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kamloopsthisweek.com | kamloopsthisweek |
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021 | Volume 34 No. 47
TURMOIL AT TRU?
The university’s board of governors is investigating a complaint by 13 current and former employees against two senior executives at TRU. Allegations include discriminatory conduct, discriminatory statements and/or harassment STORY ON PAGES A12, 13, AND A14
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ACK
IN JULY
CES OF THE YEAR
A2 Package WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021 Total 4 PIECE $ BOXING PACKAGE 1580 2697 OUR JLOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED! WEEK uly $
2020 FRIDAY NOV 27TH, 2 STARTS FRIDAY NOV 27TH,STARTS OUR T PRICES LOWEST PRICES 3096 FRIDAY SALE 499 TEED! GUARANTEED! BLACK 679 BLACK BOXING ON DINING ROOMS! After Discount WEEK July
SHOP EARLY ONLINE! BLACK FRIDAY SALE STARTS SHOP EARLY ONLINE! BLACK FRIDAY SALE S DOORS OPEN 9 AM ONLINE NOV 26THNOV @ 9PM AT HOT DEALS!! ONLINE NOV 26TH @ 9PM AT 130 $ 26 for CITYFURNITURECANADA.COM *SOME EXCLUSIONS CITYFURNITURECANADA.COM APPLY. EXCLUSIO *19SOME 76
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999 $
1.1 cu. ft. Lo-Pro Over The Range Microwave.
$
PRICES 699 OUR LOWEST PRICES 12GUARANTEED! MONTHS TEED! * SAVE AN ADDITIONAL Now $100 Only Now Only
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$
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$
350
3+ kitchen appliances
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4.0 Cu. Ft. Top-Load Washer with Dual Action Agitator
ON FURNITURE & MATTRESSES*
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449
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58”
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$
229
$ UN55NU6900 XL SAVE $500 $$ Twin SAVE 700 UPTO
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499
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279 $2199 Now Only After Discount
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779
$
1599
400
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299
30” 6.4 cu. ft. Electric Range w/True Convection
Regular $899
$
Now Only
$
33”
$ CASH & CARRY
Regular $3899
with Most Powerful Motor on the Market
Regular $1549
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200
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Now 24”Only Built In Dishwasher
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$
220
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50”
Regular $1549
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75”
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399
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Regular $479
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58”
629 449 699899 1699 679
Regular $499
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Regular $2149
55” QLED Smart TV
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1.8 cu. ft. Over The Range Microwave
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buy 2 qualifying pieces to save an extra $150; buy 3+ qualifying pieces to save an extra $300
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Regular $3699
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729
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4K Crystal UHD HDR Smart TV
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33” 22 cu. ft. French Door Fridge
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50 779
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30" 18.6 Cu. Ft. Bottom Freezer Refrigerator
699 299
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LED HDTV Sold as Set
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6.3 cu. ft. Electric Range
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1499
24” Dishwasher with QuadWash®, 3rd Rack
36” 22.6 cu. ft. CounterDepth French Door Fridge
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30” 6.3 cu. ft. Electric Slide-In Range with ProBake ConvectionTM Regular $2349
Regular $1449
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2499
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Regular $3699
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$
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Regular $2099
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$
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$ After 199 Sold in Discount 9 Set
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30” 5-Element Electric Convection Range
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200
$
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TERMS AND CONDITIONS APPLY
4K
SaveUN75TU7000 $300 SAVE
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75” 43”
$300 55” DISCOUNT
After Discount
4K QLED HDR TV
Save $200
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TERMS AND CONDITIONS APPLY
After Discount
Discount Discount Resistant 4K QLED HDR TV $Fingerprint 99 4K QLED 3 PC $HDR $ % Sold as TV Large 30-inch 5.3 Cu. Ft. $ Electric $ Wide French$ 2499 Set699 1499Bedroom 849 PACKAGE Capacity Dishwasher with 1699 Collection SAVE 679 Door Refrigerator - 6pc 5-in-1 Air Fry Oven 3rd Rack INCLUDES QUEEN BED, DRESSER, Save $600 $ 20 cu. ft. 26.7 cu. ft. French Door 24” Built In Slate Finish 30” Electric Freestanding 21.8 cu. ft. Counter-Depth 24” Built In Dishwasher 30” Front Control $ Tall Tub Dishwasher SaveElectric $520 Promo starts Nov 22nd-Dec 3rd, 2020 Now Only &French ONE Slate Finish Fridge Range with Storage Pineridge Recliner Sofa Now Only 4-Door DoorNIGHTSTAND Fridge with EvenDry System Range MIRROR 4 PC Drawers Available Available PACKAGE Internal After Discount Internal in Stainless in White $ Queen
Tessaro Sleeper Sectional
After Discount After Discount
899
Smart TV
ACK FRIDAY SALE $1699 Now Only
Pineridge Recliner Chair
$
500
$
33”
$
Promo starts Nov 22nd -Dec 3rd 2020
4K QLED HDR TV
65”
MORE * SAVE 1399
QN55Q70T
55”
3147
$
5.5 cu. ft. Steam Front Load Washer with Extra Power
30” 20 cu. ft. French Door
$ UN58TU7000 $ 399 24” Built In Dishwasher SAVE 4847 $2350 1.6 cu. ft. Over The QN55Q70T $ Range Microwave with Most Powerful 1727 24” Built In Dishwasher 30” 5-Element Electric 36” 22 cu. ft. $ SAVE $450 SAVE $250 SAVE Counter $350 65” Motor on the Market 55” 3369 Now Only with ThirdNOW Level Rack ConvectionNOW Range Depth French Door Fridge ONLY ONLY NOW ONLY $ Regular $899 $ Promo starts Regular $1399 Regular $2099 Regular $3899 $ 4K Crystal UHD HDR
4K Crystal UHD HDR Smart TVAfter Discount
4K Crystal UHD HDR Save Smart$600 LED TV Pineridge Recliner Loveseat
Save $300
2600
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After DiscountNow Only
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500
% 40OFF
75”4K
1099
STORAGE
629
$
50”
$
$
$
3 PC PACKAGE
1450
$
We will beat any competitor’s advertised price by 20% of the difference. Terms and conditions apply.
Refrigerator 3-PIECE PACKAGE 3 PC PACKAGE SAVE QN65Q70T PROMO: $3447 - $300 $ BUY $ MORE 1450 65” 3147
$
SAVE $3447 - $300 After PROMO: Discount
4K LOWEST PRICE GUARANTEEd ON APPLIANCES*
4K
After Discount
SAVE
EXTRA
58”
Twin XL / Queen Head & Foot Adjustable Bed Frame
UN50TU7000 $
SAVE 55”
SAVE
4799
$
Promo starts Nov 22nd-Dec 3rd, 2020
UPTO
$
UN58TU7000
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After Discount
After Discount
TERMSSmart AND CONDITIONS APPLY TV
4K
4K Crystal UHD HDR Smart LED TV
4K
43”
1099
4K Crystal UHD HDR
58”
Regular $499
Sold in Set
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3 PC PACKAGE PROMO: $5099 - $300
1899
$
65”
After Discount
3 PC PACKAGE PROMO: $5099 - $300
4K Crystal UHD HDR TERMS AND CONDITIONS APPLY Smart TV
SAVE $270 Woodanville Drop Leaf Round 4KDining Table 30” 30” LIVING ROOM FURNITURE!
% 60OFF
250
75”
$
1999 - $100 OFF
$
$
4K
After Discount
After Discount
After Discount
DINING OR COUNtER HEIGHt
$
50”
$
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Smart LED HDTV
LOWEST PRICE GUARANTEEd ON APPLIANCES*
We will beat any competitor’s advertised price by 20% the difference.SAVE Terms and conditions apply. PAIRofPROMO
629 LOWEST449 PRICES OF THE YEAR ON FRIDGES 899 $$589 55” 58” 499 UN50TU7000
$ over 44 years.” t’s sleep for SAVE UPTO 500 Ventura 5 Piece Dining Set Regular $1499 Set Regular $1999
4K
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UN43NU5300
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4K UHD HDR Smart LED TV
After Discount
43”
UP TO
After Discount
4K
50”
5.3 cu. ft. Electric Range with Frozen BakeTM. 4K
55”
499
$ UN75TU7000
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75”
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Stainless Steel Tub Dishwasher with Total Coverage Spray Arm.
SIN CE
SAVE
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DININGROOM FURNITURE 55” 43”
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$
OFF Now Only
UP TO
ter Discount
UP
20% OUR APPLIANCE PRICES 1399 % APPLIANCES BE BEAT! 30% TELEVISIONS 30WON’T
6.5 Cu.Ft. Top-Load Electric Dryer with Automatic Dryness Control
SHOP EARLY ONLINE! BLACK FRIDAY SALE STARTS ONLINE 26TH @STARTS 9PM ATFRIDAY NOV 27TH, 2020 NONOV INTEREST SHOP EARLY ONLINE! BLACK FRIDAY SALE STARTS ONLINE NOV 26THAPPLY. @ 9PM AT NO PAYMENTS! UP TO CITYFURNITURECANADA.COM EXCLUSIONS *SOME CITYFURNITURECANADA.COM *SOME EXCLUSIONS APPLY.
After Discount
PPLY HERE! ow Only
$
STARTS FRIDAY NOV 27TH, 2020
SAVE
SAVE AN ADDITIONAL $300 *
After Discount
SAVE
FRIDAY SALE FRIDAY SALE
®/™ © 2020 Whirlpool. Used under license in Canada. All rights reserved.
2 kitchen appliances
Regular $1299Only Now
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Buy any
7 Pc Set
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CA
EVENT
See sales associate for details and list of qualif ying appliances.
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www.kamloopsthisweek.com
SAVE
$
$
4 PC PACKAGE
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SAVE SAVE
379 UPTO
$$349 10080 Nightstand
55” $
4699
220
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$ 1.8 cu. ft. Over The Range Microwave
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$
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$
2796
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r Loveseat
$
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1399
$
99
After Discount
Package
$
$
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After Discount
Air Fry
After Discount
349 G FURNITURE! 60% 30-inch Wide French Door Refrigerator - 20 Cu. Ft.
After Discount
999
$
30" 5.9 Cu. Ft. Electric Range NOVConvection 19 – DEC 16, 2020 with Fan
5.8 Cu Ft. Smart Wi-Fi Fan Convection Gas Range
OFF
TWIN
Twin
After Discount
30" 5.3 Cu. Ft. True Convection 30" Electric Range Now Only 5-Element Slide-In Electric Range with Air Fry $ After Discount AfterDISCOUNT Discount AFTER
After Discount
% 60OFF
Buy any
After Discount
kitchen appliances
Buy any
kitchen appliances
*
SAVE AN ADDITIONAL
Regular $999
4.0 Cu. Ft. Top-Load Washer with Dual Action Agitator
Regular $1799
Sold in 12 MONTHS
Why wait?
Posturepedic Eurotop Mattresses
Create Your Dream Home Now!
After Discount
*
SAVE AN ADDITIONAL
5.3 Cu. Ft. Freestanding Electric Range Stainless Steel Dishwasher with Fan Convection Cooking with 1-Hour Wash Cycle
Sold in Set $399 399 $
Bake Assit
After Discount
After Discount
999 599 UPTO2 $100 24” Dishwasher with 6.3 cu. ft. Electric 36”French 22.6 cu. ft. CounterSave $200 36” Save $300 Save $300 3+ Door Fridge 27 cu. ft. StormWash Range Depth French Door Fridge LOWEST PRICES OF THE$300 YEAR MATTRESSES! ON DISHWASHERS MATTRESSES $
After Discount
Queen
TO $UP Save $750
After Discount
Now Only 30" Electric Range with Now Only
PAIR
Set
75”
Regular $3199
NOW ONLY
After Discount
Regular $499
$
SAVE
SAVE
550
$
NOW ONLY Now Only
1399
$
58”
FULL
43”
$449 549 Full
UN58TU7000 After Discount
Now Only
After Discount
$
30” 6.3 cu. ft. Electric Slide-In Range with ProBake ConvectionTM Regular $2349
33” 28 cu. ft. WiFi Enabled French Door Fridge
BALLINASLOE RECLINERChest Regular $3249
Available HOT $
299 BUY!
Financing Provide by
65”
QUEEN
Queen
After Discount
5300 help you buy!
499 69
549
Now Only
$
SAVE
Save $130
Save $400 75”
TOP CONTROL BUILT IN DISHWASHER WITH Save $300 SENSOR CYCLE. Front Control Dishwasher with REG. $798 QuadWash™ & EasyRack™ Plus
AFTERDiscount DISCOUNT After
After Discount
LOCALLY WAREHOUSED
799 4K
50”
Most of what you see you can take home today!
$
449
SERVING B.C. & ALBERTA
$
AFTER DISCOUNT
SaveCHOPPER $200 CLASSIC TALL 24" 50 dB Tall Tub Top TUBControl BUILTDishwasher IN DISHWASHER
QN55Q70T
55”WASHERS & DRYERS LOWEST PRICES OFOnly THE YEAR ON Now Now Only 4K Crystal UHD HDR $ Promo starts After Smart TV Discount SEE OUR ONLINE FLYERS FOR Nov 22nd -Dec 3rd 2020 Queen 50% After MORE HOT DEALS4K Now After $$ Crystal UHD HDR OFF Only Discount SHOP ONLINE TODAY www.cityfurniturecanada.com
499
$
QN65Q70T
58” After $ Discount LOCALLY OWNED SINCE 1976
629
Now Only
SAVE $200 Save $200 24" 24" 50 50 DBdBTALL TUB FRONT Tall Tub Front CONTROL DISHWASHER Control Dishwasher
1099
$
24" 49 dB Built-In Dishwasher with Stainless Steel Tub
796
$
749 699
599
After Discount
899
65” Now Only
$1399 $
899 869 899 We don’t sell. We help you buy! 779 % eWEST $300 $600 PRICES OF THE Save Save $600 $600 Save $600 40 YEAR MERRITT
2025 Coutlee Ave (250) 378-2332
REVELSTOKE
111 West Victoria Road (250) 837-3373
UN50TU7000
TERRACE
WILLIAMS LAKE
4519 Lakelse Avenue (250) 638-0555
240 MacKenzie Ave N. (778) 412-9477
SALMON ARM
HOUSTON
1160 10th Avenue SW (250) 832-9770
3459 9th Street (250) 845-2004
$ www.cityfurniturecanada.com
Discount
499 Smart TV
s. Administration fee, any delivery charges and all taxes payable at the time of purchase. On approved credit. A $21 annual membership fee may be charged to your account subject (collectively the “Account Agreement”). Finance Charges will accrue on the purchase from the beginning of the credit promotional period of 12 months on furniture and mattresses the credit promotional period, all of the accrued Finance Charges will be waived and no Financial Charges will be assessed on the purchase. Otherwise, all of the accrued Finance the regular credit plan will apply to all outstanding balances owing. See store and Account Agreement for further information. Sale ends December 3rd, 2020. Offers cannot be used itchenaid, Frigidaire, LG, GE, Bosch, Maytag & Whirlpool promotions are subject to terms and conditions so please see store for details. In-store and online availability may vary. tronics, see store or online for details. Due to COVID-19 product availability will vary across advertised items.
ining Set Discount er Discount
4K Crystal UHD HDR Smart LED TV
Sold as Set
OOM FURNITURE!
dge cliner Recliner Loveseat Chair
Promo starts Nov 22nd-Dec 3rd, 2020
6pc Save $200 Save $300 Now Only 4K QLED HDR TV
1399
$
After Discount
Save $400
5.2 Cu. Ft. High 7.4 Cu. Ft. Efficiency Top Electric Dryer Load Washer
UPTO
Now Only
$
1699
$
After Discount
OFF
Save $900
5.2 Cu. Ft. Steam Front Load Washer
7.5 Cu. Ft Steam Front-Load Electric Dryer
Now Only
BEDROOM After FURNITURE! Discount After Discount
Save $600
5.2 Cu. Ft. Ultra Large Capacity Steam Washer
7.4 Cu. Ft. Smart Wi-Fi Enabled Electric Dryer with TurboSteam™
Pineridge PineridgeRecliner ReclinerSofa Loveseat
After Discount
Save $650
GE 5.9 Cu. Ft. Electric Washer & Dryer Laundry Centre
6pc Now Only
$
After Discount
$ 1350$ Hillside Drive 1299• 250-372-7999 1999 Across from Aberdeen Mall, Kamloops Now Only
2020
After Discount
4K QLED HDR TV
Save $500 Queen Posturepedic Eurotop Mattress After After Discount Discount
After Discount
Now Only
200 NOW ONLY
$
4K
NOW ONLY
Now Only NOW ONLY $
$
AFTER DISCOUNT
After Discount
4K
NOW ONLY
$
After Discount
24" Dishwasher with Triple Filter Wash System
After Discount
w ow Only Only
399
55”
599
Now Only
4K$
50”
$499 599
$
99
4K
2199
After Discount
After Discount
After Discount UN75TU7000 After Discount
$
40
Now Only
$ $
899
$
After Discount
Regular $1449
1050
$
Now Only
24” Dishwasher with QuadWash®, 3rd Rack
SAVE
950
$
NO INTEREST NO PAYMENTS! ON FURNITURE & MATTRESSES*
Administration fee, taxes and delivery charges due at time of purchase. See store for complete details.
APPLY HERE!
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
CITY PAGE
Kamloops.ca
Stay Connected @CityofKamloops
Council Calendar In-person public attendance is permitted. Masks are mandatory. Virtual attendance via Zoom is also an option. November 30, 2021 9:00 am - Committee of the Whole 1:30 pm - Regular Council Meeting December 6, 2021 1:30 pm - Civic Operations Committee Meeting December 9, 2021 2:00 pm - Community Services Committee Meeting Please note: All meetings are now being held in Council Chambers at 7 Victoria Street West. The complete 2021 Council Calendar is available online at: Kamloops.ca/CouncilCalendar
Council Meeting Recap Sign up for the Council Highlights e-newsletter at: Kamloops.ca/Subscribe
Notice To Motorists Please use caution when driving in the vicinity and obey all traffic control personnel, signs, and devices in the following area: • Summit Drive Whiteshield Crescent South to Notre Dame Drive • Mission Flats Road To stay up-to-date on road work projects, visit: Kamloops.ca/Kammute
Seniors Light Tour This event has been cancelled for 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic in an effort to keep seniors, volunteers, staff, and BC Transit drivers healthy and safe.
Arts and Culture Engagement Group There are two openings for community members for a two-year term to volunteer with the Arts and Culture Engagement Group. For details and to apply, visit Kamloops.ca/Volunteer. Application deadline is 4:00 pm, Monday, November 29, 2021.
Report an issue: 250-828-3461 For after-hours emergencies, press 1.
2022 WINTER ACTIVITY GUIDE SNEAK PEEK
PRE-ORDER YOUR 2022 CALENDAR TODAY!
The Activity Guide is published three times per year and offers a wide range of courses and programs for people of all ages and abilities. The online version now available for viewing at Kamloops.ca/ActivityGuide.
The Kamloops City Calendar is produced annually and provides garbage collection schedules and other key civic dates while featuring photos submitted by residents through our annual photo competition. The 2022 City Calendar will not automatically arrive in your newspaper this December. Mass production of the calendar results in waste, which is bad for the environment and the City's budget. This year, Council made the sustainable choice to print the calendar in-house for those who love it and use it. They will soon be available for pick up at several City facilities free of charge.
Find your hard copy of the 2022 Winter Activity Guide in Kamloops This Week next Wednesday, December 1. Registration starts on Tuesday, December 7, at 6:30 am online or at 10:00 am by phone or in person.
Ways to register: • Go online - to register online, visit Kamloops.ca/PerfectMind. Be prepared! You will need to have a PerfectMind account before you can register. • Call us - call our Customer Relations Representatives at 250-828-3500. Please note that due to COVID-19, programs and courses listed at the time of print may be cancelled or adjusted in accordance to recommendations set out by the Government of Canada, the Province of BC, viaSport, and the BC Parks and Recreation Association.
Help us ensure we print the right amount of calendars by pre-ordering your calendar today at Kamloops.ca/Calendar. You can pre-order your copy and you will be notified when it becomes available. For assistance with pre-orders, please call 250-828-3311. For more details, including pickup locations, visit: Kamloops.ca/Calendar.
For more information and to view the guide, visit: Kamloops.ca/ActivityGuide
BUSINESS LICENCE RENEWALS The City of Kamloops 2022 business licence renewal invoices have been mailed. Please note, due to adverse weather conditions resulting in highway closures, mail may be slightly delayed. Payments are due by January 1, 2022. Business licence accounts outstanding after January 15, 2022 will have a $25 late payment charge applied to the balance owing. If you have not received your renewal notice or if there has been a change to your business, please contact the Business Licensing office by phone at 250-828-3481 prior to submitting the 2022 payment. For payment options, visit: Kamloops.ca/BLicensed
Let's Talk Kamloops is our engagement website where you can share your voice and shape our city. The COVID-19 pandemic may impact the engagement timelines for some projects. Please subscribe to the project of interest to receive updates. Sign up and speak up at: LetsTalk.Kamloops.ca
City Hall: 7 Victoria Street West, Kamloops, BC, V2C 1A2 | 250-828-3311
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
STORM BREWING OVER A SHELTER Neighbours of Kingston Avenue site decry lack of consultation
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INSIDE KTW Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A23 History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A26 Classifieds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A34 Art Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B23 Comics/Crossword . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B26
TODAY’S FLYERS
Bianca Amor, Connector, YIG*, Walmart*, Toys R Us*, Staples*, Surplus Herby’s*, SPIN*, Sleep Country*, Shoppers*, Safeway*, Gift Guide*, Save-On-Foods*, Rona*, Rexall*, Pet Smart*, Nature’s Fare*, M&M Meats*, London Drugs*, Home Hardware*, Freshco*, EB Games*, Canadian Tire*, Bed, Bath & Beyond* * Selected distribution
WEATHER FORECAST Nov. 24: Cloudy 2/0 (hi/low) Nov. 25: Cloudy 8/3 (hi/low) Nov. 26: Cloudy 7/0 (hi/low) Nov. 27: Cloudy 3/1 (hi/low) Nov. 28: Cloudy 6/1 (hi/low)
ONLINE
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facebook.com/ kamloopsthisweek twitter.com/ KamThisWeek youtube.com/user/ KamloopsThisWeek/videos Instagram: @kamloopsthisweek HOW TO REACH US: 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
A5
DOMTAR TO BE SOLD AFTER DEAL
BLAZERS, STORM REMAIN HOT
Merger with Paper Excellence must incude third-party buyer for mill
All the news on the two hockey teams and what’s happening in other sports
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SHELTERING THOSE IN NEED DAVE EAGLES
STAFF REPORTER
dave_eagles@kamloopsthisweek.com
The Y Women’s Emergency Shelter helps women and children escape violent and abusive situations and aids in transitioning them to a new phase of life. Support from the KTW Christmas Cheer Fund makes a big difference for the centre. To date this year, the Y Women’s Emergency Shelter has supported 52 families and 63 women without children — feeding, housing, clothing and providing support for them. Having worked with the women’s emergency shelter for the past 18 years, Jacquie Brand recently assumed her new role as general manager. “It has been an interesting year,” Brand said. “Just like for everybody else around the world.” She credits her hard-working colleagues for the shelter’s efforts over the past year to help so many people in need. “As much as the women and children we work with are resilient, so are the staff,” Brand said. “We’re really lucky to have some amazing individuals that are present for the women, who are dedicated to the work and the kids.” In March of 2020, when the pandemic first started, the women’s shelter was offered expansion sites, Brand said, which meant they could house children and families in the event they had COVID-19. “It was amazing that we actually had another site where we could put families in and be able to still support the 23 people that we’re funded for,”
Here’s how to help a great cause
Jacquie Brand is general manager of the Y Women’s Emergency Shelter, which to date this year has helped 52 families and 63 women without children. DAVE EAGLES/KTW
Brand said. Since then, the additional expansion site has helped to provide housing when the shelter is at full capacity. Brand said money received through this year’s KTW Christmas Cheer Fund will go toward meeting specific needs of families being helped. It will provide items such as gift cards, medications for allergies or sensitive diets, baby formula and crafts and games for the kids. The organization is also hoping to purchase a few new beds and, at some point, will need a new industrial-size dryer. Brand said the community has been always been phenomenal in its response to need.
“You always are concerned when there are things that happen, like floods and fires and how that’s going to affect the most vulnerable,” Brand said. “Our community, they never even miss a step. They just keep on giving, seeing how much more they can do. Christmas Cheer, I just really like the name because it gives cheer all year long. Not to be too cheesy, but it really does.” Brand said money from the Cheer Fund is what helps nonprofits keep going throughout the year. “And it sometimes can make or break them,” Brand said. For more information on the Y Women’s Emergency Shelter, go online to kamloopsy.org.
Charities being supported this year: Y Women’s Emergency Shelter, Kamloops Brain Injury Association, Chris Rose Therapy Centre for Autism and Kamloops Therapeutic Riding Association. To donate, go online to bcicf.ca/kamloops-this-week-christmascheer-fund. Donations are accepted online thanks to a partnership with the BC Interior Foundation. Donations can also be dropped off at the KTW office, at 1365B Dalhousie Dr. Office hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays. Cheques should be made out to the BC Interior Community Foundation.
THANK YOU, DONORS! VW Turtle Race: $11,000 Tim Shoults: $50 Greg Harris: $25 Nel Sarrasin: $50 Ron & Susan Durant: $100 Dianne Jackson: $50 Anna Evenrude: $50 Willa Dale: $50 Anonymous: 100 John & Val Kemp: $100 Cal & Pat Moulton: $100 Darren, Sharlene & Kyle McIlwain: $158 Anonymous: 50 Darla Flett, in memory of Cheroo Beanut: $50 Anonymous: $100 Kathy Kendall: $200
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
LOCAL NEWS
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THANK YOU, DONORS! From A5 Gerald & Wendy Patrick, in memory of Kelly Patrick: $100 Jo-Mary & Bob Hunter: $200 Susan Peachey: $50 Gwen Mackinder, in memory of friend Sophia: $50 Sharon Langland, in memory of Sharon & David Frampton: $100 Kamloops Old Time Fiddlers: $100 Bryan White: $100 Vic & Sally Mowbray: $100 Anonymous: $200 Rachel Andrews: 50 Ken & Marylyne House: $100 Simone Werstiuk, in memory of Carmen Werstiuk: $100 Lynne Totten: $100 Don & Debby Erickson: $100
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Gary Miller: $100 Brian & Kathy Andriashyk, in memory of Verna Wasylnka: $100 M&W Bronken: $100 Johanna Walters: $25 Rick Bennett: $25 Anna Barton: $50 Lois McAlary, in memory of Sarah McAlary: $150 Sandie & Louise, in memory of Mom, Ross & Carole: $100 Lovely Ladies of the Lake: $200 Wayne & Twink Murphy: $50 Bea Smith: $50 Terry & Doreen Monson: $100 Linda Jackson, in memory of George Wilmot: $100 Norm & Susan McGowan, in memory of Jack Buckham: $100
In memory of Dave & Sandy: $100 Harriett Chave: 100 Sharon Moore, in memory of Tom Moore: $75 Marie & Norio Sakaki: $100 Mavis Paravantes, in memory of Rita Mikuse: $100 M. Colleen Stainton: $200 Anonymous: $300 Anonymous: $100 Anonymous: $25 Anonymous: $100 Anonymous: $500
TOTAL AS OF NOV. 24: $16,683
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
Heat Up Your Holidays!
LOCAL NEWS
SD73 completes survey as part of mandate study SEAN BASS
STAFF REPORTER
sbrady@kamloopsthisweek.com
School District 73 has reported the results of an employee survey on the possibility of a vaccine mandate in the district for teachers and other staff. The board collected information on COVID-19 cases and associated age groups to gauge whether implementing a mandate would be worthwhile, concluding there is enough evidence to support further consideration. That collection of information and the subsequent survey was part of the district’s first step of a five-step process in determining whether to implement a mandate. The report was presented to the SD73 board of education on Nov. 22. It concluded that a vaccination policy would have a significant impact on the district’s ability to adequately
staff its facilities and that a rapid-testing protocol would impose a financial cost to the district. The report found 92 per cent of all district staff are partially or fully vaccinated. That figure comprises a number of employee groups, including teachers (92 to 95 per cent vaccinated), school and district support staff (90 per cent), custodians (79 per cent), bus drivers (81 per cent), grounds and trades workers (85 per cent), IT and communications staff (90 per cent) and administrators (100 per cent). Associate superintendent Shayne Olsen said some employee groups pose greater risk to shortages than others, citing existing struggles in hiring certified education assistants. He said in the current school year, the district has more than 500 unfilled requests for CEAs, noting training to fill vacated positions would take time. Bus drivers are another
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concern. Although the majority of drivers who responded indicated they were partially or fully vaccinated, only 39 per cent of that group responded to the survey. Olsen said finding bus drivers is difficult in Kamloops, but even more difficult in rural areas. Custodians are another group of concern. With 79 per cent indicating their status as vaccinated, the district stands to lose 28 custodians in total if a mandate were to be put in place. “In the short term, it would be unlikely we’d be able to replace that large number of custodians,” Olsen said. As for teachers, the report highlighted concerns over the low number of teachers teaching on call (TTOCs) who are qualified to teach subjects such as tech education and French immersion. In general, though, the district could cover its losses with TTOCs.
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Tyson McNeil-Hay | Partner Our Partners are pleased to welcome Tyson McNeil-Hay to our firm’s Partnership, effective January 1, 2022. Tyson completed his Bachelor of Arts at UBC (2006), then his Master of Arts and Juris Doctor both at Queen's University (2008, 2012). First joining our firm as an articled student, Tyson was called to the bar in 2013, and has since developed a legal practice that focuses on effective dispute resolution, for estates, businesses, and municipal governments. Tyson and his young family spend their winter free time on the slopes, and their summer weekends on the trails and in campgrounds all over the province. His four strong-willed family members help Tyson hone his negotiation skills, even when he’s not at the office! Congratulations Tyson, from all of us at Fulton!
250.372.5542 | law@fultonco.com
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
OPINION
Kamloops This Week is a politically independent newspaper, published Wednesdays at 1365-B Dalhousie Dr., Kamloops, B.C., V2C 5P6 Phone: 250-374-7467 | Fax: 250-374-1033 email: editor@kamloopsthisweek.com
That perplexing prairie home companion
S
he wrinkled her nose as though she smelled something offensive when I told her I was from Abbotsford. We were in North Vancouver’s Avalon Hotel piano bar in the mid1990s, a lounge us 20-somethings called Divorce Court, since it often hosted many older women cupping martinis with ringless fingers. Her reaction was common back then when one crossed the urban/rural divide that was the Port Mann Bridge. That wrinkled nose is also a reflexive bodily action today as people drive through Abbotsford. But that reaction is to the smell of money, as we always said, and you could fine-tune your nostrils to identify which excrement — beef, pork or poultry — was the odour du jour. The smell of money, indeed. In Abbotsford, a bit of manure on the boots meant there was likely money in those jeans, something that divorcée in North Vancouver probably never understood. (It took time, of course. After Sumas Lake was drained in 1924 to create the prairie, tobacco and hops were dominant crops that eventually gave way to more lucrative dairy, beef and poultry operations.) Growing up in Abbotsford, there were certain numbers that were always important. The digits of 1 and 11 were the two highways that took you to far more interesting places. But other numbers were always there to remind you of what can happen, and does happen, again
Sumas Lake before it was drained in 1924. A good read on its history is Chad Reimer’s book, Before We Lost The Lake. THE REACH GALLERY PHOTO
CHRISTOPHER FOULDS Newsroom
MUSINGS and again. In the buckle of the Bible Belt, those numbers are 1894, 1948, 1972, 1990, 1999 and, now, of course, 2021. Those numbers remind you Mother Nature can reclaim what is hers any time she wishes. Every person reading these words has likely been nourished at some point by what has sprouted on Sumas Prairie, be it cheese, chicken or milk. The famous berries of Abbotsford are generally grown elsewhere and are not subject to the flooding that has now absorbed all of that rich agricultural land. Blueberries are largely found on another prairie — Matsqui — which is on the other side of the growing city, to the north as you go toward Mission. The famous strawberries and raspberries are generally cultivated on higher land farther west of Sumas Prairie, on the south side of Highway 1, in fields extending all the way to the Canada-U.S. border. In school, from elementary all the way to secondary, us city kids
Robert W. Doull President Aberdeen Publishing Inc. EDITORIAL Publisher: Robert W. Doull Editor: Christopher Foulds Newsroom staff: Dave Eagles Marty Hastings Jessica Wallace Sean Brady Michael Potestio SALES STAFF: Linda Skelly, Jodi Lawrence, Liz Spivey Paul De Luca
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would learn with the Sumas Prairie kids. When the bell rang, we’d walk home and the farm kids would be driven down the hill to their farmhouses on vast tracts of land. I suppose they had chores to do while we played street hockey until dinner was ready. The names of those farm families still resonate: the Verdonks, the Fooks, the Lamsons, the Campbells. The family farm of the iconic mayor of Abbotsford, George Ferguson, who led the city for three decades, is on that prairie. That same prairie has also been the scene of tragedy, heroism and horror. There have been countless accidents, numerous fires and, of course, far too many floods. There was the great blizzard of December 1996, in which those farm families saved lives by pulling into their homes stranded travellers stuck in a few feet of snow amid vicious winds and freezing temperatures. That prairie was also the scene of perhaps the most gruesome murder case I’ve ever covered in
court as a reporter, a killing involving a jealous, estranged husband, a not quite fully dead wife and the severing of the latter’s limbs and their disposal into a manure pit, where the acid did its work to make the physical evidence disappear. But that prairie was also the playground of many city kids, the destination of an achingly long hot summer’s day bike ride to visit the slough in Hougen Park, diving into which, in retrospect, probably wasn’t the healthiest decision. It wasn’t until we were older when we learned that to get this rich prairie, something had to be taken. We now know Sumas Prairie is only there because the lake was removed, a lake that was for centuries of vital importance to the Sumas First Nation. We went to school with kids from that reserve. They were from Kilgard, which is on the lower south side of Sumas Mountain overlooking the prairie. We would all play in the schoolyard in the city, the prairie and its liquid ancestor never part of the
conversation. As we got older and read a bit more, we understood something was taken from them so we could have milk with those bedtime cookies. Our history tells of an annoyingly wide and shallow lake good for nothing more than breeding mosquitoes. Their history, that of the Neds, the Silvers and the Isaacs, tells of a vital food source and transportation link. JD Archer’s article on the fascinating Vancouver Traces website tells us that, prior to the lake’s drainage, the Sto:lo people enjoyed its bounty of salmon, sturgeon, waterfowl, elk and deer. Archer notes there were at least four villages around the lake, including, ingeniously, one built on platforms in the middle of the water to provide refuge from mosquitos. But at the turn of the 20th century, more than 100 years ago, talk by European settlers of draining the lake for agricultural purposes drew this warning from Sumas First Nation Chief Ned as he spoke to the McKenna-McBride Commission. As Archer notes, Ned said, “I am against the diking because that will mean more starvation for us.” Think of that irony when you see empty grocery store shelves due in part to the return, however temporarily, of Sumas Lake. editor@kamloopsthisweek.com Twitter: @ChrisJFoulds
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Robert W. Doull President Aberdeen Publishing Inc. Tim Shoults Operations manager Aberdeen Publishing Inc.
Circulation 250-374-0462
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
OPINION
A9
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
A HUGE THANK YOU FED UP WITH LACK OF ACTION TO THE SAVIOURS Editor: Having read in Kamloops This Week about the wonderful community service awards presented by the city, I feel it necessary to also applaud the many special groups for their astounding work this past firestorm summer. While we continue to give heartfelt thanks to our medical teams, firefighters and frontline workers for their efforts this past summer, we must also thank the volunteers, who are busy again helping flood victims due to the unprecedented rainstorm and associated damage on Nov. 14 and Nov. 15. Volunteers with Kamloops Emergency Support Service (ESS) worked thousands of hours between June 29 and Oct. 5, supporting wildfire evacuees. Along with Kamloops ESS, volunteers from St. John Ambulance and its therapy dog program, Disaster
Editor: point. City council is the body that It is less and less safe to walk in Re: Kamloops Coun. Dale Bass’s approves permits and uses for prop- the downtown area, day or night. Oct. 24 View From City Hall colerties in the city. We need far more supervision of umn (‘Pose your queries to the right So, as a taxpayer, if I am not Psychosocial Services, the these shelters and such supervision people’): happy with the proposed use of that should be a mandate of city council. SPCA and Canadian Disaster I think Bass has missed the point. building, it would be city council I Animal Response Team helped I only speak here of the downThe citizens of Kamloops elect a would address. at the reception centre. town area, as I know it, but I’m sure mayor and council to run the city I do note the city’s purchase of We ordinary citizens owe residents of North Kamloops feel the in the best interests of the electorthe Northbridge Hotel was conveall of those people massive same. ate. I fail to see how supplying a list niently left off Bass’s list. gratitude. I also disagree with Bass when I have lost count of hotel and Jenny John of emails for provincial and federal she states people are angry. I think motels, arenas, constructed shelters, they are just fed up with the ongoKamloops politicians and agencies in any way relieves city council of those respon- temporary shelters, rooms in aparting situation and frustrated with city sibilities. ment buildings and now three more council’s lack of caring to do anyEditor: Her reference to the Fortune planned shelters. I would like to thank the thing about it. Motel and who owns it and what In one way or another, the city community of Kamloops for Larry Stickney they are doing with it is not the has a say in all of these. taking in and supporting the Kamloops residents of Merritt during the flood evacuations. From the volunteers helping at the ESS registration centre and assisting us with supassistance? There must were hoarding. plies, to the hotels that had to Editor: I want to say how be many families who I hope those who quickly house everyone, to the were waiting for their gorged themselves at many local businesses that are disgusted and appalled money to buy food for the tills feel good sitting also helping, please know it is I was at the behaviour their children, only to on their mountains of very much appreciated and we of some Kamloops To read more residents who cleared find shelves stripped bread, milk and veggies are so very thankful. letters to the out grocery shelves last bare by panic-buyers. while some children may Kamloops is a great city editor, go to week. Children may have have gone without. with community pride and kamloops The selfishness is had to go to school with Shame on them. spirit. thisweek.com no fruit, milk or sandLinda Bachmann Kevin Baxter unbelievable. What wiches because people Kamloops Merritt about people on income
SHAME ON THOSE WHO HOARDED FOOD
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A10
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
LOCAL NEWS
Sale of pulp mill part of merger approval The Domtar pulp mill is on Mission Flats Road in Kamloops. It is one of the largest employers in the city, with a workforce of about 350 and a property tax bill of approximately $5 million per year. KTW FILE PHOTO
JESSICA WALLACE
STAFF REPORTER
jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com
Kamloops Mayor Ken Christian said he will be waiting to see who buys the pulp mill, which will not occur until 2022. While the merger of Domtar and Paper Excellence has been approved by the Competition Bureau of Canada, part of the approval means the Kamloops pulp mill must be sold to a third party. On May 11, 2021, Paper Excellence and Domtar, based in Montreal and Fort Mill, S.C., reached an agreement for Richmond-based Paper Excellence to purchase Domtar for $55.50 per share, a deal worth about $3 billion in United States currency. “I had every confidence in Domtar,” Christian said, “I had confidence in Paper
Excellence and now we’ll see who the new buyer is and, once we have that established, I want to meet with them because there is a number of initiatives that we have ongoing with the Domtar management team and we want to make sure that those will continue.” Christian noted “land
initiatives,” about which he could not speak, but also mill improvements and changes to the city’s property tax formula. The mill pays about $5 million per year in property taxes, which Christian equated to about a four per cent tax increase for every home in the city.
“One of the things that we’ve been talking to them a lot, and we’ve been working with them to lobby the government on, is chip supply,” he said. “We’ve also been working with them on a lot of their climate and environmental initiatives and we’ve been working with them on some of their energy initiatives. I’m confident that it’s probably a good buy for someone who is looking for a pulp mill. It’s well run and they have a very stable kind of workforce. I think it would be pretty sought after.” The Competition Bureau of Canada has concluded that the merger would likely lessen competition substantially for
the purchase of wood fibre — a key input in the manufacture of pulp — from the Thompson/ Okanagan region. As a result, the bureau has determined the proposed transaction is anti-competitive because it would enable Paper Excellence to pay lower than competitive prices to sawmills and other suppliers of wood fibre in a region where Paper Excellence already has a high concentration of pulp mills. To resolve the bureau’s concerns, Paper Excellence has agreed to sell Domtar’s Kamloops pulp mill following its acquisition. The bureau said the sale will be made to an independent purchaser to be approved by the Commissioner of Competition. The pulp mill on Mission Flats Road is one of the city’s largest employers, with about 350 employees.
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www.kamloopsthisweek.com
A11
LOCAL NEWS
Vaccines approved for kids ages five to 11 FOLLOWING A RIGOROUS REVIEW, THE VACCINE HAS PROVEN TO BE SAFE AND EFFECTIVE FOR CHILDREN KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK
A COVID-19 vaccine for children ages five to 11 has been approved by Health Canada. The approval means that approximately 360,000 children will soon be able to get vaccinated. In a statement, provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix said following a rigorous review, the vaccine has proven to be safe and effective. Recent case data shows the two age groups that have seen the highest rates of infection in the province are five- to eight-year-olds and nine- to 11-yearolds — though both have fallen sharply since early October, when they spiked at a rate of about 40 cases per 100,000. Other age groups averaged about 23 per 100,000 or lower during that peak. The age group up to four years, meanwhile, has tracked with most other age groups throughout the pandemic. “While children are at a lower risk of severe disease from COVID-19, it can
still result in serious outcomes in some children, including hospitalization and long-term symptoms,” reads the statement from the two top B.C. health officials. COVID-19 cases among school-aged children have caused a number of interruptions in schools, with school exposure notifications being a regular occurrence throughout the 2020-2021 and 2021-2022 school years. Currently, Kamloops has exposure notifications for five schools across 12 days in November. Those deemed close contacts in exposures often have to stay home and wait to see if symptoms will arise, and recovery from infections could take weeks. Parents are encouraged to register their children using the same system they used to receive their COVID-19 vaccine. To register, go online to getvaccinated.gov.bc.ca or call 1-833838-2323. To date, 75,000 childre have been registered in the system.
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A12
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
LOCAL NEWS
TRU investigating multi-person complaint 13 CURRENT, FORMER EMPLOYEES CITE MYRIAD ALLEGATIONS AGAINST TWO SENIOR EXECUTIVES JESSICA WALLACE
The response from the university
STAFF REPORTER
jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com
T
hompson Rivers University’s board of governors has initiated an investigation after a number of current and former employees — at least 13 — filed a complaint against two senior administrators. The complaint alleges discriminatory conduct, discriminatory statements and/or harassment on the part of Matt Milovick, the university’s vice-president of finance and administration, and Larry Phillips, the university’s associate vice-president of people and culture. The complaint alleges incidents of sexual harassment of female servers, misogynistic references to women and disparagment of Indigenous people at TRU and in the community, among other purported incidents. None of the allegations in the complaint have been proven as the university’s investigation into the matter continues. On Feb. 8 of this year, an anonymous complaint was made to the board, whic is currently composed of TRU’s chancellor (Nathan Matthew), president and vice-chancellor (Brett Fairbairn), eight people appointed by the province (Hee-Young Chung, Katy Gottfriedson, Jim Hamilton, Kathy Humphrey, Kathy Kendall, Lillian Kwan, Chief Jimmy Lulua and Marilyn McLean), two faculty members (Tracy Christianson and Hasnat Dewan), two students (Adam Burke and Bhavika Jain) and one person elected by non-faculty university employees (Jasmine Haskell). It is responsible for overseeing university affairs.
Matt Milovick is vice-president of finance and administration at TRU.
Larry Phillips is TRU’s associate vice-president of people and culture.
Kamloops This Week received a copy of that complaint, which was sent from the email address “truwhistleblower@protonmail.com” to the board of governors and signed by “concerned members of the TRU community in solidarity with the complainants.” Between February and November, KTW interviewed many of the complainants, who detailed their experiences. KTW has agreed to withhold their identities as they fear career repercussions. KTW will not publish specifics of the complaints at this time. KTW contacted Milovick for comment. “Having just received the Terms of Reference yesterday (Nov. 21), I understand that the TRU board of governors will begin or has begun a confidential investigation into my professional conduct. I welcome the opportunity to fully participate in this process. I will not be making any further comments at this time,” he said. KTW called Phillips, but could not connect as messages were left with each other. Thompson Rivers University associate law professor Charis Kamphuis has been supporting
the group of complainants. She is not being paid by the complainants, nor is she the group’s lawyer. Kamphuis said she first had questions about Phillips following work by her spouse in the 20182019 school year assessing university policies and practices with respect to human rights, equity and inclusion. Milovick and Phillips are among the highest-ranking officials at the university. Milovick leads TRU’s administrative operations and, on the university’s organizational chart, is one step down from the top, a slot occupied by president and vice-chancellor Fairbairn. Milovick manages TRU’s $238-million budget. Phillips oversees hiring and firing of a university with 2,000-plus employees, including faculty, support staff and administration. He is also responsible for championing values across the institution. Kamphuis said she is supporting the complainants and speaking out due to concern about the investigation that is underway and a desire for accountability.
In response to a request for comment, Thompson Rivers University provided this statement to KTW: Soon after the allegations were received via an anonymous email, an independent sub-committee was established to investigate this issue. The sub-committee, which has operated at arm’s length to ensure that impartiality and objectivity are upheld, has been investigating this matter with the guidance of an independent investigator, as well as an independent Indigenous investigator, along with legal counsel. “TRU takes such matters very seriously. The sub-committee acted quickly and went to great lengths to ensure that all these independent resources have extensive experience handling similar matters, while having no prior relationships with TRU,” said Marilyn McLean, chair of the board of governors at TRU. “Furthermore, the sub-committee has worked together with the independent and Indigenous investigators and legal counsel to put all appropriate and defensible safeguards in place for the complainants, in order to the maintain the integrity of the investigation.” Throughout this process, the sub-committee has remained fully cognizant of the need for privacy, for those against whom the allegations have been levelled, as well as for the complainants. Given the serious nature of the allegations, the sub-committee has followed, and will continue to follow, a methodical process where independent investigators gather information from complainants and follow-up with complainants to ensure the information the investigators have collected is accurate. “At this time, these allegations need to be proven, confirmed and substantiated. Until such time as the investigation is complete and the findings and recommendations are made, it would be unfair and unjust for any action to be taken against these individuals,” indicated McLean. TRU is committed to having the investigation conducted in a comprehensive, objective, impartial, safe, confidential and fair manner and within an appropriate time frame. It is expected that the sub-committee will reach its findings in the first quarter of the new year. However, the investigation will continue until such time as the investigators feel they have exhausted all avenues and, if required, may extend beyond the first quarter of 2022. “While expediency is important, thoroughness is equally important, which means that the process will not be rushed if that will sacrifice or compromise the sub-committee’s ability to fully investigate these allegations,” added McLean.
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
A13
LOCAL NEWS
Complainants, TRU at odds over anonymity Thompson Rivers University associate law professor Charis Kamphuis has been supporting the group of complainants. She is not being paid by the complainants, nor is she the group’s lawyer.
From A12
Kamphuis said problems with the investigation include a refusal to exclude Fairbairn and general counsel John Sparks, who she maintains are in a conflict of interest. Kamphuis also cited intimidating correspondence, months’ worth of delays, limiting access to the final investigation report to a board of governors sub-committee and refusal to protect complainant anonymity. “We’re talking about allegations that there is a toxic culture at the highest level of the university and allegations that the governance, or the accountability measures, to address that have not functioned properly, so, I think, the broader community has an interest in ensuring this investigation is done well,” Kamphuis said. “And that, if there are findings of misconduct, accountability occurs.” Kamphuis has spoken to 13 complainants. She said she does not know most of the complainants, noting the majority of the complainants do not know one another. Seven or eight of the complainants were involved in the investigation by TRU at the time KTW spoke to Kamphuis, while others were considering. Some complainants declined participation after a request for anonymity was denied by the university. Correspondence from former board of governors chair Barbara
Berger — who was one of three board of governors members on a sub-committee overseeing the complaint — to the concerned members in support of the complainants expressed concern about the group’s desire for anonymity. On April 1, Berger wrote that it is “problematic” that the group remains anonymous. “We have informed you of our position on continued anonymity — i.e., that anonymity is not required to ensure a fair, traumainformed process and nor is it appropriate as it fails entirely to respect the rights of the respondents or to allow for a proper investigation,” Berger wrote. An April 27 response from the concerned members stated: “From the perspective of the complain-
ants, you continue to impose barriers to a safe and accessible investigation that accounts for the complainants’ diverse circumstances, vulnerabilities, legitimate fear of retaliation, and the psychological impacts of the misconduct they have witnessed. “There is an unequal power relationship between the complainants on one side and the respondents and TRU on the other, yet you insist on treating the respondents and the complainants as equals in your design of the process.” Furthermore, the email noted: “There is widespread societal recognition that traditional institutional complaint and oversight mechanisms do not work. It is common for victims to remain
silent or leave the organization, and for perpetrators to remain in positions of power. “This societal problem is evidenced by the fact that situations of abuse and misconduct have persisted for many years in many Canadian institutions, as reported by the media in recent years. Thus, the systemic problem at hand is not one of fabricated allegations, but rather the silence and fear of victims and the impunity of perpetrators.” Berger wrote back in May, stating the board of governors and sub-committee had retained Vancouver-based lawyer, Jennifer Wiegele of Mathews Dinsdale and Clark LLP, to provide independent legal advice, noting communication to follow would come from
the lawyer. Terms of reference outlining the investigation underway state confidentiality would be maintained when reasonably possible, but that “anonymity cannot be guaranteed.” Complainants who spoke to KTW expressed fear of personal and professional ramifications and pointed to Phillips and Milovick being well-connected in Kamloops and their continued work at the university during the investigation. Kamphuis said the complainants went to the board of governors because multiple people initially voiced concerns about Phillips and Milovick directly to TRU president Fairbairn. “And what I’ve heard from those complainants, what we learned, is that the concerns they expressed were not investigated,” Kamphuis said. “And that there was little or no follow-up. Furthermore, Larry was promoted to the position of AVP people and culture after both Matt, the VP finance who he reports to, and the president were aware of serious concerns and complaints. So those pieces were obviously of great concern. “The other thing that we learned is that, in some cases, people who expressed concerns have been dismissed and, in some cases, they had been, as part of their severance agreement, made to sign a non-disparagement agreement, so an agreement that says that they basically, for the rest of their life, won’t speak negatively about TRU in any forum.”
Turn to page A14 for details on what is in the TRU investigation’s terms of reference and for more information on NDAs (non-disparagement agreements)
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A14
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
LOCAL NEWS
The TRU investigation terms of reference JESSICA WALLACE
STAFF REPORTER
jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com
KTW has reviewed a copy of the investigation’s terms of reference, which details the process of the investigation by Thompson Rivers University’s board of governors into the complainants’ allegations. The terms of reference state that, following the complaint in February of this year, the board of governors struck a sub-committee to address the matter. The sub-committee was composed
of former board of governors chair Barb Berger, Nathan Matthew and Marilyn McLean (current board chair), but Berger’s term on the TRU board of governors has since expired. The subcommittee then appointed an independent representative with no previous ties to TRU — Jennifer Wiegele of Mathews Dinsdale and Clark LLP — to assist in retaining lawyers Kelly Serbu of Serbu Law Firm Limited and Sharon Cartmill-Lane of Pearlman Lindholm LLP, who would investigate. According to the terms of reference, the investigation would
occur through two stages. First, it would include an initial inquiry focused on collecting information to determine the scope of the investigation. Complainants could meet with the investigators either virtually or in person over a 30-day period, beginning on Aug. 16. That process, however, has faced delays After receiving the details, the terms of reference state the investigators would assess the alleged conduct and commentary in the context of the BC Human Rights Code, TRU’s Values and
Vision Plan, the memorandum of understanding between TRU and Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc, TRU’s equity, diversity and inclusion action plan, TRU’s respectful workplace and harassment prevention policy, TRU’s sexualized violence policy, TRU’s whistleblower policy and the BC Workers’ Compensation Act and Worksafe BC Occupational Safety and Health policies respecting bullying and harassment. Kamphuis said the investigators are currently interviewing complainants. She does not know when the process was expected to conclude.
Waiving NDAs a victory for complainants STAFF REPORTER
jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com
Thompson Rivers University law professor Charis Kamphuis said she is aware of more than one non-disparagement agreement connected to one of the complainants. The law professor explained such agreements are typically used by the private sector to protect company trade secrets when employees leave to go to competitor organizations. However, Kamphuis noted,
NDAs are problematic in holding people to account because they intimidate individuals and prevent them from speaking out about what happened. University of Windsor law professor Julie Macfarlane has launched a campaign called “Can’t buy my silence” to ban NDAs in the context of discrimination and harassment allegations and legislation has been tabled in Prince Edward Island to prohibit or limit agreements in that context. The goal is to put forward similar legislation in every
province in Canada. NDAs have been criticized amidst the #MeToo movement since stories broke about disgraced film mogul Harvey Weinstein, who had for years been rumoured to be abusing women trying to make it in Hollywood and used NDAs as a tool behind which to hide. Since the allegations came to light, via reporting in the New York Times and the New Yorker, including through the breaking of NDAs, Weinstein has been convicted of rape and is in prison.
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investigation was the board’s decision to waive NDAs, which meant their existence could be disclosed and the allegations could be discussed. Without that waiver, those individuals would not have been able to participate in the investigation. Nine months after the first complaint was lodged, however, Kamphuis said she wonders how many others have since been silenced and what potential harm has been done to those who continue to work at TRU.
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Kamphuis called NDAs a “problematic legal device” — even more so when it comes to public institutions. “It’s student tuition and taxpayer money that is being used to finance these agreements,” Kamphuis said. “In my view, the fact that we know that this practice has occurred at TRU raises a very serious duty on the board of governors to review the practice and to enact a policy to prohibit it.” One major victory for the complainants in the TRU
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
LOCAL NEWS
Downtown levy hike on way? JESSICA WALLACE
STAFF REPORTER
jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com
Downtown business owners are being asked to approve a 26 per cent increase in levies over five years for the Kamloops Central Business Improvement Association. The increase impacts businesses and light industrial between Columbia Street and the South Thompson River and between First Avenue and 10th Avenue. KCBIA president Dino Bernardo said the increase is due to inflation costs and a new requirement by the city to provide audited year-end reports. Bernardo said the new audited reports will cost the non-profit $5,000, equating to 7.5 per cent of the increase. The remaining 18.5 equates to the cost of inflation for wages and putting on events, such as the Santa Claus Parade and the Fourth Avenue Plaza initiative. Inflation this year has been estimated to be between four and five
per cent. Meanwhile, the KCBIA levies fund wages for an executive director, marketing co-ordinator, front desk staff and the CAP team. Insurance has also increased. Some are questioning the increase. Kamloops Voters Society member Leslie Lax criticized city council for a lack of discussion when a bylaw to authorize the levy increase was read at an Oct. 19 meeting. The bylaw was read for the first three times. In effect, it launched a petition process by which impacted downtown property owners who are opposed can sign within 30 days. City of Kamloops corporate services director Kathy Humphrey said the city collects the levies on behalf of the KCBIA, but it does not determine the KCBIA budget. The levy is charged through a line item on property taxes to class five and class six owners, which is commercial and light industrial. The boundary of the KCBIA levy is not proposed to change. For the renewal of the KCBIA levy
to not proceed, a majority of owners, representing at least 50 per cent of the parcels and at least 50 per cent of the assessed value of land and improvements subject to the levy, must submit petitions within a 30-day period. Kent Taylor is part owner of the Big Boot Inn building downtown and operates a business out of the second floor on that building. He said the levy hike looks big, but it noted depends on how it is calculated. Twenty-six per cent is a big number, Taylor said, but the costs are minimal per building. Bernardo noted his levy will increase by $90 over five years. Taylor said it is “manageable” when weighing the cost and the benefits. He noted the Christmas Storybook presentation last year, which drew people downtown through the holidays. He said the downtown core has problems with homelessness and any initiatives that help to bring families, shoppers and building tenants into the core is worth the added cost.
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
LOCAL NEWS This city-owned parcel of land at the east end of Kingston Avenue in North Kamloops — under the Halston Bridge and adjacent to Rivers Trail — will be used for a homeless shelter as part of a three-shelter plan by BC Housing and the City of Kamloops. KTW PHOTO
Kingston shelter proposal creating a storm the province is invoking a legislative tool called “paramountcy” to bypass the process. BC Housing is planning to build a shelter on city land at the east end of Kingston Avenue, a dead-end portion under the Halston Bridge that meets Rivers
JESSICA WALLACE
STAFF REPORTER
jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com
Some residents are upset they were not consulted in advance of a shelter announced on Kingston Avenue in North Kamloops and
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Trail that connects Schubert Drive to Westmount. BC Housing is also planning shelters in the former Greyhound building in Southgate and the former Stuart Wood elementary downtown. Westmount resident Dennis Hayes said he represents 20 to 25 Westmount residents who fear impacts on homes, businesses, elementary schools, Rivers Trail and park space. Hayes said BC Housing should have come to the neighbourhood and detailed plans, which could be in place for five years. “It’s not the way things should be done,” he said. BC Housing senior communications advisor Sophie Carrigan Gray cited in an email statement insufficient time for consultation. She said neighbours and business owners have since been notified,
adding that BC Housing and the city are planning neighbourhood information sessions. City of Kamloops CAO David Trawin told KTW residents have made it clear they do not want shelters in their neighbourhoods. “Because we know what everyone thinks about every location,” Trawin said. “Right? There is no good location.” Trawin said the city has been pushing the province because Memorial Arena is currently being used as a shelter and the city wants the recreational facility returned to its intended use. In addition, Trawin said winter is approaching and the city is short about 90 shelter spaces. Trawin said someone without shelter died on the streets during a recent cold snap. Trawin said the province indicated it did not have time for rezoning — and the public hearing process that would have given citizens a chance to voice opposition — or NEW MAGAZINES FOR EVERYONE! permits and, as a result, the province asked the city if it opposed use of paramountcy 743 VICTORIA ST • 250-377-8808 for the Kingston Avenue property. Municipalities are given power by the province to zone, permit and more, but the province can overCorrection Notice ride local government bylaws In the circular beginning Wednesday, November 24, 2021, we through a legislative tool featured some items that, due to the ongoing global freight called paramountcy. issues, we are unsure of when we will have these items in “I believe the letter back stock. Those items are: from the mayor was, ‘Well, ● 7.5 ft. Pre-Lit Augusta Cashmere Pine Tree at the if you feel you need to use Introductory Offer of $154.99. ● 80/20 Quilt Batting by Loops & Threads™ paramountcy to get these on sale for 17.99, Reg. 28.99. projects done in time to meet ● 30” x 40” Shadow Box by Studio Décor® the goals on that, then you on sale for 74.99, Reg. 199.99. need to do what you need to We apologize for any inconvenience do,’” Trawin said. this may have caused.
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Kamloops Mayor Ken Christian could not be contacted by press deadline. Council voted to authorize lease of city land on Kingston Avenue to BC Housing. The vote happened during a closed meeting and the decision has yet to be released. Trawin could not detail the vote, but said the decision was not unanimous. Coun. Denis Walsh said he supports the Greyhound and Stuart Wood shelter locations, but noted he voted against the Kingston Avenue shelter proposal. Walsh said North Kamloops is overloaded with high-risk housing and the project interferes with economic development in the area. Walsh added that council heard a property owner is backing off plans for industrial development since the shelter announcement. The question remains: Why was BC Housing caught flatfooted when the number of street individuals was known back in April and winter comes every year? Hayes said Kamloops should follow the City of Penticton, which is standing up to BC Housing through the courts. Walsh agreed. “We should push back as a council,” he said. Coun. Dale Bass, however, said the city can’t tell BC Housing what to do. “Municipal governments are creations of the provincial governments, so they answer to the provincial governments,” Bass said. “So, yeah, Penticton can take them to court, but does that mean they’re going to win? Doubtful …”
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
A17
LOCAL NEWS
Kamloops dentist permanently barred from sedating patients MICHAEL POTESTIO
LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE
michael@kamloopsthisweek.com
A Kamloops dental surgeon disciplined for improperly sedating a young woman during a routine operation, leaving her with a lifelong severe brain injury, is now permanently banned from sedating patients due to infractions in 2019. In 2015, Dr. Bobby Rishiraj was suspended from his practice for three months by the College of Dental Surgeons of B.C. and ordered to pay a fine of $50,000 and costs of $50,891.30. The reprimand came after a botched procedure in November 2012 during a wisdom teeth removal procedure involving an 18-year-old patient. Hamu Zindoga went into cardiac arrest during the procedure and, according to evidence given in the disciplinary hearing from a paramedic, stopped breathing due to a piece of gauze blocking her airway. Zindoga and her mother, Evelyn, have since moved to Ontario, where Zindoga is being cared for. Her mother later filed a malpractice suit against Rishiraj and his dental assistant. During the college’s 2015 hearing, it was determined Rishiraj administered deep sedation to Zindoga when
neither he nor the facility were authorized to do so. It found Rishiraj failed to recognize his patient went into cardiac arrest in a timely manner, delayed resuscitative measures and failed to monitor Zindoga and other patients during sedation. The college also found Rishiraj ran his practice in a manner designed to treat as many patients as possible in a short time period. In making its penalty ruling, the college noted the review panel was troubled by the case. In the report, it noted there were “many disturbing elements of Dr. Rishiraj’s conduct that raise concerns about his character.” In addition to the financial penalties from the 2015 incident, Rishiraj was ordered to provide only moderate sedation services to patients for five years and agree to the college monitoring and inspecting his practice at any time without notice. That led to this latest reprimand. According to a decision posed to the college’s website on Nov. 17, Rishiraj admitted he provided sedation services at the facility when it was not in compliance with the college’s standards and guidelines, avoiding a disciplinary hearing scheduled for February 2022.
Rishiraj was fined another $25,000 and ordered to pay $4,000 to the college for the investigation. He greed to permanently cease providing any level of sedation services at any dental facility in B.C. Rishiraj is now banned from managing sedation services at his practice, but can continue on as operator or director of the facility. Rishiraj owns and operates Kamloops Oral Surgery and Implant Centre. In April of 2019, deficiencies were identified during an inspection of the facility by a college committee, resulting in a subsequent visit. In June of 2019, the college accepted an undertaking from Rishiraj that he would not provide any level of sedation in the facility until the matter was resolved. Included in Rishiraj’s subsequent admission was that he failed to adequately maintain sedation records for his patients and failed to perform and record required pre-operative assessments or record the patient’s level of consciousness. He also did not ensure the facility staff that assisted with moderate sedation were appropriately qualified or trained, improperly stored and logged restricted drugs and did not conduct mock emergency drills as required.
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Development of a Pest Management Plan (PMP) Southern Interior Area Forest Health Program PMP: 2022-2027 Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development (FLNRORD) 441 Columbia Street, Kamloops, B.C. V2C 2T3 Contact: Lorraine Maclauchlan Phone: 250 319-4262 The use of pesticides is intended within the area to which the pest management plan applies. The area to which the PMP applies is surrounding or near Kamloops, Cache Creek, Lytton, Lillooet, Merritt, Princeton, Kelowna, Vernon, Salmon Arm, Clearwater. The duration of the pest management plan is from 2022 to 2027. The pesticides proposed to be used under the pest management plan include: Trade Name
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Airlines add flights at YKA KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK
The weather-related closures of many highways between Kamloops and the Lower Mainland has led to additional flights out of Kamloops Airport. Air Canada, WestJet, Central Mountain Air and Pacific Coastal Airlines have all added flights and, in some cases, brought in larger aircraft as air travel has become
the only way to get to the Lower Mainland without delays and detours. Specifics on additional flights and costs involved can be found on the websites of the airlines: • Air Canada: aircanada. com • WestJet: westjet.com • Central Mountain Air: flycma.com • Pacific Coastal Airlines: pacificcoastal.com.
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The pesticides proposed for use under the pest management plan will be applied by air using fixedwing or rotary wing aircraft (e.g. AT-802F Air Tractors, Ag Cats, Hiller 12E, Lama) equipped with spray booms having a minimum of 4 Beecomist or 4 A.U. 4000 micronair atomizers (or equivalent). No treatment sites are currently proposed. Separate notification will be conducted showing any proposed treatment sites planned for 2022 in the area under the plan. Copies of the proposed pest management plan may be examined at the following FLNRORD offices: •
Thompson Okanagan Region, 441 Columbia Street, Kamloops, B.C. V2C 2T3
•
Cariboo Region, 400 - 640 Borland Street, Williams Lake, B.C. V2G 4T1
•
Kootenay Boundary Region, 625 Front Street, Nelson, B.C. V1L 4B6
Or from the B.C. government website: https://bit.ly/3BZhkLB A person wishing to contribute information about a proposed treatment site, relevant to the development of the PMP, may send copies of the information to the applicant at the address above within 30 days of the publication of this notice.
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
A19
LOCAL NEWS
KSAR SUSPENDS SEARCH FOR SHANNON WHITE MICHAEL POTESTIO
LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE
michael@kamloopsthisweek.com
Kamloops Search and Rescue (KSAR) has suspended its search efforts for missing woman Shannon White after amassing some 3,000 hours in the past two weeks, scouring forested areas north and west of the city. The 32-year-old White was last seen the morning of Nov. 1 when she left her basement suite home on Bestwick Court in Lower Sahali to drive to work at Kamloops Hyundai, a dealership two kilometres away on Notre Dame Drive in Southgate. Her 1997 Jeep TJ was found the next afternoon, Nov. 2, abandoned downtown in the 200-block of Nicola Street. Kamloops police have since learned the vehicle was spotted twice on Nov. 1 — first driving west on the Trans-Canada Highway shortly after White was supposed to have arrived at work at 8:30 a.m., leaving town for a 45-minute period, then travelling north on Highway 5, passing by Rayleigh at about 5:30 p.m. before returning south at about 6:15 p.m. The developments led police and KSAR
to search for White daily in unspecified areas west and north of Kamloops, with this past weekend’s final searched focused on the Heffley Creek area, according to Kamloops RCMP. Kamloops Search and Rescue manager Alan Hobler said the team is burned out and, after finding no sign of White following one last major search effort over the weekend, KSAR’s operations have been suspended pending any new information that comes to light. “It’s completely unprecedented how hard we searched,” Hobler said, noting searches were conduced every day, except for one day, dating back to Nov. 10, with about 3,000 search hours accumulated. The decision to recommend halting KSAR efforts ultimately came from the RCMP, Hobler said, noting it would have also been search and rescue’s recommendation due to a number of factors. At this point, the likelihood of searchers getting hurt is higher than the likelihood of finding something, Hobler told KTW. “Searchers get tired and, when searchers get tired, the higher the likelihood of injuries, as well,” Hobler said. There’s also the recent snowfall in the areas searched as snow makes the
probability of finding something lower and the likelihood of missing something much higher. Hobler said the team has extensively searched both areas RCMP requested KSAR to search. “Not to say that something [hasn’t] been missed — that’s always a possibility — but the effort to continue versus the probability of finding something is quite a bit lower now,” he said. Hobler said KSAR deployed varied and thorough techniques, noting it used search dogs and “some of the best search managers in the province to help profiling and find locations to look.” “Basically, it’s beating the bushes,” he said. “It’s a lot of people, longer days. Just shortly after dawn to dusk, they’ve been out.” While KSAR’s search efforts are now suspended, the RCMP may still continue to search, Hobler said. He said the case is potentially a homicide investigation, but noted he is not at liberty to disclose the exact locations of the searches as that information must come from the RCMP. Hobler said KSAR had 50 personnel out searching on the first day,
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west of Kamloops. On the weekend of Nov. 13 and Nov. 14, police received the tip placing White’s vehicle north of the city. Hobler said while that “shifted gears” somewhat for KSAR, both areas were searched and considered by the RCMP as “high probability locations” of finding White, based on information police have gathered. RCMP CLEAR SILVER SAGE Kamloops RCMP are no longer searching a trailer at the Silver Sage Trailer Park on the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc reserve. RCMP Const. Crystal Evelyn confirmed to KTW officers have released the scene. On Nov. 12, Kamloops RCMP issued a press release regarding its appearance at Silver Sage, but according to one resident of the park, police arrived two days earlier, on Nov. 10, and had a presence until about Nov. 16. The trailer, KTW has learned, belonged to an ex-boyfriend of White’s, with whom she had a tumultuous relationship. They broke up about a year ago, friends of White’s have said.
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
LOCAL NEWS
How to help evacuees in Kamloops KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK
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The City of Kamloops is urging residents wishing to help Merritt not to send donations to its emergency support service centre on McArthur Island. The ESS reception centre is unable to accept donations as it is not set up with the means and capacity to receive, sort and store items, said Carmin Mazzotta, Kamloops’ social, housing and community development manager. “We are overwhelmed with the outpouring of support from residents to provide donations and encourage residents to direct donations to local non-profit and charitable organizations,” Mazzotta said. An ESS reception centre is set up to provide for immediate essential needs of people affected by a disaster, including food,
lodging, clothing, emotional support and family reunification. The Kamloops ESS is also handing out a variety of vouchers for food and gasoline, in addition to accommodations, including ones for locals who are billeting Merritt evacuees. Those who wish to help should send donations of cash, food, gas cards or gift cards to the Kamloops Food Bank, other local non-profits, such as the United Way, or local thrift stores. People can also register to volunteer at Kamloops.ca/ESS. Residents of Merritt who have been evacuated due to flooding and require supports should register online at ess.gov.bc.ca, then go to the emergency evacuation reception centre at the McArthur Island Sport and Event Centre to access referrals to needed supports. The reception centre is
open 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. If you do not require Emergency Support Services, simply register online at ess.gov.bc.ca. At the BC Wildlife Park, evacuees from Merritt and Princeton are being welcomed with 50 per cent off regular admission rates. Motion Church on Fraser Street in Sagebrush is offering free coffee, snacks and a nursery for babies to evacuees. This year, the Kamloops Salvation Army is putting together Christmas Hampers particularly for displaced Merritt residents. To apply, call 250-5541611 or go online to kamloopssalvationarmy.ca. The GoFundMe website has launched a hub to identify verified fundraisers related to flooding in B.C. It is regularly updated as new fundraisers are verified and can be found at gofundme. com/en-ca/c/act/bc-flooding.
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
FRANCA MURACA
COMMUNITY
Plays, performances on tap as holiday season nears SEAN BRADY
STAFF REPORTER
sean@kamloopsthisweek.com
Just ahead of the holiday season, a number of plays and performances are set for Kamloops venues in November and December. Groups include the Kamloops Symphony Orchestra, Western Canada Theatre, Chamber Musicians of Kamloops, the Kamloops Players, the Laughing Stock Theatre Society and TRU’s Actors Workshop Theatre. Up first will be a presentation by the TRU Actors Workshop Theatre, with a play called Dead Man’s Cell Phone. Theatre students will perform the play, which was written by American playwright Sarah Ruhl and which will be directed by sessional instructor Catriona Leger. Showtime is 7:30 p.m. and the play will run from Nov. 25 to Nov. 27 and from Dec. 2 to Dec. 4. Tickets are $15, available online at tru.ca/awt or by calling the box office at 250-377-6100. The Kamloops Players will also debut their latest production. The classic story A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens, will be staged at the revamped Bridgeview Theatre at 106B Tranquille Rd. in North Kamloops. The community theatre group’s play will feature a cast of 16, with a wide age range. A Christmas Carol will run from Nov. 26 to Nov. 28 and from Dec. 3 to Dec. 5. Tickets are $15 ($10 for students and seniors), with a pay-what-you-can presentation on Nov. 28.
Call 250-305-6438 for tickets or bring exact change to the door. As part of Western Canada Theatre’s new season, the Kamloops theatre company will present Chelsea Hotel: The Songs of Leonard Cohen. Showtimes vary from Dec. 2 to Dec. 11, with evening shows at 7:30 p.m. and matinees on Wednesday and both Saturdays. Tickets are $25 and available through the Kamloops Live Box Office, online at kamloopslive. ca, or by phone at 250-374-5483. A number of events and special performances will accompany the show’s run. Details are available on the box office website. Music is also on offer. The Chamber Musicians of Kamloops’
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next performance is on Dec. 4. Baroque Pearls will feature Catharine Dochstader on flute, Cvetozar Vutev on violin, Martin Kratky on cello and Curtis Howell on harpsichord. Tickets are $15 (general admission) and less for students. Family discounts are also available. For more information, go online to chambermusiciansofkamloops. org. Christmas music will arrive on Dec. 11 with a performance by the Kamloops Symphony Orchestra. Christmas with the KSO will feature local soprano Rachel Casponi and guest conductor Cosette Justo Valdés. Tickets are $40 for adults or $15 for youths, available at the Kamloops Live Box Office. Another Christmas presentation is slated for Dec. 17 and Dec. 18 when comedy duo James and Jamesy will present O Christmas Tea: A British Comedy at Sagebrush Theatre. The duo says their show is “ideal for fans of Monty Python, Mr. Bean and Dr. Seuss.” Tickets range from $19 to $44 and are available online at jamesandjamesy.com/o-christmas-tea. Finally, the Laughing Stock Theatre Society will present Sleeping Beauty from Dec. 24 to Dec. 30 at Sagebrush Theatre, with matinees and evening shows on offer. Tickets are $25, less for children, youth and seniors, and available through the Kamloops Live Box Office, online at kamloopslive. ca or by phone at 250-374-5483.
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WHAT DO ALL THOSE NUMBERS MEAN?
A dental examination is completely different than a periodontal examination. A dental exam involves looking at your teeth, the crown (tooth) structure, rough/broken down fillings, interfering contacts of your teeth, how your teeth are wearing away, how your jaws are affecting your tooth wear patterns etc. In essence if you wanted to build the house, it’s an inventory and evaluation about all the items that go into building your house and how well put together your house is. A periodontal exam is completely different. “Peri” in latin means “surrounding.” Thus, I specialize and focus on the health and welfare of ALL the supporting structures around your teeth and what repercussions your teeth experience. The bone, the gums, tooth and jaw positioning and roles these all play with the foundation of your teeth and what factors help keep your teeth and smile bright, healthy and long lasting. In essence, I am the the “Holmes on Homes” for the mouth. Periodontists are the main troubleshooters combined with crime investigators of the mouth. If you want any intervention or treatment in trying to keep your teeth to the end, before trouble happens—we are the ones! A periodontal exam can actually predict receding gums and tooth loss. We are the fortune tellers. We have a special way to determine all these causative factors by measuring the “pockets.” I am sure you all have had your hygienist “poke” around your gums. This is only a part of a periodontal exam. What the actual numbering system means is that I have a special “ruler” on my instrument called a “probe” measuring the turtle neck space located 360° around the whole tooth (3 measures on the tongue side and 3 measures on the cheek side). If you get a measure under 4mm. That is considered normal. Anywhere between 4-6mm is considered moderate gum disease or inflammation while 6mm+ is considered advanced gum disease. So if you are in the 4-5mm range, you are on your way to a chronic inflammatory condition called Chronic Adult Periodontitis which 87 percent of the world experiences. Did you know gum disease is the 6th most common condition in the world and is still the main reason why people lose their teeth! But remember each person “poking” around your teeth has a different touch and so the numbers are relative with the same practitioner not absolute between practitioners! The most important part of the periodontal exam, involves examining the architecture and shape of your gums, the colour hues, the textures and “how” the gums actually hug and scallop the tooth/ crown shape. The gums, in essence, predict what the underlying bone structures supporting the teeth are like. These boney structures are separate from your actual jaw structures. In essence the jaw bone is connected to all the bones and the gums! The Flinstones were truly right! If you need any special Columbo like investigation of the mouth, go to a Periodontist!
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that A22 you kindly donate $10, which will COMMUNITY YOUR FRIENDS AT THE SHORES e RedFIND Cross to help with the recent Acclaimed actor ation caused by forest fires. helped WCT get established in city WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
SEAN BRADY
STAFF REPORTER
rsday, August 10 at 10AM sbrady@kamloopsthisweek.com
th
Kamloops-born-andraised actor Keith Dinicol, who had notable roles on the stage and screen, has died. The death was announced by his family on social media on the weekend. Dinicol died on Nov. 17 after suffering a stroke. He was 69. As an actor, Dinicol had early history in Kamloops, helping to establish the Western Canada Youtheatre, which would later become Western Canada Theatre. On top of acting with the emergent company, Dinicol also served as business manager and dabbled in directing in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Dinicol was active with WCT throughout the 1970s and returned for a number of plays in the 1990s, including his 1997 performance as Antonio Salieri in Amadeus. But Dinicol came to be known as a mainstay elsewhere, as a resident actor and teacher/director at the Stratford Festival in Ontario, performing there from the A LIVE-A DIENCE early 1980s until 2015.
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Keith Dinicol died on Nov. 17 after suffering a stroke. He was 69.
Dinicol also acted in TV roles throughout his career, with recent success on the Hallmark Channel series Chesapeake Shores. Other notable TV appearances include Designated Survivor, Murdoch Mysteries and Schitt’s Creek. “My Dad was a true man of the theatre, a wonderful actor and a teacher to everyone he came in contact with,” son and fellow actor Joe Dinicol said on Instagram. “That all came second to his fierce and beautiful love for his family.”
RADIO PER ORMANCE O THE CLASSIC TA A LLEI V E - A D I E N C E
A LIVE AUDIENCE RADIO RADIO PERFORMANCE PER ORMANCE OF THE CLASSIC TALE
O THE CLASSIC TALE
KAMLOOPS PLAYERS PRESENT Kamloops
AA CHRISTMAS CHRISTMAS A CAROL CAR CAROL adapted for radio from Charles Dickens’ CHRISTMAS Players presents
KAMLOOPS PLAYERS PRESENT
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CHRISTMAS CAR CAROL
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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SPORTS
INSIDE: Yamaoka talks Titans’ football playoffs plight | A24
A23
SPORTS: MARTY HASTINGS Phone: 250-374-7467 Email: sports@kamloopsthisweek.com Twitter: @MarTheReporter
Brown, Dunstone adapt to lineup changes MARTY HASTINGS STAFF REPORTER sports@kamloopsthisweek.com
The Brown and Dunstone curling rinks have experienced competition without regular team members. Matt Dunstone, the Kamloops resident who skips a Regina-based rink that normally includes lead Dustin Kidby, second Kirk Muyres and third Braeden Moskowy, is in action at the Tim Hortons Curling Trials, which began last Saturday in Saskatoon. The event will wrap up on Sunday and produce the fourperson men’s and women’s teams that will don the Maple Leaf at the 2022 Olympic Winter Games in Beijing. Team Dunstone is without Moskowy, who pulled out of the event last Thursday, citing personal reasons for his withdrawal. Colton Lott is his replacement. The team was 0-3 as of KTW’s press deadline on Tuesday. Meanwhile, Team Brown of Kamloops toiled at the Vesta Energy Red Deer Curling Classic, a 28-team, triple-knockout tournament that boasted a $35,000 purse. Corryn Brown skips the team that usually includes third Erin Pincott, second Dezaray Hawes and lead Sam Fisher, but Pincott has been picked up by Team Walker of Edmonton to handle alternate duties
Erin Pincott was called into action on Monday at the Tim Hortons Trials in Saskatoon. ANDREW KLAVER/CURLING CANADA FILE PHOTO
for the Trials in Saskatoon. “Obviously, it’s a really great opportunity, so we didn’t want to hold Erin back from that,” Brown said. “We’re really happy for her. “In a year where points are still pretty important, just even for how close we are to being back in the Slams, or being Slam regulars, we’re pretty close, so we can’t give up any opportunities to play and get points.” Brown reached the quarterfinal round and lost 6-5 to Satsuki Fujisawa, the Japanese
rink that went on to win gold, edging Unchi Gim of South Korea 6-5 on Monday in the title tilt. Hope Sunley, who normally toils for Calgary-based Team Bertsch, hopped in with Team Brown for the Red Deer event and played lead, with Fisher moving to second and Hawes sliding into third. Walker had ample opportunity to assess Pincott this season. “We played them [Team Walker] a ton this year, I think
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eight games on tour and at the play-in event,” Pincott said. “I’ve gotten to know them well on the ice. “With not making it there [to Olympic trials] ourselves, they reached out and I was happy to jump on board.” Team Brown fell one victory short of reaching the Olympic trials at the Curling Trials Direct-Entry Event, which took place in September in Ottawa. Walker picked up the thirdand-final Trials berth on offer at the Direct-Entry event with
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an 8-4 win over Brown. Pincott, operating as a fifth for the first time in her career, spoke to KTW last week and recalled an experience from the 2020 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Moose Jaw. Dailene Pewarchuk was Team Brown’s fifth and was inserted into the lineup at second for two games when Hawes became ill. “God forbid, but if someone gets sick, I’m there and ready to hop in at any moment,” Pincott said. Walker’s vice-skip, Kate Cameron, became ill on Monday. Pincott jumped into the lineup for a game against Kerri Einarson of Gimli, Man., on Monday evening. Einarson earned a 9-5 win over Walker, who was 1-3 as of KTW’s press deadline on Tuesday. “The girls were super supportive and it felt like I fit in pretty quickly,” Pincott said. “Our communication was really flowing. That was the first game post-sanding the rocks, so we were all learning at the same time about the new ice conditions and how the rocks were running.” Walker had an off-day on Tuesday and will return to action on Wednesday against Rachel Homan of Ottawa, with the draw scheduled for noon. Pincott’s inclusion in the lineup is dependent on Cameron’s health.
Offer valid until December 20, 2021. Offer may not be combined with other offers or discounts.
A24
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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SPORTS
Titans take issue with football decision MARTY HASTINGS
STAFF REPORTER
sports@kamloopsthisweek.com
BC School Sports acted arbitrarily and without transparency when it rescheduled the Subway Bowl, according to South Kamloops Titans’ head coach Brad Yamaoka. The provincial governing body announced changes to the schedule last week, morphing the B.C. high school football playoffs into regional championships, reacting in the wake of the heavy rainfall that led to widespread flooding and landslides in the Lower Mainland and Interior. That means semifinal and final games that were to be played at BC Place in Vancouver will now be played regionally. “It’s baffling,” Yamaoka told KTW last week. “I get that there are extenuating circumstances, but they didn’t even give us a chance to see if we could get down there at all. It’s ridiculous,
especially if they don’t contact our principal or anybody who is involved in these things and just put out a press release. There may be a way and there may not be, but they arbitrarily made those decisions and it really doesn’t sit well.” On Nov. 17, the provincial government declared a state of emergency for all of B.C. Multiple highways closed and the Lower Mainland was cut off from the Interior and the rest of Canada. “Maybe we can fly? Maybe that’s a pipe dream, but we haven’t had the chance to look into it,” Yamaoka said. “I’ve got a room full of kids I’ve got to explain this to, that a bunch
of people from the Coast just decided their fate for them.” Highway 3 and Highway 99 have reopened to re-establish routes for essential travel between the Coast and the Interior and Okanagan. Yamaoka’s qualms are with the AA division, in which his Titans toiled and claimed the No. 1 Interior seed. Prior to the scheduling changes spurred by the natural disaster, the Titans were to play host to the Ballenas Whalers of Parksville on Nov. 19 at Hillside Stadium, one of four provincial AA quarter-final games. Quarter-final weekend was also to include Vernon squaring off against Duchess Park in Prince George, Langley playing host to Carson Graham of North Vancouver and John Barsby of Nanaimo travelling to Abbotsford to toil against Robert Bateman. The quarter-final winners were to advance to play on Nov. 27 in the semifinal round
and the finalists were slated to clash in the AA Subway Bowl Championship on Dec. 4, with each of those games to be played at BC Place Stadium. “We’ve got a lot of kids who worked their asses off to get there,” Yamaoka said. “They promote it [games in BC Place] like crazy. They fought like hell to get it. You get to play in a dome. It’s one of the best experiences.” Instead, an Interior/North AA/AAA Subway Bowl will take place. Vernon bested Duchess Park 31-7 on Saturday in Prince George in semifinal action. Underdog South Kamloops is slated to host AAA Kelowna on either Friday or Saturday at Hillside Stadium, with the winner moving on to square off against Vernon for the regional title on either Dec. 3 or Dec. 4 in the Interior/North Subway Bowl. “The decision to move away from a provincial championship to a regional playoff to finish
our season was not easy,” Travis Bell, chair of the BCSS Football Advisory Committee, said in a BC School Sports release. “The current uncertainty of travel conditions between the Interior and mainland, as well as the dynamic flooding situation in the Fraser Valley, were at the forefront of this decisionmaking process. “Considering all the facts that we currently have, we feel it is the responsible decision to ensure the safety of our studentathletes, coaches and their supporters.” Yamaoka noted that of the four originally scheduled AA quarter-final games, road travel restrictions would have kept only the Titans-Whalers matchup from happening. The Titans’ bench boss proposed a scenario in which lower-seeded Ballenas should be forced to forfeit as it cannot fulfil its travel obligations. See YAMAOKA, A28
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DISPERSAL AREA:
Victoria St from 6th Ave to 8th Ave The Lansdowne Village Mall Transit Transfer Exchange will be temporarily relocated to St. Paul St between 5th Ave and 6th Ave. The St. Paul St temporary exchange will be in effect from 3:30-6:00 pm. Please use caution when driving in the vicinity of this event and obey all traffic control devices and traffic control people. Thank you for your cooperation and please call KCBIA at 250-372-3242 if clarification is necessary.
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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A25
SPORTS
Blazers look to down T-Birds The Kamloops Blazers will be looking for their second consecutive victory over the Seattle Thunderbirds on Wednesday in Kent, Wash. Matthew Seminoff led the way offensively and Dylan Garand was formidable between the pipes for Kamloops last Saturday in a 5-1 win over hometown Seattle (11-5-1-0). Seminoff scored a hat-trick, with Daylan Kuefler and Reese Belton adding singles in support of Garand, who stopped 29 shots to pick up his 12th victory of the season. Jared Davidson scored for Seattle on the power play at 18:25 of the third period to ruin Garand’s shutout bid.
Tournament Capital Sports
BRIEFS B.C. Division standings: Kamloops (14-2), Kelowna (8-4-0-2), Vancouver (7-7-1-0), Prince George (7-10-00) and Victoria (2-112-0). STORM ROLLING? The Kamloops Storm were aiming to make it three victories in a row on Tuesday against the Grizzlies in Revelstoke. Go online to kamloopsthisweek.com for the result of the game, which took place after KTW’s press deadline. Kamloops was 11-4 heading into the
matchup and held a two-point lead on Revelstoke (10-5) atop the Doug Birks Division. The Storm blanked the North Okanagan Knights 4-0 on Sunday on McArthur Island and bested the hometown Summerland Steam 4-1 on Saturday. Zakery Anderson of Kamloops leads the Storm in scoring, with 18 points, including 10 goals, in 15 games. CHANGE OF PLAN The TRU WolfPack were impacted on Tuesday by changes to the Canada West schedule, alterations made as flooding and road closures continue to impact travel across southern B.C. in the wake of extremely heavy rainfall on
Nov. 14 and Nov. 15. TRU will play host to the UBC Okanagan Heat of Kelowna in men’s and women’s basketball action on Friday and Saturday. The women will tip off at 5 p.m. on Friday and 3 p.m. on Saturday. Men’s play will get underway at 7 p.m. on Friday and 5 p.m. on Saturday. Trinity Western of Langley was originally slated to play the WolfPack in men’s and women’s basketball action this weekend in Kamloops. TRU was slated to play the Fraser Valley Cascades in Abbotsford this weekend in men’s and women’s volleyball action. Those matches have been postponed until Feb. 4 and Feb. 5.
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A26
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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GLOBAL VIEWS Extreme weather events, such as the atmospheric river of Nov. 14 and Nov. 15 that created flooding in Merritt and elsewhere, along with mudslides and highway collapses, has become more common as the climate crisis continues. The recent COP26 summit in Glasgow was held to address the emergency. IVAN DIAZ PHOTO
Actually, COP26 was not a complete failure
C
losing the two-week COP26 climate summit in Glasgow earlier this month, Alok Sharma, the British president of the 197-country conference, declared, “We’ve kept 1.5 (degrees Celsius) within reach, but its pulse is weak.” But he was close to tears several times in his closing remarks. That was not because the 40,000-delegate meeting was a complete disaster. It wasn’t a complete success, either, but these things never are. Sharma was upset because a last-minute assault by the world’s coal, oil and gas superpowers — Saudi Arabia and Australia as the biggest exporters and China, India and Russia as huge producers and consumers — nearly brought the meeting to a halt. After days and nights of almost non-stop negotiations, the great majority of the countries present got a commitment to phase out coal power into the conference report for the first time. There is no timetable, but it’s a start. What? You mean none of the other summits ever mentioned coal in their reports? Coal is the worst fossil fuel by far in terms of
GWYNNE DYER World
WATCH the volume of carbon dioxide it puts into the atmosphere when it burns. Surely they must have mentioned it before. Nope. The fossil fuel powers always managed to keep it out of the final documents by threatening to sabotage a process that depends on consensus and unanimity. It’s ridiculous, of course. Your whole purpose is to stop global warming, but you’re not allowed to mention the principal cause? That’s right, but it’s not as stupid as it seems. Everybody, including the Australians and the Indians, understands fossil fuels are the major problem. They love their children and
they don’t want to condemn them to a hopeless future. However, they’re not ready to do anything about it yet because so much of the present prosperity of their countries depends on keeping those fuels going. They are fighting a delaying action at every summit and keeping the word “coal” out of the documents yet again was an important symbolic goal for them. At the final plenary session, India’s climate minister, Bhupender Yadav, stood up and asked how developing countries could promise to phase out coal and fossil-fuel subsidies when they “have still to deal with their development agendas and poverty eradication.” The answer is that all the development agendas and poverty eradication will shrivel up and die if the warming stays on its current track — and Yadav probably knows that, too. But he effectively threatened a veto and managed to get the phrase “phase out coal” changed to “phase down coal.” It wasn’t much of a victory because the offending word “coal” is still in the Glasgow Climate Pact. It will be there at all future climate summits and
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every year there will be attempts to strengthen the other words around it. Eventually they will succeed. At this point, you may want to join with Greta Thunberg in dismissing the whole process as “blah, blah, blah,” but you would be wrong. This is the only way millionsstrong groups of people called countries, most of whose ancestors were hunter-gatherers only a few thousand years ago, can make decisions on subjects that matter to all of them. Their representatives come together physically and, if the debate is intense and the meeting goes on long enough, their fixed positions tend to start bending toward compromise and consensus. That’s how their ancestors did it in the far distant past and that’s how we still do it today. So, the great achievement at Glasgow was to agree they will all meet again next year and keep worrying away at the problem and ratcheting up the promises. There’s no formal agreement to meet again the year after that, but everybody expects this will be an annual event in the future, no longer one every five years. What two weeks together
arguing about climate issues did for the key delegates at Glasgow was to create a pressure-cooker atmosphere in which hard positions softened and movement finally became possible. Doing it every year, with people you already know from last time, should make the process move faster. It doesn’t mean human beings will respond fast enough to avoid catastrophic warming. We have left it very late, the special interests will continue to wage a fighting retreat in defence of the status quo and some non-linear response to the warming climate may suddenly upset all our plans and expectations. We are in unknown waters now. But COP26, while not yielding much in the way of enforceable commitments to cut emissions, has actually turned out to be one of the more productive climate summits. Perhaps it’s the extreme weather of the past year or so that has put people into a more co-operative mood, but there is a smidgen of hope in the air. Gwynne Dyer’s latest book is The Shortest History of War.
Richard Dickens established the Richard Dickens Music Scholarship fund in his will to support his belief in post-secondary music education.
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A27 THE HOME OF THE HOME INSPECTION TEAM
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A28
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SPORTS
Yamaoka: ‘I’m not happy’ From A24
South Kamloops would then be pencilled into a semifinal showdown at BC Place Stadium. “If we can’t fulfil our obligation, for obvious reasons, whether it’s the highways or cost, then we’ll default back to Ballenas,” Yamaoka said. “That just seems like a reasonable thing.” The new schedule features the Coastal AA Subway Bowl, with Ballenas, Carson Graham, John Barsby, Robert Bateman and Langley involved in the tournament. Those teams are, from left to right in descending order, the top five seeds in the Coastal AA Division, with 8-0 Langley ranked No. 1. Semifinals and the championship game will be played at BC Place Stadium. “If they told Ballenas and Carson Graham, ‘Hey, this is your game, you don’t get to go to the dome, you’re just playing for fun,’ those two teams would not be happy,” Yamaoka said. “I guarantee you there would be a lot more fireworks. To arbitrarily give a fourth and a fifth seed (Carson Graham and Ballenas placed fourth and fifth, respectively in the AA Coastal Division) over a one
seed in the Interior … I’m not happy,” Yamaoka said. “We’re busting our asses in the cold at Hillside Stadium for the last two weeks. The only team it really affected was the team from Parksville. There is an appeal process. I know Vernon is definitely not happy, either.” BLUE WAVE BOUNCED The Vernon Panthers earned a 38-14 victory over the Westsyde Blue Wave last week in the first round of the junior varsity high school football playoffs. Logan Rubel and Kooper Groeneveld had touchdowns for the Blue Wave. TITANS ON TOP The South Kamloops Titans won the junior boys’ Okanagan Valley Championship on the weekend in Revelstoke. South Kamloops bested the Kelowna Owls 2-0 in the best-of-three championship final to claim gold and secure a berth in the provincial championship later this month. Key plays from Huxley Wendland, Kelton Blower and James Upshaw helped seal the victory in the final.
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A30
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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Denise Bouwmeester MASTER CERTIFIED NEGOTIATION SPECIALIST
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1302 OTTAWA PLACE $425,000
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Publish my name in memory of • Character home nestled in downtown area • Original millwork/mouldings, high ceilings & archs, stained glass • 2 bedrooms and 1 bath & partial basement • Landscaped fenced backyard updates include 100 amp service, furnace, roof, paint, front door • RM-5 zoning and close to the City Gardens project by Kelson Group
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Mail or drop off cheque, money order or cash to Kamloops This Week Re: Christmas Cheer Fund, 1365B Dalhousie Drive V2C 5P6 BC Interior Community Foundation will issue tax receipts on behalf of the Christmas Cheer Fund on donations of $25 or more
QUINN PACHE
PERSONAL REAL ESTATE CORPORATION
REAL ESTATE TEAM
250-299-1267 | Quinnpache@royallepage.ca
TRUST | PASSION | KNOWLEDGE
250-682-6252 | lindsaypittman@outlook.com
LINDSAY PITTMAN
Quinnpacherealestate.ca KAMLOOPS REALTY
2167 Aster Crt $389,000
1917 Raven Cres $749,900
MIKE LATTA
REFERRAL PARTNER - REALTOR®
Follow Us! @qprealestateteam
356 Poplar Drive $99,000
REFERRAL PARTNER - REALTOR®MBA
250-320-3091 | mikelatta@royallepage.ca
KAYLEIGH BONTHOUX Office Manager/Unlicensed Assistant
778-765-5151 | kayleighbonthoux@royallepage.ca
405 Monarch CRT $786,000
D L O S SOLD
2418 Omineca $799,900
G N I D N E P
MLS®164795
MLS®165002
MLS®164772
MLS®164651
MLS®164844
8660 Westsyde Road $849,900
101-2575 Elston Dr $849,900
3920 Heffley-Louis Creek Road $1,048,000
4373 Clearwater Valley Rd $1,099,000
6640 Old HWY 5 $1,849,900
G N I D N E P
G N I D N PE MLS®164332
MLS®164578
MLS®164680
MLS®162873
MLS®164819
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
A31
Call today for your FREE home market evaluation! 250.377.7722 www.cbkamloops.com www.sunrivers.com 3,100 Offices Worldwide In 49 Countries BUILDING LOT
Call today to book your personal tour!
Sun Rivers
205 Sagewood Drive – Lot 57 $189,000 • Great opportunity to build your next home! • Located in the established neighbourhood of Sagewood • Lock n’ Go living for a low maintenance lifestyle
Lot size 4,284 Sq. Ft. New Listing
669 Pine Street $649,900
• Perfect for the downtown lifestyle! • Updated bungalow that will tick all the boxes • Fully finished attic space • Fenced & irrigated yard with room for a garage/shop
3
2
1,717
1606 Golf Ridge Way • $699,900
North Shore
407 120 Vernon Ave $224,900
1
• Choose your finishing Selections • Completion Spring 2022 *Panoramic Views • Rancher With Finished walkout basement • Yard maintenance included
4
13-1900 Irongate Place • $749,000
3
3
Sun Rivers
4112 Rio Vista Place $899,000
3,084
397 Wing Place • $639,000
Barriere
• 13,765 sq ft lot • Spacious 30’ x 18’ detached Shop • Updated flooring and fresh paint throughout
751
Under Construction
NEW LISTING
4394 Borthwick Ave $415,000
• 1 Bedroom top floor unit with in suite laundry • Close to shopping and restaurants • 55 and over • Quiet Location
1
Downtown
BOB GIESELMAN 250.851.6387
2
1,512
NEW LISTING
Paul Lake
2251 Paul Lake Road $985,000
• Year round lake house lifestyle with private dock • Extensive updating: Kitchen with stainless steel appliances • Master suite with fabulous spa ensuite • Spacious Decks, hot tub, double garage/shop
6
4108 Rio Vista Place
2
2,156
4042 Rio Vista Place
MIKE GRANT 250.574.6453
LISA RUSSELL 250.377.1801
What our clients say “Lisa Russell is a joy to work with from meeting her to listing, to the selling of our home. She helped us prepare our home to ensure the best price. Lisa is professional, thorough and looks after every detail. Its rare that you meet some one so dedicated to being the best at all times. She is a fountain of information and guided us through the entire process with ease. If you choose Lisa as your realtor you will be in great hands.” LISA RUSSELL - E and N 250.377.1801
4114 Rio Vista Place
4109 Rio Vista Place
NEIGHBOURHOOD TOURS BY APPOINTMENT - CALL TODAY!
FINAL PHASE
NOW SELLING Call now for more information
• Stunning views • Modern, high quality finishings • Expansive decks & private patios • Lock n’ go Living
“Loved that we could put our own personal style in our home.” – Roxanna
KAMLOOPS@COLDWELLBANKER.CA • 250-377-7722
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
...selling Kamloops every day™ Phil.Dabner@evrealestate.com | phildabner@telus.net | phildabner.evrealestate.com
1-250-318-0100
©2019 Engel & Völkers. All rights reserved. Each brokerage independently owned and operated. Engel & Völkers and its independent License Partners are Equal Opportunity Employers and fully support the principles of the Fair Housing Act. • Serving Kamloops since 1991
Coming Soon! The Lightwell - Kamloops’ newest building in the heart of Downtown. Studio + den 4th floor unit and studio 5th floor unit. Bright and inviting floor plans featuring 9’ ceilings, in-suite laundry, stainless steel appliances, underground/heated parking & so much more. Large sundecks where you can take in the stunning mountain and city views. Enjoy all the amenities Downtown has to offer all within walking distance to dining, shopping, parks, transit, schools, etc. The Lightwell also features a rooftop patio, 2 elevators, intercom admittance plus pets and rentals are welcome. First time buyer, looking to downsize or hoping to invest - this building has everything you need & more. Contact Phil Dabner for more details.
746 Pleasant Street - Centrally located in South Kamloops within walking distance to schools, parks, shopping, Sagebrush Theater, the hospital, city center, bus route and approx 10 minutes to TRU. Some Features of this updated home are 2 bedrooms on the main floor, an extra loft style Bedroom/office on the upper floor. Updates include bathrooms, Kitchen, flooring, paint, windows and roof. There is also a 2 Bedroom self-contained suite with separate entry. The yard is fully fenced and has a large detached shop with additional parking to the side. Alley access. Appliance package available up and down. Quick possession. Call Phil for additional information and or for viewings $698,800
1072 Schreiner Street - Centrally located in Brocklehurst and ideal for the growing family. This property faces a park and backs onto Brock Recreation center. Close proximity to Airport, Kamloops Golf and Country Club, schools, shopping and bus route. Some features of this bungalow style home are 3 bedrooms on the main floor and 2 additional bedrooms in the lower floor. The main floor has an open plan featuring hardwood floors and a country style kitchen with a large island that overlooks the living and dining area. The lower floor has a spacious storage room, coldroom, utility and laundry room as well as an open area ideal for family or a games area. Ample parking with additional parking and a gate to access the backyard. The property is fenced with mature landscaping and features a large garden shed. $569,900
QUALIFIED BUYERS LOOKING FOR 11-1651 VALLEYVIEW DRIVE - NEW TO MARKET. Centrally located in Valleyview Drive and a few minutes from the City Centre. Meadowlark Terrace is a very well cared for, small bare-land strata community. It has a Recreation Center, indoor pool, and RV parking. This level entry unit is comfortably designed for wheelchair access and features easy access from the 2-car attached garage to the main floor laundry and mud-room. The unit has 5 well-sized bedrooms, 3 bathrooms including the 4 piece ensuite, a fully finished daylight basement, and a 40’x10’ covered deck with lovely views. For additional information and or for viewings call PHIL at 250-318-0100 OR 778-765-1500! OFFERED AT $698,800.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Sun-Rivers between $650,000-$850,000 West-End or South Kamloops – $750,000-$1,000,000 Ski and Ski out at Sun-Peaks – $1,0000-3,000,000 Townhome - any location South Shore up to $500,000 Single family home – $650,000-$900,000 South Shore any location single family – $600,000-$800,000
Please call Phil on cell at 250-318-0100 or at the office 778-765-1500
FOLLOW YOUR DREAM, HOME.
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
A33
250-374-3331 www.ralphrealestate.ca REAL ESTATE (KAMLOOPS)
FOR MORE INFO VIEW ALL OUR LISTINGS, UPCOMING LISTINGS, AND KAMLOOPS LISTINGS AT RALPHREALESTATE.CA
Sahali 311-436 LORNE STREET • $389,900 • MLS®164858 • Immaculate 2 bedroom 2 bathroom apartment in The Courtyard • 1 parking stall & 1 storage locker • 1 dog or cat allowed with strata permission. No rental restrictions
Rayleigh 4616 CAMMERAY DRIVE • $699,900 • MLS®164759 • Great family home and area with 3+2 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms • Many updates including furnace, roof, windows, paint, and more • Quick possession possible
Aberdeen 1430 WESTERDALE DRIVE • $1,350,000 • MLS®163997 • Executive home in Glenmohr Estates with 2+3 bedrooms and 4 bathrooms • Just under 4000 square feet of living space and large 0.32 acre lot • Immaculate inside and out
Valleyview 34-2860 VALLEYVIEW DRIVE • $525,000 • MLS®164904 • This immaculate townhouse in Cortland Park has 3 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms • Pets and rentals allowed with strata permission • Quick possession possible
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
www.kamloopsthisweek.com p
CLASSIFIEDS INDEX
Phone: 250-371-4949
LISTINGS
DEADLINES
REGULAR RATES
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
Based on 3 lines 1 Issue . . . . . . . . . . . $1300 Add colour. . . . . . . $2500 to your classified add
Coming Events
• 10:00 am Tuesday
All ads must be prepaid. No refunds on classified ads.
Coming Events
Tax not included
Coming Events
| RUN UNTIL SOLD
No Businesses, Based on 3 lines Merchandise, vehicles, trailers, RV’s, boats, ATV’s, furniture, etc. $ 3500 Tax not included Some restrictions apply
Coming Events
Please help those who need it most. Give to the Christmas Cheer Fund.
Donate online at www.kamloopsthisweek.com/community/cheer Name Address City
Postal Code
Phone Email FOR TAX RECEIPT PURPOSES
Donation date Please find my donation enclosed in the amount of
$25
$50
Credit Card #
$75
$100
Expiry
| Email: classifieds@kamloopsthisweek.com EMPLOYMENT RUN UNTIL RENTED GARAGE SALE
No Businesses, Based on 3 lines Houses, condos, duplexes, suites, etc. (3 months max) $ 5300 Add an extra line to your ad for $10 Scheduled for one month at a time. Customer must call to reschedule. Tax not included. Some restrictions apply
Signature: Mail or drop off cheque, money order or cash to Kamloops This Week Re: Christmas Cheer Fund, 1365B Dalhousie Drive V2C 5P6
Wrought iron beds $300/each. High chair $30. Cedar Hope Chest $400. Rocking chair $150. Oak dresser with mirror $475. 250-3728177.
Fuel tanks - 1-300 gal and 2-100gal on stands. $300. 250-672-9712 or 250-819-9712.
Animals sold as “purebred stock” must be registrable in compliance with the Canadian Pedigree Act.
1bdrm suite needed in Sahali Dec. on for 55+ on fixed income. 250-5798327.
Art & Collectibles 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 “Power of One” Magnificent creation by John Banovich 43”hx50”wide brown wooden frame. $500 Firm 250-578-7776
Antique china cabinet $800. Ivory Wingback chair. $75. 4-seater beige couch. $100. 250-3764161.
BC Interior Community Foundation will issue tax receipts on behalf of the Christmas Cheer Fund on donations of $25 or more
Advertisements should be read on the rst publication day. We are not responsible for errors appearing beyond the rst insertion. It is agreed by any Display or Classied Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event that errors occur in the publishing of any advertising shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for the portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only and there will be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement.
To advertise call
250-371-4949
Personals PERFECT Part-Time Opportunity
1 Day Per Week Call 250-374-0462
Lost Lost: Yellow Gold Ring on the N/Shore. Centre stone is aqua marine and band containing 8 diamonds. 250-374-9677.
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.
Tax not included
Wanted to Rent
Greeting cards made in England each cellophane wrapped 90,000 for $6,000/obo 250-3766607. Greeting cards made in England each cellophane wrapped 30,000 for $2,000/obo 250-3766607. Mastercraft 10” table saw $150. Mastercraft Miter saw w/stand. $150. Iron Horse Air Compressor 4.1 CFM $100. 250573-5635. Satellite phone Model Iridium 9505A handset w/attachments. $1300. 250-374-0650. Shoprider Navigator electric wheelchair. Good condition. $1,750. 250320-8901. Shoprider Scooter. $750. 250-574-0325.
Furniture 8ft Antique Couch $700. Couch & matching chairs $100. 250-374-1541.
6pc patio set. $225. 6pc Bedroom set like new. $575. 2 Horse Saddles $295/each. Beaver table saw 48” $125. Battery charger $75. Angel grinder $75. Small radial alarm saw $50. 250-374-8285.
Publish my name in memory of
Tax not included
Pets
For Sale - Misc
Publish my name
Based on 3 lines 1 Issue.. . . . . . . $1638
For Sale - Misc
Trek Crossrip Road Bike. Like new. Paid $1950 Asking $1300. 250-5720753.
Security Code
$1250 - 3 lines or less BONUS (pick up only): • 2 large Garage Sale Signs • Instructions
Antiques
Bicycles
Other $
My cheque or money order is payable to BC Interior Community Foundation - Cheer Anonymous
Fax: 250-374-1033
EARN EXTRA $$$
KTW requires door to door substitute carriers for all areas in the city. Vehicle is an asset Call 250-374-0462 Cordless + electric cord snowblower by Snow Joe. $200. 250-377-8956. Do you have an item for sale under $750? Did you know that you can place your item in our classifieds for one week for FREE?
Call our Classified Department for details! 250-371-4949 kamloopsthisweek.com
Peace of mind pet care and house sitting. Keep your house and pets safe while your away. 250374-6007.
Garage Sales WESTSYDE Moving Sale: Queen size bedroom suite, China cabinet/dining table/ snowblower +much more. 250-579-8895.
Health WE will pay you to exercise! Deliver Kamloops This Week Only 1 issue a week!
Call 250-374-0462 for a route near you!
Commercial
CHOOSE LOCAL “Our Family Protecting Your Family”
PRESTIGE
LOCAL ALARM MONITORING STATION
KAMLOOPS ONLY ULC CERTIFIED MONITORING STATION FREE ESTIMATES FOR SYSTEM UPGRADES OR SWITCH-OVERS LIVE ANSWER | EFFICIENT COST EFFECTIVE | LOCAL COMPANY
Antique Duncan Phyfe table, extra leaf, buffet, hutch and 4 chairs. Exec cond. $600. 778-2577155.
10-989 McGill Pl. Kamloops
Diningroom table w/8chairs, c/w Buffet and Hutch. Med Colour. $800. 250-374-8933.
Shared Accommodation
Exec desk dark finish $200. Teak corner cabinet $100, Custom oak cabinet $200. 250-8517687.
Plants / Shrubs / Trees Scotch Pine trees smaller ponderosa in pots 2ft (50) $10 each obo 250376-6607
Wanted to Buy WTB 3+ beds House. Young family with newborn daughter looking to buy a house in the Kamloops area. Would prefer a house with a income suite. Self represented and pre-approved. We both save$$$Lets talk! 604-626-2658.
250-374-0916
Classes & Courses HUNTER & FIREARMS Courses. A Great Xmas Gift. Next C.O.R.E. January 8th and 9th. Saturday and Sunday. P.A.L December 5th. Sunday. Professional outdoorsman and Master Instructor: Bill 250-376-7970.
To advertise call
250-371-4949 Renos & Home Improvement
Peter Smiths Renovations Free Estimates: Kitchens, Basements, Renos, Sidewalks, Garages, Fencing, So Much More Not Limited (250) 2626337
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
Downtown 2 connected rooms + half bath. N/S/P. $800/mo. Util/internet included. 250-318-0318.
10-989 McGill Pl. Kamloops
Farm Services
Farm Services
250-374-0916
SHAVINGS & SAWDUST 10 TO 150 YARD LOADS BARK MULCH FIR OR CEDAR
- Regular & Screened Sizes -
REIMER’S FARM SERVICE
250-838-0111
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com RVs / Campers / Trailers
Run until sold New Price $56.00+tax Do you have a vehicle, boat, rv, motorcycle, ATV or trailer to sell? With our Run til sold specials you pay one flat rate and we will run your ad until your vehicle sells.* $56.00 (boxed ad with photo) $35.00 (regular 3 line ad)
Motorcycles 2017 Harley Davidson Road King Milwaukee 8 engine. 35,000kms. $17,000/obo. 250-6823152.
Domestic Cars RUN UNTIL SOLD ONLY $35.00 (plus Tax) (250) 371-4949 *some restrictions apply call for details
Sports & Imports
Business Oportunities ~ 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.
Employment
Career Opportunities
Career Opportunities
Career Opportunities
Are you looking for a Career where you can make a difference and be in high demand?
Automotive Tires
Trucks & Vans 2009 Ford Ranger, +cab. 4ltr, 5spd, winters on. 405,000kms. Good cond. $3,000. 250-372-7817.
Trucks - 4WD
2 - P215 / 60 R 16 M&S $125.00 2 -P225 / 60 R 16 M&S $125.00 2 - 245 / 50 VR 16 Good Year Eagle M&S $250.00 Phone 250-319-8784
2004 GMC 3/4T HD. New brakes, good tires. $6,000/obo. 250-3207774.
Community Workforce Response Grant offering full tuition funding for eligible BC Residents who are either unemployed or have precarious employment.
Utility Trailers
For Sale by Owner
Kamloops # recruitment agency
1
250-374-3853 For Sale by Owner $55.00 Special
Pirelli P7 Cinturato Run Flat tires on 17 “ BMW M series rims. $ 700.00. 250-819-0863.
To advertise call
250-371-4949
The special includes a 1x1.5 ad (including photo) that will run in (two editions) in Kamloops This Week. Our award winning paper is delivered to over 30,000 homes in Kamloops and area every Wednesday. Call or email us for more info: 250-374-7467 classifieds@ kamloopsthisweek.com
Follow us @KamThisWeek
Do you love solving problems or brightening someone’s day?
BYLAW OFFICER Applicants must have excellent verbal and written communication skills, be able to deal tactfully and effectively with the public and be impartial and firm with difficult enforcement matters. Applicants must also understand and effectively carry out oral and written instructions.
All aluminum cargo trailer 7ftx14ft. $12,000/firm. Like new. 250-719-3539.
4 Toyo Winters. 235/55/R18. Will take $150. 250-371-1704.
FREE
Limited Seats available First come First Serve! Call Now: 1-877-315-5241
3 week practicum
We are currently hiring a full time Bylaw Officer.
2018 GMC Z71 SLT Crewcab 4X4 fully equipped. Excellent condition. Black with black leather. 107,000 kms $54,800 250-319-8784 3 Michelin 205/50 R16 winters. $50/tire or $100/3. Good tread. Call 778-220-6566 with offers.
21 week certificate
Looking for nursery workers Mon-Sat 8-10hr per day transportation provided Call 250-3197263 or Email: san1575@hotmail.com
Need extra $ $ $ Kamloops This Week is currently hiring Substitute Carriers for door-to-door deliveries. Call 250-374-0462 for more information
Work Wanted HOME & YARD HANDYMAN If you need it done, Give us a call! Steve 250-3207774.
Paladin Security is looking for full-time, part-time, and casual Security Guards to join our team. For more information and to apply, go to:
paladinsecurity.com/careers!
Applicants must have Bylaw Compliance, Enforcement and Investigative Skills Level 1 (or equivalent) and valid B.C. Driver’s License with clean drivers abstract. Hours of work will include shift work including weekends. Please forward resume and cover letter to admin@sunpeaksmunicipality.ca by December 3, 2021. We would like to thank all those interested but only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
PLEASE RECYCLE THIS NEWSPAPER kamloopsthisweek.com
Catch your next job in our employment section.
Starting December 6th for Kamloops Residents.
Experienced meat cutter required for family owned and operated butcher shop in Forest Grove, BC. Wages are negotiable as to level of experience. Please call 250-397-2827 for more detailed information, resumes can be emailed to:
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
Employment
Be prepared to work in areas such as group homes, private home care, private long term care (non-licensed), day programs and many more settings.
sonjacanderlini@gmail.com
2017 Genesis G90 Prestige 4 Dr Pure Luxury 3.3 twin turbo AWD. Loaded with options 45,500 kms. White with brown leather $48,800 250-319-8784
A35
Become a Social & Community Service Worker in just 6 months.
Call: 250-371-4949
*Some conditions & restrictions apply. Private party only (no businesses).
Career Opportunities
JOIN OUR FORCE
BECOME A SNOWFIGHTER Argo is accepting Resumes for drivers experienced in the operation of tandem axle trucks for the Kamloops, Barriere, and Clearwater Areas. Experience operating snow removal equipment would be an asset. Must hold a valid BCDL, minimum Class 3 with air. Visit our website at https://argoroads.ca/jobs/ or submit your Resume with a current National Driver Abstract by email to argokam@argoroads.ca or by fax to 250-374-6355.
To advertise in Classifieds call:
250-371-4949
A36
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
Employment
Employment
www.kamloopsthisweek.com Employment
Employment
Employment
Employment
Employment
Employment
PART-TIMEOFFICE
JOB POSTINGS
COMMUNITY HEALTH REPRESENTATIVE Interim-Fulltime Under the direction of Xwisten’s Health Manager, the CHR is responsible for providing health promotion and prevention programs for Xwisten community members.
AMA7 SWA7 NURSE Full-time Permanent (35 hrs/week) Ama7 Swa7 Nurse is responsible for providing quality home care to Xwisten Clients that are referred to the Home and Community Care Program.
HEADSTART/DAYCARE SUPERVISOR Full-time Permanent
EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATOR Full-time Permanent (35 hrs/week)
Bridge River Head Start / Daycare Program is seeking an individual to commit to providing high quality care to children aged 0-6 years with interest in working in a unique program and ensuring that there is use of best practice provided during the program delivery.
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT COORDINATOR
CANNABIS CONSULTANTS Job Type: Auxiliary (On-call) Location: Kamloops (Lansdowne Village, Northills or Columbia Place)
Cannabis Product Consultants at BC Cannabis Stores, operated by the LDB, are cannabis subject matter experts for both customers and staff and the first point of contact in developing customer relationships. Through excellent, friendly customer service, they cultivate relationships with customers built on knowledge and trust. To be eligible, applicants must meet the following qualification requirements:
• Be at least 19 years of age • Be able to work shift work and weekends • A minimum of one year of recent related experience working in a sales environment • Have a valid Selling It Right Certificate™ Rate of Pay - $19.4456 per hour plus 6% in lieu of vacation and an additional 79¢ per hour up to $55.30 per biweekly period in lieu of benefits. To apply for this exciting opportunity, please visit: https://bccannabisstores.prevueaps.ca/pages/openings/
WE’RE HIRING! ALL SURFACE POSITIONS
Non-business ads only • Some restrictions apply
1365 DALHOUSIE DR
250-371-4949
5300
$
Plus Tax
3 Lines - 12 Weeks
Must be pre-paid. Scheduled for 4 weeks at a time private parties only. No businesses. Some Restrictions Apply
1365 DALHOUSIE DR
ROUTES
CARIBOO CONTRACT SERVICES A JDS COMPANY
JDS is currently seeking well-rounded and experienced individuals for all labour and supervision positions including:
Packages start at $35
RENTED
PAPER
Only those short listed will be contacted
RUN TILL SOLD SPECIAL
RUN TILL
250-371-4949
For more details on the above opportunities please visit www.localwork.ca or Forward Resumes to: Gary Forsyth, Administrator Fax: (250) 256-7999
ask us about our
VALLEYVIEW MINI-STORAGE
Drop off resume: #10 1967 ETC HWY, Kamloops
Add an extra line to your ad for $10
For a minimum of six months. On the job training will be available. The Social Development Coordinator is required to properly supervise and manage the overall Social Development programs including Income Assistance, Adult in Home Care, Child out of Parental Home, National Child Benefit ReInvestment, and Family Violence Prevention.
TIME TO DECLUTTER?
Join our friendly team, 10-15 hours a week. Wide variety of office duties. Training provided.
AVAILABLE GET YOUR STEPS IN AND GET PAID
• Pit Shifter • Mine Technician • Truck Drivers • Blasters • Mechanics • Drillers • Shovel Operators • Equipment Operators (Dozer, Grader, Loader) We offer competitive wages and travel allowance. Please apply at hr@jdsmining.ca
250-374-7467 circulation@kamloopsthisweek.com
Thanks for wearing a mask, for everyone!
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com Employment
Employment
Employment
Employment
Employment
Employment
The TRU School of Business and Economics is recruiting sessional faculty for the following on-campus positions: FACULTY
Inquire about our
$3,000 SIGNING BONUS + RELOCATION SUPPORT
NOW HIRING
MILLWRIGHTS | SAW FILERS Join our expanding team on beautiful Vancouver Island. Competitive wage • Benefits • Pension westernforest.com/careers
Innovation and Entrepreneurship HR Management Economics Supply Chain Management Marketing/International Marketing International Business Accounting
Rte 382 – 114-150 Fernie Pl, Fernie Rd, 860-895 Lombard St. – 23 p. Rte 384 – 407-775 W.Battle St, 260-284 Centre Ave. – 42 p. Rte 385 – 350-390 W.Battle St, Strathcona Terr. – 29 p. LOWER SAHALI/SAHALI Rte 400 – 383 W. Columbia St. – 21 p. Rte 401 – 250-395,405-425 Pemberton Terr. – 81 p. Rte 405 – Anvil Cres, 98-279 Bestwick Dr., Bestwick Crt E & W & Morrisey Pl. – 51 p. Rte 449 - Assiniboine Rd, Azure Pl, Chino Pl, Sedona Dr. – 90 p. Rte 451 – Odin Crt, Whiteshield Cres, Whiteshield Pl. – 39 p. Rte 452 – 1430-1469 Springhill Dr. – 64 p. Rte 453 – 1575-1580 Springhill Dr. – 73 p. Rte 456 – Springhaven Pl, Springridge Pl, 1730-1799 Springview Pl. – 47 p. Rte 457 – 990 Gleneagles Dr, 662-698 Monarch Dr, 1810-1896 Springhill Dr, Tolima Crt. – 50 p. Rte 467 – 1605 & 1625 Summit Dr. – 29 p. Rte 468 – 320-397 Monmouth Dr, Selwyn Rd, 303-430 Waddington Dr. – 57 p. Rte 471 - 100-293 Monmouth Dr. – 38 p. Rte 474 – Coppertree Crt, Trophy Crt. – 21 p. Rte 475 – Castle Towers Dr, Sedgewick Crt & Dr. – 47 p. Rte 476 – Tantalus Crt, Tinniswood Crt, 2018-2095 Tremerton Dr. – 50 p. Rte 483 - Breakenridge Crt, Cathedral Crt, Grenville Pl, 409-594 Robson Dr. – 59 p. Rte 485 – 690 Robson Dr, 2020 & 2084 Robson Pl. – 50 p. Rte 492 – 2000-2099 Monteith Dr, Sentinel Crt. – 35 p. ABERDEEN Rte 503 - Fleming Circ, Hampshire Dr. & Pl, Hector Dr. – 51 p. Rte 508 – 700-810 Hugh Allan Dr. - 49 p. Rte 510 - 372-586 Aberdeen Dr, 402-455 Laurier Dr. – 36 p Rte 511 – Drummond Crt. – 50 p. Rte 522 – 604-747 Dunrobin Dr, Dunrobin Pl. – 65 p. Rte 525 – Farrington Crt, Greybriar Crt, 2130-2196 Van Horne Dr. – 59 p.
In Memoriams
In Memoriams
In Loving Memory of
In Loving Memory of
March 26, 1932 – November 27, 2016
May 29, 1954 November 28, 2017
Walter Raymond Gibbs
Burk Thomas Roblin
Applicants must have relevant masters level qualification relevant to the position. I was supposed to spend the rest of my life with you.
For further information, please visit:
tru.ca/careers
We wish to thank all applicants; however, only those under consideration will be contacted.
PAPER ROUTES AVAILABLE DOWNTOWN Rte 306 – 261 6th Ave, 614-911 Seymour St, 600-696 St Paul St, 753-761 Victoria St. - 26 p. Rte 308 – 355 9th Ave, 703-977 St Paul St. - 35 p. Rte 310 – 651-695 2nd Ave, 660-690 3rd Ave, 110-292 Columbia St(Even Side), 106-321 Nicola St, - 43 p. Rte 311 – 423-676 1st Ave, 440-533 2nd Ave, 107-237 Battle St, 135-173 St Paul St. – 27 p. Rte 313 – 430-566 4th Ave, 520-577 5th Ave. 435-559 Battle St, 506 Columbia St, 406-576 Nicola St, 418-478 St Paul St. - 34 p. Rte 317 – 535-649 7th Ave, 702-794 Columbia St(Even Side), 702-799 Nicola St. - 40 p. Rte 318 – 463 6th Ave, 446490 7th Ave, 409-585 8th Ave, 604-794 Battle St. - 17 p. Rte 319 – 545 6th Ave, 604690 Columbia St(Even Side), 604-692 Nicola St. -12 p. Rte 320 – 483-587 9th Ave, 801-991 Battle St, 804-992 Columbia St(Even Side), 803-995 Nicola St. - 50 p. Rte 322 – 694 11th Ave, 575-694 13th Ave, 1003-1091 Battle St, 1004-1286 Columbia St(Even Side), 1004-1314 Nicola St. - 56 p. Rte 323 – 755-783 6th Ave, 763-884 7th Ave, 744-764 8th Ave, 603-783 Columbia St(odd Side), 605-793 Domion St. - 52 p. Rte 325 - 764-825 9th Ave, 805979 Columbia St, 804-987 Dominion St, 805-986 Pine St. - 64 p. Rte 326 – 850 11th Ave, 10031083 Columbia St(odd Side), 1003-1195 Dominion St. - 33 p. Rte 328 – 935 13th Ave, Cloverleaf Cres, Dominion Cres, Park Cres, Pine Cres. - 62 p. Rte 331 – 984-987 9th Ave, 1125 10th Ave, 901-981 Douglas St, 902-999 Munro St, 806-990 Pleasant St. - 34 p. Rte 335 – 1175-1460 6th Ave, 1165-1185 7th Ave, Cowan St, 550-792 Munro St. - 56 p. Rte 370 – Nicola Wagon Rd, 35-377 W. Seymour St. – 36 p. Rte 371 – Connaught Rd, 451-475 Lee Rd, W. St Paul St. - 73 p. Rte 380 – Arbutus St, Chaparral Pl, Powers Rd, Sequoia Pl. – 69 p. Rte 381 – 20-128 Centre Ave, Hemlock St, 605-800 Lombard St. – 42 p.
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Rte 528 - 1115-1180 Howe Rd, 1115-1185 Hugh Allen Dr.-47 p.Rte 542 – Coal Hill Pl, Crosshill Dr, Dunbar Dr. – 58 p. Rte 544 - 2070-2130 Van Horne Dr, Holyrood Cir. & Pl. – 23 papers
Rte 760 – Beaver Cres, Chukar Dr. – 62 p.
BROCKLEHURST Rte 1 – Argyle Ave, Ayr Pl, 10631199 Crestline St, 1008-1080 Moray St, Perth Pl. – 94 p. PINEVIEW VALLEY/ Rte 3 – 2402-2595 MT. DUFFERIN Young Ave, - 38 p. Rte 564 – 2000-2099 Hugh Allan Rte 4 – 727-795 Crestline St, Dr, Pinegrass Crt, & St. – 37 p. 2412-2680 Tranquille Rd. – 40 p. Rte 580 – 1300-1466 Pacific Way, Prairie Rose Dr, Rockcress Dr. – 83 p. Rte 18 – 919-942 Schreiner St, 2108-2399 Young Ave. – 56 p. Rte 582 – 1540-1670 Hillside Rte 19 - Downie Pl. & St., Dr, 1500-1625 Mt Dufferin Moody Ave. & Pl, 2307-2391 Ave, Windward Pl. – 38 p. Tranquille Rd. – 50 p. Rte 584 - 1752–1855 Rte 20 – Barbara Ave, Pala Hillside Dr. – 26 p. Mesa Pl, Strauss St, Townsend Pl, Rte 587 – Sunshine Crt, & Pl. – 51 p. 2105-2288 Tranquille Rd. – 48 p. Rte 590 - 1397 Copperhead Rte 21 - 2300-2397 Fleetwood Dr, Saskatoon Pl. – 36 p. Ave, Fleetwood Crt. & Pl, RAYLEIGH 1003-1033 Schreiner St. 1020Rte 830 – Chetwynd Dr, 1050 Westgate St. – 53 p. Stevens Dr. – 55 p. Rte 24 – Dale Pl, Lisa Pl, 806Rte 831 - 4904-5037 Cammeray 999 Windbreak St. – 50 p. Dr, Mason Pl, Pinantan Pl, Rte 27 – Bentley Pl, Kamwood Pl, Reighmount Dr & Pl. – 61 p. 1866-1944 Parkcrest Ave, - 62 p. Rte 833 – Cameron Rd, Rte 32 – Laroque St, 1709Davie Rd. – 44 p. 1862 Parkcrest Ave, - 65 p. Rte 838 – 4556-4797 Cammeray Rte 43 – Clifford Ave, 1713Dr, Strawberry Lane. – 62 p. 1795 Happyvale Ave, 500-595 VALLEYVIEW/ JUNIPER Holt St, Kobayashi Pl. – 69 p. Rte 603 - Comazzetto Rd, Strom Rd, Rte 48 – 804-998 Holt St. – 45 p. 1625-1764 Valleyview Dr. - 42 p. Rte 49 – Centennial Dr, Rte 606 - Orchard Dr, Russet Wynd, 1005-1080 Holt St, 16611815–1899 Valleyview Dr. – 39 p. 1699 Parkcrest Ave. – 31 p. Rte 607 – Cardinal Dr, 1909NORTH SHORE/BATCHELOR 2003 Valleyview Dr. - 33 p. Rte 106 – 1239-1289 10th Rte 617 - 2401-2515 Valleyview St, Cranbrook Pl, Creston Pl, Dr, Valleyview Pl. – 52 p. 949-1145 Halston Ave(Odd Rte 618 – Big Nickel Pl, Chapman Side), Kimberley Cres. - 75 p. Pl, Marsh Rd, Paul Rd, Peter Rd, Rte 137 - 144-244 Briar 2440-2605 Thompson Dr. - 58 p. Ave, 106-330 Clapperton Rd, Rte 620 – MacAdam Rd, McKay Larkspur St, Leigh Rd, 100-204 Pl, Pyper Way, 2516-2580 Tranquille Rd, Wilson St, - 55 p. Valleyview Dr. – 63 p. Rte 151 – 1020-1132 7th St, Rte 655 – 1685 Finlay Ave, 22022382, 2416-2485 Skeena Dr. – 33 p. 1024 + 1112 8th St, Berkley Pl, Dundas St, Richmond Ave. – 73 p. DALLAS/BARNHARTVALE Rte 153 – Seton Pl, Rte 701 – Freda Ave, Klahanie Kemano St. – 36 p. Dr, Morris Pl, Shelly Dr, Rte 158 – Cornwall St, 901-935 Todd Rd. - 87 p. Hamilton St, Kent Ave, Midway Rte 714 – 1101-1247 St,1303-1393 Schubert Dr,601Highridge Dr. - 44 p. 675 Windsor Ave-76p Rte 751 - 5310 Barnhartvale Rte 175 - Norfolk Crt, Norview Rd, Bogetti Pl, 5300-5599 Pl, 821-991 Norview Rd. – 36 p. Dallas Dr, 5485-5497 ETC Hwy, Rte 203 –508-700 Collingwood Viking Dr, Wade Pl. – 64 p. Dr(Even Side). – 48 p. Rte 752 – 5600-5998 Dallas WESTSYDE Dr, Harper Pl, & Rd. – 60 p. Rte: 252 – 813-897 Mayne Rd, Rte 755 – 6159-6596 Dallas 815-886 Morven pl, 2770-2876 Dr, McAuley Pl, Melrose Westsyde Rd. (even side) – 47 p. Pl, Yarrow Pl. – 71 p.
INTERESTED? CALL 250-374-0462
Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes Obituaries
Miss you more every day in my heart.
Then I realized you spent the rest of your life with me.
Forever Walt
I smiled because I know you loved me till the day you went away, and will keep loving me till the day we meet again!
Your Loving Wife Shirley and Family
Love & miss you always Sharon
Love’s greatest gift is remembrance. Obituaries
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In Loving Memory of Scott C. Roberts
April 1959 - November 14, 2021 With heavy hearts we announce the passing of Scott C. Roberts. Scott passed away after a short but hard battle with cancer. Scott passed peacefully at Kamloops Hospice with his partner by his side and surrounded by his loving family. Scott leaves behind his greatest love and soulmate Tammie. Scott also leaves behind his son Darnel, daughter Ashten, brother Ross (Faye), brother Don and sister Marlene (Al), step-son Jon and many nieces and nephews. Scott was a long-time resident of Kamloops. Scott’s greatest passion was fishing with his family. Scott enjoyed all types of sports. In his younger days he coached minor league hockey. Scott will be deeply missed by his family and friends. Special thanks to M.W.S.Hospice for all the care and attention given to Scott to ensure a peaceful passing. Any donations, please give to Marjorie Willoughby Snowden Hospice.
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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Iain Alexander McKee
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April 1, 1987 - November 14, 2021
In Loving Memory of Bertha Marjorie (Armstrong) Collins June 21, 1926 - October 6, 2021
Bertha was born in Elstow, Saskatchewan and grew up on the family farm in Carrot River, then attended Success Business College in Regina. In 1948 she moved to Red Deer, AB and farmed with her husband until 1962 when they moved to Kamloops, BC. She moved to Richmond, BC in 1964 and then back to Kamloops in 1974. Over this time, she raised her family and managed her career. She worked for the Co-op in Regina, Fry Cadbury’s in Red Deer, the Sheriff’s office in Kamloops, the Fire Chief’s office in Richmond, retiring from the Court Registry in Kamloops in 1986. When not working her and her husband could be found on the road enjoying their caravan. Bertha enjoyed her retirement, often travelling back to her large extended family in Saskatchewan and enjoying trips across Canada, to the Yukon and down to Nashville and points south. She will be missed by her family and extended family from British Columbia to Manitoba and by her friends in Kamloops and at Cottonwood Manor. A special thank you to the Caregivers, Nurses and Doctors at Ponderosa Lodge who provided wonderful care over her final months. Arrangements entrusted to Kamloops Funeral Home Condolences may be sent to the family from www.kamloopsfuneralhome.com
kamloopsthisweek.com • kamloopsthisweek.com
In Loving Memory of Darlene May Bendick
November 30, 1954 - October 20, 2021 After a two year battle with cancer Darlene was called to heaven on October 20, 2021, to join her parents, Ruby and Fred Yemen, and her daughter Tiffany. Darlene will be lovingly remember by the love of her life, Stewart of 32 years, children Kristina and Sarah (Mike) and grandkids, Isabella, Matthew and Logan. As well as her five siblings, family, and many friends. Darlene was born in Lethbridge AB, but lived her life in Kamloops, BC. She enjoyed her years working at Cablenet and BCLC, making solid relationships along the way. She was also an entrepreneur and started her own business “Muckers Boot Covers” in 1999. Darlene was immensely proud of her family, and leaves behind nothing but beautiful memories. She was a beautiful women, with an infectious personality. The sound of her laugh will never leave us. Darlene passed away peacefully in her home with her loving husband and daughters beside her and on the same day her own mother had passed 6 years prior.
“You taught us everything in life but not how to live life without you.” We want to really thank Dr. Miranda DuPreez and Dr. Pwint and all the care aids and nurses that worked alongside us. In lieu of flowers, we’d like any donations to go to Afternoon Auxiliary to RIH / HAT & WIG BANK. Email: Lynn.littlejohns@interiorhealth.ca
Following a lengthy battle with mental health, Iain Alexander McKee of Kamloops died by suicide on November 14, 2021 at the age of 34. Though his life was short, he is remembered for absorbing each moment he had. His dauntless and fun loving nature led him on great adventures and his magnetism inspired others to let go of fear and embrace the wonder of life alongside him. Iain ushered others into his life vision - a life where love knew no bounds, where there was always room for others, and the impossible became possible. He was a dreamer, he wanted to show you the stars and dance with you under them. Music sounded better with him by your side. As a pillar of his community, he effortlessly fostered a safe and nurturing environment for those around him to learn, grow, and thrive. His light and legacy will live on within those who were lucky enough to cross paths with him. Iain will be sorely missed by his wife Megan McKee of 3 years (in love far longer) and his sweet pup Ghosty. His parents John and Beverly McKee, brother Adam, sister-in-law Katie and nephew Jack with Iain’s grandparents; Megan’s parents Jack and Tracy Young, sister-in-law Katie and nephew Theo and family. As well as numerous relatives and friends here in Canada and in the UK. “The best gift you could have given me was a lifetime of adventures together, in this life and the next.” - MM Iain’s Celebration of Life will be held on Saturday, December 11, 2021 at 1:00 pm, at the Monte Creek Greenhouse, 2420 Miner’s Bluff Road. In lieu of flowers, the family is asking for memorial donations to be made in the name of Iain McKee to: The Canadian Mental Health Association, Kamloops Branch (donations can be made online at their website or phone them at 250-374 0440). Gardengate, a program of Open Door Group providing mental health services in Kamloops (donations can be made online at their website or in person at 915 Southhill Street Kamloops, BC V2B 7Z9, 250-554-9453).
Yvonne Madeline Duke 1937 - 2021
Yvonne Duke of Kamloops, BC, passed away peacefully on Friday, November 12, 2021, at 84 years of age. She will be sadly missed by her loving husband Joe, her five children Michael (Cheryl), Michele (Dale), Rodney (Angie), Cindy (Bill) and Karen (Kevin); her eleven grandchildren, Brandon, Breanne, Jeremy, Jaime, little Mikey, TriCia, Melissa, Jessica, Chad, Elisha, Carlie and their families which includes twenty-one great-grandchildren. Yvonne was predeceased by her parents Herbert and Maude Pointer, as well as her siblings Peggy McEwan, Bert Pointer and Reg Pointer. Yvonne was born September 24, 1937, in Earl Grey, SK. Growing up she and family lived in southern Saskatchewan, eventually moving west to British Columbia in 1963 settling in Kamloops in 1967. As matriarch, Yvonne took great pride in her family and was always instrumental in getting the family together and keeping it close. She extended and opened her house and heart to anyone. Over the course of her lifetime, it was common for her to take other relatives, friends, and family into her home. A Memorial Mass for Yvonne will take place on Thursday, November 25, 2021, at 11:00 am at St. Paul’s Cathedral, 360 Nicola Street, Kamloops, BC, with Rev. Canon Len Fraser officiating. In lieu of flowers, donations in Yvonne’s memory may be made to the Canadian Cancer Society. Condolences may be expressed to the family from www.myalternatives.ca
THE ANGEL ON YOUR SHOULDER
By Jackie Huston Lena, Wisconsin There’s an angel on your shoulder Though you may not know she’s there, She watches over you day and night And keeps you in her care. There’s an angel on your shoulder Watching you learn and grow Keeping you safe from danger And nurturing your soul. She’ll be there through your triumphs She’ll dance on clouds with pride, She’ll hold your hand through disappointments and fears, Standing faithfully by your side. In her lifetime this angel was strong and true, And stood up for what was right. In your life you’ll be faced with decisions and trials And she’ll shine down her guiding light. Life holds so much in store for you, So remember as you grow older, There are no heights you cannot reach ‘Cause there’s an angel on your shoulder. Bereavement Publishing Inc. 5125 N. Union Blvd, Suite 4 Colorado Springs, CO 80918
GIVE LAVISHLY LIVE ABUNDANTLY By Helen Steiner Rice The more you give, The more you get, The more you laugh, The less you fret, The more you do unselfishly, The more you live abundantly, The more of everything you share, The more you’ll always have to spare, The more you love, The more you’ll find, That life is good, And friends are kind, For only what we give away, Enriches us from day to day.
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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sunset while sitting around a campfire with his family. He also loved being on the water, whether it was boating around a lake, swimming, or just sitting on the beach. Bob was most at peace when he was surrounded by water and wilderness. His love for being outside also led him to develop interests in boats and trucks, specifically Dodge trucks. One of Bob’s strongest skills was his ability to cook and BBQ. Bob really enjoyed cooking and hosting for family and friends. He was a caring and generous man who had a talent for making everyone around him smile through his huge heart and friendly personality. He was admired for his outgoing persona and contagious laugh that will be missed by many. In 1994, Bobby and Vinessa welcomed their son Spencer Stewart to the world. Bobby was thrilled to be a father and was always incredibly proud of Spencer. Bob met his former wife, and lifelong best friend Shelley Stewart, on a house boating trip on his favourite lake, Shuswap. In 1999, he followed his love to Richmond, where they raised their children Taiya (2001) and Blake Stewart (2002). Bob’s three children meant more to him than anything in the world. He loved spending time with them playing video games, going camping, and coaching sports. He instilled in his children to always do what they love and never worry about what others think. He had a loving nature and his life revolved around those he cared about most. In 2016, Bob moved to Shuswap Lake to spend more time with his father (Bob Sr.). Bob spent his last years on the lake fishing, camping, and enjoying the incredible views. He loved living at Blind Bay, BC, where he sadly passed away. Rest in Paradise, Bobby. A celebration of his life will be held with family and friends at a later date. Online condolences may be sent to Bob’s family through his obituary at www.bowersfuneralservice.com
Ask DRAKE
It is with heavy hearts that we announce the unexpected loss of Tqeltkukpi Mawgcen Neskynilh, Spelqweqs (Marcus Frank Sauls III) on November 14, 2021. Mawgcen was born September 18, 1981 and raised on Neskonlith Reserve #1. He devoted his life to helping everyone. Travelling the world and true to his traditional ways, which included being a fluent speaker of the old Secwepmec language.
Q. How can I be sure they’re Murray’s ashes?
Mawgcen is survived by his mother Karen. R. August, stepfather Rocky Tomma, siblings Anthony Sauls, Frances August, Stephanie, Kyle Sauls and Brittani Tomma. He is also survived by his godmother Karin, nieces and nephews, along with numerous aunties (favourite being Freda August), uncles and cousins and Sundance family. Mawgcen will be missed by his family and friends.
A. There’s an excellent system of checks and balances. For example, have you ever noticed the stainless steel disk that comes back with Murray’s ashes? Give us a call and I’ll explain it to you.
Cherished memories of the good times and his teachings will be remembered. He was a true warrior right to the end. In lieu of flowers, monetary donations can be sent to missspencer@live.ca Condolences may be expressed at: www.schoeningfuneralservice.com
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JANUARY 17, 1926 – NOVEMBER 15, 2021
July 4, 1968 - November 2, 2021
Tqeltkukpi Mawgcen Neskynilh
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JOHN GARFIELD WELLS
STEWART, Robert (Bob/Bobby) Gordon With heavy hearts, Bobby’s family announces his sudden passing on November 2, 2021, at the age of 53. Bob will be sadly missed by his three children: Spencer Scherrer-Stewart (Kamloops), Taiya Stewart and Blake Stewart (Richmond). Bob will also be missed by former wife Shelley Stewart (Richmond) and his eldest son’s mother, Vinessa Scherrer (Kamloops). Bob is survived by his mother and stepfather, Donna and Gord Dittberner, and his two sisters: Carol (Jeff) DeFehr (Kamloops) and Jackie (Mark Lamley) Stewart of Vancouver. Missing their uncle is niece, Payton DeFehr-Robb (Kamloops), and nephews, Nolan and Theodore Lamley (Vancouver). Many aunts, uncles and cousins adored Bobby. He is predeceased by his grandmother, Alice Stewart in 2021, father, Robert (Bob) Stewart in 2017; grandfather, Ralph Becker in 2017; niece, Cora Lamley in 2015; grandmother, Erna Becker in 2007; uncle, Larry Morton in 1995 and grandfather, Donald Stewart in 1983. Bob was born in Kamloops, but moved to Prince George and Port Moody, before settling back in Kamloops in 1980. He attended Robert L. Clemitson Elementary, Valleyview Secondary, and graduated in 1986 from Kam Hi (now SKSS). As a child, Bobby loved spending time at his Grandparent’s house, swimming in their pool. Bob also loved going hunting with his Grandpa Ralph and helping him with his forestry projects. Bobby and Grandpa Ralph treasured every minute they spent together. Bobby’s grandparents meant the absolute world to him. He would travel far and wide to see them any chance he could. One of Bob’s greatest passions in life was carpentry. He found enjoyment in taking something ordinary and turning it beautiful. He spent his early years in carpentry building and renovating luxury homes; however, he found more fulfillment in creating art later in life. Bob’s talents even won him notable recognition when he won the Georgie Award from the Canadian Home Builders Association. Bob had a real connection with nature and loved being outdoors. He cherished the evenings watching the
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Drake Smith, MSW Funeral Director Every Wednesday in KTW!
Drake Cremation & Funeral Services
210 Lansdowne • 425 Tranquille Rd. 250-377-8225 • DrakeCremation.com AFFORDABLE & NO BLACK SUITS
It was with heavy hearts that we say good bye to our father, Gramps, great grandfather, uncle, brother and dear friend, John Garfield Wells. John was born on the family farm,( the fifth of 10 children) just a step or two from Wellwood, Manitoba to John (Jack) James Wells and Ada Hope Wells (nee Whitmore). He was predeceased by his parents, his wife Audrey in 1984 (mother of Barrie and Alison), wife Joyce Fraser in 1996 and dear long time friend, Joyce Snider in 2021. His siblings who predeceased him include brothers Andy, Jim and Alex plus sisters Joan, Winona, Dawn and Beth. His surviving siblings include his brother Charlie (Chase BC) and sister Frances (Neepawa MB) and sister-in-law Marjorie Cartwright (Kamloops). John is survived by his son Barrie (Bev) of Kamloops BC, daughter Alison of Kamloops BC, four grandchildren [(Tyler, Brett (Alex), Tammy and Amanda (Dan)] plus 2 great grandchildren, Shayne and Lucy. “Papa John” was also well loved by the Porter children and grandchildren: Ryan (Kristy), Hilary (Derek), Jaren, Jayse and Zephyrin. Dad’s gentle smile and gentlemanly nature will be dearly missed by many extended family members and close friends. His amazing record of 35 years of employment with CN Railways was only topped by the fact that as retiree, he collected a pension longer than he worked as a signal maintainer! Dad was a long time member at the Kamloops Golf and Country club, plus the Kamloops Curling Club. Both sports kept him active and healthy well into his late 80’s. Other favourite activities included bicycling, gardening and walking his ‘grand dog’ Ava along Schubert Drive, admiring the scenery. Over the years he made several trips back to Manitoba to visit family and friends to share memories of his life on the farm outside of Wellwood. Dad was a faithful member of St. George’s Anglican Church. His dedication and sixty two years of service to St. George’s was greatly appreciated by the congregation and officiants. A memorial service will be held on Friday, November 26, 2021 at 11 a.m., officiated by Rev John Boyd and Rev Linda Lagroix, at Kamloops Funeral Home, 285 Fortune Drive, Kamloops B.C. Please respect Provincial COVID protocols, which will include proof of full vaccination and the use of facial masks. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to the Marjorie Willoughby Snowden Hospice House. (The “angels” that watch over our loved ones in their last hours are immeasurably the most compassionate, caring people that we have ever met). “The universe gives us a reminder of how beautiful endings can be when the sun sets and the moon rises” – Taylor Ashley
John Martin Ludwig It is with deep disheartening sadness that we announce the passing of John Martin Ludwig. John fought a long battle waiting for a lung transplant. He was raised in Revelstoke with his three sisters Harolyn, Traci, and Julie and was married to his wife Marni for 25 years. John was predeceased by his parents Harold and Shirlee. John loved and cared for all his family and friends and absolutely loved and supported all his nieces and nephews. His fairness and devotion will always be remembered. John’s business took him to a multitude of cities where he made amazing friends along the way. His absolute pride for his ironworker/welder career left behind a legacy of people who apprenticed under him, amazing structural buildings and bridges. John’s humour was contagious, jokes were plentiful and his story-telling legendary. He enjoyed making people laugh. His smile was always big and kind.
We will miss you John, forever and a day. Your loving wife and all your family. A Celebration of Life will be held May 28, 2022 at his home. kamloopsthisweek.com • kamloopsthisweek.com
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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Harold Houghton
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Stanley Tuomo Saari
May 18, 1922 - November 16, 2021
It is with great sadness passing of Stanley Tuomo was 88 years old, born Corner, BC. Even though died too quickly at Royal on October 6, 2021.
It is with heavy hearts and the fondest of memories we announce the passing of our beloved Husband, Dad, Grandpa and Great Grandpa, Harold Houghton at the age of 99 years in Kamloops, B.C. Harold is survived by his loving wife Sylvia of 70 years, his daughter Wendy, son-in-law Rod, four grandsons Dylan (Alison), Ryan (Cary), Garrett (Elizabeth), Branden (Felicia) and six great-grandchildren - Everett, Nathan, Lochlan, Rebecca, Derek, and Holden. Harold was predeceased by his parents Cyril and Ester and his older sister Iris who he adored. Harold was born in Sheffield, England and was a proud Seaman of the UK Merchant Marines from 1942 to 1951. He served his country as an Engineering Officer aboard The Celtic Star, The Pasteur, The Duchess of Richmond, The Empress of Scotland, The Admiral Cunningham, S.S. Charmouth Hill and the S.S. Notting Hill. While serving aboard The Celtic Star as the Assistant Engineer he was torpedoed March 29, 1943 by the Italian submarine “Finzi” and The Celtic Star sunk on March 30, 1943 off the coast of South Africa. After 3-4 days in a life raft the crew was rescued by the H.M.S Wastwater and taken to Freetown, Sierra Leone to await his return to England 3 months later. During this time he found his love for travel and the sea. Harold married the love of his life Sylvia on August 30, 1951 and shortly afterwards immigrated to Vancouver, BC. They made their home in Burnaby where Harold was always taking on a new project for the house. Harold worked for Standard Oil / Chevron at the Burnaby Refinery as a Machinist Engineer and Foreman from 1951 to when he retired in 1985. He loved the ocean breezes and soaking up the sun on the beaches of Hawaii or California. He was a tireless, meticulous hard worker because as he would say “You don’t get anything done just standing around.” No matter how hard or difficult something was his motto was “ You have to try” and try he did as he had beaten the dreaded “C” cancer 4 times. His final challenge was Alzheimer’s. Harold was a kind, generous, proud loving man who would do anything for anybody. If something needed fixing he was always there with a solution and spent many hours tinkering away in the garage or at his workbench. He was a firm believer in honesty, integrity and family. He always spoke a kind word. He had a passion for the outdoors and all living creatures. He stood strong in his belief to live and let live. A bug in the house meant you catch it and let it go outside. He had a definite sweet tooth and a love for chocolate and liquorice. Most days usually meant a coffee and timbits at Tim’s and we sure didn’t have to ask twice if he wanted to go out for lunch or dinner. His favourite British poet/comedian was Marriott Edgar. Harold never tired of “The Lion and Albert” and could recite the entire poem which always ended with him laughing and a huge grin on his face. Harold continually gave the gift of life by being a regular blood donor and was a registered organ donor. In memory of Harold please pay his kindness forward by doing a good deed for someone in need. “ For only what we give away enriches us from day to day”. Harold supported the following charities: BC Cancer, Heart and Stroke, SPCA, Wildlife Rescue, and the Royal Columbian Hospital.
He leaves behind his bride of 66 years, Lilly Saari (Sydor) and four children (Deborah Saari (Les Fisher), Richard Saari (Wanda Bestwick Saari), Ronald Saari (Janet Saari), and Charney LaMarsh (David LaMarsh). Stan adored his sixteen grandchildren and twelve great-grandchildren, all of whom brought him great joy and pride. Stan also leaves behind a younger brother, Allan Saari (Patricia Saari) and many special nieces and nephews. He is predeceased by his parents, Samuel and Sylvie Saari, and two siblings, Tuano Saari (Dolly Saari) and Taimi Norberg (Gordon Norberg). Stanley enjoyed hosting his family and friends for many yearly get-togethers at his residence in Clearwater, and later ‘The Cabin’ in Lac La Hache, BC until his move to Kamloops in 2016. Christmas in July, Thanksgiving’s, Halloween and Christmas parties will be fondly remembered by all those who attended. Always an entrepreneur, breaking new ground, Stanley was often called a “Jack-ofall-trades”. He never let not knowing how to do something stop him from pursuing his many visions, passions, and dreams. He possessed a broad working knowledge of lived experiences, derived from blacksmithing with his father, and having careers in automotive and fibreglass industries (Maple Ridge) as a young family man before entering the grocery, hospitality and recreation industries (the first neighborhood pub and golf course, Clearwater, BC) where he worked until his retirement. Stanley had a mind hungry for growth, always looking for opportunities to widen his expertise, even into his retirement. Throughout his life, Stanley enjoyed many hobbies including snowmobiling hosting Rotary students, golf, boating, flying, hunting and fishing with his grandsons. Inspired by his father, Stanley took up woodworking in his 80s. His family cherishes the bowls and kuksa (Finnish cups) he turned and the boards he cut and shared so generously. Flying was one dream Stanley only partially fulfilled, attaining his private pilot licence in 1980. Until his death, Stanley continued to dream about building his own plane. Stanley will be remembered by his family as a determined and passionate man with a dry sense of humour, whose occasional gruffness did not diminish his devotion and love for his family.
Roy Philip Ereaut It is with a heavy heart that we announce the passing of Roy Philip Ereaut on November 10, 2021 in Kamloops, BC at the age 85 years old. He is survived by his son Robert, daughter Deborah (Irfan), and his grandchildren Levent and Dilara. He will be missed by his sisters Maisie, Melba and sisters-in-law Flora (Bill), Annie plus numerous nieces and nephews. He was predeceased by his parents Philip and Mary, his brother George, and his loving wife Johanne.
“Now is the hour, when we must say goodbye, Soon you’ll be sailing, far across the sea, While you’re away, oh please remember me. I’ll dream of you, if you will dream of me, Each hour I’ll miss you, here across the sea, It’s not goodbye, it’s just a sweet adieu.” We are all ships returning home laden with life’s experiences, memories of work, good times and sorrow, each with our own special cargo. Until we meet again. Always to be remembered and never to be forgotten. By request no formal service. His ashes will be scattered at a future date. Cremation arrangements entrusted to Drake Cremation and Funeral Services. Condolences may be emailed to: drakecremation.com
that we announce the sudden Saari, of Kamloops BC. Stanley February 4, 1933 in Webster’s he lived a long and full life, he Inland Hospital, Kamloops, BC,
Roy was born on August 3, 1936 in Burgeo, Newfoundland. The youngest of four siblings, Roy grew up with a close connection to the sea as told by his stories to his grandchildren. At the age of eighteen, he travelled to Gander to enroll in the Air Force where he would serve in the CAF until his retirement in 1984. During his time in the Air Force, Roy met the love of his life Johanne and they married having their two children Robert and Deborah. His time in the air force took Roy and his family across Canada, living in different provinces and also spending a period in Tacoma, Washington before settling in Kamloops in 1980. Following his retirement from the Air Force, Roy worked for the Canadian Corps of Commissionaires with the local RCMP detachment and later with the airport. Although there was many highlights in Roy’s retirement, the time he spent with his beloved wife Johanne and their miniature schnauzers (Oscar and subsequently Cajun) would be his most cherished memories until her passing in 2015. Roy was admitted to RIH and quietly passed away in his sleep six days after his admission. A private family service was held. Should friends desire, donations to the Canadian Cancer Society or a charity of your choice would be appreciated in his memory. Condolences may be sent to www.schoeningfuneralservice.com
May the Sunshine of Comfort Dispel the Clouds of Despair
To advertise call Celebrate the lives of loved ones hy
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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Norma Leslie Myers
March 20, 1931 - November 11, 2021 With last kisses and flowing tears, Lorna and Linda said good-bye to their beloved Mother, Norma Leslie Myers, on November 11, 2021 . Memories of her will be cherished by her daughters, Lorna Fuoco (Reg) and Linda Seller (David); grandchildren David Fuoco (Serena), Lisa Brunt (Davis), Kristin Seller (Eric) and Erin Hegg (Paul); and great-grandchildren Avani and Anaya Fuoco, Jackson and Carter Brunt, and Livia and Jack Hegg. Those who knew Mom will remember her for her passion for duplicate bridge that culminated in a Bronze Life Master; her love of books and reading; her joy in being outside in her garden or at her cabin on Shuswap; and her quest for the next adventure. If it was happening, she was there. She was independent, capable and determined. For Mom, where there was a will, there was a way. Her kind-heartedness and curiosity shone through everything she did. She loved life and would have lived forever given the option. Mom never gave up on anything or anyone. We knew this was true when, at a very young age, we witnessed her successfully resuscitate our belly-up goldfish. Regardless of our accomplishments or lack of them, she loved us unconditionally and supported us without judgement. When asked by others how we knew we were loved, our answer was simple, “There was never any reason to doubt. We just knew.” One of the highlights of Mom’s days was a visit from her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. She adored them and they loved her back. This poem was written by the grandchildren for their Grandma. To Our Grandma Her peaches are sweet, Her dancing is neat. She owns lots of shoes but she prefers bare feet. She can chop up a tree, Read a book in a flash. She can swim like a fish and then make you laugh. If you wash her car, She’ll wash yours right back. If you get out of line she’ll keep you on track. She gives big strong hugs and she’s fearless and bold. There’s no doubt her heart is made purely of gold. The best thing about her is her hugs and her smile, and if you happen to cry she’ll cry with you a while. We couldn’t keep up to her even if we tried. We love her so dearly. It can’t be denied.
Obituaries
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Obituaries
In Loving Memory of Flora Jean Gair Flora Jean Gair of Kamloops passed away on November 11, 2021, at the age of 94. Flora “Jean” was born in Smithers, BC to parents Anna Gesine and William Gair. She grew up near Burns Lake with her parents and 6 siblings on their farm in Forestdale, “Crow Creek”. As she did very well in school, she boarded in Smithers with a doctor’s family while she attended Smithers High School. Following school, she worked for a pharmacy in Burns Lake. In June 1946, she married Charles Van Tine (deceased) in Burns Lake. The couple moved to Terrace, BC and built a home and had two children. They moved to Westsyde (Kamloops, BC) in 1963 and bought a corner store. Flora ran the small post office and that was the beginning of her career with Canada Post. The family moved to Telkwa then Smithers, where she worked in both post offices. Flora worked her way up to become a Post Master of which she was very proud. The job took her to different parts of BC, including Logan Lake, Valemount and Telkwa. She retired in 1992 and moved to Kamloops to be closer to her children and grandchildren. Flora loved cross country skiing and partook in that activity until age 85. She also enjoyed singing. She was an avid reader and liked playing Scrabble and doing crosswords puzzles. Most important to her was her children, grandchildren, and great-granddaughter. She enjoyed visits from her nieces, nephews, family, and friends.
Obituaries
I’m Glad I Touched Shoulders With You
From Bob White’s Scrapbook There’s a comforting thought at the close of the day When I’m weary and lonely and sad That sort of grips hold of this crusty old heart And bids it be merry and glad. It gets in my soul, and it drives out the blues, And finally thrills through and through. It’s just a sweet memory that chants the refrain, “I’m glad I touched shoulders with you.” Did you know you were brave, Did you know you were strong, Did you know there was one leaning hard, Did you know that I listened and waited and prayed And was cheered by your simplest word? Did you know that I longed for that smile on your face, For the sound of your voice ringing true, Did you know I grew stronger and better because I had merely touched shoulders with you? I am glad that I live; that I battle and strive For a place that I know I must fill; I’m thankful for sorrows I’ll meet with a grin What fortune may send good or ill; I may not have wealth, I may not be great but I know I shall always be true, For I have in my life that courage you gave, When once I touched shoulders with you.
Predeceased by her three brothers, Bill Gair, Lou Gair, George Gair and her three sisters, Isabelle Horning, Edith Anderson, and Rebecca Perrault. Plus, her beloved son Brian Van Tine. Survived by her daughter Lynn (Adrian) Higgins of Kamloops, BC, her grandson Nigel (Tracey) Higgins, their daughter Bailey Higgins, (Flora’s great-granddaughter) of Surrey, BC, and her grandson Shawn Higgins of Kamloops, BC.
OF A LIFE SO BEAUTIFULLY LIVED. AND A HEART SO DEEPLY LOVED. Your Life was a Blessing, Your Memory a Treasure, You are Loved beyond Words and will be Missed beyond Measure ~Unknown. A scattering of her ashes will take place in early summer 2022 at a place chosen and dear to her. Memorial donations may be given to the charity of choice in Flora’s name. Condolences may be expressed to the family from www.myalternatives.ca
PRAYER FOR
PEACE Lord, make me an instrument of your peace. When there is hatred, let me sow love; Where there is injury, pardon; Where there is doubt, faith; Where there is despair, hope;
Hugs and kisses always
Where there is darkness, light;
Thank you to Mom’s extended family, including relatives in other parts of Canada, the USA and Italy, for their love and support, and to her friends for their kindness and caring especially during this past year.
Where there is sadness, joy.
Our memories and the example Mom set for each of us to live life with curiosity, confidence, and unconditional love will be held close to our hearts.
Grant that I may not so much Seek to be consoled, as to console;
A celebration of Mom’s life will be held at a later date.
Thanks for wearing a mask, for everyone!
Obituaries
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To be loved, as to love;
May the Sunshine of Comfort Dispel the Clouds of Despair
For it is in the giving that we receive; And it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
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JASPER’S STORY OF HOPE
H
i, my name is Jasper Flurey. I grew up in Fort Langley BC, and was born in June of 1990 – that makes me 31 years young! I was not a good student and got suspended every year since Grade 2. I craved attention and did whatever I could to get my fix, usually as the class clown and troublemaker. In Grade 9, I moved to a large secondary school and was blown away by the freedoms. Soon I was skipping class and smoking weed at school. I discovered alcohol and its “magical” couragebuilding properties. I loved to be drunk, and felt 10 feet tall and bulletproof while under the influence. There were so many students that I was able to fly under the radar for a while, but my poor attitude, and bad behaviour caught up with me and got me the boot halfway through Grade 12. Not that I was
lined up to graduate. Coming from a family that had excelled in higher education, I carried a lot of shame about not completing high school. I worked basic labour jobs, but my lack of education and confidence didn’t allow me to ever find a job that could be considered a career. My drinking and drug use spiralled out of control until I became homeless and lost contact with all friends and family. I spent 7 years on the streets before eventually being arrested and incarcerated. On Sept. 16, 2020 I was released to Vision Quest – a treatment facility outside of Logan Lake. Since being in treatment I have begun to understand how and why my addiction took over my life. I know that if I put in the effort, I can continue to remain sober. Jail saved my life and so has VQ and the staff. I have now moved to transitional housing and
have started Street School. The teachers at Street School are compassionate and understanding, and are a large part of my
recovery. They help in building the confidence I need to remain a sober and productive member of society. I
plan on completing the program, and then begin studying to become an Outreach Worker. I believe I can connect
with active addicts, and be a light in their lives as living proof that from the depths of despair, there is always hope.
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USING DCCS AS HOUSE DOWN PAYMENTS? THE COMMUNITY OF LANGFORD ON VANCOUVER ISLAND IS DOING IT FOR POTENTIAL HOMEBUYERS WITH INCOME LIMITS, BUT THERE IS HESITANCY TO DO LIKEWISE LOCALLY JESSICA WALLACE
STAFF REPORTER
jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com
K
amloops politicians are weighing in on a Vancouver Island city’s policy aimed at helping first-time home buyers. The Victoria suburb of Langford, which happens to be the home of Premier John Horgan, is utilizing development cost charges — fees charged to developers — to help provide down payments through a capped grant program for homes up to $450,000 purchased by individuals with an income of $125,000 or less. The city wants to ensure people continue to put down roots as average home prices skyrocket to $900,000. The average selling price of all homes (single-family, townhouse and apartment/condo) in the Kamloops area rose to $619,265 in October, while the average sell-
ing price to date of single-family homes in the Kamloops area increased to $669,225. Kamloops Mayor Ken Christian said the city is not looking at a similar policy, noting he would not in favour of such an initiative. Christian said the city’s development cost charges are assigned to projects that better the entire city. “What you’re essentially talking about is using taxpayers’ dollars to subsidize housing for entry-level housing and I think there are better ways that municipalities could encourage entry-level housing, other than subsidizing the down payment,” he said. Christian said there are ways the city can encourage development, through zoning that reduces lot size requirements and encourages secondary suites and carriage houses. He said those tools make housing less expensive, but does not directly subsidize or underwrite a person’s mortgage.
Coun. Kathy Sinclair said she is interested in looking into Langford’s policy. She said the city needs to look at every possible angle to increase housing affordability. Sinclair said it is “shocking” how much housing prices have increased since she moved to Kamloops in the last decade. She said other communities are facing similar problems and it comes down to supply and demand. She said the city needs everything from affordable rentals to affordable home purchases. “Rentals are a real issue right now and this wouldn’t help alleviate that, necessarily, but it’s definitely attractive to first-time homebuyers,” she said. “It sounds like it would be a good opportunity for them and I do think the city could play a role.” Sinclair said she wants to run the idea by the chair of the development and sustainability committee, Coun. Sadie Hunter, to add it to a committee agenda for discussion.
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Hunter said she is curious to see how the new policy works in Langford and called it an “innovative idea.” “I think anything we can do to make housing and homes more affordable for people, I think, is worth considering,” she said. Hunter said the Langford initiative does not sound that much different from the affordable housing fund in Kamloops and other initiatives undertaken to provide land for affordable and social housing. “In my mind, it’s a bit of an extension of that and also even an extension of affordable recreation, KamPass, all these,” Hunter said. “Helping somebody buy a home is quite different, but in this time we need to think of out-of-thebox solutions.” Coun. Dieter Dudy said he would be concerned about how such a policy would impact the development community, pointing out that developers are on the hook for DCCs. “That money is supposed to go
toward putting in infrastructure that you continue to develop,” he said. “And that offsets the costs of the city, et cetera. Taking that money and actually giving it to people who move in, is that going to have a negative effect on making sure that all the infrastructure is in place? That’s the concern I have.” Dudy said anything that can be done to get homebuyers into homes is wonderful, but he also questioned if that is the role of local government, noting housing is a provincial jurisdiction. “The more stuff that we start taking on our own sends the message to the province that, ‘Oh, these guys can do that,’” Dudy said. “So then it becomes an expectation on their part, where they come back to us and say, ‘Well, you did it before. We see no reason why you shouldn’t go down that road. You chose to go there, now you’re going to go there.’” — with a file from the Vancouver Sun
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LOCAL NEWS
Fundraisers for mom who lost daughter in crash EMBER YOUNG, 6, DIED IN THE HEAD-ON COLLISION ON NOV. 18 NEAR LOGAN LAKE. EMBER’S SISTER HAILEY, 5, AND MOM JORDAN SUSTAINED SERIOUS INJURIES IN THE HIGHWAY 97 CRASH KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK
Fundraisers have been launched to help the mother of the six-year-old girl who was killed in a two-vehicle crash south of Logan Lake on Nov. 18. Ember Young died in the head-in collision on Highway 97C near Foley Road that occurred in snowy conditions at about 12:15 p.m. Ember’s five-year-old, sister Hailey and mom Jordan Goetz sustained serious injuries. Macy Jarry has organized a campaign to raise money to help cover costs of Ember’s funeral. The fundraiser is online at gofundme.com under “Ember Young’s funeral expenses.” “I am setting this up on Jordan’s behalf as she is in no
condition to do it herself,” Jarry said in the gofundme post. “If anyone can help make the financial impact of this situation even a little bit easier on the family, it’s the least we can do in such a devastating time. Thank you for any donation whatsoever.” Another fundraiser on gofundme.com has been created by Ray Wiens. It can be found by searching “Ember Young family.” Wiens noted the family has been through tragedy before as Jordan’s husband died this past August. Jordan and the girls moved in with Jordan’s parents in Merritt, from where they were evacuated last week as the city flooded. They then went to Jordan’s grandmother’s home, but were
again evacuated, this time to Kamloops. Wiens said the trio was en route to his home in Lower Nicola, near Merritt, when the accident occurred. Cpl. Mike Halskov of the BC Highway Patrol said the crash involved a passenger vehicle and a large utility vehicle. The RCMP, BC Coroners’ Service and the Commercial Vehicle Safety Enforcement branch are investigating. Halskov said the cause of the collision remains under investigation, adding there is no evidence to suggest any criminality as a contributing factor. Anyone with information about this collision, including any dash-cam video, is asked to call police at 250-378-4262 and quote file 2021-5574.
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LOCAL NEWS
Lifetime achievement award for Marr DALE EAGLES
STAFF REPORTER
dave_eagles@kamloopsthisweek.com
Retired lawyer and longtime brain injury advocate David Marr was honoured recently with a lifetime achievement award for his passion and service. Marr’s advocacy work for the local asso-
ciation was instrumental in bringing awareness of brain injury to the Kamloops region. As a founder of the Kamloops Brain Injury Association and the Brain Injury Alliance of B.C., Marr was instrumental in establishing the alliance and in securing funding through the provincial government. “I’m very grateful for receiving it,”
Marr said of the honour. His work saw him directly speaking out for brain injury survivors as a lawyer in court, ensuring there was a well-rounded support system in place for them outside the courthouse. Marr specialized his legal practice in the area of brain injury and often helped survivors of brain injury get heard in court. “I’m a little bit hesitant.” Marr said, of receiving the award. “I worked with such wonderful people putting together the Kamloops Brain Injury Association when we started in 1986.” That year, a group of brain injury survivors approached Marr, asking if they could start an organization. During the first three years, the Kamloops Brain Injury Association was nothing more than a coffee party, held once a month
Brain Injury Alliance of B.C. president Tara Decker (left) presents Kamloops Brain Injury Association founder and advocate David Marr with a lifetime achievement award as KBIA executive director David Johnson looks on. DAVE EAGLES/KTW
in Marr’s reception room office. “They came from Merritt, from Ashcroft, from Salmon Arm and from Kamloops,” Marr said. “Two nurses came down and talked to them about how they should exist in the community and where they should seek help. You could just see
the relief in their faces, having somebody that understood their problems.” Marr said there is a long list of others who have helped over the years, including members of the community, Royal Inland Hospital and individual supporters, such as the late Dr. Gur Singh.
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LOCAL NEWS MONDAY - FRIDAY 9 AM - 5 PM SATURDAY 10 AM - 2 PM Travel is the only thing you buy that makes you richer.
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A $90-million performing-arts centre has been identified as the No. 1 need in the City of Kamloops’ recreation master plan. According to Kamloops Coun. Mike O’Reilly, the cost of creating that proposed project and many others should be shared by nearby residents of the Thompson-Nicola Regional District, many of whom use current city facilities and will use future facilities.
O’Reilly wants region to pay to play in city JESSICA WALLACE
STAFF REPORTER
jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com
Kamloops Coun. Mike O’Reilly wants the Thompson-Nicola Regional District to contribute financially to new recreational facilities in the city. At its latest meeting, Kamloops council heard of a need for $234 million worth of recreational facilities, including a performing-arts centre ($90 million), a recre-
ational swimming pool ($50 million), a twin-sheet ice arena ($45 million), an expanded curling facility ($30 million) and indoor field and gym space ($19 million), as identified in the city’s recreation master plan. O’Reilly said that while Kamloops typically funds such facilities on its own, residents of the regional district utilize them and areas around Kamloops, such as Chase, Sun Peaks, Tobiano and Logan Lake, are growing.
“One big thing is the funding for these,” O’Reilly said. “We continually go back to the City of Kamloops taxpayers and, as we look and as we sit and hear from the ThompsonNicola Regional District, their highest growth areas are the areas directly surrounding the City of Kamloops. … The actual capital investment is something I think we should look at from the TNRD to help support this.”
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LOCAL NEWS
Councillor wants federal cash for federal cops JESSICA WALLACE
STAFF REPORTER
jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com
A Kamloops city councillor hopes the federal government will help pay for increased costs of policing after the RCMP’s first-ever union agreement
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was ratified earlier this year — impacting the city’s budget. Coun. Arjun Singh’s notice of motion, to be debated at council’s next meeting on Nov. 30, calls on the federal government to cover retroactive costs for the RCMP. Council’s preliminary bud-
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get, without service cuts, indicates a five per cent property tax increase will occur next year. It would be the most significant increase in Kamloops in recent memory. That is in part due to RCMP costs. The city is on the hook for $6 million in payments retroactive 2017, to be funded from reserves, as well as $2.52 million in additional RCMP contract costs in 2022, to be funded via taxation.
Singh’s notice of motion also calls on the federal government to consult with municipalities prior to implementing initiatives that could impact city finances and policing in communities. A CAPITAL IDEA Singh is in Ottawa this week for the Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM) board meeting, which concludes on Nov. 26.
Singh said that, in addition to the issue of police funding for municipalities, the FCM board is discussing safe supply amidst the ongoing opioid overdose crisis, Supreme Court of Canada cases making it more difficult for police to hold people in custody and climate action. Singh is on the FCM’s board of directors, which represents municipalities across the country.
Fundraiser for family of crash victim A fundraiser has been launched for the family of a man killed in a collision in Sicamous. Shaun Michael, 48, died on Nov. 6 when a pickup truck crossed the centre line and collided with Michael’s pickup truck on the Bruhn Bridge. The driver of the other truck, a 52-year-old Alberta man, was
taken to hospital with serious, but non-life-threatening injuries. The online fundraiser at gofundme.com (search “In Loving Memory of Shaun Michael”) has bene organized by friend and work colleague Hope Bahry and seeks to raise $100,000 to help Michael’s wife and two daughters. Michael was returning home
to Kamloops after completing an emergency telecommunications repair for Global Broadband, the telecommunications company for which he worked, when the collision occurred. Michael is survived by wife Tanya and daughters Jadyn and Harley. He was predeceased by his young son, Trace.
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LOCAL NEWS
B7
39TH 41thANNUAL Annual
According to police, a pickup truck blew through a stop sign on Battle Street and crashed into a southbound vehicle travelling up First Avenue at about 1:30 a.m. on Nov. 3, 2019. ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTW FILE
2019 crash that killed three leads to lawsuits MICHAEL POTESTIO
LOCAL JOURNALISM IINITIATIVE
michael@kamloopsthisweek.com
While a criminal trial has yet to begin, lawsuits have been filed against the man charged in connection to a fatal hit-and-run more than two years ago that claimed the lives of three Nigerian students in Kamloops. Reid McKnight, a Canadian Armed Forces solider, is charged with failure to stop at an accident involving death and three counts of dangerous driving causing death. He is alleged to have been the driver who fled a crash in downtown Kamloops on Nov. 3, 2019. The collision claimed the lives of Daniel Okocha, Feyisola Adebowale and Oluwatosin Adeojo, all of whom were international students at Thompson Rivers University. A fourth passenger in their vehicle survived the crash with injuries.
The parents of Adebowale and Okocha each launched civil suits against McKnight on Oct. 28, seeking unspecified amounts in costs and damages. Both lawsuits have named McKnight, the estate of Adeojo, who also died in the crash, and a John Doe as defendants. The lawsuits claim the collision and deaths were caused by negligence on the part of either, all or a combination of the defendants. Both civil suits are seeking general damages, special damages and costs, including expenses for funerals, travel, airfare, accommodation and wage loss. Both plaintiffs are being represented by the same legal counsel. BC Hydro is also suing McKnight for $17,000 in connection with damages to its infrastructure from the crash, court documents state.
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That suit was filed on Oct. 19. McKnight, the registered owner of the pickup truck that hit the car carrying the students, was charged in September 2020, though he was arrested and released the day after the incident pending further investigation. Emergency crews were called to the intersection of Battle Street and First Avenue at about 1:30 a.m. on Nov. 3, 2019, after a blue Ford Ranger pickup truck collided with a red Dodge Charger carrying the students. Investigators believe the truck, travelling westbound on Battle, sped through a stop sign and struck the car carrying the students, which was heading south (uphill) on First. McKnight’s next court date for his criminal proceedings is Nov. 29, at which time he is expected to fix a date for future court proceedings.
Downtown Kamloops is excited to announce that Santa and his Elves are on their way. This year the theme is "Luminous 'Loops". Attendees can expect Victoria Street to be illuminated with larger-than-life floats, mascots, many friendly faces, and the jolly old guy' himself, Santa, dressed in red, in his sleigh with his reindeers. So dress warm and bring all your good cheer! We extend genuine gratitude to the community for your patience, eagerness, and participation in the Downtown Kamloops 41st Annual Santa Claus Parade. The Kamloops Central Business Improvement Association encourages attendees to wear masks, stand with a family group, and maintain social distancing, as per provincial regulations. Leave the area after the event. If you are sick, please do not attend. When: Wake Up Santa at 4:10 PM followed by the Parade at 4:30 PM on Sunday, November 28th, 2021 Where: Starting at 2nd Ave & St. Paul Street, down 2nd Avenue to Victoria Street, along Victoria Street and ending at 6th Avenue We encourage parade spectators to walk or carpool to the event. Two downtown parkades located on Seymour & Lansdowne Street are free on weekends. Please note on Sunday, November 28th, public transit will be limited.
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LOCAL NEWS
Shendruk only IH executive to be based here JESSICA WALLACE
STAFF REPORTER
jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com
Amidst ongoing concerns at Royal Inland Hospital and calls from city council to have Interior Health’s president and CEO meet with the group, a member of the health authority’s senior executive team is relocating to Kamloops. Currently, no Interior Health senior executives are based in Kamloops, with the health authority brass primary located in Kelowna. On Nov. 16, city council requested Interior Health president and CEO Susan Brown come to council to address ongoai163000449791_Affiche11x17 B-C.pdf 1 2021-08-26 15:01:38
ing staffing and communications concerns. Coun. Mike O’Reilly said the health authority model is not working. He said he fears opening of new buildings at RIH without sufficient staff. On Thursday, Nov. 18, during the twice annual Thompson-Nicola Hospital District board meeting, O’Reilly reiterated those concerns and questioned whether RIH would be better served with more Interior Health administration based in Kamloops. “Kamloops council has heard significant responses from people, workers at Royal Inland Hospital, with grave concerns over staffing and what’s creating the
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staffing shortage, to the plans to meet when she is setpoint that numerous peotled in Kamloops. ple have said they don’t Interior Health executives feel this is the bottom, and where they are located: they don’t think this is the • Susan Brown, president worst that it is going to and CEO: Kelowna get worse,” O’Reilly said. • Karen Bloemink, viceTracey Rannie, execupresident of human resources, tive director of clinical population health and pandemoperations at RIH, said ic response: Fernie staffing is challenging • Mike Ertel, vice-president of right now, but noted work medicine and quality: Kelowna Diane Shendruk is VP of continues behind the • Jenn Goodwin, vice-presclinical operations for scenes to support RIH. ident of communications and Interior Health North. She added that Diane culture: Kelowna Shendruk, vice-president • Mal Griffin, vice-president of clinical operations for Interior Health of digital health: Kelowna North, is moving to Kamloops. • Shallen Letwin, vice-president of clinShendruk has been with Interior ical operations for Interior Health South: Health since 2020 and previously worked Kelowna in the Saskatchewan health-care system. • Donna Lommer, vice-president of Her VP role leads clinical operations clinical and corporate services: Kelowna across Interior Health’s northern region, • Addie Pryce, vice-president of aborigincluding the Thompson-Caribooinal partnerships: unknown Shuswap, North Okanagan and East • Diane Shendruk, vice-president of Kootenay. She is currently based out of the clinical operations for Interior Health Kootenays. North: Nelson (moving to Kamloops) Kamloops Mayor Ken Christian said • Sylvia Weir, vice-president and chief Shendruk has reached out to him with financial officer: Kelowna
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LOCAL NEWS
$5.2-million Riverside Park project has begun JESSICA WALLACE
STAFF REPORTER
jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com
Rivers Trail and the pier in Riverside Park closed this week as the city works to replace the spray park, upgrade pathways and build a new change room and washroom facility. Demolition of the concrete and asphalt surfaces in the park began on Monday as part of a Riverside Park improvement project worth $5.1 million. It is being funded in part with $750,000 in grant dollars. The scope of the project includes: • replacing the spray park with a new, accessible spray park; • demolishing the old concession and washroom buildings; • constructing/installing a new change room/ washroom building with gender-neutral and accessible components; • completing floodmitigation work, including raising of Rivers Trail between Uji Gardens and
THE PLAN INCLUDES REPLACING SPRAY PARK AND MAIN WASHROOM BUILDINGS Sandman Centre; • paving and widening the Rivers Trail multi-use pathway to three metres between Uji Gardens and Sandman Centre; • installing new lighting, benches and garbage receptacles along the Rivers Trail; • planning the new spray park’s concrete pad to accommodate the possibility of a future skating rink. Work began between the pier — which is located at the confluence of the North and South Thompson rivers — and Sandman Centre and will move toward Uji Gardens. The city’s capital projects manager, Darren Crundwell, said the current washroom facility is old and in need of replacement. He said Rivers Trail will be widened and elevated, with new lighting
installed. The city is working through winter in order to avoid freshet, when waters rise in the spring. Supply chain issues are not expected to impact the project. Council decided against installation of an outdoor ice rink previously approved for the same project in order to save money, but $100,000 has been earmarked for brine lines to be installed, leaving the option available in the future, should council choose to fund it. The Riverside Park project is expected to be completed in the summer of 2022. The playground, tennis courts, pickleball courts, bandshell and green space will remain open. The beach, pier, Rivers Trail, spray park and washroom building, however, will be closed.
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Age: 40 | Race: Caucasian Height: 173 cm / 5’08” Weight: 81 kg / 179 lbs Hair: Brown | Eyes: Blue
Wanted for: Theft Under $5000. Fail to Comply with Undertaking. Possession of Stolen Property Under $5000. Assault with a Weapon x3. Uttering Threats x3. Possess Weapon for Dangerous Purpose. Fail to Comply with Recognizance. Fail to Comply with Probation Order x 4
LEES, Andrew
Age: 50 | Race: Indigenous Height: 178 cm / 5’10” Weight: 95 kg / 210 lbs Hair: Black / Grey | Eyes: Brown
Age: 50 | Race: Caucasian Height: 170 cm / 5’07” Weight: 88 kg / 194 lbs Hair: Bald | Eyes: Hazel
Wanted for: Assault by Choking Assault Fail to Comply with Release Order
Wanted for: Assault with a Weapon Break & Enter & Commit
www.kamloopsCrimeStoppers.ca
If you know where any of these suspects are, call Crime Stoppers anonymously at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477). You can also submit an anonymous tip online at kamloopscrimestoppers.ca. You never have to give your name or testify in court. If your information is used in an arrest, you may be eligible for a cash reward of up to $2,000 These suspects are wanted on arrest warrant not vacated as of 3:00pm on Nov 17, 2021
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LOCAL NEWS The Lamplighter Motel is at at 1901 East Trans Canada Hwy. in Valleyview. LAMPLIGHTER MOTEL PHOTO
Congratulations to Gina Fedora, manager of Fisherman’s Market Kamloops, for winning our Salt of the Earth Award. This is a tri-annual award given to the Fisherman’s Market Crew Member who best exemplifies our core values of honesty, integrity, hard work and amazing customer service. Of these traits, Gina has proven to be one of a kind.
BC Housing leases Lamplighter Motel JESSICA WALLACE
STAFF REPORTER
We are truly happy to have her aboard our ship, thank you Gina! Head over to the store and say hi to Gina! Our winter hours are 10:30-5:30 Monday-Saturday. C117 1180 Columbia St. W, Kamloops, BC WWW.THEFISHERMANSMARKET.CA
jessica@kamloopsthisweek.com
BC Housing has leased the Lamplighter Motel in Valleyview. According to BC Housing senior communications advisor Sophie Gray, the agency signed a lease in October to utilize 31 units in the motel, which is located at 1901 East Trans Canada Hwy.
“We lease hotel and motel rooms in Kamloops for various reasons, including for use as shelters, COVID isolation spaces, women’s transition housing and supportive homes,” Gray said in an email to KTW. “To protect the privacy of residents in the Lamplighter Hotel, we are not able to share any further details about the site at this time.” BC Housing also
recently purchased the Fortune Motel, located at 654 Fortune Dr. in North Kamloops, and utilizes the Acadian Motor Inn, which is located downtown on Columbia Street. The City, of Kamloops, meanwhile, is looking to incentivize redevelopment of motels and hotels throughout the city via a proposed expansion of its tax revitalization tax exemption.
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ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES WIRELESS Aberdeen Mall (250) 377-8880
215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall (250) 377-8007
ANDRES BUSINESS ANDRES CAR AUDIO 300 St. Paul St. (250) 377.3773
B11
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 314-9944
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300
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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KAMLOOPS
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
BU YI NG
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P R IC E
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215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall WE377-8007 WILL NOT BE BEAT! (250)
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES WIRELESS Aberdeen Mall (250) 377-8880
215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall (250) 377-8007
ANDRES BUSINESS ANDRES CAR AUDIO 300 St. Paul St. (250) 377.3773
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 314-9944
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
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P R IC E
EX PE RT IS E
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CO M M U N IT Y
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215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall WE377-8007 WILL NOT BE BEAT! (250)
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES WIRELESS Aberdeen Mall (250) 377-8880
215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall (250) 377-8007
ANDRES BUSINESS ANDRES CAR AUDIO 300 St. Paul St. (250) 377.3773
B13
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 314-9944
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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KAMLOOPS
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
BU YI NG
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215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall WE377-8007 WILL NOT BE BEAT! (250)
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES WIRELESS Aberdeen Mall (250) 377-8880
215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall (250) 377-8007
ANDRES BUSINESS ANDRES CAR AUDIO 300 St. Paul St. (250) 377.3773
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 314-9944
ANDR
300
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
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P R IC E
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CO M M U N IT Y
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215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall WE377-8007 WILL NOT BE BEAT! (250)
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES WIRELESS Aberdeen Mall (250) 377-8880
215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall (250) 377-8007
ANDRES BUSINESS ANDRES CAR AUDIO 300 St. Paul St. (250) 377.3773
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745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 314-9944
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KAMLOOPS
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
BU YI NG
PO W ER
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P R IC E
EX PE RT IS E
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215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall WE377-8007 WILL NOT BE BEAT! (250)
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES WIRELESS Aberdeen Mall (250) 377-8880
215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall (250) 377-8007
ANDRES BUSINESS ANDRES CAR AUDIO 300 St. Paul St. (250) 377.3773
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 314-9944
ANDR
300
(25
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
BU YI NG
PO W ER
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P R IC E
EX PE RT IS E
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CO M M U N IT Y
KAMLOOPS
215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall WE377-8007 WILL NOT BE BEAT! (250)
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES WIRELESS Aberdeen Mall (250) 377-8880
215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall (250) 377-8007
ANDRES BUSINESS ANDRES CAR AUDIO 300 St. Paul St. (250) 377.3773
B17
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 314-9944
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300
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
KAMLOOPS
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
BU YI NG
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P R IC E
EX PE RT IS E
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CO M M U N IT Y
B18
215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall WE377-8007 WILL NOT BE BEAT! (250)
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700
ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES WIRELESS Aberdeen Mall (250) 377-8880
215 • 450 Lansdowne Mall (250) 377-8007
ANDRES BUSINESS ANDRES CAR AUDIO 300 St. Paul St. (250) 377.3773
745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 314-9944
ANDR
300
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WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
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B19
COMMUNITY
Cutober event rasied $7,000
Community
BRIEFS Kiwanis online auction begins
MICHAEL POTESTIO
LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE
michael@kamloopsthisweek.com
Another year, another $7,000 has been raised for mental-health and sexual assault counselling agencies in Kamloops. The Cutober fundraiser was launched last year by Kamloops resident Nathaniel Martin to collect money for the Kamloops Sexual Assault Counselling Centre (KSACC) and the Kamloops branch of the Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA). This year’s fundraiser brought in just north of $7,000 for the organizations to split, Martin told KTW. Last year, the campaign raised about $7,400. Of the money raised last month, about $5,000 came from a group effort at Teck’s Highland Valley Copper mine near Logan Lake, where Martin works. The rest was donated by members of the public who made donations, purchased Cutober merchandise and attended the Oct. 2 live haircuts event at Aberdeen Mall, where six dads got new dos from their kids. The fundraiser sees parental participants receive a unique haircut from their children and pledge to sport it through November — one minute for every dollar raised during the month of October. Martin started Cutober with his daughter in October 2020 as a way to raise funds for and aware-
The Kiwanis Club of Kamloops’ annual radio auction has moved online and will take place from Nov. 24 to Nov. 28. Money raised from auctioning off more than 200 items goes to support children in Kamloops via various endeavours. To bid, go to the Kiwanis Club of Kamloops Facebook page. Nathaniel Martin slumps down so daughter Abrielle can reach his hair during the Oct. 2 Cutober event at Aberdeen Mall. ALLEN DOUGLAS/KTW
ness of mental-health stigmas and domestic violence amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. “We may not know the clients’ names or faces that the KSACC or CMHA will help with these funds, but the point was we know they’re out there waiting to be heard, and the kids and these dads hope that this will help open a few doors for them,” Martin said an email. “Until next October, be kind and patient, maybe hold a door or two, buy a stranger a coffee or simply stop and offer a family with taking a picture their phone to avoid those awkward selfie shots — it might just make all the difference.”
SPCA craft fair at TRU on Nov. 28 The BC SPCA Kamloops and District’s 22nd annual Christmas Craft Fair will take place on Sunday, Nov. 28, from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the TRU Conference Centre on the university campus. The event will feature more than 100 local crafters, vendors, artists, craftsmen/women and more. All proceeds raised will go toward providing assistance and care for animals and guardians within the Kamloops district. There is a $2 admission fee.
Japanese Okoya & Sterling Silver necklace or earrings
2999
$
ea.
Canadian Diamond Studs .40 carat total weight in 10 karat White, Yellow or Rose Gold settings
4999
$
59500
$
set
Home of the $5 Watch Battery (Taxes & installation included)
Sahali Mall
danielles.ca
Mon. to Sat. 10 am - 4 pm Locally Owned & Operated Jewellery repairs done on location
B20
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
COMMUNITY
South Kam students create latest art calendar KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK
Art students at South Kamloops secondary have again created a calendar that is available for purchase, with proceeds going to future visual arts initiatives at the school. Impressions of Kamloops 2022 acrylic paintings were created by the students, who were inspired by Canadian artists. Teacher Lisa Yamaoka said 58 students investigated artistic styles as a way to connect to the local community and share about their learning. The theme focuses on artistic impressions and personal experience about Kamloops. Yamaoka said the art students started their learning with a field trip to the Kamloops Art Gallery for a tour of the fall exhibit Holding a Line in Your Hand. Inspired by both historical and contemporary Canadian artists, students investigated artistic styles as a way to connect to and create a personalized images about Kamloops. Jurors who had the difficult task of selecting the featured images for the
calendar included Kirsten Gardner, the Kamloops Art Gallery’s school programs co-ordinator, Cory Langevin and Tanya Pawliuk of the school’s parent advisory council and Nicole Tomm, a South Kamloops secondary counsellor. Yamaoka noted the school’s parent advisory council and the City of Kamloops’ arts and culture engagement group also lend their support. A small opening to celebrate the calendar’s creation was held in the Sagebrush Theatre lobby for students and their families. A number of the works will be shared at events in the theatre until Dec. 15. There is also a virtual exhibition to view all the artwork online at tinyurl.com/p6pbmw5x. Those interested in supporting the annual fundraiser can purchase postcards ($12) and 2022 calendars ($15) at the South Kamloops secondary main office at 821 Munro St. in Sagebrush, at the The Art We Art, 264 Victoria St. downtown and the Kamloops Art Gallery, downtown at Victoria Street and Fifth Avenue.
MEMORIES & MILESTONES MEMORIES & MILESTONES JARMAN / WINTERS HAPPY SWEET 16th BIRTHDAY PARKER!
From beautiful baby to beautiful lady… it’s been a joy watching you grow up. It’s now time to roll down the car windows – you’re old enough to drive! We love you lots and lots and hope you enjoy this special day. Love Mom and Dad.
JARMAN / WINTERS HAPPY 16th BIRTHDAY TY!
From tiny boy to our tall handsome young man…
always believe in yourself and grab the opportunity that life offers you every day.
Welcome to giving your parents more grey hair…you can now drive! We love you lots and lots and hope you enjoy this milestone day. Love Mom and Dad.
BREAKING NEWS! READ ALL ABOUT IT!
Dimas turns
60
May this special day of yours be absolutely terrific. Happy birthday. Love from all your family
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CORRECTION NOTICE PLEASE BE ADVISED THAT IN TODAY’S SURPLUS FLYER SALE DATES SHOULD BE
NOVEMBER 29 TO DECEMBER 5 SORRY FOR ANY CONFUSION
- SURPLUS MANAGEMENT
MONDAY
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B22
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
KAMLOOPS’ BEST SELECTION OF
VQA WINES AND BC CRAFT BEER GIFT PACKS & STOCKING STUFFERS
Buy 6 Bottles of Wine, Save 5%! Buy 12 Bottles, Save 10%! Buy 6 Bottles Microbrew, Save 5%!
Great wines in stock!
Don’t forget to check out the RED TAG savings! Save between $1 - $3 per bottle! HOLIDAY HOURS: CHRISTMAS EVE 9AM - 7PM CHRISTMAS DAY: CLOSED NEW YEAR’S DAY: 10AM - 7PM WE’RE IN LANSDOWNE MALL!
225-450 LANSDOWNE ST 250-571-1377 LANSDOWNELIQUOR.CA LANSDOWNELIQUOR
HOLIDAY BEAR GIVEAWAY 1st place prize: One year membership full play at the Dunes (value $2000) 2nd place prize: $1,000 in groceries 3rd place prize: $500 in gas
OUR TIME IS NOW – JOIN US
Plus eachng participatiis location r a drawing fo
limited edition bear!
COMMUNITY
Free concert on Nov. 26 KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK
The Indigenous Connections team at Kamloops Alliance Church, led by Woodland Cree elder Norm McCallum, is inviting Kamloops residents and evacuees from flooded areas to enjoy a country gospel Christmas evening of song and celebration featuring 14-time Aboriginal Award winner Yvonne St. Germaine. The free concert will take place at Kamloops Alliance Church, at 200 Leigh Rd. at the north side of Overlanders Bridge, on Friday, Nov. 26, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. “We know it’s been a very difficult season for so many with all that has been happening throughout the world, within our Kamloops community, and for our neighbours in Merritt, Princeton and beyond,” McCallum said. “When we first planned this special concert a few months ago, it was my vision to build bridges with all peoples that would unite us in love and understanding and open the windows of our hearts toward one another and with Indigenous peoples of this country,” he said.
The concert at Kamloops Alliance Church in North Kamloops will include songs from Yvonne St. Germaine (above) and a Christmas message from Norm McCallum.
“Now more than ever, I see how special it is to open our doors to not only our local community, but also to those who are here with us in Kamloops hoping to return home.” The free event will kickstart the holiday season through stories and a Christmas message from McCallum, plus music by Yvonne St. Germaine, a selfproclaimed “Métis-gal from Saskatoon” who, through song and sharing, hopes to bring light and joy to the lives of many. “I have dedicated my heart to our Indigenous communities, not only in song, but in motivational speaking to help bring heal-
ing,” St. Germaine said. “Those who join us at the event can expect to hear a spin on my own sound of country gospel music. “My vision is that my music will help the community of Kamloops and all evacuees enjoy an evening of hope, knowing that no matter who you are or where you come from, we are a community.” Because the event is deemed a worship event by the public health officer, vaccine passports will not be required, although masks will be mandatory, a physically distanced section will be available and all COVID-19 protocols will be followed.
CanGo plant sale on all week KAMLOOPS THIS WEEK
The Kamloops CanGo Grannies are holding their annual Christmas greenery arrangement fundraiser through Friday, Nov. 26. It is being held in the workroom and yard of On Side Restoration, at
755 Laval Cres. in Southgate. Sales take place from 9:15 a.m. to 4:15 p.m. The group raises money for the Stephen Lewis Foundation, which supports grandmothers in Africa who are raising their grandchildren orphaned by the AIDS epidemic.
TOGETHERWERISE-RIH.COM
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
B23
KAMLOOPS ART PAGE Welcome to Kamloops This Week’s Art Page, where we showcase creations from artists of all ages. Submissions can be sent via email to editor@kamloopsthisweek.com.
Sophia Piroddi created Stuck In Space while in Grade 5 at the Kamloops School of the Arts in the 2020-2021 school year. The comic is about a girl named Astrid who somehow gets magically transported into outer space. Abby Chapman’s Beach Day artwork was created in the 2020-2021 school year when she was in Grade 5 at Dallas elementary.
Eight-year-old Magnolia Garrioch created this as yet untitled artwork for KTW readers to enjoy.
B24
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
PLANNING SOME HOLIDAY CHEER?
CALL A DEER! 250-320-0650 Operation Red Nose is a designated driving service provided to any motorist during the holiday season.
HOURS OF OPERATION:
9:00pm - 3:00am November 26, 27, December 2, 3, 4, 9, 10, 11, 16, 17, 18, 30 & 31 Help keep Kamloops safe this holiday season by volunteering just 6 hours of your time For information or to volunteer this Holiday season please contact 250-320-0650 | kamloops@operationrednose.com or www.pacificsportinteriorbc.com/operationrednose
Please Don’t Drink & Drive! Please Don’t Drink & Drive!
DON’S Auto Towing Ltd. DON’S
671 Athabasca Street West Auto Towing Kamloops, BCLtd. 250-374-6281 • 1-877-374-6281 671Athabasca Athabasca Street 671 StreetWest West 250-374-6281 • 1-877-374-6281 Kamloops, BC 250-374-6281 • 1-877-374-6281
Let’s keep the holidays merry and bright! Plan for a safe ride home. Your family and friends will thank you. Peter Milobar, MLA
Todd Stone, MLA
Kamloops – North Thompson
Kamloops – South Thompson
618B Tranquille Road Kamloops, BC Phone: 250.554.5413 Toll Free: 1.888.299.0805 peter.milobar.mla@leg.bc.ca
446 Victoria Street Kamloops, BC Phone: 250.374.2880 Toll Free: 1.888.474.2880 todd.stone.mla@leg.bc.ca
www.petermilobarmla.ca
Proud Supporters of Operation Red Nose
COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE REPAIRS AND MAINTENANCE FOR YOUR CAR AND TRUCK 963 VICTORIA ST. | CITYCENTREAUTOSERVICE.CA | 250-372-5150
www.toddstonemla.ca
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
FAITH
What does it mean to be Orthodox? Part 9 of 10
W
hat is the difference between Eastern Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism? Like so many other questions I have explored in this series, the answer is a matter of history. In July 1054 A.D., a papal delegate, Cardinal Humbert, arrived in Constantinople from Rome to excommunicate the Patriarch of Constantinople and the entire Eastern Orthodox Church. Known as “The Great Schism,” this date marks the official split between the two churches, which has not been healed to this day. How did it come to this? Flash back 600 years or more, to a period when no distinction could be made between “Roman Catholic” and “Orthodox.” There was only the church, composed of dioceses in urban centres throughout the empire, each headed by a bishop who governed, along with his presbyters and deacons. Bishops who ruled the largest cities (like Alexandria and Constantinople) or centres of spiritual distinction (like Rome, Jerusalem and Antioch) took on a special prominence. Among these, Rome was preeminent. Both saints Peter and Paul had been martyred there and St. Peter was Rome’s first bishop. In addition, Roman Christians had a reputation for solid theological teachings and, in matters
V. Rev. Richard René is the priestin-charge of St. Nicholas Orthodox Mission (orthodoxkamloops.ca), an English-language Eastern Orthodox Church for the Kamloops community.
of dispute, the bishop of Rome regularly offered wise and godly arbitration. Despite his theological authority, however, the bishop of Rome did not meddle in the jurisdictions of other bishops. They often sought his opinion, but they did not need his approval to make decisions within their own dioceses. In fact, all bishops were equal by virtue of their consecration, whether they ruled prestigious urban centres or small cow towns. Then, beginning in the late fourth century, Germanic tribes from the north began a series of invasions, cutting off Western Europe (the diocese of the bishop of Rome) from the rest of the empire, including Alexandria, Constantinople, Jerusalem and Antioch. Communication between East and West virtually ceased. In its isolation, the Western church faced unique problems. When the Germanic conquerors
Places of Worship KAMLOOPS
Christian Science Society, 1152 Nicola Street, Kamloops Sunday Church Services 10:30 - 11:30 am
of Spain adopted Arianism (a heresy that denied the full equal divinity of Jesus with God the Father), Spanish theologians proposed an addition to the fourth century Nicene Creed. Where the original version of the Creed said the Holy Spirit “proceeded from the Father,” the revised version stated that the Holy Spirit “proceeded from the Father and the Son.” By adding this clause (“filioque” in Latin), the theologians hoped to equate the authority of Jesus with God the Father and refute the Arians. Another unique Western controversy centred around investiture. According to custom, a newly consecrated bishop would receive his staff and ring of authority from the local lord, on whose land the diocese was located. This “lay investiture” was, in effect, the state’s approval of church authority. However, because Germanic legal traditions gave the lord possession over anything on his land, the lords felt they could invest only those bishops they preferred, such as their relatives or political favourites. In reaction to these abuses, the pope asserted supreme jurisdictional authority over the church, including all church appointments, quite separate from state approval. Anyone who disagreed would be excommunicated. Remember, these controversies and their solutions took place in the West, completely
isolated from the East. In fact, neither side of the empire had any real sense of what was happening in the other. When some semblance of political stability returned to Western Europe around the 10th century, westerners began to engage in sustained ways with eastern Christians once again — and only then did it become clear just how far apart they had grown. The jurisdictional authority of the pope was not just absolute in the diocese of the West, it was absolute everywhere, in the whole of Christendom on pain of excommunication. And so, we arrive at that fated day in 1054, when Cardinal Humbert flung down the papal bull of excommunication on the altar of Haghia Sophia and stormed out in a self-righteous huff. The Patriarch of Constantinople’s retaliatory excommunication of the Pope followed as a matter of course. The formal schism between the East and the West was not by any means sealed in 1054 A.D. Only in the 13th century, when Roman Catholic knights of the Fourth Crusade sacked and burned Constantinople, was the separation between the two churches finally cemented with Christian blood. Today, Catholic and Orthodox theologians are striving to heal the wounds inflicted 10 centuries ago.
Open Your World to BC’s Motion Picture Industry Training No Cost tuition/fees! Learn Set Construction, Grip or Lighting in the film industry Dec. 13/21 - Feb. 24/22 No Cost for eligible applicants who are displaced from COVID, unemployed or under employed (P/T). 90% Online and 10% in-person, Kamloops.
A C T B I G
T A H I T I
O N E P I N
M A L E S
M O N T D A H R I E A V R M E I N E L T R A D R A W W E S E M U S L O R E T R E X C U S S E D
I C R E A D I A N R I T T L E D A C S O C I M C R I B A R I N O D I N G M E G C E D T A N B A S F I S H C I N E C U N S R B A O O I L M A P S L O T S M A I M P R I V E L I K E
V A P E S H O P S G A M Y
T C E L L D I N A C E O S N O T I N
O R S K I E S R M A I D A S C A M A K E H O L O D O N T A L E P L D Y C O U S B A R S F E S T A L E D S T H E T C O M R A N O V A L E T O W I S E T M E E E N T R N A T I O O T E A D
T H E S U N A I R B U S B A N D
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A P P S N A R C T R I O A N N A S T E C K S T I S T E R S H A U L E T N A G S I T O I C A T T M A G R A G U A R R E N C E S D I E T R E S S
ANSWERS TO CROSSWORD FOUND ON B27
City of Kamloops
ACTIVITY PROGRAMS We thank you for your patronage, understanding, and patience as we work together during this unprecedented time. Visit Kamloops.ca/COVID for updates Programs are cancelled if the minimum numbers are not met.
Try It! Footbag & Jianzi
Ages:7-12
Join us a try out these non-traditional and multi-cultural sport games Footbag (Hacky Sack) and Jianzi. These games focus on mobility, agility, balance, and coordination that allow you to keep up sports and focus on skill development. The purpose of these games are to keep the ball or object suspended in the air. Jianzi, dating back to over 1000 years, is known as the feather, disc or ring kicking sport that originated from China. Hal Rodgers Friday Nov 26 4:00-5:00pm 1/$8
Saturdays on Seymour
All Ages
Join the KMA on the last Saturday of the month for creative activities for the whole family to enjoy. Different theme each month! Sat Nov 27, Dec 18 1:00–3:00 pm FREE
KMA Heritage Explorers Ages: 6–12
Join the KMA as we explore our exhibition. Each session has a different focus around the exhibition and a craft activity. Sat Dec 4 2:00–3:00 pm 1/$10 Sat Dec 18 10:00–11:00 am 1/$10 Card Making Winter/Christmas Theme Learn the techniques behind making beautiful handmade cards with simple step by step instructions. Sign up with a friend enjoy learning and creating cards in a relaxing atmosphere. All supplies provided to make various cards. Heritage House Mon Nov 22 – Dec 6 6:30–8:30 pm $45
For information www.nic.bc.ca or contact Ashley Russo at Ashley.Russo@nic.bc.ca 250-923-9700 ext 7837
All are welcome www.christianscience.bc.ca csskamsoc@yahoo.ca
To advertise here, please call 250-374-7467
C O M E A S
Kamloops.ca
B26
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
WEEKLY COMICS
ARCTIC CIRCLE by Alex Hallatt
PARDON MY PLANET by Vic Lee
BABY BLUES
SHOE by Gary Brookins & Susie Macnelly
by Rick Kirkman & Jerry Scott
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
ZITS by Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman
by Chris Browne
WEEKLY HOROSCOPES
ARIES - Mar 21/Apr 20
Aries, family tops your list of priorities. You are likely to spend considerable time with loved ones in the days to come. Relish in all the opportunities to enjoy one another.
TAURUS - Apr 21/May 21 You may feel uneasy or worried for unknown reasons, Taurus. Trust your gut in this instance and steer clear of trouble should it try to find you.
GEMINI - May 22/Jun 21 Gemini, focus on keeping your cool even if others are trying to provoke you. Be the bigger person in all of your interactions. You have great control of your emotions.
CANCER - Jun 22/Jul 22
Cancer, you have been working very hard lately and this may result in an overactive and tired mind. You should factor in a break so you can recharge your body and spirit.
LEO - Jul 23/Aug 23 The conditions are right for finishing important tasks, Leo. You will be able to come up with wonderful ideas that have true staying power. Pursue your options.
VIRGO - Aug 24/Sept 22 Virgo, your energy will remain high this week, enabling you to get many things done. Additionally, you may have a big change coming, like buying property or landing a new job.
LIBRA
NOVEMBER 24 - NOVEMBER 30, 2021 - Sept 23/Oct 23
Be confident and listen to your instincts, Libra. Do so before undertaking any important tasks that turn up in the days or weeks ahead.
SCORPIO
- Oct 24/Nov 22
Scorpio, it may be tempting to shirk your responsibilities right now, but resist that temptation. Keep your head down and keep working. It will all soon prove worth it.
SAGITTARIUS - Nov 23/Dec 21 Sagittarius, you may have to reset your priorities, as new information has come to the surface. Prioritize responsibilities so major issues are taken care of first.
CAPRICORN - Dec 22/Jan20 Capricorn, unavoidable situations may cross your path and it is important that you stay the course. Committing to tackling things head is the most productive approach.
AQUARIUS - Jan 21/Feb 18 Aquarius, you treasure friends and family, and this week calls for an important decision that could affect them all. It may be tough but you will make the right call.
PISCES
- Feb 19/Mar 20
Pisces, minor obstacles are in your path and it’s easy to get frustrated. Once you clear the hurdles it will be smooth sailing before long.
National Addictions Awareness Week
NOV 21-27 2021
Working Together to Change the Narrative About Substance Use and Addiction www.ccsa.ca/national-addictions-awareness-week It’s about collaborating as a community to make change happen and to reassess the way they think about Substance Use and People who use Drugs
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Piles 15. Tablet purchases 19. Setting for Banff National Park 21. Dealer’s enemy 22. Disney film with more than a million hand-drawn bubbles 24. Rap’s Run-D.M.C., e.g. 25. Ostrich or kangaroo 26. Amtrak service 27. Emulate Ella Fitzgerald 29. Boxer Wolfe who played Artemis in ‘‘Wonder Woman’’ 30. ‘‘Yes, indeed’’ 31. Get-together 33. Rush 35. Clear spirit 36. Seasonal fast-food sandwiches that aren’t halal 37. ‘‘Star Trek’’ virtualreality chambers 38. San ____ (European enclave) 39. [stern glare] 40. Italian wine region 41. Certain developer’s job 42. Seriously unpleasant 43. Or greater 44. Fall flavoring 45. Some movie-theater concession areas 50. Shattered 51. Eateries serving small plates 52. Spoils 53. Up 54. Command center 55. Multiday event, for short 56. 2017 CVS Health acquisition 57. Profess 58. Tough bass part? 60. Really grooves with something 61. Quaint locale of first-aid supplies 63. Valorous
64. Bhikkhunis : Buddhist monastery :: ____ : convent 65. The C of C major, e.g. 66. Word with zone or boots 67. Actor Idris 68. Error message? 69. Was completely exhausted 70. Hiking aids 72. Employees who work a lot 73. Bit of reading near a cashier, in brief 76. Grasps at straws? 77. Not at all 78. Big name in pasta sauces 79. N.B.A. coach ____ Unseld Jr. 80. Badly hurt 81. ‘‘Capisce?’’ 82. Rail in a dance studio 83. Images on some Australian silver coins 85. V.I.P. access points 89. Mythos 90. Nutritional plan involving controlled removal of foods 91. Predator frequently appearing in Calvin’s daydreams in ‘‘Calvin and Hobbes’’ 92. Special delivery?
DOWN 1. Put on pretensions 2. Island home to Faa’a International Airport 3. It’s located in the middle of an alley 4. Drones, e.g. 5. Terse confession 6. Op. ____ 7. Bad person to confess bad things to 8. Twisting together 9. Puerto Rico’s ____ Telescope, formerly the world’s largest singleaperture telescope 10. Impersonate at a Halloween party 11. Immune system component 12. Vegetable in bhindi masala 13. Lens holder 14. Fine crystals used in food preparation 15. Symbol of industry 16. Make a flying jump onto a slope 17. They get left in the dust 18. Treat on a tea trolley tray 20. ‘‘____ Mode’’ (2018 No. 1 hit for Travis Scott) 23. Labyrinth builder of myth 28. Tarot card said to ‘‘radiate’’ positivity 31. Foretold the future 32. Certain gasket 33. Deterrent to a pickpocket 34. Behaves like a fool, informally 36. Drama linked to the resurgence of the name ‘‘Betty’’ for baby girls 37. Remains tightly secured 38. Acquired family member 39. Actress Meyer of ‘‘Beverly Hills 90210’’ 41. Tested the censor, say 42. Vendors of e-cigs 43. Cruise stop
44. Wet behind the ears 45. Important sales for growing businesses? 46. Argument 47. Totally wipes out 48. Like some very old characters 49. Pallet piece 50. Small drink of whiskey 51. Zap, in a way 54. Items at T.S.A. checkpoints 56. Boeing competitor 58. What the waving of a white flag can indicate 59. Business brass 60. Reduce in rank 62. Style pioneered by Picasso 63. Works at the cutting edge? 66. Hot, in Havana 67. Evidence of a crossword solver’s mistake, maybe 68. Dairy-free coffee additive 69. Butcher’s offering 70. Quiver 71. Ripply fabric pattern 72. Give a thumbs-down 73. Bespectacled ‘‘Peanuts’’ character 74. Gives a thumbs-up 75. Talk-show slate 76. Harped (on) 77. Unfashionable 78. Time off, for short 81. Slightly spoiled, in a way 82. Label signing 84. ____-positive movement 86. Contest 87. Actress Mowry of ‘‘Sister, Sister’’ 88. Authority, metaphorically
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CROSSWORD ANSWERS FOUND ON B25
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!
WORD SCRAMBLE
Rearrange the letters to spell something pertaining to writing a novel.
ANSWERS
ANSWER: EDITING
KTW's new weekly video show!
Providing a behind-the-scenes look at the stories of the week from a unique angle Hosted by
Marty Hastings & Chris Foulds
Check it out at facebook.com/kamloopsthisweek or search “Kamloops Last Week” on
B28
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
BLACK FRIDAY STARTS WITH
RED THURSDAY 4
DAYS
OF OUR
LOWEST PRICES
OF THE
YEAR
Starts Thursday, Nov. 25 to Sunday, Nov. 28, 2021
IN STORE ONLY Based on the promotional prices as advertised from November 25-28, 2021. Our Lowest Prices of the Year is defined as the period between January 1 – December 31, 2021. †
VISIT YOUR LOCAL CANADIAN TIRE STORE
†
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
W1
1289 Dalhousie Drive Kamloops, BC 250-372-3181
STARTS
FRIDAY!
BLACK FRIDAY
SALE
EVERY ITEM IN STORE
DRASTICALLY
REDUCED!
THE BIGGEST AND GREATEST SALE IN HISTORY! TUNDRA POWER RECLINING SOFA BLACK
1000
$
OFF
1999 SPECTACULAR
FRIDAY
$
THE MOST
EVENT EVER IS 2199 HERE
PROVIDENCE POWER RECLINING SOFA
$
800 OFF
BLACK
FRIDAY
$
LEATHER HARMONY RECLINER European Style BLACK
600
$
OFF
FRIDAY
$
1299
STARTS FRIDAY!
BRISE SOFA
BLACK
FRIDAY
$
1099
50% OFF
Casually contemporary
BARNESLEY SOFA
BLACK
FRIDAY
$
1099
50% OFF
Easy-elegant, casual flair
WIXON SOFA
BLACK
FRIDAY
$
899
50% OFF
Contemporary style
DO NOT PAY UNTIL 2022 WITH NO INTEREST - NO PAYMENTS - SAME AS CASH!
W2
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
BLACK FRIDA Leather - Power Headrest
POWELL RECLINER SOFA
Elegant transitional styling and reclining comfort
SAVE
1200
$
BLACK
WALL-HUGGER POWER RECLINER
FRIDAY
$
Leather with headrest
1999
BROOKS RECLINER SOFA
FORUM Reclining Sofa
Tall foam back for extra head support, plus chaise seats and footrests for continuous comfort
SAVE
BLACK
50%
FRIDAY
Casual blend of comfort and function with an updated look that’s cleaner and less overstuffed than you’d expect
$
1899
FINLEY RECLINER SOFA
SAVE
55% Available in fabric or leather
BLACK
FRIDAY
$
1899
SAVE
50% Reclining comfort with contemporary style. Modern lines, sleek track arms and a tall foam back that gives it a neat and structured look.
BLACK
FRIDAY
$
2299
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
W3
AY HOT DEALS!
REG. $1399 SAVINGS $600
NOW
$
799
REG. $1699 SAVINGS $700
NOW
999
$
799
REG. $1699 SAVINGS $600
NOW
1099
$
CANADIAN MADE SOLID PINEWOOD CANADIAN MADE
REG. $2099 SAVINGS $1000
NOW
REG. $1899 SAVINGS $700
1099 NOW $1199
$
NOW TWIN SOLID WOOD ALDER BED
TWIN SOLID WOOD ALDER BED
Handcrafted
$
REG. $2099 SAVINGS $800
699
BUY THE COMBO PACKAGE FOR
GEL SPRING BAMBOO EUROTOP MATTRESSS MATTRES
BLACK
FRIDAY
$
499
$
BLACK
QUEEN STORAGE BED
FRIDAY
$
SAVE
50%
999
899
SOLID WOOD CANADIAN MAPLE BLACK
SAVE
Queen Size Bed
1299
$
FRIDAY
$
50%
1799
NOTRE DAME BIG O TIRES
1289 Dalhousie Drive *See in-store for details. We reserve the right to limit quantities. Some pictures may not be identical to current models. Some items may not be exactly as shown. Some items sold in sets.
DULUX PAINTS
DALHOUSIE
HUGE
SELECTION OF $ from RECLINERS
250-372-3181
W4
WEDNESDAY, November 24, 2021
www.kamloopsthisweek.com
BLACK FRIDAY on
HOT DEALSmattresses! iCOMFORT LIMITED EDITION BLACK
FRIDAY DEAL
$
60% OFF
999 QUEEN
Cool, supportive sleep is the priority. We’ve specifically designed this mattress to keep even the warmest sleepers cool. With iComfort, multi-layered mattress-cooling foam technology adds support.
60% OFF
ANYA
ORCHID FIRM TIGHT BLACK TOP FRIDAY • Serta® Anti-Microbial Fibre Technology • 805 Individually Wrapped Coil System • Serta® PillowSoft™ Foam • Serta® Support Gel Foam
VESPER
599
QUEEN
60% OFF
BLACK
• pressure-relieving foams • gel-infused fiber blend • 800 Beautyrest Pocketed Coil
CONNECT EURO TOP
BLACK
HAYWARD BLACK
FRIDAY DEAL
60% OFF
$
• traditional quilted plush mattress • recommended for side/ back sleepers • gel-infused memory foam
1999 QUEEN
UNISON EURO TOP
FRIDAY DEAL
$
799
QUEEN
60% OFF BLACK
The Beautyrest Black Hayward pairs the Cooling Upgrade with additional Gel Touch Foam. The Gel Touch Foam is supple gel foam that provides fantastic pressure relief, plus airflow and breathability.
• charcoal memory foam • provides natural cooling • eco-friendly TENCEL yarn for breathability and moisture management
1199 QUEEN
$
699
QUEEN
60% OFF BLACK
• 2” pillow top layer for enhanced comfort • targeted support system powered by T1 Pocketed Coil Technology • Seaqual Fabric Technology
EMERALD GLOBAL EURO TOP
FRIDAY DEAL
$
OFF
FRIDAY DEAL
DEAL
$
60%
FRIDAY DEAL
$
999
QUEEN
60% OFF BLACK
FRIDAY DEAL
$ • 3” comfort layer • T1 Pocketed Coil Technology
1499 QUEEN
FREE DELIVERY & SETUP!
SEE IN-STORE FOR DETAILS
DO NOT PAY UNTIL 2022 WITH NO INTEREST - NO PAYMENTS - SAME AS CASH!