, from RL-1: Rural to a special Comprehensive Development Zone to allow an affordable housing complex comprising single family dwellings, two family dwellings, multi-family dwellings and a community hall. Future uses also include smallscale agricultural and renewable energy generation. All persons who believe that their interest in property may be affected by the proposed Bylaws shall be afforded a reasonable opportunity to be heard at the Public Hearing. Additionally, they may make written submissions on the matter of Bylaw 2694 or 2695 (via the options below) which must be received at our office prior to 9 a.m. on the 5th day of November, 2019. The entire content of all submissions will be made public and form a part of the public record for this matter. How do I get more information? A copy of the proposed Bylaw and all supporting information can be inspected from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday - Friday (except statutory holidays) at our office, from October 24th, 2019 until 1:15 p.m. the day of the Hearing; or please contact us via any of the options below.

For info & submissions Mail

Phone

Email

Fax

Website

#300-465 Victoria St Kamloops, BC V2C 2A9

(250) 377-8673 1 (877) 377-8673

planning@tnrd.ca admin@tnrd.ca

(250) 372-5048

www.tnrd.ca

No representations will be received by the Board of Directors after the Public Hearing has been concluded. R. Sadilkova, Director of Development Services

hilippe Druillet’s stories are a borderline psychotic and incomprehensible madness. Let me tell you about The Night. You may recall a couple months back when I wrote of Yragael/Urm The Mad by the Métal Hurlant/Heavy Metal magazine co-founder. The Night somewhat has more of a narrative structure to it than Druillet’s other work, but only barely, and it begins to dissolve and the story races towards its end. The book is also wrought with primitively used expletives, which arguably help with comprehension, but that’s doubtful as well. From a certain point of view, there are seemingly two kinds of comic creators: storytellers and artists. Druillet is probably not the former, at least that’s not his strong suit. The Night was created after his wife died from cancer in 1975. It is an act of expression, loosely tied to a narrative. It is dark, bleak and inevitable, a strange story about drug-fueled biker gangs battling each other and an authority in a post-apocalyptic world. Chaotic and uncontrollable forces of youth crash toward the undeniable result that awaits us all. Part hatred of death and part acceptance of the dawn after the night, it is some kind of struggle indeed.

NICK KLIE

COMIC KAM

It is uncertain what answers Druillet was looking for, or if he ever found them. It is also difficult to discern who he was more angry with: the disease or the doctors who failed to save his wife. Again, it was 1975, hope was likely fleeting. The whole story is certainly some sort of catharsis for Druillet, fuel for his nightmarish and maddening landscapes and architecture, populated with all manner of hyper-detailed mutants and monsters. Truly some sort of bizarre tribute to his wife. Nick Klie is manager of High Octane Comics. For more, visit 250 Third Ave. or call 250-377-8444.

FUNDRAISER

DINNER WEDNESDAY, NOV 27

Doors open 5:30 pm | Dinner 6:00 pm The Commodore Grand Café & Lounge 360 Victoria St. PASTA | CHICKEN | SALAD 50/50 DRAW & DOOR PRIZES

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For tickets contact Tara@kamloopsthisweek.com


FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

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SPORTS

INSIDE: Bronco named BCFC rookie of year | A28

A27

SPORTS: MARTY HASTINGS Phone: 250-374-7467 Email: sports@kamloopsthisweek.com Twitter: @MarTheReporter

Rouault dynasty building WolfPack legacy MARTY HASTINGS STAFF REPORTER sports@kamloopsthisweek.com

M

ike Rouault said he is the best basketball player in his family. That bold statement could cue a Rouault Royal Rumble. “Everything is competitive at our house,” said Megan Rouault, Mike’s younger sister. Megan, 20, and Mike, who turns 23 in November, will both be in action for TRU WolfPack basketball teams against the Trinity Western Spartans of Langley on Friday at the Tournament Capital Centre, continuing the Rouault dynasty that began when eldest brother, Brett, joined the club in time for the 2010-2011 Canada West season. “They have a great work ethic that’s obviously been instilled from what they get at home, but I think also through the discipline of sports,” said Scott Clark, who is entering his 10th season as the WolfPack men’s basketball team’s head coach. “They’ve developed the desire. “Competitive people, when they lose a game of cards, they are a little choked about the whole situation.” The family moved to Vernon when Megan was in Grade 5 and the Okanagan city remains the Rouault home base. Parents Dave and Debbie have become Highway 97 WolfPack superfans. Pick-up basketball tilts — often featuring Brett and Megan versus Mike and Mitchell, the second eldest sibling and the only one who did not play for the Pack — did not always end well when the Rouaults were growing up. “I definitely didn’t take any mercy on her [Megan] on the court,” said Mike, who is entering his fifth season with the WolfPack and his final year of U Sports eligibility. “I think that made her better in the long run.” Added Megan: “I don’t really care if people push me around now. I’ve been used to it for my whole life.” Clark is in a good position to talk about the Rouault siblings. When Brett was married, Clark was there. Clark’s own son was roommates with Brett at TRU. Next season will mark Clark’s first at the school without a Rouault on his roster. “I knew he [Brett] was a quality student, a quality athlete, quality kid, so I wanted him to live with my son,” Clark said of Brett, who is now studying at medical school.

ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTW Megan Rouault is one of two siblings taking to the court this season for the TRU WolfPack. Her older brother, Mike, plays for the men’s team, for whom eldest brother Brett used to toil. Both squads will be in action this weekend against Trinity Western. The Pack’s home openers are scheduled for Friday at the TCC.

“They’re very intelligent people.” Each Rouault sibling has a perfect record when it comes to being a U Sport Academic All-Canadian, which means competing for a varsity team and maintaining at least an 80 per cent average over the school year. The quick math: 11 WolfPack seasons in the books for the Rouaults equals 100 per cent Academic All-Canadian years. You can probably guess why they strive for excellence in the classroom. “I think it’s just because Brett was first and he was always super good at school,”

said Megan, who is studying to be a software engineer. “We took him as a role model and wanted to be like him.” Added Mike: “If somebody doesn’t get a good mark, we’ll be on the person. We’re competitive about that, too.” Mike, who is planning to go to law school, racked up bragging rights in a big way in 2018-2019. He earned the Cliff Neufeld Leadership Award for a second straight year and was named the Doctor Roger H. Barnsley Scholar Award winner.

Brett won the Barnsley Award in 2014 and 2015. “I’ve got to keep up now,” said Megan, who, along with Mike, helps lead the WolfPack’s Monday night study group, the PACE program. An off-season full of hard work will begin to pay off on Friday, although Megan is recovering from a dislocated shoulder and her playing status for this weekend is undecided. See WOLFPACK, A30

FRIDAY, NOV 15 | 7 - 11 pm The Rex Hall | 417 Seymour St. • Local art show • Live music • Cash bar • Appies • Community inspiration IOSECURE

Tickets: www.ktwtimeraiser.ca


A28

FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

MUG

Kamloops & District

CRIMES OF THE WEEK SHOTS

SPORTS

Wallet theft suspect sought On Oct. 12 a wallet was stolen from a vehicle. Shortly after, a credit card from the stolen wallet was used at a local convenience store. The male suspect was wearing a black hoodie that has a skull bone logo with a maple leaf on the front and a black ball cap. Do you know his name? If so, call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477).

MCQUILLAN, Meagan Lately

DOB: 1978-08-19 Height: 163 cm / 5’04” Weight: 51 kg / 113 lbs Race: Caucasian Hair: Blonde | Eyes: Blue Wanted For: Fail to Comply

Shoplifting from Sahali On Oct. 25 a female shoplifted from a store in Sahali. She is described as being Caucasian, brown hair, glasses, wearing a white hoodie with a logo on the front. Call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222TIPS (8477) if you have information on her identity.

ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTW FILE Abe Fimbo prepares to make a tackle for the Kamloops Broncos at Hillside Stadium.

SAULS, Travis Allen

Hardware store heist suspects

DOB: : 1985-09-24 Height: 170 cm / 5’07” Weight: 84 kg / 186 lbs Race: Indigenous Hair: Brown| Eyes: Brown

On Sept. 11 two men stole items from a hardware store. The first suspect is described as: Caucasian, red t-shirt, jeans, black ball cap and sunglasses. The second suspect is described as: Caucasian, black t-shirt and jeans. Call Crime Stoppers at 1-800222-TIPS if you can help catch these two.

Wanted for: Fail to Comply, Break & Enter and Commit

www.kamloopsCrimeStoppers.ca

SBITNEY, Brandyn Kelly

If you know where any of these people are, call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477). The tip line pays up to $2,000 for information leading to the arrest of fugitives. Remember, Crime Stoppers just wants your information, not your name. Crime doesn’t pay, but Crime Stoppers does.

This program is jointly sponsored by Kamloops Crime Stoppers & Kamloops This Week. People featured are wanted on arrest warrants not vacated as of 3 p.m. on October 30, 2019

DOB: 1986-11-20 Height: 170 cm / 5’07” Weight: 77 kg / 170 lbs Race: Caucasian Hair: Brown | Eyes: Green Wanted for: Fail to Comply

CRIME STOPPERS IS SUPPORTED BY

MOBILE PATROLS GUARD SERVIcE ALARM RESPONSE

(250) 828-0511 (24 hours) SERVING KAMLOOPS & AREA SINcE 1972

A L i g h t i n t h e n i g h t. . .

Rookie of the year MARTY HASTINGS STAFF REPORTER sports@kamloopsthisweek.com

Braden Vankoughnett picked up the phone in a hurry. The Kamloops Broncos’ coach had just seen film of Abe Fimbo in six-man football action in Saskatchewan and his talent radar was sounding off. “From the day I gave my tape to Kamloops, he instantly contacted me and said he wants to make me a great linebacker, a great player,” said Fimbo, who turns 18 in December. “That’s a big impact. I’ve never had a coach put that much time into making me a great player.” Fimbo was this week named the B.C. Football Conference’s rookie of the year for 2019, a season in which he racked up 38 solo tackles, three assisted tackles, six special teams tackles, one fumble recovery, one blocked kick and three passes defended in nine games.

“He chases the ball down,” Vankoughnett said. “When he gets there, he gets there with an attitude and he punishes people. “He came in never having played 12-man football and dominated the league as a rookie.” Fimbo, who stands six feet tall and weighs about 210 pounds, endured an 0-10 campaign, the Broncos’ second consecutive winless season. “I don’t like losing at all, but I didn’t care if we were winning or losing, I loved the experience of playing for an organization like the Broncos,” said Fimbo, who plans to return to Kamloops next year. “I wasn’t expecting to get any awards this year. My teammates and coaches had faith in me.” Vankoughnett was among the believers. “I’m super excited for the guy,” he said. “It couldn’t have happened to a better player, a better athlete.”

Badminton players wanted A drop-in badminton group is looking for new players. Shuttlecocks fly from October to May from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. on Tuesdays in the Our Lady of Perpetual Help church gym (635 Tranquille Rd.). Male and female players ages 16 and older are invited. Beginner-, intermediate- and advanced-level players are welcome. The cost to play is $5. For more information, call Robert Kelly at 250-579-0193.

Tournament Capital Sports

BRIEFS VIBE ROLLING Rochelle Smith paced the Kamloops Vibe offensively last weekend in a pair of victories over the visiting North Shore Rebels in South Coast Women’s Hockey League action. Smith scored once in a 3-1 victory on Saturday at McArthur Island Sport and Event Centre and twice in

a 4-1 triumph on Sunday at Memorial Arena. Jenna Ormondy had one goal and four points and Jaclyn Frilund notched three points, including one goal, on the weekend. Kamloops, which went with Ashley Fisher between the pipes in both games, pushed its record to 5-0 on the campaign. Kamloops and Richmond will play twice this weekend. Game times are 6:30 p.m. on Saturday and 11 a.m. on Sunday on Mac Isle.


FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

SPORTS

Bawa gets call to Hall MARTY HASTINGS

STAFF REPORTER

sports@kamloopsthisweek.com

Robin Bawa is a trailblazer, the first player of South Asian descent to play in the NHL. He will be inducted into the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame in the pioneers’ category on June 4 during a gala at the Vancouver Convention Centre. Bawa’s hockey path was paved in Kamloops. The former Kamloops Junior Oiler and Blazer returned to the Tournament Capital this summer for the first time in about a decade to attend the WHL club’s alumni tournament at Rivershore Golf Links. “My most memorable moment was having Ken Hitchcock as a coach,” said Bawa, the 53-year-old Chemainus product. “Ken, Donnie Hay and Donnie Moores, they did wonders for my game and helped my career in the longterm.”

Bawa, a forward, racked up 288 points, including 118 goals, in 307 games for the Blazers. The 1986-1987 campaign was his graduating season. The skilled junior player was not drafted into the NHL, but transitioning into an enforcer role boosted his stock and he made his Washington

Capitals’ debut in 1989-1990 after productive seasons in the International Hockey League and American Hockey League. Bawa played in 61 NHL games, with stints in Washington, Vancouver, San Jose and Anaheim. He bounced around the AHL and IHL in a 12-year pro career,

retired in 1999, moved back to Canada in 2002 and, along with his cousin, took over his dad’s Delta-based transportation business. “Both my boys play,” Bawa said. “It’s all about skill. It’s nothing about fighting or hitting anymore. “They have different skills coaches and trainers. We didn’t have that when we were young. We had our dad teaching us. The game has come a long way and it’s good to see.” The B.C. Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2020 includes Sonja Gaudet, Alex Stieda, Jeff Francis, Brent Johnson and Kirk McLean in the athletes’ category; Harry White, Bill Mitchell and Valerie Johnson in the builders-coaches’ category; the 19791980 Victoria Vikes’ basketball squad in the team category; and Cleve Deenshaw in the media category. Kathy Newman will receive the W.A.C. Bennett Award.

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TRU SOCCER MEN OUSTED IN ROUND 1 Squeaking into the playoffs was an accomplishment for a team that dealt with injuries all season, but the TRU WolfPack’s post-season tenure was shortlived. The Mount Royal Cougars of Calgary edged the visiting WolfPack 2-1 last Saturday, ending TRU’s bid for a third consecutive Canada West men’s soccer medal. “Tough loss and disappointing way to end the season,” WolfPack head coach John Antulov told TRU Sports Information. “But very proud of the group being able to make the playoffs three years in a row. That is great for our program. We came up a little short today and were not at our best.” TRU, which won Canada West bronze in 2017 and 2018, endured spells this season in which as many as eight players were sidelined with injuries or sickness. Leading WolfPack scorer James Fraser had eight goals in eight games when he was lost for the season with an injury. He cracked the Canada West men’s soccer second all-star team, despite missing nearly

half of the season. Midfielder and captain Jan Pirretas Glasmacher was named to the conference’s first all-star squad. The WolfPack earned two victories over the UNBC Timberwolves in Prince George on the final weekend of the regular season to finish with six wins, five losses and five ties. TRU leapfrogged into the fourth and final playoff position allotted to Pacific Division teams with a winning percentage of .479, edging the UBC Okanagan Heat (.458) and Fraser Valley Cascades (.422). The club also started poorly in 2018, but recovered in time to make the playoffs. Justin Donaldson of Kamloops is the WolfPack’s only graduating player. “Really optimistic about the future and the group of players coming back and the new players coming into the program,” Antulov said. “We will just continue to keep the program at the level where it is at and take it a little further.” SILVER LINING The TRU WolfPack claimed

silver at the national college baseball championship in Toronto. Tyler Moskalyk pitched well and went the distance on the mound for the Pack in the tournament final on Saturday, but the Durham Lords edged TRU 2-1 in extra innings. TRU took the lead in the bottom of the fourth inning when Vance Fode doubled to right field, scoring Taylor Van Ham. Durham tied it in the top of the fifth inning and scored the winning run on a WolfPack error in the top of the eighth inning. RUNNING WITH THE PACK The TRU WolfPack crosscountry running team was in action last weekend in Calgary at the Canada West championships. Zoe Painter of Whitehorse led the TRU women, posting a time of 34 minutes and 38 seconds in the women’s eightkilometre race to place 58th. Calum Carrigan was the top male WolfPack runner, finishing 63rd in the 10-kilometre event with a time of 36 minutes and 14 seconds.

A29

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED!

Volunteer positions: Designated driver, escort driver, navigator, phone operator, and dispatch. Operation Red Nose is a designated driving service provided to any motorist during the holiday season.

Applications at Tournament Capital Centre, Volunteer Kamloops and Desert Gardens Community Centre.

For information or to volunteer www.OperationRedNose.com 250-320-0650 kamloops@operationrednose.com

NOV 29, 30, DEC 5, 6, 7, 12, 13, 14, 19, 20, 21, 26, 27, 28, 31


A30

FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

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Bats are misunderstood and underappreciated. They’re also in trouble from white noseis syndrome. Fall Activity Guide out. Join community bat coordinator Vanessa Robinson on a IS NOW OPEN.creatures. journey toREGISTRATION learn more about these fascinating Walk upare Tranquille to view numbers them leaving Programs cancelledcreek if the minimum are nottheir met. roosts. Use a bat detector to ‘hear’ them. There’s so much to discover about Memorial bats. 18th of September. Kamloops Hill Park7| pm to 9 pm. Meet in Pine Park parking lot, Tranquille. Cenotaph Tour

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

SPORTS

Blackout game at Hillside The South Kamloops Titans are asking fans to wear black on Friday, when Okanagan Mission (1-2) of Kelowna comes to town for a B.C. Secondary Schools Football Association contest. South Kamloops (2-1) will clinch a playoff spot with a victory in the annual Blackout Game, which is scheduled for 7 p.m., if Clarence Fulton (2-1) falls to the Vernon Panthers (3-0) on Friday. If both South Kam and Clarence Fulton are victorious, points-for-and-against tiebreakers will come into play to decide Interior AA Conference final standings and playoff berths. Salmon Arm (0-4) will finish last in the division. RAIDERS HIT THE ROAD The Kamloops Rugby

Tournament Capital Sports

BRIEFS ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTW FILE Amaryn Mahal registers a sack for the South Kamloops Titans.

Club Raiders will on Saturday continue their stretch of road matches that lead into the B.C. Rugby Union holiday break. Kamloops (0-4) will square off against Meraloma (1-3) in Vancouver in Women’s Fall

Join the KMA for a Cenotaph Tour. Engage with the history of the Battle St. Cenotaph and hear about the stories behind some of the names etched in stone. Participants will receive a small KMA booklet detailing our in-depth local history. Registration is required. Kamloops Museum & Archives Fri Nov 1 12:15–12:45 pm FREE Sat Nov 2 1:00–1:45 pm FREE Wed Nov 6 12:15–12:45 pm FREE Thu Nov 7 12:15–12:45 pm FREE Fri Nov 8 12:15–12:45 pm FREE Sat Nov 9 1:00–1:45 pm FREE

WolfPack siblings push each other on, off court From A27

Pottery Children’s Workshop Ages: 7–16 Students will learn hand-building techniques, how to use the potter’s wheel, and glazing and decorating techniques to finish their work. Clay and related firing costs are included in the class fee. Redemption Pottery Studio Wed Nov 13–Dec 18 3:30–5:00 pm 6/$150

Storytelling with Adriana Ages: 2–5

Little ones will hear the Spanish language spoken during stories from the museum and explore Spanish culture and language with an interactive, hands-on cultural activity. Kamloops Museum & Archives Wed Nov 13 10:30–11:30 am 1/$10

Taiji Qigong (Tai Chi) for Health

Explore Taiji Qigong exercises for mind-body connection. Studies indicate Taiji benefits include improved balance, mental health, and cognitive function, as well as reduced chronic pain, such as osteoarthritis and fibromyalgia. Yacht Club Thu Nov 7–Dec 5 9:00–10:15 am 5/$50

Mainland A Division action. Squamish-based Axemen Rugby Club teams will play host to Kamloops in men’s second- and third-division play. Both of Kamloops’ men’s squads are atop league stand-

ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTW WolfPack guard Mike Rouault drives toward the basket.

The men’s game tips off at 5 p.m., with the women’s matchup to follow at 7 p.m. “My brother [Mike] and I train together all summer,” said Megan, a 5-foot-9, third-year forward. “I don’t really compete with him in the weight room, but he’ll be yelling at me to beat my previous day because he’s doing twice as good as he was the day before, so I have to match that. “Sometimes, Brett still comes shooting with us. It’s my challenge to beat Brett because he’s out of shape and old now.” The Rouault Royal

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ings, the seconds with a record of six wins and one loss, the thirds at 5-1. The Squamish seconds and thirds are 3-1 and 4-2, respectively. Kamloops’ third-division team earned a 29-5 victory over Meraloma last weekend in Vancouver. Scoring tries for the visitors were Jordan Wolfe, Wes Black, Simon Carroll, Kevin Duggan and Nick Smith, with two conversion kicks by Trevor Miyazaki.

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Rumble might ruin Christmas dinner. Mike, a 6-foot-5 guard, and Brett, a 6-foot-4 guard, missed out on being TRU teammates by one season. “I went to UBCO [UBC Okanagan] for my first year and got cut [from the basketball team],” Mike said. Clark found a spot for Mike on his team in time for the 2015-2016 season, the year after Brett’s graduating campaign. “I said he can come here and work his way

S A G E L Y R E D I D E B E R T

C H I A P E T

A L A R M I S T

M A L B E C

M I L E R

B R I U R A T E D R A S A M P G O R O R I S N A V A I V V I L O I G E Y C I G A V E R E S

A R O D P L U N G I N G J A M E S

N E L A W D I P S E A S R E A R E O N D O O P M O C C S O R A C L I P G H B O O U N O T I T D E L I V O E L I N I T E E N S C A V E K E L E T O P E R A I T S Y

up the ladder,” Clark said. “He’s a great worker. You could tell his game was going to expand.” That rookie season remains the highlight of Mike’s basketball career with the WolfPack, who won Canada West silver and reached the U Sports championship tournament in 2016. Both of TRU’s basketball teams dropped the final six games of 2018-2019, losing streaks that resulted in missing the playoffs. Neither Rouault is thrilled about that. Expect both to do their part in making sure it doesn’t happen again. The dynasty depends on it.

G L O E L N D E T E I K A M T E A R T D E T H F I E E R E T E A P M I M A N O N K T I O E A S

B A T A R A N G S

I M I N

M O R I B M U A N N D D E L L U A M P E Y N T

T E N T S W A R E S T A M I L

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S H A N D O N N G I N I M S H P O I M T E S H E I N N E E M D Y

E T I E N N E

S O R T E R

C E A S E S

E G G E D

A T R I A

T H O R N

ANSWERS TO CROSSWORD FOUND ON A33


PG31

FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A31

FAITH

Society of Jesus: Not an order for the lazy

T

here have been many religious orders founded over the centuries. Some are wellknown and still in operation to this day, such as the Dominicans, Franciscans, Cistercians, Oblates and Trappists. Father Paul LeJeune, who left his name and his legacy in this community, was an Oblate. Religious communities often had an inspirational founder, who started with a specific mission in mind, such as providing alms to the poor, or provision of educational or medical services. Others were specifically dedicated to prayer and contemplation. (For example, we have a community of Carmelite nuns at a monastery near Armstrong.) The founding group would apply to the pope at the time for official recognition of

CHRIS KEMPLING

You Gotta Have

FAITH

their name and their particular mission. The Society of Jesus, more commonly called the Jesuits, is one such order. It was founded in 1534 by Ignatius of Loyola, a nobleman and former soldier from the Navarre region of Spain. It was formally recognized by Pope Paul III in 1540. Loyola wrote a small book, Spiritual Exercises, which detailed the spiritual requirements of any who would wish to join the order. I have a copy of it in my library and what impressed me

most about it was its discipline and very demanding regimen. This is not an order for the lazy. Clearly, Loyola brought the rigorous demands of his military background when formulating his program. The opening statement of Loyola’s Exercises gives a pretty good summary of what he expected: “Whoever desires to serve as a soldier of God beneath the banner of the Cross in our Society, which we desire to be designated by the Name of Jesus, and to serve the Lord alone and the Church, his spouse, under the Roman Pontiff, the Vicar of Christ on earth, should, after a solemn vow of perpetual chastity, poverty and obedience, keep what follows in mind. “He is a member of a Society founded chiefly for this purpose: to strive especially for the defence and propagation of the faith and for the progress of souls in

Christian life and doctrine, by means of public preaching, lectures and any other ministration whatsoever of the Word of God, and further by means of retreats, the education of children and unlettered persons in Christianity and the spiritual consolation of Christ’s faithful through hearing confessions and administering the other sacraments. “Moreover, he should show himself ready to reconcile the estranged, compassionately assist and serve those who are in prisons or hospitals, and indeed, to perform any other works of charity, according to what will seem expedient for the glory of God and the common good.” The Jesuits have had a huge impact over the centuries. They insisted on high levels of education for their membership and were instrumental in the foundation of many schools and universities.

Quebec Muslims ‘need to be patient’ in face of rejections, mosque founder says GUISEPPE VALIANTE

CANADIAN PRESS

MONTREAL — When residents north of Montreal learned of a plan to transform a local church into a mosque and Islamic cultural centre, the reaction was so strong that parish leaders invoked the 2017 mass shooting of Muslims in Quebec City to justify putting the project on hold. Members of the diocese of Trois-Rivieres, Que., located along the St. Lawrence River between Montreal and Quebec City, sent a litany of angry and threatening emails to the parish. Others spoke out during public consultations held earlier in October. Rene Beaudoin, a parish member leading a committee on the future of the region’s churches, said the outcry made diocesan Bishop Luc Bouchard think of the six Muslim men shot dead in a Quebec City mosque in 2017. The Bishop decided to stop the sale. “He absolutely didn’t want something like that happening in Trois-Rivieres,’’ Beaudoin said in a recent interview. While no

one threatened outright violence, he said, the parish wanted to be prudent. “We got emails saying: ‘The sale is not going to happen’ and other things like that,’’ Beaudoin said. “So the Bishop stopped the sale. He said he wanted to put out the fire.’’ The saga highlights the simmering tension in Quebec as the province confronts social and demographic upheaval. Quebec’s aging population and the fiercely secular identity among the francophone majority are driving churches across the province into bankruptcy. At the same time, ongoing immigration brings waves of newcomers whose diverse beliefs and perspectives assert an increasing influence over the province’s identity. In Trois-Rivieres, the underused St-Jean-de-Brebeuf church and the burgeoning Islamic cultural centre face each other from opposite sides of a main boulevard. One is an imposing greystone structure with a grand entrance

and a towering silver-coloured steeple; the other is a small, twostorey, semi-detached building with a modest, Islamic-style wooden arch that extends from the front door. Beaudoin said the Muslim community was already using the church’s basement for activities. When mosque leaders learned the church was struggling financially, they started negotiating with the parish to buy the building. Both sides settled on a $500,000 price tag, Beaudoin said. But when the sale process moved to the public consultation stage, about 100 residents showed up on Oct. 8, according to local media. Mosque leaders in TroisRivieres did not return numerous requests for comment. But Boufeldja Benabdallah, president and co-founder of Quebec City’s main mosque, said he understood what the community was going through. “We are in a painful situation now but change always wins,’’ Benabdallah said.

They were expected to obey, without question, any direction to serve anywhere in the world for evangelization and education of their target group. Most Canadian school children are taught about Jesuit missionaries Brebeuf and Lalement, who laboured in the Huron mission on Georgian Bay in the 17th century. It was very difficult work, and, as most know, they were martyred, horribly tortured to death by the hostile Iroquois. The Jesuits were not without controversy. They ran afoul of powerful commercial interests in Portugal and Spain by opposing the enslavement of native tribes in the New World. These interests were successful in having the Jesuits thrown out of every territory controlled by the Portuguese. Later, Pope Clement XIV completely abolished the Jesuits in 1773.

Of course, the secular powers wasted no time in confiscating the Society’s many properties and institutions around the world. While the primary reason for the Jesuits’ suppression was primarily economical rather than spiritual, they were often criticized for their use of casuistry. Casuistry is a philosophical concept that basically allows someone to excuse their moral failures with clever arguments. Blaise Pascal was one of the most vocal critics of Jesuit casuistry. Jesuits were often confessors to kings and nobles, and had become quite adept at excusing moral laxity among those they were counselling (sometimes in exchange for generous donations to Jesuit causes). Some would argue a current example of this kind of casuistry is homosexual rights advocate Father James Martin, a Jesuit.

He has been campaigning vigorously for recognition of same-sex marriage by the Catholic church, and equates those who oppose the idea as being similar to “racists.” What does Pope Francis (who is the first Jesuit in history to become pope) think about this? In 2017, he named Martin to the Vatican’s Secretariat for Communications. Then, in September of this year, Pope Francis granted Martin a one-hour private meeting at the Vatican. For conservative Christians, this cozy relationship is dismaying. Loyola is likely spinning in his grave. KTW welcomes submissions to its Faith page. Columns should be between 600 and 800 words in length and include a headshot of the author, along with a short bio on the writer. Submissions can be sent via email to editor@ kamloopsthisweek.com.

KAMLOOPS

Places of Worship Kamloops

ALLIANCE CHURCH

Weekend Gathering Times Sat: 6:30pm Sun: 9:00 & 11:00am Online live at 11am 200 Leigh Rd | 250-376-6268 kamloopsalliance.com @kamloopsalliance

Simplicity in Worship

Clarity in Bible Teaching

Friendliness in Fellowship

Please Join Us

10:00am

Sunday Mornings

422 Tranquille Rd

(Inside the Stagehouse Theatre)

All are Welcome www.northshorecalvary.com

UKRAINIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS 1044- 8TH STREET ~ 250.376.9209

SATURDAY November 2, 2019 Vespers @ 5:30 pm SUNDAY November 3, 2019 Divine Liturgy @ 10:00 am SATURDAY November 16, 2019 Vespers @ 5:30 pm The Parish Priest is Rev. Fr. Chad Pawlyshyn SERVICES ARE IN ENGLISH

COMMUNITY CHURCH 344 POPLAR A Place To Belong A Place To Worship A Place To Serve

Sunday Service - 11a.m. Children’s Church - 11:45 a.m.

250-554-1611

Visit us at www.kamsa.ca


A32

FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

WEEKLY COMICS

FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves

ARCTIC CIRCLE by Alex Hallatt

THE BORN LOSER

BABY BLUES

BIG NATE

by Art & Chip Samsom

by Rick Kirkman & Jerry Scott

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

by Lincoln Peirce

by Chris Browne

THE GRIZZWELLS by Bill Schorr

SHOE by Gary Brookins & Susie Macnelly

PARDON MY PLANET by Vic Lee

ZITS by Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman

GUESS WHO?

HERMAN

by Jim Unger

KIT ’N’ CARLYLE

by Larry Wright

FAMILY CIRCUS

by Bil & Jeff Keane

I am a singer born on November 9, 1973 in Kentucky. I wanted to be a sports therapist while studying in college, but I ended up in a popular, independently formed boy band with a name that calls to mind body temperature.

ANSWERS

Nick Lachey

Do you have

AMAZING LOCAL

PHOTOS? We’re looking for your local photos to use in local publications

WIN A PRIZE VALUED AT $50 Submit your photos to

www.kamloopsthisweek.com/contests Submission Deadline: 12:00 pm on Nov 26

Photos must as high quality as possible. One winner selected at the end of each month from all acceptable entries. Physical copies not accepted. Read terms and conditions online for details.


FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD BE PATIENT

A33

By Natan Last

ACROSS 1. World capital with the historic Temple of Hercules 6. Responses to an offer, colloquially 11. ____ Dunphy, “Modern Family” matriarch 12. Slow Wi-Fi woe 15. Actor Don of old Hollywood 17. Uninteresting and self-absorbed 18. One-named electronic musician and D.J. with multiple Grammys 20. Paranoid types, slangily 22. Futon alternatives 23. Stand that an artist might take 24. Villainous brother of Prospero in “The Tempest” 25. E-sports enthusiast 26. Melt down, as fat 29. Occasion to sing “Dayenu” 30. Long narrative poem 31. Ice-skating spot 32. Crew 34. Faux pas 35. Picasso’s “____ Demoiselles d’Avignon” 36. Baseball hit just beyond the infield 37. “No kidding!” 39. Malawi-to-Kenya dir. 40. Element used in old television tubes 42. Creator of a philosophical “razor” 46. Best friend of Potter and Weasley 48. Banquet vessels 49. Speechify 50. One frequently saying “Sorry, I missed that” 51. Like classic Disney films 54. Golfer’s vehicle 56. “No fighting!” 60. Geologic period 61. Eye roll accompanier, often 63. Muscle Beach sight 64. Their eggs are incubated by males

1

DOWN 66. Eldest of the “little women” in “Little Women” 67. Wettish 69. It’s always something 71. What may follow bigger or better 72. Farrah Fawcett’s signature do 73. Sikorsky of aviation 74. “Message received” 76. Rabid enthusiast 77. Warrior, e.g., in yoga 78. Actress Roberts of “Everybody Loves Raymond” 80. Homeowner’s need 82. Like most standardized tests 83. Tribe famous for weaving and sand painting 85. Crème de la crème 86. Really tickles 88. Russian ruler known as “the Moneybag” 90. It’s in the bag 91. Fruit in an oftenparodied William Carlos Williams poem 92. Dark forebodings 96. N.B.A. franchise whose mascot is the fireball Burnie 100. Kind of tuna 101. Troglodyte 105. Base of a column 106. Juul, e.g. 107. It can open a lot of doors for you 110. Historical role for Peter Lorre in “The Story of Mankind” 111. Party that might not start till midnight 112. Classic kids’ game involving removal of body parts … with a hint to this puzzle’s theme 113. Qatari leader 114. 102-Down, affectedly 115. Minuscule, informally 116. “It is the ____, and Juliet is the sun” 117. Actress Cannon

1. Top celebs 2. Red wine from France 3. Middle-distance runner 4. Nickname for an ESPN baseball commentator 5. Post production locales? 6. Weapons thrown by the Dark Knight 7. Volunteer’s phrase 8. Sights on many music festival grounds 9. Seconded, so to speak 10. Karaoke selection 11. Gift that grows on you? 12. Fabulist 13. Semidomed church area 14. Secluded valley 16. Saint-____, capital of the Loire department 17. With wisdom 18. Wisecracking Marvel superhero 19. Experienced one 21. Worker at a recycling plant 27. British rocker Brian 28. Cry of terror 31. Contact electronically 33. Middle of a diamond 36. Hawks, e.g. 38. They might be hawked 41. Lament 43. Mobile home? 44. Ukulele accessory 45. Not much 47. Writer Anaïs 51. Fixed up 52. Old kingdom of Spain 53. Author Pierce of the fantasy series “The Song of the Lioness” 54. Way down 55. Response to tickling 57. “Hi, honey!” follower 58. Finishes 59. Urged (on) 62. “Now that was funny!”

65. Peace Nobelist who went on to become president 68. Outhouses 70. Well, I’ll be dammed! 71. Drain 72. Treated meanly 75. Inclination 76. Brine-cured cheese 79. Classic Harlem ballroom, with “the” 81. Go (for) 82. Language from which “curry” comes 84. King who lent his name to a Bible 87. Like most oatmeal 89. Plant, as an idea, modern-style 91. Communist sympathizers, pejoratively 92. He was “thumb” critic! 93. Bishop’s deputy 94. “Mercy!” 95. Metric of corporate success 96. Frenzy 97. Other side 98. Features of many malls 99. Part of an acacia tree 102. See 114-Across 103. Subj. of a “Delayed” sign 104. Speck 108. Decorative fish 109. “The Lord of the Rings” tree creature

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CROSSWORD ANSWERS FOUND ON A30

WORD SEARCH

PRODUCE WORD SEARCH

SUDOKU FUN BY THE NUMBERS

Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!

ANSWERS

Find the words hidden vertically, horizontally & diagonally throughout the puzzle APPLE BEET CANTALOUPE CARROT CHERRY CRANBERRY FIG GRAPEFRUIT GRAPES KIWI ONION ORANGE

PEAR PEPPER POMEGRANATE POTATO PUMPKIN RADICCHIO RADISH RASPBERRY RHUBARB STRAWBERRY TOMATO WATERMELON

ANSWERS

FRIDAY, NOV 15 | 7 - 11 pm The Rex Hall | 417 Seymour St. • Local art show • Live music • Cash bar • Appies • Community inspiration IOSECURE

Tickets: www.ktwtimeraiser.ca


A34

FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com y

KamloopsThisWeek.com

CLASSIFIEDS Phone: 250-371-4949

|

Fax: 250-374-1033

|

Email: classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com

DEADLINES

REGULAR RATES

RUN UNTIL SOLD

RUN UNTIL RENTED

GARAGE SALE

EMPLOYMENT

Announcements . . . . 001-099 Employment . . . . . . . . .100-165 Service Guide . . . . . . . 170-399 Pets/Farm . . . . . . . . . . .450-499 For Sale/Wanted. . . . .500-599 Real Estate . . . . . . . . . .600-699 Rentals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 700-799 Automotive . . . . . . . . . . 800-915 Legal Notices . . . . . . 920-1000

WEDNESDAY ISSUES • 10:00 am Tuesday FRIDAY ISSUES • 10:00 am Thursday

Based on 3 lines

No Businesses, Based on 3 lines Merchandise, vehicles, trailers, RV’s, boats, ATV’s, furniture, etc.

No Businesses, Based on 3 lines Houses, condos, duplexes, suites, etc. (3 months max) $ 5300 Add an extra line to your ad for $10

$

1250 Friday - 3 lines or less $ 1750 Wed/Fri - 3 lines or less

Based on 3 lines 1 Issue.. . . . . . $1638 1 Week. . . . . . $3150 1 Month . . . $10460

INDEX

LISTINGS

ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID. No refunds on classiďŹ ed ads.

Coming Events

Art & Collectibles

If you have an upcoming event for our

BUYING & SELLING: Vintage & mid-century metal, teak, wood furniture; original signed paintings, prints; antique paper items, local history ephemera; BC pottery, ceramics. 4th Meridian Art & Vintage, 104 1475 Fairview, Penticton. Leanne@4thmeridian.ca

COMMUNITY CALENDAR go to

kamloopsthisweek.com and click on the menu and go to events to submit your event.

For Sale - Misc 1948 Ferguson rebuilt motor & extra parts has a util. snow blade & chains mostly original $3,000. 250-374-8285. 5th wheel hitch $250. 250374-8285.

PERFECT Part-Time Opportunity

2 Days Per Week

Butcher-Boy commercial meat grinder 3-hp. 220 volt. c/w attachments. $1500. 250318-2030.

Call 250-374-0462

Do you have an item for sale under $750?

REMEMBRANCE DAY

Did you know that you can place your item in our classifieds for one week for FREE?

Kamloops This Week will be closed on Monday, November 11, 2019

Call our Classified Department for details! 250-371-4949

EARN EXTRA $$$

KTW requires door to door substitute carriers for all areas in the city. Vehicle is an asset Call 250-374-0462 Greeting cards made in England each cellophane wrapped 90,000 for $17,000 (250) 376-6607

1 Issue . . . . . . . . . $1300 1 Week. . . . . . . . . $2500 1 Month . . . . . . . . $8000 ADD COLOUR. . $2500 to your classiďŹ ed add

35

$

00

Tax not included Some restrictions apply

Tax not included

Houses For Rent

Handyperson

6 drawer Walnut dresser w/ mirror & matching double bed exc cond $200. 250-374-7514.

Furnished5BdDen nrRIH, nsp, $3300. Call for shorttermrates 604-802-5649pg250-314-0909

RICKS’S SMALL HAUL

8ft Antique Couch Couch & matching $200. 250-374-1541.

$900. chairs

Monte Lake 1bdrm. Own yard, W/D, F/S. Ref’s req’d. Remodeled. $800/mo. 250-320-3833.

Diningroom table w/8-chairs, c/w Buffet and Hutch. Med Colour. $850. 250-374-8933.

Monte Lake 3bdrms on 1 1/4 acres. Remodeled, custom kitchen, unfinished basement. W/D, F/DW, gas stove. $1400/mo. Ref’s. 250-3203833.

Sports Equipment Hockey Gear fits 5’4� 120 lbs, brand new + skates 6.5 size. Serious inquires only $650/obo. for all. Call 9-6pm 250-374-7992. Ultra Light Ride Snowboard w/bindings, never used. $375. Arc Solomon snowboard w/bindings $325. 578-7776.

Skates/Skis/ Snowboards SKI SALE: 3 pairs. 180cm Atomic Powder Cruise- the ultimate floater. $100. 170cm Saloman Scream - light cruiser for novice plus. $125. Atomic Metron10 - great carver, wide toe. $125. Ski tuning kit. 250579-5880.

Pets Animals sold as “purebred stock� must be registrable in compliance with the Canadian Pedigree Act.

Health WE will pay you to exercise! Deliver Kamloops this Week

House-sitting Peace of mind house sitting and pet care. Keep your house and pets safe while your away. 250-374-6007.

Lost Lost: 18 month old female short haired tabby and white cat on Oct 23rd on Lorne St. 250-377-8997.

Personals

Toro lawnmower 21 inch. 650cc motor. $75.00 250-3746092.

CHECK US OUT ONLINE

Snow Removal

CHOOSE LOCAL

Looking For Love? Try your luck with 1x1 boxed ad $35 plus tax for 2 weeks. Price includes box number. Call 250-371-4949 to place your ad and for more details.

“Our Family Protecting Your Family�

Free Free: Hospital bed with electronic controls. You pick-up. 250-299-8887.

Furniture White leather power reclining sofa. $750. 48� round table/chairs. $250. 250-3125531.

PRESTIGE LOCAL ALARM MONITORING STATION KAMLOOPS ONLY ULC CERTIFIED MONITORING STATION

FREE ESTIMATES FOR SYSTEM UPGRADES OR SWITCH-OVERS LIVE ANSWER | EFFICIENT COST EFFECTIVE | LOCAL COMPANY

10-989 McGill Pl. Kamloops

250-374-0916

Brand New Yamaha R3 Motorcycle with only 6kms. 320CC, liquid cooled, ABS brakes. Still has 1 year Factory Warranty. $4,700. 250-578-7274.

Domestic Cars

JA ENTERPRISES Furniture Moving and Rubbish Removal jaenterpriseskam@gmail.com 778-257-4943

2006 Buick Allure CXS. 1owner. Fully loaded. Excellent condition. 207,000kms. $4,900/obo. 250-701-1557, 778-471-7694.

Scrap Car Removal

Security

CHOOSE LOCAL “Our Family Protecting Your Family�

PRESTIGE LOCAL ALARM MONITORING STATION KAMLOOPS ONLY ULC CERTIFIED MONITORING STATION

FREE ESTIMATES FOR SYSTEM UPGRADES OR SWITCH-OVERS LIVE ANSWER | EFFICIENT COST EFFECTIVE | LOCAL COMPANY

10-989 McGill Pl. Kamloops

Taking orders 3 meat cabbage rolls ask for Karen between 9am-6pm 236-421-2255

250-374-0916

Farm Services

Farm Services

SHAVINGS & SAWDUST 10 TO 150 YARD LOADS BARK MULCH FIR OR CEDAR

courses mid-week & weekends. NEW - Intro to Reloading & Bear Aware courses on demand. For schedules see www.pal-core-ed.com or 778-470-3030 HUNTER & FIREARMS Courses. A Great Gift. Next C.O.R.E. November 9th and 10th, Saturday and Sunday. P.A.L. November 3rd, Sunday. Professional outdoorsman & Master Instructor: Bill 250-376-7970 Science of Mind Beginner Classes Offered. Contact Rev. Ken Serl 250-682-9287

Boats 14ft. Runabout boat. 40hp Johnson motor on trailer. $1500/obo. 778-469-5434.

RVs/Campers/Trailers 17’ Aerolite Trailer like new, slide out, stabilizer bars. $9,900 (250) 372-5033 1972 Triple E motor home 25’ 77,000miles 402 Chev lots of extras $7,000 250-523-9495

- Regular & Screened Sizes -

2004 Cougar 5th wheel. 12ft slide. Excellent cond. $14,000/obo. 250-554-1744.

REIMER’S FARM SERVICE

2005, 38’ RV trailer 2 slides, sleeps 6, appl incld, fully loaded, $14,000. 236-421-2251.

250-838-0111 Handyperson

Accent Renovations. Handyman Services. Basement Development. Interior/Exterior Renovations. Licensed and Insured. 250-851-6055.

Yamaha Grizzly ATV. KMS 011031 $4,000 250-579-3252

Misc Home Service

PETER’S YARD SERVICE

Licensed & CertiďŹ ed 250-572-0753

ATVs / Dirt Bikes

2010 Harley Davidson Softail. Lugg carrier, cover, lift-jack. $11,000/obo. 250-374-4723.

AAA - Pal & Core

Time to Trim Your Hedges Tree Pruning or Removal Yard clean-up, Landscaping

Tax not included

Motorcycles

For all Deliveries & Dump Runs. Extra large dump trailers for rent. Dump Truck Long and Short Hauls!! 250-377-3457

Landscaping

Farmers Market

Commercial

Renos & Home Improvement

Classes & Courses

for a route near you!

Vacant NKam, 2bdrms, c/a, patio, nice yard. $1,000/mo plus shared hydro. Ref, req. 250-376-0633.

Tax not included

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Call 250-374-0462

Basement Suites

• 2 large Garage Sale Signs • Instructions • FREE 6� Sub compliments of

Property For Sale

Only 2 issues a week!

ROLL ENDS AVAILABLE $5-$10/ ROLL 1365 B Dalhousie Drive, Kamloops, BC call for availability 250-374-7467

Scheduled for one month at a time. Customer must call to reschedule. Tax not included. Some restrictions apply

Furniture

Solid oval oak table w/6side chairs, 2 arms chairs, buffet. $5,000. Exec desk dark finish $200. Teak corner cabinet $100. Treadmill $450, Custom oak cabinet $200. 250-8517687.

BONUS (pick p up p only):

PAPER ROUTES AVAILABLE

250-374-7467

2006 Dodge 2500 4x4 HD. w/1994 11ft. camper. $15,500/both. 778-220-7372. 2014 Adventurer Camper 89RB solar 13’ awning + extras $22,000 (250) 523-9495.

kamloopsthisweek.com • kamloopsthisweek.com

2010 Dodge Charger SXT Sedan. 4dr., AWD, V-6, auto. 50,001 kms. Must see to appreciate. $14,900. 250-374-1541. 2013 White Chevy Cruze LT. Auto, fully loaded. $5,500/obo. 250-554-4731.

2014 Lincoln MKS, AWD, 4dr Sedan. 3.5 Ecoboost twin turbo like new, black in & out. 80,000kms, $22,300.00. 250-319-8784.

RUN UNTIL SOLD ONLY $35.00 (plus Tax) (250)371-4949 *some restrictions apply call for details

Sports Utilities & 4X4s 2010 Ford Escape XLT. Excellent condition. Loaded. $8,900/obo. 250-320-0246.

Trucks & Vans

2014 Ford Platinum 4x4 Crew-cab 3.5 Ecoboost, white with brown leather, Fully Loaded. Immaculate. 142,000kms. $31,300. 250-319-8784


FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com Trucks - 4WD

Business Opportunities

2003 Chev 3/4T service truck 4x4. 6.0L, V-8, auto. Engine driven air compressor. Power tailgate. $6900. 250-320-9215.

~ Caution ~ While we try to ensure all advertisements appearing in Kamloops This Week are placed by reputable businesses with legitimate offers, we do caution our readers to undertake due diligence when answering any advertisement, particularly when the advertiser is asking for monies up front.

Trucks/Heavy, Commercial Cummings Gen Set Ford 6cyl 300 cu/in single and 3 phase pwr $5000 (250) 376-6607

Vans 1995 Plymouth Voyager. Great van needs to be seen. $1500. 250-319-7053.

Rims

Kamloops # recruitment agency

1

250-374-3853 Considering a Career in Real Estate?

4 - BMW X5, X3 wheels like new. $700 Call 250-319-8784.

Utility Trailers 10ftx6.6ft heavy duty utility trailer. $600. 250-578-7776.

Garage Sales NORTH SHORE Moving Sale: Saturday, Nov 2nd. 9am-3pm. 691 Belmont Cresc. Yard, garden, camping, misc tools + much more.

Follow us @Kam ThisWeek

Century21 Desert Hills Realty. We provide training & tutoring. Talk to Karl Neff 250 377 250-377-3030 SStart your new career today!

General Employment Full-time homecare worker required to assist disabled lady in her home. Medical experience an asset, but not essential. Call/text 778-586-4452 or email: nora.slamp@gmail.com I PAY Cash $$$ For All Scrap Vehicles! and $5 for auto batteries Call or Text Brendan 250-574-4679.

is looking for substitute distributors for door-to-door deliveries. Vehicle is required. For more information please call the Circulation Department at 250-374-0462 Looking for Helper for cleaning shop, some computer skills. Non smoker. Call 250315-8573. Looking for nursery and ginseng workers Mon-Sat 8-10hr per day transportation provided Call 250-319-7263 or fax 250-554-2604

Employment

Employment

Work Wanted Drywall repair, taping, textured ceilings and painting. Reasonable rates and seniors discount. Bonded. Graham. 250-374-7513/250-851-1263.

POSTING DATE: October 16, 2019 CLOSING DATE: Open until ďŹ lled. Applicants will be reviewed on an ongoing basis. STATUS: Full-Time / 40 hours per week KTWDigital is seeking a talented candidate to join our Digital Design Team as a Front-End Developer. The candidate will be responsible for a substantial volume of web development projects for a wide range of clients. Builds will be completed using a custom Wordpress platform and designed from scratch for each client. The candidate will also be responsible for general design services, digital advertising, email marketing, website maintenance and updates, and more.

KEY RESPONSIBILITIES:

• Design and Develop Wordpress websites for a diverse range of clients • Create unique & eective designs for each individual client • Maintain and update existing portfolio of websites • Collaborate with existing design/development team • Integrate industry standard technology and philosophy • Manage timelines and deadlines for multiple projects • Manage the design of Branding, Marketing Materials, Advertisements, and other related material • Integration of Google Services (Analytics, Search Console, G-Suite, etc.)

REQUIREMENTS:

• Strong knowledge of Wordpress • Understanding of HTML/CSS • General Web Development Experience • General understanding of UI/UX Best Practices • Graphic Design Experience • Strong ability with Adobe Creative Suite • Marketing Experience • Ability to work on multiple projects and balance workloads

WHILE NOT REQUIRED, THE FOLLOWING WOULD BE DEFINITE ASSETS FOR THIS ROLE: • eCommerce experience (WooCommerce, Shopify, BigCommerce, etc) • Social Media Management experience • Email Marketing (Mailchimp, etc) • Javascript/jQuery/PHP • CRM experience Please submit a resume along with a portfolio of recent work to: Chris Wilson, Digital Sales Manager chris@ktwdigital.com 1365B Dalhousie Drive Kamloops BC V2C 5P6

Job wanted by Computer Programmer-Analyst /Office Worker/Tutor Detail oriented, organized, problem-solver, extremely computer literate. Strong proofreading, editing, technical writing, public speaking skills. Can teach practically anything I know. IT work preferred but any job using problem-solving skills could be a good match. Gene Wirchenko at 250-8281474. gene@shaw.ca

Law Firm requires: 1. Conveyancing Legal Assistant, 2. Legal Assistant for a Solicitor’s Practice. Experience required for both positions. Private Office, Excellent Salary & Benefits for qualified applicants.

HOME & YARD HANDYMAN If you need it done, Give us a call ! Steve 250-320-7774.

Desk clerk (4-8 pm), laundryperson (car required), & 2-day part-time chambermaid.

LAMPLIGHTER MOTEL 250-572-0763 or email: anilparekh23@gmail.com

Send Resume to: Roger Webber Webber Law #209 – 1211 Summit Drive Kamloops, BC V2C 5R9 roger@webberlaw.ca tel: (250) 851-0100 fax: (250) 851-0104

facebook.com/kamloopsthisweek Employment

Employment

HIRING TWO LINE COOKS

Westsyder Inn at 3369 Westsyde Road, Kamloops is looking for two Line Cooks which are full-time, permanent jobs. Job duties include prepare and cook food according to speciďŹ cations, oversee kitchen operations, train and supervise staff, supervise and maintain inventory and record of food supplies and equipment, ensure quality of food. 6 months experience or related education required, Food Safety CertiďŹ cate and High School Wage: $14-$15/hourly. 40 hours per week. Apply at paulvinepal@gmail.com or fax at 778 -298-5999

Employment

Employment

FULL-TIME DIGITAL DESIGNER

WEBBER LAW Need extra $ $ $ Kamloops This Week is currently hiring Substitute Carriers for door-to-door deliveries. Call 250-374-0462 for more information

Employment

A35

A Division of Tle’ Nax T’awei Industrial Limited Partnership

Employment Opportunity Experienced Machinist Horst Precision Machines (HPD) Location: Position Status:

Kamloops, BC Permanent, Full-time

POSITION SUMMARY: Reporting to the General Manager of HPD the Journeyman Machinist is responsible for all machining operational aspects to ensure products are manufactured in a timely cost effective manner in accordance with established company procedures. QUALIFICATIONS: � ���������� ��������� ������������ � ���������� ���� ������ ��� ��� ������ � ��������� �� ������� ������������� � ���������� �� � ������ ��� ������������� ����������� �� �� ����� DESIRED KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND SUITABILITIES: We are looking for someone who is reliable, has a positive attitude and can move efficiently through all work processes to produce quality products. You ��� ������� �� ���� �� ��� ���������������� ��� ������� ���� ���� ���� ������ ������������� ������� ������������ ���������� ���������� �������� ��� �����ability are key in this role. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: ��� �� ��������� �������� ���� �� ���������� ������� �������� �� ������ ��� ���� �������� ���� �� ������������ ���� ����������� ���� ����� �������� ��� an interview will be contacted. For further information, a copy of the job description, or to apply; please email: jfrederickson@ttlp.com Please include the title of the position you are interested in or are applying for in the subject line of your email. Resumes and covering letters should be sent no later than Thursday, �������� ����� ����� Horst Precision Machines is a division of the Tle’ Nax T’awei Industrial Limited Partnership and is affiliated with the Teslin Tlingit Council (TTC). The TTG encourages TTC citizens and their spouses and family to take advantage of the TTG’s preferential hiring policy.

Automotive Technician & Automotive Apprentice Â?Â?Â? ­­ €

As the ideal candidate, you have a strong background in vehicle maintenance & enjoy working with a high energy team. Required Skills and Experience ¡ You hold a Level 2, 3, 4 or Red Seal Automotive Service Technician ticket and have experience in front end brakes, shocks and wheel alignments. ¡ You have the ability to excel in a physically demanding environment. vehicles. ¡ You have a strong passion for people and understand the true value of good customer service. ¡ Safety is paramount – you contribute and adhere to a safe and environmentally responsible workplace. ¡ Supply and maintain personal tools. fundamental business knowledge. ¡ Working along-side an experienced red seal Automotive Service Technician. ¡ Working with a Well-Established Company – Kal Tire has been in business since 1953 and currently has over 250 store locations across Canada. Continued expansion plans lead to career advancement opportunities. Â

Â? contributions. We want to hear from you! Apply in person or email resume to Dan: dan_cecchini@kaltire.com

JOIN OUR TEAM MARTIN & MARTIN Lawyers is looking for a family lawyer with strong advocacy, analytical and organizational skills to join our law practice. Applicants will manage all aspects of the ďŹ le, from the initial consult to ďŹ nal settlement. The preferred applicant will have a minimum of 5 years family law experience, with some trial experience. ALSO PLEASE NOTE: If you have an assistant that you work well with, we will also consider adding them to our team. Please forward your resume to careers@martinlawyers.ca

THERE’S MORE ONLINE Be a part of your community paper & comment online. KamloopsThisWeek.com


A36

FRIDAY, November 1, 2019 Employment

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

Employment

Employment

Employment

Employment

Employment

Looking for Carriers Driver Wanted Applications will be reviewed as they are received. December 1st start date. Kamloops This Week is looking for an energetic individual to join our team of Contract Drivers. Reporting directly to the Circulation Manager, you will be responsible for the timely delivery of newspapers to our valued carriers, business and apartments. The applicant must have a suitable vehicle (van or covered pickup) with all necessary insurance and a valid driver’s license. The successful candidate will be paid in accordance to the Kamloops This Week/Unifor Collective Agreement. This posting is open to internal and external candidates concurrently. Internal applicants will be considered ďŹ rst in accordance with the Collective Agreement. New applicants must submit a resume, current driver’s abstract and description of their vehicle to be considered. Internal applicants may just submit their expression of interest to the Circulation Department directly. In addition to the posted opening, Kamloops This Week is establishing a list of substitute drivers to ďŹ ll routes on a temporary basis or as routes come open. This is a part-time, 2 night per week contract with delivery typically starting between midnight and 2am. Please send your expression of interest to the attention of:

Circulation Manager

Kamloops This Week 1365 Dalhousie Drive, Kamloops, BC. V2C 5P6 Fax 250-374-1033 Or email c/o Sherrie Manholt, HR Manager sherrie@kamloopsthisweek.com

RUN TILL

RENTED

$53

Rte 317 - 535-649 7th Ave, 702-794 Columbia St(even side), 702-799 Nicola St. - 46 p. Rte 319 - 545 6th Ave, 604-690 Columbia St(even side), 604-692 Nicola St. - 16 p. Rte 320 – 483-587 9th 804-992 Columbia St (even side), 803-995 Nicola St. 51 p. Rte 322 - 694 11th Ave, 575-694 13th Ave, 1003 Columbia St, 1004-1314 Nicola St. - 61 p. Rte 324 - 606-795 Pine St. – 30 p. Rte 325 - 764-825 9th Ave, 805-979 Columbia St(odd side), 804-987 Dominion St, 805-986 Pine St. - 65 p. Rte 327 – 1103-1459 Columbia St, 1203-1296 Dominion St. – 38 p. Rte 331 - 984-987 9th Ave, 1125 10th Ave, 901-981 Douglas St, 902-999 Munro St, 806990 Pleasant St. – 38 p. Rte 372 - 22-255 W. 179 W. Nicola St. – 50 p. Rte 380 - Arbutus St, Sequoia Pl. – 71 p. Rte 382 – 114-150 Fernie  Â? Â? Â? Â? Â? Rte 390 – Fernie Crt, 158-400 Fernie Pl, Guerin Creek Way. – 46 p.

LOWER SAHALI/ SAHALI

KTW Digital is part of the Aberdeen Publishing Group

00 Plus Tax

3 Lines - 12 Weeks

Add an extra line to your ad for $10 Must be pre-paid Scheduled for 4 weeks at a time Private parties only - no businesses Some Restrictions Apply

Rte 403 - 405-482 Greenstone Dr, Tod Cres. – 27 p. Rte 405 – Anvil Cres, Bestwick Crt. E & W., 98-279 Bestwick Dr, Morrisey Pl. – 47 p.

Rte 410 - 56-203 Arrowstone Dr, Silverthrone Cres. – 47 p. Rte 449 - Assiniboine  ­ Sedona Dr. – 90 p. Rte 457 - 990 Gleneagles Dr, Monarch Dr, 1810-1896 Springhill Dr, Tolima Crt. - 50 p. Rte 459 - Monarch Crt, & Pl. – 38 p. Rte 474 - Coppertree Crt, Trophy Crt. – 22 p. Rte 475 - Castle Towers, Sedgewick Crt, & Dr. – 44 p. Rte 478 - 191-299 Chancellor Dr, Sentry Pl, Sovereign Crt, The Pinnacles. – 42 p. Rte 481 Â? Â? € ‚ Crt, & Pl. – 68 p. Rte 482 - 101-403 Â? ‚ Â? Â? Â? Rte 483 - Breakenridge Crt, Cathedral Crt, Grenville Pl, & 409-594 Â? ‚ Â? Â? Rte 484 – 1923-2069 Gladstone Dr, Gladstone Pl, & 611-680 & 695 Â? ‚ Â? Â? Rte 487 - 201-475, 485-495 Hollyburn Dr, Panorama Crt. – 75 p.

ABERDEEN

Rte 503 - Fleming Circ, Hampshire Dr. & Pl. & Hector Dr. – 48 p. Rte 509 - 459-551 ­ ‚ Â? ƒ „ Shaunessy Hill – 47 p.

PINEVIEW VALLEY/ MT. DUFFERIN

Rte 581 - Cannel Dr, Cascade St, 15081539 Hillside Dr. & Mellors Pl.-47 p. Rte 582 - 1540-1670 Hillside Dr, 1500-1625 Â… Â? ‚­Â† Â? ƒ Windward Pl.-37 p.

Rte 584 - 1752–1855 Hillside Dr. – 26 p. Rte 586 - 1505-1584 Â… Â?‚­Â† „ Park Way & 1537-1569 Plateau Pl-27 p. Rte 588 - Davies Pl, 16801754 Hillaisw Pl, Monrwewy Â? ƒ ‡ Â? Â? Â? Â? Rte 589 - 1200 – 1385 Copperhead Dr. – 52 p. Rte 590 - 1397 Copperhead Dr. & Saskatoon Pl. – 36 p.

VALLEYVIEW

Rte 602 Knollwood Cres, Parkhill Dr, 1783 Valleyview Dr. - 47 p. Rte 603 ‡ˆ     1625-1648, 1652-1764 Valleyview Dr. - 40 p. Rte 605 - 1770-1919 Glenwood Dr, Knollwood ‚ ‰ ‡ Â? Â? Â? Rte 606 - Orchard Dr, ­ €Š Â? Valleyview Dr. – 39 p. Rte 607 - Cardinal Dr, 1909-2003 Valleyview Dr. – 33 p. Rte 608 - Curlew ƒ Glenwood Dr. – 70 p. Rte 618 - Big Nickel Pl, Chapman Pl, 2509-2552 Â… ­ Â? ƒ Â?Â? Thompson Dr. – 58 p.

JUNIPER

Rte 667 – Birkenhead Dr, & Pl, 1674-1791 Cheakamus Dr, Similkameen Pl. – 64 p.

BROCKLEHURST

Rte 4 - 727-795 Crestline St. & 2412 – 2741 ‹ ÂŒ­ Â? „ Â? Rte 14 - 2399-2305 Briarwood Ave, McInnes ‡ Â? ƒ Wallace Pl. – 37 p.

Rte 15 - Bossert Ave, 2195 Parkcrest Ave. & 1054-1094 Schreiner St.-55 p. Rte 19 – Downie Pl & St, Moody Ave & Pl. 2307 ÂŽ ‹ ÂŒ­ Â? Â? Â? Â? Rte 21 - 2300-2397 Fleetwood Ave, Fleetwood Crt & Pl, 1003-1033 Schreiner St, 1020-1050 Westgate St. – 53 p. Rte 61 - Popp St, ‘ Ž„ Â? ÂŽ ‹ ÂŒ­ € Woodstock Pl. – 39 p.

NORTH SHORE

Rte 106 -1239-1289 10th St, Cranbrook Pl, Creston Pl, 949-1033 & 1035-1045 Halston Ave, Kimberley Cres. - 73 p. Rte 112 - 701-779 10th St, 702-717 9th St, Kirkland „ Â’ ‹ ÂŒ­ ƒ ÂŽ ‹ ÂŒ­ Â? Â? „ Â? Rte 153 - Kemano St. & Seton Pl. – 36 p. Rte154 - Belmont Cres, Cumberland Ave, Patricia Ave & Qualicum Pl. – 70 p.

BATCHELOR

Rte 175 � “ ’ ˆ Norview Pl, 821-991 “ � � Ž �

WESTMOUNT/ WESTSYDE

Rte 253 - Irving Pl, 2401-2477 Parkview Dr,  Ž ƒ � € Š � � � Rte 257 - Alpine Terr, Community Pl, 2192-2207 Grasslands Blvd, Grasslands Pl, 881-936 McQueen Dr, Woodhaven Dr. – 53 p. Rte 258 - 806-879 McQueen Dr, Perryville Pl. – 36 p. Rte 260 2040–2185Westsyde � � � �

DALLAS/ BARNHARTVALE

INTERESTED IN A ROUTE?

FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 250-374-0462

CANADA WIDE

CLASSIFIEDS • Find qualified employees • Power your website • Sell products fast! • Coast-to-coast or province by province • Select the region that’s right for your business

ONE CALL DOES IT ALL!

LIZ SPIVEY 250 374 7467

1365 DALHOUSIE DR

35

$ SOLD RUN TIL

Rte 701 - Freda Ave, Klahanie Dr, Morris Pl, Shelly Dr, 901-935 ‹

� � � Rte 706 - 1078-1298  ‚ … � � Rte 710 - 1350-1399 ‚ Ž Ž ‹

Â? Â?ÂŽ Rte 718 - 1207-1390 Belair Dr. – 23 p. Rte 750 - 5101-5299 Dallas Dr, Mary Pl, Nina ‡ Â? Â? ÂŽ Â? Rte 751 - 5310 ” • Pl, 5300-5599 Dallas Dr, 5485-5497 ETC Hwy, Viking Dr, Wade Pl. – 64 p. Rte 752 - 5600-5998 Dallas Dr, Harper Pl. & – Â? Â? Rte 754 - Hillview Dr, & Mountview Dr. – 40 p. Rte 755 – 6159-6596 Dallas Dr, McAuley Pl, Melrose Pl, Yarrow Pl. – 72 p. Rte 759 – Beverly Pl, 6724-7250 Furrer …‡— ‡ˆ Â? Â? Â? Â? Rte 761 – 6022-6686 ­ – ­ ˜ Â? Â? Â? „

RAYLEIGH

Rte 830 – Chetwynd Dr, Stevens Dr. – 55 p. Rte 831 - 4904-5037 Cammeray Dr, Mason Pl, ”  ­ Dr, & Pl. – 61 p. Rte 833 – Cameron ‚ Â? Â? Â?Â? Â? Rte 836- Cahilty Cres, Hyas Pl, 4551-4648 ­ Š Â? Â? ÂŽ Â? Rte 837 - Helmcken Dr, 4654-4802 ­ Š Â? Â? Â? Â? Rte 842 – 3945-4691 Yellowhead Hwy. – 35 p.

In Loving Memory of Lillian Maskell

(nĂŠe Adsett) February 5, 1926 November 1, 2017

In memory of 50 wonderful years together. The perfect wife and companion. Miss you more each day that passes. Your Loving Husband Ted

To advertise in the Classifeds call

250-371-4949

CWC

Put the power of 8.3 Million ClassiďŹ ed ads to work for you!

250�371�4949

00

+ TAX

TURN YOUR STUFF INTO CA$H

Please recycle this newspaper.

Lee

KIDS & ADULTS NEEDED!

DOWNTOWN

OBITUARIES & IN MEMORIAM

250-371-4949 *RESTRICTIONS APPLY

Don't forget to set your clocks

back

one hour this

Sunday, November 3


FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

A37

OBITUARIES & IN MEMORIAM In Loving Memory Of Baylie Presta

October 29, 2012 – October 30, 2012

We’ll be your legacy We’ll be your voice You’ll live on in us So we’ve made the choice To honour your life By living again We love you We miss you We’ll see you again

Love you Always and Forever Mom and Dad

A Division of Service Corporation International (Canada) ULC.

Dale William Hasenwinkle 1934 - 2019 It is with sadness that we announce the passing of Dale William Hasenwinkle on October 16, 2019 at the age of 85 years. Dale was born in Seattle, Washington on May 21, 1934. He was predeceased by his parents Alice and Earl Hasenwinkle , brother Glen Hasenwinkle and sister-in-law Kathy Hasenwinkle. He will always be lovingly remembered by his wife Vicki, his daughters Wendy of Kamloops and Diane (Joel) of Kelowna and son Rob of Vancouver, his grandchildren Tegan, Brock, Hollis and Owen will forever hold his memories in their hearts. Dale dearly loved his children and grandchildren. He was very proud of their accomplishments and enjoyed watching his grandchildren’s involvement in sports, track, acting in plays and in playing in piano recitals. Dale was involved with computers from the 1960s on, always stating that he was born too early as technology was changing so fast and he wanted to learn more. He and his family moved to Kamloops in the 1970s to open Hasen Auto. When he closed the business down in the late 80s, he did the computer work for B.C. Livestock, working with the auctioneer. He then moved on to work at CMHA as a job coach. In his final working years, until age 75, he had his own computer business and clients included St. Ann’s Academy and others.

Calvin Edgar Wilson It is with sadness the family of Calvin Edgar Wilson announces his passing on October 27, 2019 at the age of 91 years. Cal was born on October 7, 1928 in Beverly, Alberta. Married four times, Cal was blessed to have fathered seven wonderful children, twelve grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. Cal was very proud to be a welder at the Vancouver shipyards and his membership in the Marine Workers’ and Boilermakers’ Industrial Union. He was also a long-time member of the Fraternal Order of Eagles. The family would like to express its gratitude to the staff at the Trim Residence in Mission for the exceptional care they provided to their father in his final years. A Memorial Service will take place at 11:00 am on Saturday, November 9, 2019 at the Woodlawn Mission Funeral Home, 7386 Horn St., Mission, BC.

Dennis Martin Schatkoske 1951 - 2019 We are shocked, saddened and mourn the sudden passing of Dennis on Sunday, October 27, 2019. He is survived by his loving partner Bonnie Dunn, children Tamara (John) of Pitt Meadows, Jennifer (Marc) of Chilliwack and Michael (Trina) of Calgary, grandchildren Harrison, Hazel, Ramona and Keelan, sisters Sharon (Barry), Darelene (Blair) and Faye (Jerry), and numerous other family members. Dennis will also be missed by Sherry (Dan), Missy (Steve), Cole, Kaylea and Rylee. Dennis enjoyed keeping busy with home projects, boating at Shuswap Lake, travelling to Mexico and staying active golfing and playing pickleball. He was a thoughtful, loving father and grandfather, making sure he spent time with all his children and grandchildren. He was lucky to spend lots of time with his three beloved sisters in both Mexico and Canada. Dennis was fortunate to have lifelong friends that loved and supported him including his close friend Wayne who kept him honest on the golf course. He and his partner Bonnie put in numerous summers at Shuswap Lake transforming a property to a beautiful vacation destination for their children and grandchildren. Bonnie’s children Missy and Sherry and their families frequently visited the lake filling their weekends with love. They welcomed friends and family to their places in Mexico and Shuswap. Dennis was loved by all who knew him and will be deeply missed. Memorial donations may be made in Dennis’ name to the Heart and Stroke Foundation, P.O. Box 460 STN K, Toronto, ON M4P 9Z9. The celebration of life for Dennis will be announced at a later date. Arrangements entrusted to Kamloops Funeral Home 250-554-2577 Condolences may be sent to the family from www.kamloopsfuneralhome.com 250-554-2577

While the price difference for a cremation with NO Service is similar at most funeral homes in Kamloops, First Memorial is proud to have facilities to accommodate all of your needs, whether you choose a Celebration of Life or a full Traditional service. We can do it all at First Memorial. Come talk to us and have a look around. You will be pleasantly surprised. Dale was a determined curious problem solver who faced challenges with such a positive attitude. He enjoyed his time spent camping, hunting, bowling, hydro plane racing, skiing, trips with his RV, being a snowbird and travelling to new places. His positive attitude and determination were the role model for everyone who knew him. His family was extremely grateful for the care of his doctors, Dr. Harold Stefanyk and Dr. Proctor. No words can express our gratitude to the staff and volunteers at the Kamloops Hospice Association for their compassionate and professional care. Our thanks also to the Palliative Care Team. A Celebration of Dale’s Life will be held on Saturday, November 16, 2019 at 11:00 am in the Schoening Funeral Chapel, 513 Seymour Street, Kamloops. Should friend desire, donations to the Marjorie Willoughby Snowden Hospice Home would be appreciated in Dale’s memory. Condolences may be expressed at www.schoeningfuneralservice.com

Schoening Funeral Service 250-374-1454

First Memorial Funeral Service 250-554-2429

schoeningfuneralservice.com

Thank You The family of Oliviero (Oliver) Lepri (September 05, 2019) would like to express our gratitude to all for your support and prayers, attending Oliver’s Mass of Christian Burial, donations to Kamloops Hospice and BC Cancer, Offering of Masses, gifts of baking/ meals and flowers. Additional thanks to Thompson Valley Funeral Home, Ashcroft HUB, Fratelli Foods, Craig’s Bakery and Safety Mart Foods (Ashcroft). Your support reflects how special Oliver was to us all. Thank you.

Glen Engen Glen Engen passed peacefully at Royal Inland Hospital on October 20, 2019. He is survived by immediate family members, wife Faye, daughter Cindy and son-in-law Al, grandchildren Austin, Benjamin, Kennedy Novakowski, daughter-in-law Erika and grandchildren Logan and Kayla Engen.

Ask DRAKE Drake Smith, MSW Funeral Director

Every Friday in KTW!

Q. Why don’t people want to view the deceased?

!

A. Lots of reasons. For example, a relative of mine still has nightmares about the bright orange lipstick they put on her friend in the coffin. The funeral director thought it matched her dress perfectly. Wrong! !

Drake DrakeCremation Cremation !

!

& Funeral Services

& Funeral Services

210 Lansdowne 425 Tranquille Rd. 250-377-8225 DrakeCremation.com AFFORDABLE & NO BLACK SUITS

210 Lansdowne Street, Kamloops, BC, V2C 1X7 4638 Town Road, Box 859, Barriere, BC, V0E 1E0

73 Taren Drive, Clearwater, BC, V0E 1N2 Toll free: 1-877-674-3030

www.DrakeCremation.com


www.kamloopsthisweek.com

FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

A39


A40

FRIDAY, November 1, 2019

www.kamloopsthisweek.com

2nd Annual

Apple Harvest Sale The Biggest & Longest Apple Sale EVER! NOVEMBER 1 - DECEMBER 2, 2019

BC Grown

BC Grown

JONAGOLD APPLES

SPARTAN APPLES

67 ¢ /LB $12 /18LB Case

73 ¢ /LB $13 /18LB Case

BC Grown

BC Grown MACINTOSH APPLES

GALA APPLES

67 ¢ /LB $12 /18LB Case

73 ¢ /LB $13 /18LB Case

BC Grown

BC Grown HONEYCRISP APPLES

AMBROSIA APPLES

84 ¢ /LB $15 /18LB Case

98 ¢ /LB $17 /18LB Case

BC Grown

BC Grown BARTLETT, ANJOU

GRANNY SMITH APPLES

& BOSC PEARS

98 ¢ /LB $17 /18LB Case

88 ¢ /LB $15 /18LB Case

Also On Sale! $17 /3L

Apple, Beet & Carrot Juice Apple & Carrot Juice

$17 /3L

Apple & Beet Juice

$16 /3L

DAILY DRAW!

$16 /3L

or

from our 2019 Harvest!

$19 /3L

Cherry Juice

Apple Juice

Try our Locally Made Juice

$23 /5L

Every purchase of a case of apples, you will be entered to win our draw for 1 of 32 cases of apples!


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