trail daily times, october 12, 2012
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Contact the Times: Phone: 250-368-8551
Fax: 250-368-8550Newsroom:
250-364-1242Canada Post, Contract number 42068012
Sledge Sledge hockey star hockey star prepares for prepares for Trail campTrail campPage 13Page 13
S I N C E 1 8 9 5FRIDAYOCTOBER 12, 2012
Vol. 117, Issue 196
$110INCLUDING H.S.T.
S I N C E 1 8 9 5
PROUDLY SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF ROSSLAND, WARFIELD, TRAIL, MONTROSE, FRUITVALE & SALMO
BY TIMOTHY SCHAFERTimes Staff
Even though people are disheartened about the pros-pect of the entire NHL season being cancelled, they can still look forward to another sea-son.
Influenza (flu) season is approaching and Greater Trail will be host to four training camps (flu clinics) beginning Oct. 14 before the games begin in earnest this fall.
The flu vaccine is free for many people including people over 65, children up to five years old, aboriginal people, health care providers and pregnant women.
According to Interior Health, the flu is a highly con-tagious infection and can be very serious, especially for those with heart, lung and other health problems.
In years when influenza is
widespread in B.C., hundreds of people may die from influ-enza or its complications, such as pneumonia, said Dr. Rob Parker, IHA medical health officer, in a press release.
“The two most important ways to protect yourself from getting the flu are to wash your hands frequently and get your flu shot,” he said. “Flu vaccinations are a proven, safe and effective way to reduce your chances of getting the
flu. The flu shot also lessens the severity of symptoms for those who do get the flu.”
Dr. Parker also noted that the flu shot cannot give people the flu. The vaccine used in B.C. contains dead influenza viruses that cannot cause infection.
The flu shot is anywhere from 60 to 90 per cent effect-ive in preventing influenza, he added, and if people don’t get it they can’t spread it.
People not eligible for the free flu vaccine through the publicly-funded program should contact their phys-ician, local pharmacy, walk-in clinic, travel clinic or private provider to arrange one.
Many physician offices and pharmacies—such as the pharmacy in Ferraro Foods—also provide vaccines free to those who are eligible.
For more information about influenza, contact your local public health office (look under Interior Health in the blue pages of your phone book) or visit our website at www.interiorhealth.ca.
Information is also avail-able on the Immunize BC website at www.immunizebc.ca, or on HealthLink BC at www.healthlinkbc.ca. You can also call HealthLink BC at 8-1-1 to speak to a health-care professional.
TIMOTHY SCHAFER PHOTO
Sarah Dufresne, right, takes one for the team on Wednesday as she gets an influenza vaccine needle from pharmacy manager Lee Boyer in Ferraro Foods. Right now the pharmacy is offering flu shots on a walk-in basis, Monday to Friday, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Greater Trail clinics• Kiro Wellness Centre, 1500 Columbia Ave., Trail,
Oct. 14, 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. Drop in.• Fruitvale Hall (1968 Main St.), 367-9186, Oct. 23,
9 a.m. – 4 p.m. Drop in.• Kiro Wellness Centre, 1500 Columbia Ave., Trail,
Oct. 28, 9 a.m. – 12 p.m. Drop in.• Kiro Wellness Centre, 1500 Columbia Ave., Trail,
Dec. 12, 9 a.m. – 12 p.m. Children’s second immuniza-tions by appointment.
Flu clinics signal start of season
BY TIMOTHY SCHAFERTimes Staff
Trail’s topography was the top topic of a reso-lution at the recent Union of B.C. Municipalities meeting in Victoria.
Being situated on the steep valley sides of the Columbia River, some Silver City neighbourhood streets and avenues find themselves as slippery slopes when winter hits.
As a result, the city’s burly buses are unable to make it up the grades, negating transit service to the residents in older areas—like West Trail—on heavy snow days and stranding some residents.
Late last month, Trail council advanced a resolution—provincial development of a rural transportation strategy—towards solving that situation that received unanimous support at the convention of all municipal governments in B.C.
But Mayor Dieter Bogs said the resolution had Trail’s unique topography of steep streets at its heart.
“Buses here find it difficult to run up (to West Trail) during certain times in the winter,” he said, adding that a few days a week are being missed in the heart of winter. “We need a more comprehensive strategy for rural B.C. and rural transportation.”
If there can’t be buses running during those times, Bogs added, maybe they need to initiate a taxi service for that short of a time frame. The province could work with the local taxi service and coordinate transportation at same rate as if people took a bus, he explained.
See UBCM, Page 3
BY BREANNE MASSEYTimes Staff
Chloe Sirges took a step into the dark and then a few great people turned on the lights.
More than one year ago 12-year-old Sirges left the familiarity of primary school at Webster Elementary in Warfield and began Grade 7 at Twin Rivers Elementary in Castlegar.
But it wasn’t the unfamiliarity of a new school that challenged Sirges, it was how her education and social life was changed.
Sirges began the long journey north to Castlegar to enroll in a French immersion school, something that isn’t offered in her
See MEETING, Page 3
Bus routes can be a slippery slope
Resolution gets unanimous support at UBCM
District meeting will discuss French immersion’s future
LOCALA2 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, October 12, 2012 Trail Times
Town & CountryBECOME A VOLUNTEER
For Hospice Palliative Care! Training Oct.26(pm),27,28
$35. 250-364-6204 to register
COLOMBO LODGE SUPPER MEETING
Sunday, October 14, 5:00pm “Renato Colbachini Tipits
Tournament” Bring a friend
Tickets $12 @ Star Grocery Menu: Colombo pasta,
Colombo style chicken, jo-jos, salad, buns, coffee.
Other contacts: Tony Morelli Columbus Day Banquet - October 20. Tickets: call
Tony 250.368.9736SISTERS OF COLOMBO
Harvest Banquet Honouring 40Yr. Members
Sunday, Oct.28,2012 No Host Bar: 5:00pm.&
Dinner 6:00pm Tickets &Table Reservations
Doreen @Alexander’s Allana @Village of Warfield
Members $20 &Non-members $25
MONTROSE CHRISTMAS CRAFT FAIRE Nov.2nd, 10-8 Nov.3rd, 10-4 Montrose Hall
Free Admission
TRAIL STINGRAYS AGM
Aquatic Centre Wed. Oct.24th, @6pm
COME ONE, COME ALL! Italo Canadese
Fall Banquet and Dance Nov.3 at our Hall,
419 Rossland Avenue Bar 5:30, Dinner 6:00 Live dance music by
TIMETRAP Tickets only $60 per couple
in advance from 250-368-3268, 250-368-5291
Buy by October 27 to win a $110 value door prize
*Bloomin’KIDS* Partnering with Parents. Grow children’s reading
skills, attention, confidence. Parent coaching included. Eileen Pedersen, Educator:
250.364.2488Columbus Day Banquet &
Wine Competition. Everybody welcome.
October 20th Cocktails 6pm, Dinner 7pm. Enter wines for competition between 9 & 12, Oct. 20 @ the Colombo Lodge Games
Room. $84/couple.
Toni Morelli 250.368.9736 Pat Zinio 250.364.9927
Pat Zanier 250.362.5825
Dinner With The CANADIAN NATIONAL
SLEDGE HOCKEY TEAM Saturday, Oct.27 @Colombo Lodge Cocktails: 6:00pm
Dinner $25: 7:00pm To purchase tickets:
Trail City Hall: Eleanor Gattafoni-Robinson
250-364-1968; Pat Zanier 250-362-5825;
Tony Morelli 250-368-9736TRAIL LEGION
Cheap and Easy Dinner Swiss & Mushroom Chicken
Saturday, October 20th 5:00(ish)
$6.00 per person Cut Off Date: October 18th Please call 250-364-1422
to reserve your ticketTRAIL LEGION
General Membership Meeting October 15, 2012, 7:00pm 2nd Call for Nominations
to the 2013 Executive Thank you for attending
BV LIONS MEAT DRAW Everyday Saturday
Fruitvale Pub, 2:30-4:30pm
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Colombo calling on local winemakers for competitionBY BREANNE MASSEY
Times StaffTest your taste
buds.
The Cristoforo Colombo Lodge is host-ing a Columbus Day Banquet and Wine
Competition for ama-teur vintners to strut their stuff.
The competition began many years ago when the Italico Club of Trail put a ser-ies of long-standing viticulture traditions to the test. But now the Colombo Lodge is taking on the menu with the same flavour and a couple of saucy
tweaks.“It’s one of the best
wine events in the Kootenays,” organizer Pat Zinio explained. “I was thinking about this the other day and the Okanagan might have all the wineries, but the Kootenays have the best winemakers.”
The only rule, Zinio added, is that the wine being entered has to be
made during 2011 from grapes or grape juice. In addition, each entry is only allowed to sub-mit one bottle of each red and white wine. There is a $3 entry fee collected per bottle.
Participants in the competition portion of the night are encour-aged to drop off a sample bottle at the Colombo Lodge Games Room between 9 a.m. and noon on Oct. 20.
Vickie Fitzpatrick and Alita Parissotto will be judging the competition. Prizes will be awarded for first, second and third places in both red and white wines during the ban-quet.
But that’s not the only part of the even-ing the community can look forward to.
The sounds of clas-sic and contemporary
music will flood the room for couples who wish to dance to tracks by Castlegar-based per-formers Terry Alton and Tonnie Stewart (TNT). The duo knows over 100 songs span-ning over six decades of experience, includ-ing headlining on sev-eral cruises.
“Tonnie covers everything from Patsy
Cline to Cher and even some modern stuff like Katy Perry,” Alton said.
“We’ll probably start the night off with some classical music and then start doing the contemporary stuff as the night progresses.”
The night is expected to kick off with cock-tails at 6 p.m. and a five course Italian meal will follow at 7 p.m.
Zinio hinted there might even be a mid-night snack.
Tickets for each couple are $84 each. Anybody is welcome to attend the Columbus Day Banquet and Wine Competition.
Contact Tony Morelli at 250-368-9736, Pat Zanier at 250-362-5825 or Zinio at 250-364-9927 for more information or to buy tickets.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
The Zanier family passing down the art of wine making.
“I was thinking about this the other day and the Okanagan
might have all the winer-
ies but the Kootenays
have the best winemakers.”
PAT ZINIO
LOCALTrail Times Friday, October 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A3
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UBCM requests busing strategy
FROM PAGE 1hometown of Trail—and she is only one of two students in the program’s enrolment of 60 from Trail.
“The time and organization is a bit of a pain,” she said.
“It would be hard (to commute) for someone with par-ents who both work full time.”
Sirges might not have to make the long commute to school with her mother for long.
Later this month when School District 20 (Kootenay Columbia) begins the process of gathering response on starting a similar program in the southern end of the district in Greater Trail.
The first meeting—Oct. 16 at 7 p.m. in the Webster School library—will be the first of four infor-mation meetings to gather response on the possible expan-sion of the late French
immersion program.And judging from
Sirges’ response from the first year at a French immersion school, it is a decision she won’t regret.
She said she could go on forever about why other kids should attend French immer-sion, but to sum it up (and she wrote this 20 times in a row in her agenda): LFI ROCKS.
“I love the teach-ers, the program is great; it’s not just
about learning French out of a book, you actually use it,” she said.
French is great to learn because Canada is bilingual and learn-ing French gives you a leg-up when you apply for a job over other applicants, Sirges added.
SD20 director of instruction Bill Ford said the district needs the feedback from the four meetings to gauge interest in set-
ting up the program somewhere in Greater Trail.
“I’m hoping that work will be done either by Christmas or first thing in the new year,” he said on the prospect of a new program in the area.
The evenings include parent infor-mation sessions, a question and answer period, and a teach-er, parent and kid panel discussion from people who are already part of a French immersion program in the dis-trict.
Through the ses-sions, Ford said par-ents will learn the benefits for students, what French immer-sion would mean for a young person, what the board of educa-tion needs to see to make it happen, as well as what the next steps would be.
Subsequent meet-ings would be held in Fruitvale (Oct. 23, 7 p.m., in the elementary school library), Rossland (Oct. 30, 7 p.m., MacLean Elementary School library) and in Trail (Nov. 6, 7 p.m., Glenmerry Elementary School library).
If you are unable to attend, but are interested in learn-ing more or in shar-ing your thoughts, contact Bill Ford at bford@sd20.bc.ca or 250-368-2230.
Meeting will gauge support
BREANNE MASSEY PHOTO
Choloe Sirges loves her French immersion pro-gram in Castlegar. The school district wants to find out if more people in the Greater Trail area would like this program in local schools.
SPECIAL STUDENT OFFER! Purchase a regular priced ticket on October 18th only, and get a free ticket for up to two students under the age of 18 (subject to
seat availability) Season Tickets for the entire 2012-2013 season are still available!
Regular: $105.00 - Student or Senior: $95.00 - Family: $225.00
Trail Society for the Performing Arts presents
Holy RAV line, Batman, The Number 14 bus is back! There’s a reason this show has played over 1000 times on four continents since it’s premiere in 1992. Follow the hilarious adventures of 60 different people as they ride The Number 14 bus through the streets of Vancouver. If you’ve never seen it, make sure you do -- and if you have, go see it again. And bring the kids. We guarantee that everyone will laugh until they’re sore!
Catch the bus in Trail at the Charles Bailey Theatre
Thursday, October 18, 2012 7:30pm
Tickets: $30 Regular - $15 Students Phone the CB Theatre box office at:
250-368-9669 or email trail_arts@telus.net
FROM PAGE 1“It’s time, particularly in areas
where big buses shouldn’t be running or can’t, that we need smaller buses and coordinate a more comprehensive transpor-tation strategy,” Bogs said.
No one spoke against the resolution and it passed unani-mously.
The UBCM will now request that the province develop a transportation strategy to critic-
ally assess and determine solu-tions towards the sustainability of passenger directed vehicle operations including both pub-lic transit and taxis in rural com-munities.
The resolution will go through the UBCM resolutions committee, taking it to the provincial government level for consideration as legislation or policy.
UBCM member municipal-
ities submitted a total of 203 resolutions before the June 30 deadline. In 2012, members’ resolutions reflected local gov-ernment contexts and concerns, and responded to initiatives and legislation.
Local governments also expressed frustration due to limited revenue sources, as they cope with funding and program cuts by the provincial and fed-eral governments.
“I love the teachers, the
program is great: it’s not
just about learning
French out of a book, you
actually use it.”
CHLOE SIRGES
DOWNTOWN ACCIDENT
GUY BERTRAND PHOTO
Downtown Trail traffic was backed up on Thursday afternoon after a motorcycle and car collided at the intersection of Bay Avenue and Victoria Street. According to officials, the rider was taken to hospital with non life-threatening conditions. No further details were available at press time.
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A4 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, October 12, 2012 Trail Times
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2012 Pain Resolution
BY WANDA CHOWBurnaby NewsLeaderA Burnaby family is
out tens of thousands of dollars after ICBC denied it coverage for a totalled sports car because it misrepre-sented who would be the car’s principal oper-ator.
Yu Jung Lau and Victa Wei Lau sued ICBC for coverage but lost in a recent B.C. Supreme Court judg-ment.
Justice Frits Verhoeven said in his reasons for judgment that he concluded “with considerable reluc-tance” that the princi-pal operator was mis-represented because the decision “was made in order to save a rela-tively modest amount of insurance premium, and almost certainly without any real appre-ciation that forfeiture of the insurance could result, with dire finan-
cial consequences.“The result is harsh
for the plaintiffs.”Not only is the
family on the hook for the cost of the car, but ICBC determined Victa Lau, then 22, to be solely at fault in his accident with another vehicle, and the claims by the occupants of that vehicle remain unresolved.
Yu Jung Lau is an autobody repairman who immigrated from China 31 years ago. His wife operates a conven-ience store in Burnaby where the family lives above the business. They have three sons, with Victa being the eldest.
In 2009, the family already owned four vehicles, a 2005 Lexus RX330, a 2000 Toyota Corolla, a Volvo 850 and a Ford van. Only the Lexus and Toyota were insured at the time because they couldn’t
afford to insure them all.
Yu Jung Lau testified he saw a newspaper ad for a 2005 Subaru Impreza WRX STI and after Victa checked it out, the parents agreed to support the purchase, paying a total of $7,000 in partial and down payments for the car, with their son agree-ing to make the $657 monthly payments.
They purchased six months of insurance coverage, and the fath-er was named principal operator which, consid-ering Victa was licenced as a novice driver at the time, would have saved them $380 on the pre-mium.
Victa made three payments on the sports car, which cost $41,287, before it was totalled in a crash in Burnaby just over two months later on Dec. 28, 2009.
While Yu Jung Lau testified he drove the Subaru the most, Victa said in his written state-ment to ICBC that he
was the principal oper-ator. Victa said the same thing to the ICBC adjuster handling the file both on the tele-phone and in person when they met.
“On the other hand, in his examination for discovery, Victa Lau testified he only drove the Subaru to church on Sundays, and on special occasions, or to run errands for his mother in connection with the store.”
And while the father said he was the one that wanted the car, his testimony about the reasons were “uncon-vincing,” particularly as he had trouble recalling much detail about it.
The Subaru “was an expensive, high per-formance vehicle, with 300 horsepower, a very prominent spoiler on the trunk and a large air intake scoop on the hood,” Verhoeven said. “This is the kind of car that would certainly appeal to a young man.”
Yu Jung Lau’s ration-ale for his son making the car payments also did not make sense, the judge said.
“Victa could con-tribute to the family finances or pay room and board without his father buying an expen-sive high performance car that the family did not need.”
And Victa was the one that took delivery of the car when it was bought because his father was too busy.
“Victa Lau’s Facebook postings reveal that he dem-onstrated great pride in the car among his friends,” the judge said. “All of this is consist-ent with the car being obtained primarily for his use.”
Verhoeven found Yu Jung Lau knowingly misrepresented who the intended princi-pal operator was and therefore forfeited his insurance coverage. He dismissed the Lau family’s case.
ICBC denies coverage for totalled sports carBURNABY
BY MONIQUE TAMMINGALangley Times
For the first time in B.C., a gambling addict is suing the casinos she frequented, including Langley’s Cascades Casino, and the provincial government, for failing to stop her from gam-bling her life away.
In 2010, Joyce Ross, 56, filed suit against the B.C. Lottery Corporation (BCLC) and Langley Cascades Casino and Fraser Downs gaming cen-tre in Cloverdale for letting her continue to gam-ble even after she put herself on the government’s “self-exclusion program.”
She is now pleading her civil claim in B.C. Supreme Court in New Westminster.
She told CBC News that in 2007, she signed herself up for the program in the hopes casino staff would not allow her to gamble. She told the media when she filed the claim that she was totally out of control and spent every dime she had, as well as her family and friends’ money, to gamble.
The self-exclusion program was created by the BCLC and is meant to prevent compulsive gam-blers from entering casinos. The gaming centre is supposed to have a record of the gamblers’ face and by using state-of-the-art surveillance systems to catch addicts as they come in the door.
Ross is claiming the program failed complete-ly, as she continued to gamble until 2010 when she hit rock bottom and got help.
THE CANADIAN PRESSVICTORIA - Nurse practitioners are being
given expanded roles in B.C. hospitals that will allow them to admit and discharge patients.
The job of nurse practitioner is normally con-fined to diagnosing, prescribing and ordering diagnostic tests to treat common medical condi-tions.
And while most NP’s have the education need-ed to do admissions work, they didn’t have the legislative authority.
Health Minister Margaret MacDairmid says the government has now brought in regulations to close that gap.
The minister says the changes will help ease congestion and reduce workloads in hospitals, especially in rural areas that have with fewer physicians.
B.C. is now the second province in Canada, behind Ontario, to give NP’s admitting and dis-
Gambling addict sues
NPs now allowed to admit and
discharge patients
WHISTLER GETS IRONMAN
MARK BRETT/WESTERN NEWS
Matthew Russell was this year’s winner of the Subaru Ironman Canada race in Penticton. Reports Thursday have identified Whistler as the site of the 2013 Ironman Canada on Aug. 25.
Trail Times Friday, October 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A5
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HACKETT, MARY ASSUNTA “ECHARA” — It is with heavy hearts we announce the passing of Echara Hackett on Friday, October 5th, 2012 at Columbia View Lodge at the age of 94 years.
She is survived by her loving family: two daughters and one son, Betty-Lou Jorgensen of Salmo, Shiela Hackett of Grand Forks, and Ray-mond (Pam) Hackett of Castlegar; ten grandchildren; eighteen great grandchildren; three great-great grandchildren with two more on the way; one sister Fedis Prissinotti of Powell River, B.C.; and numerous nieces and nephews in Canada and Italy. She is further survived by her very special Care Aide and friend, Meghan Leface and family.
A very special thanks is extended to Mark Andretta and his wife Beverley, who so lovingly cared for Echara following her death. Echara was predeceased by: her parents Ottavio and Armenia Brandolini; her loving husband Leonard; her sister Alice Scott; her brother Frank; and her son-in-law John Jorgensen. Echara immigrated to Canada with her family in 1919 at the age of 2 years. Her family moved to Powell River, B.C., later to New Westminster, B.C., and fi nally to Trail, B.C. which was home since 1933. This is where Echara met and married Leonard Hackett in 1938 and raised their three children. Echara worked at the Star Bakery, then went on to People’s Jewellers, and fi nally, retired from Sears.
Her family would like to extend a special thank you to the caring staff at Columbia View Lodge which Echara called home for the past 23 years and to others who helped with her care over the years. She will be greatly missed. Cremation will precede a Celebration Of Life Service which will be held on Monday, October 15th, 2012 at Columbia View Lodge at 10.30 a.m. Pas-tor Ken Siemens will be offi ciating. Inurnment will fol-low in the family plot at the Trail Cemetery.
Funeral arrangements have been entrusted to the PLEASANT VALLEY DIGNITY FUNERAL HOME VERNON, BC. (250) 542-4333 Condolences may be emailed to pleasantvalleyfh.com.
***CUMMING, G. LOUISE — “Farewell.
Life has been a marvellous journey. I am now free from my body that has served me some 95 years.”
Born November 20, 1916 in Peach-land, B.C. at the home of her grand-parents and passed away in Victoria B.C. on August 8, 2012.
Her tribute was held August 17, exactly 79 years to the day from when she met her future husband at a dance in Penticton. At the time of her marriage to Alex Cumming in 1935 she moved to the West Kooten-ays where they raised their family in Castlegar and Trail. After the death of her hus-band in 1968 Lou moved to Victoria. She is survived by her daughter Rita of Drumheller, son Jim and his wife Maureen of Victoria and her sister Mary Haker of Keremeos as well as numerous nieces and nephews. When in Castlegar she was actively involved with the United Church where she taught Sunday School, was a choir member and was active with the United Church Women.
After moving back to Trail in 1962 she was employed at the Hudson’s BayCompany.Her fondest memories were of the log home Jim and Mabel Cumming built in Syringa Creek in 1910 and later purchased by Alex and Lou. It was a special place where she and her family spent many happy summers.
OBITUARIES Going on holidays?Let us know & we’ll hold your subscription until you are back!
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THE CANADIAN PRESSA new survey shows
Vancouver, Montreal and Toronto parked among the top five cities in North America when it comes to traffic delays.
Vancouver is second only to Los Angeles in the 26 cities tal-lied in a traffic-congestion survey from GPS firm TomTom covering the second quarter of this year.
The research, using data drawn from the company’s subscribers, shows drivers in Vancouver have their overall commute delayed an extra 33 per cent during con-gestion compared to when traffic flows smoothly.
Montreal took fourth place in the survey, while Toronto came in fifth, Ottawa 12th and Calgary 16th.
But the survey shows drivers in the top three Canadian cit-ies are hit the hardest by traffic during evening gridlock, which
takes more than two-thirds long-er compared to when traffic is light.
Meanwhile, Edmonton came in 25th of the 26 cities tallied, with traffic bumping commute times by only one-tenth.
And the Alberta city showed the biggest drop in congestion delays compared to the previous quarter - a seven per cent drop - according to the research.
The report also found that congestion in Vancouver was worst during peak morning and evening traffic periods on Thursdays, adding an extra 37 minutes in delay per hour.
It says drivers in the city who have a 30-minute commute will spend an extra 87 hours a year stuck in traffic.
San Francisco came in third for congestion, while Washington, Seattle, New York, Chicago and Miami filled out the top 10.
Canada’s three biggest cities among worse for traffic delays
THE CANADIAN PRESSOTTAWA - The Alberta plant
at the centre of an E. coli scare and massive beef recall is being allowed to resume limited oper-ations.
But the Canadian Food Inspection Agency says no prod-ucts will leave the XL Foods meat packer in Brooks until the agency is satisfied it is safe to do so.
“Beginning today XL Foods will be permitted to resume limited in-house cutting and further processing under strict enhanced oversight,” Harpreet Kochhar, executive director for the agency’s western operations, said Thursday.
“This will allow the CFIA to review in a controlled manner the company’s improvements made to all previously addressed deficiencies.”
The plant was shut down Sept. 27 during an ever-expanding recall of its beef products across Canada and more than 20 other countries. It hasn’t been allowed to ship meat to its biggest market, the United States, for four weeks. The restrictions have led to lower cattle prices and a backlog of thousands of slaughter-ready animals in feedlots and ranches.
Kochhar said the plant has been cleaned and sanitized, and issues around condensation, drainage and ice buildup have also been addressed.
Workers will begin process-ing, under the scrutiny of more
inspectors, 5,100 beef carcasses already inside the plant. No new animals will be slaughtered.
The carcasses have been tested for E. coli and are 99 per cent free of the bacteria, Kochhar said.
The main focus will be on more stringent E. coli control measures that have been imposed since a strain of the bacteria made 12 people sick in four provinces. There will be more tests of meat samples and increased monitor-ing of sanitation and hygiene.
“Meat from these carcasses will remain under CFIA deten-tion,” he said. “Products will not be allowed to leave the premises until the CFIA has confirmed in writing to the minister of agricul-ture and agri-food that the plant controls are effectively and con-sistently managing E. coli risks.
“The CFIA will immediately suspend operations if inspectors note any concerns with the facil-ity’s food safety controls.”
The XL Foods plant is the second-largest meat packer in the country behind Cargill, and slaughters and processes more than one-third of Canada’s beef.
Richard Arsenault, director of meat programs at the agency, said the lessons learned at XL Foods will eventually be applied to other meat plants.
“Our goal here is that this will not be something that we will have happen in the next three months, six months, or ever again,” Arsenault said.
Limited operations approved for beef plant
A6 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, October 12, 2012 Trail Times
OPINION
Ta Ta – we’re off on a laughing tour of Canada
Waiting for the Sunday Cinema fea-ture to start
at the Royal Theatre, I was letting my mind wander. The interval before a movie is one of those pleasant pauses when, if they don’t drag on, you can clear your head while anticipating the pleasure to come.
I was summoned back to reality by an “entertain-ment” blurb, a distraction that, along with adverts, seem to be coming at you everywhere you go these days. If you aren’t ensconced in your own digital world, then someone wants to drag you into his or hers.
The entertainment clip featured some pop singer I had never heard of talk-ing about his latest record-ing, which is hilariously called “Cicada.” While the performer thinks the name evokes pleasant memories of summer, for most of us the insect’s high-pitched hum is something they pre-fer to avoid – in memory or in the flesh.
Time Magazine once included the bug’s call on a list of Top 10 Most Annoying Sounds, along
with nails on a chalkboard and the screech of the vuvuzela, the plastic horn that South African soccer fans blew incessantly dur-ing the last World Cup.
As the next blather piece came on the screen my mind wandered off to other inappropriate or funny names. A field day can be had, of course, with government and other com-mittee inspired monikers. Service Canada springs to mind as a classic oxymoron, especially in the wake of extensive personnel cuts in recent years.
Then I started thinking about some of my favor-ite place names in Canada, starting with Dildo in Newfoundland. You would think a province that has been the butt of all those unfortunate “Newfie” jokes for so long would outlaw such place names, but I guess there is no over-coming local taste.
And who are we to make fun of other places when the heart of the Lower Columbia is dubbed Trail. Warfield and Trail residents wish they had a nickel for all the times they have had to struggle to explain to some-
one at the other end of the telephone line that “Trail” is a town not a street.
But at least the early burghers of the Silver City did not have a high-priced branding expert advising them when they set out to shorten the name of Trail Creek Landing. If they had, we would be living in TCL, Tracreelia or some other even more blandly and forgettably named burg. (When you arrive in Dildo, you figure you are at the least going to feel the earth move.)
Fruitvale is a lovely sounding name, but its ori-gins are a bit of a laugher. The flim flam men flogging lots at the turn of the last century pitched it as fruit-
growers paradise, much to the chagrin of the settlers who arrived to discover the exposure and climate ruled it out as a candidate for the new Garden of Eden.
Salmo was originally known as Salmon Siding, having taken its name from the adjacent river before the names of both the watercourse and the com-munity were inexplicably shortened.
If it hadn’t, they could have out Kimberleyed Kimberley’s Bavarian kitsch. Think of all the attention-grabbing possibilities the original name could have been put to, including sal-mon siding (not the colour, the fish) on every building in the commercial core.
But Salmo was forever fixed in my mind by a Globe and Mail reporter. He was on some prime ministerial candidate’s tour bus when it passed through the West Kootenay, back in the days when our riding was still in play.
Concluding that, if he hadn’t reached the end of the Earth he was close, his dispatch described Salmo as being situated “halfway between Yahk and Ymir.”
Well, we like our little piece of heaven even if it didn’t make much of an impression on him. As for heavenly places, my favour-ite B.C. place name is Ta Ta Creek. I can’t pass by the East Kootenay whistle stop without feeling a pinch of whimsy – appropriate for travels in the Rocky Mountain Trench – and singing that most playful of Hank William’s tunes Jambalaya (“Goodbye Joe, me gotta go, me oh my oh.”)
Across Canada, the place names I love include Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump, south of Calgary. The World Heritage Site is rare in that the place is even more inter-esting than the great name.
Then there is Climax, which confuses me because I always thought the only thing that normally-unflap-pable Saskatchewan resi-dents get excited about is their beloved Roughriders.
St-Louis-du-Ha! Ha! in La Belle Province, Ecum Secum, Nova Scotia . . . What’s in a name? Sometimes a crazy notion or just a good laugh.
Raymond Masleck is a retired Trail Times reporter.
Published by Black PressTuesday to Friday, except
statutory holidays
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RAYMOND RAYMOND MASLECK MASLECK
Ray of LightRay of Light
Trail Times Friday, October 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A7
LETTERS & OPINION
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Feeding our energy appe-tite is top of mind for many people these days. Some argue we should
get coal, oil and gas out of the ground as quickly as possible, build more pipelines and make as much money as we can selling it here and abroad. Their priorities are the economy and meeting short-term ener-gy needs so we can live the lives to which we’ve become accus-tomed.
Many others question those priorities. Do we gain comfort and happiness by driving inefficient automobiles, buying and scrapping and then buying more stuff that we must work harder to pay for, and sell-ing resources to enrich the fossil fuel industry and to allow other countries to follow our unsus-tainable path?
Some governments and industry favour the short-term view. But it’s a “false economy” – it will cost us more in the long run. What about our children and grandchildren and their children and grandchildren? If we pollute the air, water and soil that keep us alive and well, and destroy the biodiversity that allows natural systems to func-tion, no amount of money will save us.
While rushing to exploit our valuable and diminishing fossil fuels, Canada’s government is simultaneously “streamlining” environmental regulations and review processes, cutting scien-tific staff and departments and limiting public debate on proj-ects that could irreparably dam-
age our rich natural heritage. Some provinces are attempting to water down hard-won envi-ronmental laws, like endangered species legislation, that act as a critical hedge against environ-mental degradation.
The federal government is also neglecting its legal obligations to protect species at risk. Ecojustice, on behalf of five conser-vation groups includ-ing the David Suzuki Foundation, recently launched a lawsuit to challenge the gov-ernment’s multi-year delays in producing recovery strategies
for species that would be affect-ed by the proposed Northern Gateway project.
If we don’t slow down and try to look at ways out of the mess, energy issues will contin-ue to increase, like the Hydra of Greek mythology. With pipe-lines, the main issue is rapid oil sands expansion. But other massive energy projects are also coming down the pipe – from huge dams, like the Site C in northern B.C., to proposed drill-ing for oil and gas in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the Arctic. To what end?
Not only are fossil fuel com-panies making record profits, they’re being subsidized by Canadian taxpayers to the tune of $1.4 billion a year. Instead of giving them money, shouldn’t we be compelling them to put at least a small portion of their enormous profits into reduc-ing the massive greenhouse gas emissions they cause?
A large part of the problem is that we are increasing our fossil-fuelled ambitions at breakneck
speed in the absence of a nation-al energy strategy. No one seems to know where we’re going, but the end of the road is looming, and it might lead to a steep drop. We’re already harming precious ecosystems and are ready to put even more at risk without having an idea of the often irreplace-able value they represent. With climate change and its impacts, along with deforestation, pol-lution and increasing urbaniza-tion, we’re condemning millions of people to lives of poor health, desperation and even death.
Still, we’ve also created much that is good. We have political systems that encourage public debate and access to informa-tion. There are politicians and industry leaders who have joined countless citizens, First Nations, and environmental, labour and social-justice organizations to question current policies and actions.
What Canada really needs in the short term is a nation-al energy strategy – one that goes beyond fracking and oil sands and pipelines to take into account these many other fac-tors, including wiser use of fos-sil fuels. It must help us make the transition from our waste-ful addiction to polluting and ever-diminishing fossil fuels to conservation and renewable energy.
Globally, we need to shift from the outdated 20th-century notion of measuring progress with gross domestic product to a development paradigm that takes into account well-being and happiness, and that accounts for nature’s valuable services.
Dr. David Suzuki is a scien-tist, broadcaster, author, and co-founder of the David Suzuki Foundation.
Energy plan must be about more than just energy
DAVID DAVID SUZUKI SUZUKI
Troy MediaTroy Media
An editorial from the St. John’s Telegram
Organized seal culls are bad - unless they’re in Europe.
Seals don’t threaten fish stocks - unless they’re European seals.
It appears what most fisher-men on this side of the Atlantic have known all along is now being taken seriously by politi-cians on the other side.
And the sheer hypocrisy of seal culls in northern Europe stinks worse than last week’s fish guts festering on a beach.
Canadian Sealers Association president Frank Pinhorn certain-ly thinks so.
“It’s two-faced,” he told CBC news on Oct. 9. “Individuals making decisions that are not thought out, and it doesn’t dem-onstrate any ... common sense.”
He’s referring to the 2009 European Union ban on seal products, a ban Canada is chal-lenging through the World Trade Organization.
As it turns out, Scotland already culls some seals to pro-tect its farmed salmon opera-tions. Seals are also culled in Finland and Sweden.
Last month, the European Parliament approved a motion to investigate the effect on fish populations of “natural preda-tors such as sea lions, seals and cormorants,” with an eye to pos-sibly expanding culls.
So, where does the mighty International Fund for Animal Welfare stand on this?
It’s hard to tell. They’ll respond to media questions, but their website is still obsessed with Canadian seals.
Check their seal news sec-tion. The top two items by Sheryl Fink are about Zak and Mika, two young harp seal pups at the Aquarium des Iles de la Madeleine in Quebec.
An international petition led to a stay of execution for the cuddly twosome. When the aquarium closes, they will be
released into Canadian waters rather than slaughtered.
Well, the IFAW certainly has its priorities straight.
In fact, the IFAW has suc-ceeded in hopelessly muddying the waters when it comes to seals. It has played on people’s emotions and spread false and misleading information around the globe.
To get an idea how poorly people understand the issue, you need only look at the Toronto Sun’s headline for the European cull story: “Canada opposes EU seal cull.”
Um, not quite. Read that story again.
Canadian officials have mere-ly highlighted the hypocrisy of European parliamentarians pon-dering the exact same activity they condemned Canada for in word and deed only three years ago.
That’s what happens when common sense is usurped by emotion and propaganda.
Flip flop on seal cull doesn’t add up
REGIONALA8 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, October 12, 2012 Trail Times
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BY NICOLE TRIGGInvermere Valley Echo
A butchered first-year fawn discovered on the out-skirts of the Wilder subdiv-ision on Tuesday morning has local conservation offi-cers suspecting that poach-ers are responsible.
“The way it was butch-ered, obviously these people knew what they were doing with knives,” conservation officer Greg Kruger told The Valley Echo.
A nearby resident notified the Invermere Conservation Officer Service on Tuesday
morning after his dog dis-covered the carcass. The resident told Kruger he sus-pected poaching because he had heard a single gunshot the night before sometime around 10:30 p.m., but didn’t think it was worth calling in at the time.
“It was likely a small calibre gun, not that loud,” Kruger said, “but it’s hard to say, the gully would sup-press a lot of sound.”
Though he tried to find a bullet hole, he couldn’t, but saw that parts of the rib cage had been cut out.
“When it was butchered, it appears that the bullet hole was cut out to cover (it up),” Kruger said.
The fawn was a mule deer, the most common kind seen in and around the dis-trict, with very little meat because it was so young.
Poaching suspected in deer kill
INVERMERE
Trail Times Friday, October 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A9
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On July 26, 2012, FortisBC Inc. (FortisBC) applied to the British Columbia Utilities Commission (Commission), pursuant to sections 45, 46, and 56 of the Utilities Commission Act (the Act), for approval of the Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) Project (Project) for its electricity customers, including approval of a revised depreciation rate for the proposed meters to be installed (the Application).
The Application estimates the capital cost of the Project to be $47.7 million and expects the Project to commence in late 2013 and be completed by 2015. FortisBC proposes to install 115,000 residential and commercial AMI meters. To maintain firm contract vendor pricing, FortisBC requests approval of the proposed Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity by July 20, 2013.
On September 28, 2012, the Commission issued Order G-137-12 establishing the amended Preliminary Regulatory Timetable and the Community Input Sessions for this Application.
The Community Input Sessions will provide Members of the public an opportunity to make presentations to the Commission Panel on the AMI Project, and the presentations will be recorded. Each presentation will be limited to 15 minutes. All parties making submissions at the Community Input Sessions are encouraged to provide a hard copy of their submissions for filing on the official record.
Parties wishing to make a presentation to the Commission Panel should contact Mr. Gordon Fulton, Commission Counsel, at or (604) 647-4104 by Monday, October 15, 2012. If by Wednesday, October 17, 2012 four or less presentations are scheduled for a Community Input Session, then that
Community Input Session will be cancelled. Notice of cancellation of a Community Input Session will be provided to those who register with the Commission Secretary for the Community Input Session.
A short information session will be held on how to participate in a Commission proceeding at 5:45 p.m. prior to the commencement of the evening Community Input Sessions. An information letter will be posted to the Commission’s proceeding website providing Participants with procedural information on the Community Input Session.
All submissions and/or correspondence received from active participants or the public relating to the Application, will be placed on the public record and posted to the Commission’s web site.
The Application and supporting documents will be available for viewing on the Commission’s website at .
The Application and supporting documents will also be made available for inspection at FortisBC’s Head Office at Suite 100, 1975 Springfield Road, Kelowna, B.C., V1Y 7V7, and at the BC Utilities Commission office, Sixth Floor, 900 Howe Street, Vancouver, B.C., V6Z 2N3.
For further information, please contact Ms. Erica Hamilton, Commission Secretary, by telephone (604) 660-4700 or BC Toll Free at 1-800-663-1385, by fax (604) 660-1102, or by email .
PUBLIC NOTICENOTICE OF COMMUNITY INPUT SESSIONS
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Remember someone special by making a donation to the Canadian Cancer Society, BC
and Yukon in memory or in honour.Please let us know the name of the person you wish to remember, name and address of the next of kin, and we will send a card
advising them of your gift. Also send us your name and address to receive a tax receipt.
To donate on-line: www.cancer.ca
Greater Trail Unit/ Rossland unitc/o Canadian Cancer Society
908 Rossland AveTrail BC V1R 3N6
For more information, please call(250) 364-0403 or toll free at 1-888-413-9911
Canadian Cancer SocietyB R I T I SH COLUMBIA AND YUKON
When one has experi-e n c e d the loss
of someone who was dearly loved the grief suffered is usually severe. Grief is a jour-ney not easily travelled. It is very desirable and important to eventu-ally embrace the loss, accept it as a part of one’s life and live the changed life as fully as possible.
This does not detract from continuing to love the person who has gone and it does not diminish the memories. It is important to pro-vide the opportunity for family and friends to meet and mourn the loss.
Funerals and recep-tions are the usual way to do this initially. These
events are not for the deceased. They provide consolation for every-one. Unfortunately, though, it is often the case that friends, and sometimes members of the family, withdraw because they do not know how to speak to the griever about the loss. They want that person to return to the kind of person they knew before the loss, not realizing that their life has changed for-ever.
It is also com-mon for those not as closely associated with the deceased to ‘move on’ after the funeral much more quickly than those who suffer the loss most acutely. The grieving person may have to struggle on alone. A common
misunderstanding is that grief will resolve or lessen in a few months. However, the grieving person may experience sadness, anxiety, leth-argy or even anger for months running into years.
One way to gain assistance is to become a member of a Grief Support Group whose members have all experienced a severe loss. Each one is griev-ing and has consider-able understanding of the pain others are experiencing. For many it is very helpful to share with others who are suffering. It
is comforting to know that there are people who are a little further along in the journey to healing and that you will get there too.
The Greater Trail Hospice Society pro-vides a Grief Support group. It is not highly structured, has a sim-ple set of ground rules including, most import-antly, confidentiality, and meets .twice a
month on Wednesday afternoons. The meet-ings are drop in. Participants are free to come to meetings that fit their schedule. It is a place to share, to reflect, or to sit quietly if you want. It is a place to receive support, but also a place to give sup-port when you thought you had nothing left to give. Some people join months after their
loss, and others come when grief has been their journey for sev-eral years.
If you, or someone you know, feels that
grief support might be of benefit call our Volunteer Coordinator at 364 6204. She will arrange a meeting for more information.
Grieving should not have to be a lonely struggleTOMTOM
MCEWANMCEWANHospice - support, Hospice - support,
care, companionshipcare, companionship
A10 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, October 12, 2012 Trail Times
RELIGION
TRAIL & DISTRICT CHURCHES
Sponsored by the Churches of Trail and area and
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The opinions expressed in this advertising space are provided by Greater Trail Area Churches on a rotational basis.
Trail Seventh DayAdventist Church
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3365 Laburnum DriveTrail, BC V1R 2S8Ph: (250) 368-9516
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Harvest Thanksgiving (part 2)
I want to follow Meridyth’s excellent Thanksgiving message from last week, with a very particular Harvest Thanksgiving thought. Why? Because there were two items about harvest which caught my attention, items which maybe weren’t appropriate in the rush of warm fuzzyness which Thanksgiving generates, but which belong as part of the season.Food waste was in the news last week as a report suggested that Canadians average 183 Kg (!) per person per year of waste. The total annual cost is $28 billion!!! In the USA, and maybe here, “Rotting food is the largest single component of landfills”. That is not just obscene because of the waste, it is obscene because of the other set of facts, that 1 in 7 people in our world are hungry. Canada’s government has a poor international reputation for addressing
international and domestic food needs. 900,000 Canadians do not have regular meals.Now, as we harvest our gardens with thankful hearts, is the time for us to address our food waste and to consider the hungry in our midst and in our world. Make sure that your harvest is used - one of our local food banks will always take it. Waste less food by buying better; by using leftovers and by composting (Google “food waste”). Address world hunger by donating to charity : World Vision and Feed the Children are among the many reputable charities assessed by moneysense.ca. What has this got to do with faith? Try James’ hard hitting words (James 3v15)“Faith without works is dead”Neil Elliot St Andrew’s Anglican Church
1139 Pine Avenue (250) 368-6066 Reverends Gavin and Meridyth Robertson
10am Sunday Worship and Sunday School
CATHOLICCHURCHES
St. Anthony ParishSCHEDULEMASSES:St. Anthony’s Sunday 8:30am315 Rossland Avenue, Trail 250-368-3733
Our Lady ofPerpetual HelpEast Trail2000 Block 3rd AvenueMASSES: Saturday 7:00pm Sunday 10:00am
Phone 250-368-6677
Anglican Parish of St. Andrew /
St. George1347 Pine Avenue, Trail
This Week Sunday, October 14
8am Traditional Eucharist
10am Family Eucharist (with Children’s Program)
Contact Canon Neil Elliotat 250-368-5581
www.stamdrewstrail.ca8320 Highway 3BTrail, opposite Walmart
250-364-1201 Pastor Rev. Shane McIntyre
Affiliated with the PAOC
SUNDAY SERVICE 10AM
Weekly Snr & Jnr Youth Programs
Mom’s Time Out Weekly Connect Groups
Fri. Kidz Zone Sunday Children’s Program
Sun – Infants Nursery Bus Pickup Fri thru Sun
THE UNITEDCHURCH
OF CANADACommunities in Faith
Pastoral ChargeTrail United Church
1300 Pine Avenue, Trail Worship at 11am
St. Andrew’s United Church
2110 1st Ave, Rossland Worship 9am
Beaver Valley United Church
1917 Columbia Gardens Rd, Fruitvale
Worship at 9am
Salmo United Church 304 Main St, Salmo
Worship 11am
For Information Phone 250-368-3225or visit: www.cifpc.ca
I think about food quite a lot. Food has always been a big part of my life, and many of my fondest memories are inseparable from large family gatherings around the table. We
marked every holiday and significant event in life with some type of celebration that involved generous amounts of delicious foods. Growing up, I never wondered at the cost of food, or questioned the ability of my parents to pro-vide. Three squares a day, and then some, were a given.
Today, I continue the tradition of cele-brating in style with specially prepared foods and fine wines. Monday morning, as I ran off the extra calories from the Thanksgiving feast, I muttered a quick prayer of gratitude for the abundance that daily graces our table. Like the majority of Canadians, we always have food on our table, and the means to purchase it. Even as my own family enjoys abundance, we are conscious that many people in our communities, across the country, and around the world are unable to meet their basic food needs.
Canadians are among the world’s most well fed people. We are so well fed that we waste a staggering $27 billion of food annually. Despite this plenty, an estimated 850,000 Canadians are hungry. In May of this year, the plight of hungry Canadians made international headlines when Olivier De Schutter, the United Nations special rapporteur on the right to food, criticized Canada for its lack of a national food security strat-egy. While the Canadian government refuted De Schutter, proclaiming that federal and prov-incial governments are improving the lives of Canadians, it seems clear to me that Canada has a problem with hunger.
I doubt that very few communities in the coun-try do not have at least one food bank. Trail has three, and demand for food is increasing. Local food bank volunteers report that more families with children are requesting food. While some of their clients are employed, usually at entry-level or minimum wage jobs, earnings are not keeping pace with the rising cost of food.
The 2011 report from Food Banks Canada confirms these anecdotal observations of local volunteers. Across the country, Canadian food banks collectively reported 93,000 first time users each month. Thirty-eight percent of people using food banks are children and youth; 18% of those accessing food banks have some form of employment income.
Organizations like Food Banks Canada can help us understand the various causes of hun-ger. Two causes of hunger are low income and a lack of affordable housing. De Schutter was unequivocal in his criticism of Canada’s failure to address these problems; Canada is a rich coun-try that has failed to “adapt the levels of social assistance benefits and its minimum wage to the rising costs of basic necessities, including food and housing.”
A feast of rich foods and fine wines is the stuff of dreams for many Canadians. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations has designated October 16 World Food Day. It is a day to remind us that food is a basic human right, not a luxury for those with good jobs living in nice houses. It is time to open our eyes to the hungry in our communities, and to make our own pledge to alleviate hunger through charit-able giving and social action.
Trail resident Louise McEwan has a background in education and catechesis, and degrees in English and Theology. She writes every other week. She blogs at www.faithcolouredglasses.blogspot.com. Contact her at mcewan.lou@gmail.com.
Dreaming of rich foods and fine wines
LOUISE LOUISE MCEWAN MCEWAN
Everyday Theology
Trail Times Friday, October 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A11
We’re currently building a new, bigger Ronald McDonald House® BC next to BC Children’s Hospital. Once completed, the House will keep thousands more families together as their children receive treatment at the hospital. This House is our chance to surround more sick children with the love and support of their parents and siblings.
Find out how you can help at rmhbc.ca
Please drop off your non-perishable food item or gently used and clean winter coats, hats and gloves to the drop off centre located across from YVS or the Lottery Booth.
When you drop your items off please come to the lottery booth for your entry form for a chance to win a 37 inch flat screen TV.
Giving back to our communitiesWaneta Plaza thanks you for all your support over the past 34 years.
Waneta Plaza’s
FOOD AND COATS FOR KIDS DRIVE
October 14 to October 27
serving our community
34years
REGIONALA12 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, October 12, 2012 Trail Times
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NELSON – As Halloween approaches, bats with bloody teeth or scary green eyes
become more common conjuring up images of blood-sucking, dirty, aggressive creatures.
Educators trained by the Kootenay Community Bat Project (KCBP) are gearing up
to dispel these myths to students in the Columbia Basin.
“Bats are actually
very shy, clean crea-tures” says Juliet Craig, Coordinating Biologist for the KCBP. “They are extremely benefi-cial in eating nocturnal flying insects includ-ing mosquitoes, and cycling nutrients from wetlands to upland for-ests”.
Craig trained a group of talented, keen educators last spring so they would have the tools and information to provide school pro-grams on bats during Halloween.
In partnership with Wild Voices for Kids, the educators will be offering free school programs to teach chil-dren about the amazing worlds of bats includ-ing their unique fea-tures, their role in eco-systems, and our local bat species. Students will get a virtual tour of bats from around the world, eavesdrop on their echolocation calls, and explore cur-rent issues in bat con-servation.
“Of the sixteen spe-cies of bats in B.C.,
half of them are con-sidered vulnerable or threatened and an additional species, the little brown myotis, has recently been assessed for federal Endangered status” says Craig. “Bats need all the help they can get including more positive press, and school programs can help do that.”
The Kootenay Community Bat Project, which began in 2004, has just wrapped up another year of identi-fying local bat species, providing educational programs and work-shops, and assisting landowners with bat issues. Funded by the Columbia Basin Trust,
the KCBP has provided over 400 visits to local residents, and identi-fied over 300 roost sites for seven bat species.
In addition, with funding from the Public Conservation Assistance Fund, the KCBP is paying for bat-house materials for residents who would like to build a bat-house this winter.
To find out more about the Kootenay Community Bat Project, visit www.k o o t e n a y b a t s . c o m or contact 250-352-2260. Teachers can book a school program through Wild Voices for Kids at cbeen.org/wvfk/teachers/.
Educators aim to dispel myths about bats
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Large colony of yuma bats in attic of local house.
BY JIM BAILEYTimes Sports Editor
He may not be a household name yet, but Greg Westlake is one of the most prolific scorers ever to hit the ice in international hockey, and local fans will have the great privilege of watching him in action as the Team Canada Sledge Hockey Team touches down in Trail next week.
Westlake and 20 players from the Canadian Sledge Hockey Team will join head coach, Mike Mondin of Trail, for its final selec-tion camp at the Trail Memorial Centre October 21-27.
Westlake joined the National Sledge Team in 2005 and was named the captain of the team two seasons ago “for all the rea-sons that would define a captain,” explained Mondin.
“He is confident in his abilities, always well prepared to compete in all situations and is a leader on and off the ice. Greg always sets the pace and is determined to be successful. He is the fiercest of competitors that only rubs off on those around him . . . I know his teammates know he has their back for any reason.”
In last year’s World Sledge Hockey Challenge in Calgary, the Oakville native set a record by scoring nine goals and nine assists in five games to lead Canada to the gold medal over Norway.
Among his many accom-plishments, Westlake has helped Canada win four World
Challenges, in addition to a gold medal at the 2006 Paralympic Games in Torino, Italy, gold at the 2008 Sledge Hockey World Championship, and bronze med-als at the 2009 and 2012 World Championships.
But as the saying goes, “you haven’t seen nothin’ yet.” At age 26, Westlake is arguably just reaching his peak.
Born in North Vancouver, but raised in Ontario, Westlake was
born with his feet turned back-wards and had to have them amputated at just 18 months old. He grew up playing stand up hockey with prostheses and started sledge hockey with the Mississauga Cruisers at age 15, quickly graduating to the national team at 18.
“It’s one of those things where because I came from a stand-up hockey background that helps a lot,” said Westlake from Toronto. “Sledge hockey is hockey, it’s the exact same sport, it’s the exact same rules, so I wasn’t exactly learning a new game, I was just developing a different skill set, so it wasn’t the hardest transition ever for me.”
It took Westlake a few years to gain the confidence and become completely comfortable on the ice with the national team, but veteran line mates Brad Bowden and Billy Bridges certainly helped in his development. The trio has been a force in international sledge hockey for many years, and the magic they create on the ice beguiles the opposition.
“So many young hockey play-ers play a very individual game. I think it’s so important to talk to your linemates and just real-
ly know what they’re thinking in their head and what they’re expecting from you, and you can really develop that chemistry.”
Sledge hockey is an intense and competitive game that has grown in the past few years at home and internationally. Since falling under the auspices of Hockey Canada, and the exposure generated by the 2010 Vancouver Paralympic Games, more and more cities and countries are developing programs, even mak-ing the game accessible for able-bodied players.
Countries like Japan, South Korea, and the Czech Republic are emerging sledge hockey nations, recently knocking off power-houses like Canada, the U.S. and Norway.
“We can’t go to a tourna-ment and rely on anything,” said Westlake. “It’s hard to make the semifinal, it’s even harder to win that game and just to get to the final is an accomplishment - then you still got to win that one. It’s difficult, but I wouldn’t have it any other way.”
Despite the growing parity, the unique rivalry between Team Canada and our southern neigh-bour is as fierce as ever. Generated
from sheer geographical specifi-city and the numerous ‘friendlies’ played to prepare for internation-al competition, Westlake is no fan of the U.S., especially since it knocked Canada out of the gold medal game in each of the last two World Championships.
“I don’t have anything against anyone personally, but a good old-school quote from a fighter in the NHL is, ‘I try to hate every-body equally.’ It’s nothing per-sonal, it’s just that we train so hard and we train for so long to get to a Paralympics or a World Championship and every guy on every other team, they’re in between you and your goals and your dreams, and everything you worked for, so it’s really hard to have a friendly relationship with someone who stands directly in the way of everything.”
Like all the players on Team Canada’s sledge hockey team, Westlake has faced adversity and overcome it his whole life, but since joining the team, his goals of “just playing hockey and trav-eling” have changed, while his admiration of his teammates and the sport has grown substantially.
“Since then (2005), I’ve had the opportunity to meet so many amazing people whether it’s a cancer survivor or somebody who came back from serving our coun-try in Afghanistan and lost a leg there (Dominic Larocque). Just the opportunity to meet all these amazing people I never would have met, I think it’s really helped me to mature and grow as a per-son. It’s taken me from a kid who just wanted to play hockey, to someone who is really proud to be on the team and do work in the community and really be an ambassador for the game and for Hockey Canada,” said Westlake.
He looks forward to visiting Trail again, and invites everyone to come to the practices at the Cominco Arena, meet the play-ers, and enjoy the sport. It’s what makes the team special, he says, and why everywhere they go they try to promote the sport of sledge hockey and share their unique stories.
A dinner with the Canadian Sledge Hockey Team is planned for Oct. 27 at the Colombo Lodge, at 7 p.m. Everyone is welcome. Tickets $25. Call 364-1968 or 362-5825 for tickets.
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Sledge hockey star prepares for Trail camp
DYLAN LYNCH/HOCKEY CANADA IMAGES
Team Canada sledge hockey captain Greg Westlake controls the puck in a recent World Championship match against Japan. Westlake and the rest of Team Canada will be in Trail Oct. 21-27 for its final selec-tion camp.
OVERVIEWSledge hockey is the Paralympic version of Ice hockey and, since its debut on the Paralympic
program at the 1994 Lillehammer Paralympic Winter Games, it is quickly becoming one of the biggest attractions for spectators at the Paralympic Winter Games. It is fast-paced, highly physical, and played by male athletes with a physical disability in the lower part of the body.
COMPETITORSLike hockey, each team has six players on the ice, including the goaltender. Teams are com-prised of a maximum of 15 male players per team, including two goaltenders. To be eligible to compete at the Paralympics, athletes must have a disability of permanent nature in the
lower part of the body that precludes their participation in standing hockey.RULES
Athletes are strapped into a metal frame that rests on two regular-sized ice-skate blades. The sledge is raised high enough to allow the puck to pass underneath. Athletes use two 75 cm
long hockey sticks, with spikes on one end and blades on the other. The spike is used to pro-pel the sledge across the ice, and the slightly curved blade is used to handle the puck.
The goaltender may have an additional pick at the base end of his stick and may use an additional stick with a blade or a trapper globe with teeth.
CLASSIFICATION/ ELIGIBILITYTo participate in IPC competitions and sanctioned events (i.e. Paralympic Winter Games),
athletes must have an impairment of permanent nature in the lower part of the body of such a degree that it is obvious and easily recognizable and makes ordinary skating – and con-
sequently ice hockey playing impossible.Examples include amputation (leg, foot), paresis (loss of 10 muscle points in both legs), joint
immobility, cerebral palsy and leg shortening of at least 7 cm.
SLEDGE HOCKEY FACTS
Team Canada returns to Silver City
SPORTSSCOREBOARD
NFLThursday
Pittsburgh at Tennessee, 8:20 p.m.
SundayOakland at Atlanta, 1 p.m.
Kansas City at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.Indianapolis at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.Cincinnati at Cleveland, 1 p.m.Detroit at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
St. Louis at Miami, 1 p.m.Dallas at Baltimore, 1 p.m.
Buffalo at Arizona, 4:05 p.m.New England at Seattle, 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at San Fran, 4:25 p.m.Minnesota at Washington, 4:25
p.m.Green Bay at Houston, 8:20 p.m.
Monday,Denver at San Diego 8:30 p.m.
Byes: Carolina, Chicago, Jacksonville, New Orleans
A14 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, October 12, 2012 Trail Times
Beaver ValleyNitehawksHost Kamloops
Storm
In the Beaver Valley ArenaSat. Oct. 13 @ 7:30 pm
www.bvnitehawks.com
We are the
CHAMPIONS
Every September, Shoppers Drug Mart® stores across Canada set up a Tree of Life in support of women’s health, with 100% of all proceeds going directly to women’s health initiatives in your community. Over the years, you’ve contributed over $17 million and we’re hoping you’ll help us make a difference again this year.
Visit your local Shoppers Drug Mart between September 29 and October 26 and buy a leaf ($1), a butterfl y ($5), an acorn ($10) or a cardinal ($50) to help women’s health grow in your community. To fi nd out which women’s charity your local Shoppers Drug Mart store supports, visit shoppersdrugmart.ca/treeofl ife.
T R A I L
SMOKE EATERS V E R S U S
Game Day tickets available at:
Coquitlam Express
Friday, October 12doors open at:6:45pm game starts at: 7:30pm
Game Sponsor: Gerick Sports
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Game Sponsor: Evergreen Sports &
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Merritt Centennials
Sunday, October 14doors open at: Please Note:4:15pm Game starts at: 5:00pm
Good to see that the Smoke Eaters have drawn a couple of nice home crowds, not so
good that they have lost more than they have won.
I have yet to see them play in this 2012/13 season (hoping to make Sunday’s game my first of the year), but the results themselves, the result of a large infusion of players paired with some talented returnees with a year of BCHL experience under their belts, are encouraging for a fan who witnessed the annus horribilis that was 2011/12. All fans, I expect.
Meanwhile, in that other world we have been inhabiting for the past three weeks, there has not been a single mention of ice hockey. NFL football, that other football, major league baseball, cricket, tennis, that other hockey, cycling, motorsports and golf have all had airtime, but not a minute of hockey news has surfaced on any channel while we have been sailing to the tropics and back - so it seems there has been no movement on the NHL front.
That should be good news for junior hockey, the Smokies and their Sunday foes from Merritt in particular, as fans get to see the entertainment value in their own back yards and perhaps desire more of it.
Here’s hoping there is actually a lot of that going around, for the Smokies, all local hockey fans and the businesses that benefit from having a BCHL franchise in this area.
• Our trip has been unique for us, not least because internet access (at the least expensive level $25/hour) is much too pricey to expend on much browsing of Canadian news sites. So if anything noteworthy has happened back home ($204 internet-fee dollars later) while we have baked and broiled and seen and learned in alien environments, we haven’t become aware of it - so are hoping to return to things that are pretty much as we left them.
Just a couple of days away from that now (as I write this). The trip wasn’t to be missed, but home is home.
DAVE THOMPSON
Sports ‘n’ Things
There’s no place like home
CANADIAN PRESSTrail native Steve
McCarthy is back in B.C. after a successful bid to crack the Abbotsford Heat lineup.
McCarthy, a veteran of 302 NHL games, played with Flames’
new coach Bob Hartley last year for Zurich and earned a contract after a solid camp in Abbotsford.
“It’s my NHL starting Friday,” McCarthy said. “That’s how I approach it and the great thing is everybody in that room and the coaches approach it the same way.”
The 23rd overall draft pick of the Chicago Blackhawks in 1999 has previous experience in the AHL including a good stint with the Norfolk Admirals when he was their nominee for ‘Man of the Year’ for 2001-02. The defence-man scored seven goals and 21 assists that year, but was beat out for the
honour by former Trail Smoke Eater Travis Roche of the Houston Aeros.
The Heat also announced the release of goaltenders Alex Evin and Grant Rollheiser.
Rollheiser, a former Trail Smoke Eater goal-ie, was drafted 158th overall in the sixth round by the Toronto Maple Leafs in 2008 and graduated from Boston University in April.
Alex Evin, a 2012 Colgate University graduate, is a Castlegar native and former Rebels goaltender who finished his long BCHL career with the Penticton Vees.
Ben Walter, who was second on the team in scoring last season with 59 points, says the NHL lockout could lead to a better chance to get noticed by the Flames’ coaching staff.
However, even the rookies are feeling extra pressure with otherwise NHL-bound players competing for jobs in the AHL.
“It made me want to bear down and take it very seriously,” said Max Reinhart, a star with the Western Hockey League’s Kootenay Ice last sea-son.
“Obviously there’s no camp in Calgary, where everyone wants to be, but this is a pretty good league and it’s not exactly a cakewalk to step onto this team and make it.”
HOCKEY
McCarthy signs with HeatGraduating
goalies released
SPORTS & RECTrail Times Friday, October 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A15
Located at the Junction beside the Credit Unionwww.diggardencentre.com
250-359-5926
Hours: Tuesday - Saturday 9:30 - 5:30 Sunday & Monday CLOSED
30% OFF ALL OUTDOOR PLANTS
20% OFF INDOOR/OUTDOOR POTS
10% OFF FALL BULBS & GARLIC BULBS
We are open until x-mas so come see all of the unique new garden
giftware arriving daily
Please drop off your non-perishable food item or gently used and clean winter coats,
hats and gloves to the drop off centre located across from YVS or the Lottery Booth.
When you drop your items off please come to the lottery booth for your entry form for a
chance to win a 37 inch flat screen TV.
Giving back to our communities
Waneta Plaza thanks you for all your support over the past 34 years.
Waneta Plaza’s
FOOD AND COATS FOR KIDS DRIVE
Oct 14 - 27
Retail Makeover Workshop Prestige Lakeside Resort Keys to Retail Success and Best Practices
In this workshop Barbara Crowhurst,North Americas #1 Retail Business Coach will go back to the basics.
Teaching the Strategies that Drive Retail Sales.
Eff ective Marketing: At the core of this basic strategy is bringing new customers into your store and increasing the number of times existing customers come in to your store.
Key points Barbara covers: defi ning your market place, what is your potential customer base, knowing who your competition is, using technology eff ectively, social media, website, your customer data base, today’s traditional advertising and how best to maximize eff ective, using a POS system, creating a promotional calendar and the best marketing practices for retail success in today’s economy .
Updated Store Design and Product Placement: At the core of this strategy: Barbara covers what makes good retail store design and why placing products in her retail grid system keeps customers in your store longer and buying more.
Strong in Store Sales Focus: At the core of this strategy: Barbara covers your role in the performance of your store, your sales staff commitment to your business, increasing the average sale, what an add on sales program is, why it’s important to you and how it eff ects your yearly sales targets.
October 29th Prestige Lakeside Resort 1pm-4pmTickets available through the Nelson and District Chamber of Commerce$40 per person plus HST250 352 3433info@discovernelson.com
This event is sponsored by the Nelson and Area Economic Development Partnership
If you only go to one sessionthis year to upgrade your retail knowledge this is the one!
BY JIM BAILEYTimes Sports EditorTrail Martial artists
kick up their collect-ive heels Saturday as the club hosts its Trail Tae Kwon-Do cham-pionship at the Trail Memorial Centre.
Close to 100 com-petitors from across western Canada will compete this weekend, including about 30 from the Trail Martial Arts club.
Competitors from age six to 76 face off in three different disci-plines: sparring, pat-
terns, and flying side-kicks.
“I think we’re going to do really well, we’re well practiced and well prepared, but time will tell,” said head martial arts instructor Jason Ayles.
Last year was the club’s first tournament and it was a great suc-cess, with most of the local competitors tak-ing home medals.
“It went really well, surprisingly smoothly for a first tournament, so this year should be even easier,” said Ayles.
“When you have a good team, it makes a big dif-fence that’s for sure.”
Tae kwon-do is a relatively new art, emerging from Korea in the late 1950s as an attempt to unify dif-ferent forms of martial arts like Karate and Tang su do.
Tae kwon-do tech-niques are based on centuries old know-ledge that, for adults, combines exercise, skill, self-discipline and concentration that develops ones ability to defend oneself as much
as it helps reduce stress and incorporate a high ethical standard.
The all-day tourna-ment starts at 8 a.m with the young martial arts aficionados going until about noon, and adults and black belts from then until 5 or 6
p.m. Trail Martial Arts
has grown to about 100 students and offers a variety of classes five days a week at its loca-tion on Bay Avenue.
Visit trailmartialarts.com for more informa-tion.
Trail Martial Arts hosts tournament
The Ladies Recreational Hockey program laces them up on Monday. Instructor Mark Heslop will focus on learning skills through game playing. Oct. 15 to Dec. 10, every Monday from 7:30 to 8:45 p.m. at the Cominco Arena. Pre-registration is required.
Run, Jump, Throw is an intro to track and field taught by coach Dan Horan. Learn the proper skills of run-ning, jumping and throwing and the technical skill progressions for track and field events. This is a co-ed program for ages 7 to 10 years. The first session starts Oct. 16 to Dec. 4, Tuesday’s from 4:45 to 5:45 p.m. at the Fieldhouse.
Ladies Group Gym Training is a new program designed to expand your fitness routine and teach new workout ideas. Get familiar with the gym equipment and feel confident learn-ing exercises for each muscle group. Get the results you are looking for and take advan-tage of these small group-training ses-sions. Oct. 15 to Nov. 12, Monday’s from 6 to 7 p.m. All classes are taught by Elite Certified Personal Trainer, Diana Howard. Call to pre-register.
Beginner Salsa Dance Workshoptakes the floor Sunday from noon to 4:00 p.m. at the Trail Memorial Centre Fitness Studio. Taught by experi-enced instructors, Amber Hayes and Ory Jimenez, the classes cover several basic steps and turns that can be enjoyed with any salsa song. A part-ner is encouraged.
Mom’s Time Outis for ages one to five and starts Oct. 15 - Nov. 7, Monday and Wednesday from 9:30
to 11a.m. at the Trail Aquatic Centre. Your child is supervised while mom/dad enjoys the aquatic and fitness centre. The fee includes entry into the facility for one parent/guardian.
Youth Film Making Workshopis for ages 13 to 18, and will run on Tuesday and Wednesday from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. at the Trail Aquatic Centre. Join professional film-mak-ers from Nelson-based Watershed Productions for an introduction to digital film-making.
TRAIL REC
Ladies hockey hits the ice
LEISURE
Dear Annie: I am 29 and have been a teacher in a small town for seven years. During this time, I have had two serious rela-tionships, but neither worked out.
Recently, my mother has been on me about moving so I can find someone to marry and have kids. I understand that she doesn’t want me to be alone, but, Annie, I have wonder-ful friends here. Some are as close as family.
Right now, I am OK with being single, but I know that I have a ten-dency to resist change. My mother thinks I will be alone for the rest of my life and regret it. I told her I would consider moving, but I really don’t want to leave this place. I love my friends, my job and my students.
What should I do? My mother is so upset that it makes me stressed. -- All Talked Out
Dear Talked Out: How important is it to
you (not your mother) to be married? Not everyone needs a life partner to lead a happy, fulfilling life. Raising children is an entire-ly separate issue and could involve adoption or fostering. And many teachers consider their students the only “chil-dren” they need.
It is difficult to meet prospective mar-riage partners in areas where the dating pool is small. Even online matchmaking might require relocating. If you can be happy with-out marriage, tell your mother the subject is closed. But if you are simply too frightened to get out of your com-fort zone, please work
on it, with counsel-ing if necessary. You shouldn’t have major regrets down the road.
Dear Annie: I am 37 and have a rich life with wonderful friendships and a great career. But I am deeply hurt that my sister has never expressed an interest in being a part of my life.
She takes things too seriously, often holds grudges over minor criticisms, and assumes the role of victim when anything hurts her feel-ings, which is often. She married a solid guy, but he’s the type who sees the glass as half-empty.
I am returning to my hometown after living abroad for a year, and I wrote about seeing them. My brother-in-law responded (my sis-ter rarely does), but his interest seemed half-hearted, and he made all kinds of excuses about stress from work and not really being able to do much but rest on the weekends.
My sister has never once visited me in all the cities I’ve lived in. She rarely inquires about my life. I am fun loving and happy. It hurts that she con-tinually rejects me, and I wonder why I care about a relationship that is so one-sided.
I have talked to her about it, and she always says she’ll be in closer contact, but it never happens. Do I need to let this rela-tionship go? -- Wish I Had a Sister
Dear Wish: Your sister is oversensitive and finds it difficult to be closer, but she is not toxic, and we don’t believe she is trying to hurt you. She could actually be jealous of the life you are leading. She seems incapable of the warmth you want, but you apparently have many friends who fill that need. You don’t have to cut her off. All you need to do is adjust your expecta-tions. Please accept your sister’s limitations
and reconnect in small doses.
Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Angry and Embarrassed.” As a mother of three small children, going out to dinner gives me a break from cooking. I try to teach my chil-
dren manners and tell them that making a mess is not OK, but this lady’s grandchild is 16 months old and cannot understand that yet.
When my kids make a mess at a restau-rant, my husband and I apologize and then
leave a more generous tip for the server. But I do not feel that these parents were rude in not cleaning up a few noodles that landed on the floor. -- Done That
TODAY’S CROSSWORD
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SOLUTION FOR YESTERDAY’S SUDOKU
Sudoku is a number-plac-ing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each col-umn and each 3x3 box contains the same num-ber only once. The diffi-culty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from Monday to Friday.
TODAY’S PUZZLES
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
Marcy Sugar & Kathy Mitchell
A16 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, October 12, 2012 Trail Times
Not everyone needs marriage to be happy
LEISURE
For Saturday, Oct. 13, 2012 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Your partner or spouse might change jobs in the next few years. This could force you to stand on your own two feet. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) In the next few years, part-nerships will be challenged. Those that endure will make adjustments, whereas some relationships will end. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Prepare yourself, because you’re entering two-to-three-year period of hard work. At times, you might feel over-whelmed, but you will get a lot done. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Many of you will have increased responsibilities with children in the next few years. All of you will ask yourselves, “What do I really want to be when I grow up?”
LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You feel a strong urge now to secure your home base. During the next few years, many of you will make major repairs or a residential move in order to do this. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Many of you will have a job change or make a residential move in the next few years, even if you don’t think this is likely. (Chances are high that this will happen.) LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) At this stage in your life, you’re giving serious thought to your values. You want to know what matters. You don’t want to be 90 years old and thinking, “I blew it.” SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) In the next few years, you’ll enter a new sandbox, because you are going to reinvent yourself in the next seven years. It’s going to be a whole new ballgame.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) It is totally appropriate to go through closets and cup-boards, getting rid of what you no longer need. In next few years, you’ll downsize, letting go of places, people and possessions. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) At this stage in your life, you have to balance what you give to others with what you give to yourself. You must
maintain your own integrity. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Aquarians are finally com-ing into a time of harvest. In the next few years, you see what works and what doesn’t. Expect promotions and kudos. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) This is a time of prepa-ration. It will behoove you to take courses or do what-ever you can to improve your
career or enhance your life in the next few years. YOU BORN TODAY You are bold about going after what you want because you take your career seri-ously. You’re a keen critic and like to expose the sacred cows in society. You delight in puncturing naive beliefs.) Many of you develop a par-ticular technique that you use. You’re not casual; you’re intense. Your year ahead is the beginning of a new nine-
year cycle. Open any door! Birthdate of: Lenny Bruce, comedian; Margaret Thatcher, politician; Sacha Baron Cohen, actor/come-dian. (c) 2012 King Features Syndicate, Inc.
TUNDRA
MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM
DILBERT
ANIMAL CRACKERS
HAGARBROOMHILDA
SALLY FORTHBLONDIE
YOUR HOROSCOPEBy Francis Drake
Look in the Classifieds for
more Horoscopes
Trail Times Friday, October 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A17
A18 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, October 12, 2012 Trail Times
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Reporting to the Director, Finance, the Manager, Procurement & Contracts assesses all existing service contracts and procurement methods and will recommend changes for implementation, including contracting strategies such as master agreements. This position leads the preparation, development and administration of all service and procurement contracts as well as provides support to the contract managers overseeing the work under the service contracts, and will also lead periodic contract management training sessions for staff. The Manager, Procurement & Contracts will be responsible for creating competitive bid documentation and developing related agreements for various program operations and support services. Also responsible for developing policies and procedures for all procurement activities and facilitates the development and issuance of all service contracts. The ideal candidate will have a Supply Chain Management Professional (SCMP) designation or equivalent with preferably an university degree in a relevant field and a minimum 7 – 10 years of progressively responsible contracting experience in the construction industry. A good knowledge of contract law, analysis, practices, procedures and drafting of legal documents is expected. Demonstrated negotiation skills and ability to effectively apply analytical tools, concepts and methods is also a requirement. Qualified applicants interested in joining a dynamic team and living in the beautiful Kootenays are encouraged to visit the Careers section of our website at www.columbiapower.org. This position will remain open until filled. This position will be located at Columbia Power’s main office in Castlegar, BC.
Manager, Procurement & Contracts
EMCON SERVICES INC., Road and Bridge Maintenance Contractor in the Castlegar, Rossland, Trail and Fruitvale Areas are looking for professional drivers for part time employment for the upcoming winter season. Qualifi cations for these positions are:• BC driver’s license (minimum Class 3/Air)• Proven on highway trucking experience• Experience driving tandem axle vehicles and experience
on a variety of transmissions including 13 speed.
Qualifi ed applicants are invited to submit application along with a photocopy of driver’s license, a driver’s abstract and references to substantiate driving experience to:
Emcon Services Inc.6150 2nd Street
Grand Forks, BC V0H 1H4Or Fax (250) 442-2677
Seasonal Truck Drivers Needed
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR - Castlegar & District Community Services Society. Responsible for overall program management, staff accountability, community development and growth of the Society. Full time position with a competitive salary and benefi ts package. See www.cdcss.ca/em-ployment for details.
We require a TECHNICIAN to work in a fast paced, expanding shop.
Please send or email resume with completework history and references to:
Carlos DeFrias at Champion Chevrolet service@championgm.com 250-368-9134
or Marc Cabana at Champion Chevrolet marccabana@championgm.com
2880 Highway Drive, Trail BC V1R 2T3
Trail BC
WE’RE GROWING!
An opportunity as a Body Shop Manager is now available. We are looking for an experienced individual to lead our team. We provide: Salary plus bonus Full benefits
Great facility Team atmosphere You provide: Automotive knowledge Great people skills
Good work habits HonestyApply in person or by e-mail to Marc Cabana
marccabana@championgm.com 2880 highway drive Trail BC
Trail BC
WE’RE GROWING!
City of Trail - Job Pos ngLIFEGUARD/INSTRUCTOR (Casual)
The City of Trail is seeking a mo vated individual to ll the casual posi on of Lifeguard/Instructor at the Trail Aqua c & Leisure Centre.
Detailed informa on about this employment opportunity is available on the City’s website at www.trail.ca/employment.php or by request to Trisha Davison at (250) 364-0852.
Applica ons will be received un l Thursday, October 18, 2012.
The City of Trail thanks all applicants for their interest and will only reply to those selected for an interview.
Call Today! 250-364-1413 ext 206
FruitvaleRoute 368 26 papers Caughlin Rd, Davis Ave & Hepburn DrRoute 369 22 papers Birch Ave, Johnson Rd, Redwood DrRoute 375 8 papers Green Rd & Lodden RdRoute 378 28 papers Columbia Gardens Rd, Martin St, Mollar Rd, Old Salmo Rd, Trest DrRoute 382 13 papers Debruin Rd & Staats Rd
CastlegarRoute 311 6 papers 9th Ave & Southridge DrRoute 312 15 papers 10th & 9th AveRoute 314 12 papers 4th, 5th, & 6th AveRoute 321 10 papers Columbia & Hunter’s Place
BlueberryRoute 308 6 papers 100 St to 104 St
RosslandRoute 403 12 papers Cook Ave, Irwin Ave, St Paul & Thompson AveRoute 406 15 papers Cooke Ave & Kootenay AveRoute 414 18 papers Thompson Ave, Victoria AveRoute 416 10 papers 3rd Ave, 6th Ave, Elmore St, Paul SRoute 420 17 papers 1st, 3rd Kootenay Ave, Leroi AveRoute 421 9 papers Davis & Spokane StRoute 422 8 papers 3rd Ave, Jubliee St, Queen St & St. Paul St.Route 424 9 papers Ironcolt Ave, Mcleod Ave, Plewman WayRoute 434 7 papers 2nd Ave, 3rd Ave, Turner Ave
MontroseRoute 342 11 papers 3rd St & 7th AveRoute 348 21 papers 12th Ave, Christie Rd
PAPER CARRIERS For all areas. Excellent exercise, fun for ALL ages.
WANTED
Help Wanted
Help Wanted Help Wanted
Help WantedHelp Wanted
Announcements
BirthsRYAN AND LISA LUDWAR, of Trail, are pleased to an-nounce the birth of their son, Bailey James, on October 9, 2012, weighing 9 lbs., a broth-er for Nya. Proud grandpar-ents are Marsha & Gary Lud-war and Lynn & Elaine Wheeler.
Coming EventsFOR YOUR NEXT EVENT,
Large or SmallBook our
Italo Canadese Hall!Best Rental Rates In Trail
Main Hall seats 200Ground Floor Hall seats 100
Kitchens and bars,air conditioned andStairlift accessible
Audio/Visual equipped forpresentations
Package options includingcatering & menus availableInformation and Bookings at
250-368-3268, 250-368-5291
Information
The Trail Daily Times is a member of the British Columbia Press Council. The Press Council serves as a forum for unsatis ed reader complaints against
member newspapers.
Complaints must be led within a 45 day time limit.
For information please go to the Press Council website at
www.bcpresscouncil.org or telephone (toll free)
1-888-687-2213.
Pets are an extension of the ego of ManThere are about 100 million cats in the USA and Canada. They kill more than a billion birds each year, Pets are an extension of the ego of man.
PersonalsALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
250-368-5651
FOR INFORMATION,education, accommodation
and supportfor battered womenand their children
call WINS Transition House 250-364-1543
Employment
Business OpportunitiesADVERTISE in the
LARGEST OUTDOOR PUBLICATION IN BC
The 2013-2015 BC Freshwater Fishing
Regulations SynopsisThe most effective way to
reach an incredible number of BC Sportsmen & women.
Two year edition- terrifi c presence for your business.Please call Annemarie
1.800.661.6335 email:
fi sh@blackpress.ca
Education/Trade Schools
21 WEEK HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR
APPRENTICESHIPPROGRAM
Prepare for a Career in Heavy Equipment Operation. Intro-ducing our new Apprenticeship Program which includes:
• ITA Foundation• ITA HEO Theory• Multi Equipment Training -(Apprenticeship hours logged)
Certifi cates included are:• Ground Disturbance Level 2• WHMIS• Traffi c Control• First Aid
Reserve your seat for October 22, 2012.
Taylor Pro Training Ltd at 1-877-860-7627
www.taylorprotraining.comINTERIOR HEAVY EQUIP-MENT OPERATOR SCHOOL.NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks.Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options.Apply online! IHEschool.com 1-866-399-3853
THERE’S STILL TIME TO REGISTER!
Homeshare and Respite Care Training available through
ShelterGuides 14 week online program.
Now running October 22 to February 11.
Visit www.shelterguides.comfor more info, call Selkirk
College to register250-365-1208
Help Wanted
Line Cook & Prep CookDrop Resume at The Greek Oven, back door between 9 - 11, 400 Columbia Ave
ask for Peter
Registered Care Aide required for Castlegar Senior.
Phone 250-365-8096POSITION OPENED for store-front baker. Apply with resume to manager @ Tim Horton’s, Trail, Tues-Sat. 9-5.
Employment
Help Wanted
Kitchen Help and Day
Prep Cook Wanted
Apply at in person with resume to
Benedict’s Steakhouse 3 Scho eld Highway, Trail
250-368-3360
An Alberta Construction Com-pany is hiring Dozer and Exca-vator Operators. Preference will be given to operators that are experienced in oilfi eld road and lease construction. Lodg-ing and meals provided. The work is in the vicinity of Edson, Alberta. Alcohol & Drug testing required. Call Contour Con-struction at 780-723-5051.
WEEKLY housekeeper servic-es needed for professional couple in Trail area. Please call Holly at 250-368-5990
Employment
Help WantedCellar Person/ Production
Assistant: The Nelson Brewing Company is seeking a highly motivated, respon-
sible individual with a passion for crafting all natural organic
beer to assist in fi ltration, brewing and packaging duties.
Previous experience is preferred but not necessary. Preference will be given to
applicants with post-secondary education in a brewing-related discipline and/or related trade
experience (electrical, plumbing, millwright). Contact
Mike Kelly at: mike_nbc@netidea.com with a
cover letter and resume detailing your interests and suitability for this position.
**WANTED**NEWSPAPER CARRIERS
TRAIL TIMESExcellent ExerciseFun for All Ages
Call Today -Start Earning Money
TomorrowCirculation Department250-364-1413 Ext. 206For more Information
250.368.8551
fax 250.368.8550 email nationals@trailtimes.ca
Your classifieds. Your community
PHONE:250.368.8551 OR: 1.800.665.2382
FAX: 250.368.8550
EMAIL CLASSIFIEDS TO: nationals@
trailtimes.ca
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AGREEMENT It is agreed by any Display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement.
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COPYRIGHT Copyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassified.com. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form what-soever, particularly by a photographic or of set process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse in law.
ON THE WEB:
Trail Times Friday, October 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A19
Wayne DeWitt ext 25Mario Berno ext 27Dawn Rosin ext 24
Tom Gawryletz ext 26Keith DeWitt ext 30
Thea Stayanovich ext 28Joy DeMelo ext 29
Denise Marchi ext 21
1148 Bay Ave, Trail 250.368.5000
All Pro Realty Ltd.
www.facebook.com/allprorealtyltdtrailbc www.allprorealty.ca
Waneta$249,000
Glenmerry$309,900
War eld
Trail$99,500
Glenmerry$269,500
Trail$219,000
Salmo$230,000
Trail$369,000
Montrose$212,000
Waneta$650,000
East Trail$245,000
Salmo$258,000
Fruitvale$349,000
Waneta$575,000
Trail$129,000
Trail$199,000
Redstone$1,250,000
SOLD
Fruitvale
SOLD
Saturday, Oct 13 12-2pm 2004 Old Salmo Rd, Fruitvale
$344,000
MLS#K214964
Fruitvale$599,000
MLS#K215406
Columbia Heights$169,900
MLS#K215646
Annable$169,000
MLS#K215920 MLS#K214030 MLS#K215151
MLS#K214110 MLS#K215420
MLS#K215183 MLS#K214818
MLS#K215625 MLS#K215555 MLS#K215747
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FABULOUS
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REDUCED
LAND
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RIVER
CLOSE TO
TOWNEXQUISITE
Rural Fruitvale$319,900
MLS#K215182
Saturday, Oct 13 12-2pm 165 Johnson Rd, Ross Spur
$389,500
OPEN HOUSE
MLS#K215182
OPEN HOUSE
HUGE YARD
Employment
Help Wanted
JOIN THE AXIS TEAM IN CASTLEGAR!
If you are passionate about working with youth
and want to make a difference in their lives,
consider joining our team in the following positions:
Casual Awake Night Residence Workers(8 hour shifts) – medical program
Full Time and Casual Residence Workers
(24 hours shifts) – medical program
Full Time and Casual Residence Workers
(24 hours shifts) For the medical program; the successful applicants
must have experience with tube feeding and will be
required to lift youth every 2 hours throughout the
night. For further information refer to our website
www.axis.bc.ca under job opportunities. Resumes with cover
letters can be faxed to Bev Munro (250) 851-2977
or emailed to: bev.munro@axis.bc.ca.
Only those shortlisted will be contacted.
Trades, TechnicalCARPENTERS needed for in-dustrial work on union pro-jects. TQ or Red Seal pre-ferred. for details call 250-365-2813
Services
Catering/Party Rentals
E.TRAIL EAGLESHall Rental AvailableCatering/ Kitchen on RequestInquiries: Kim 250-364-2646or Gloria 250-368-3707
Financial ServicesGET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420.
www.pioneerwest.com
Need CA$H Today?
Own A Vehicle?Borrow Up To $25,000
No Credit Checks!Cash same day, local offi ce.www.PitStopLoans.com
1.800.514.9399
ContractorsHANSON DECKINGWest Kootenay Agent forDuradek 250-352-1814
Garden & Lawn
Siddall Garden Services
250.364.1005Household Services
A-1 FURNACE & Air Duct Cleaning. Complete Fur-nace/Air Duct Systems cleaned & sterilized. Locally owned & operated. 1-800-565-0355 (Free estimates)MR.PICKLES Home ServicesCleaning, companionship, odd jobs, personal care, pet care, transportation, yardcare. Call 250-368-7521
Maintenance Services
THERAPEUTIC TOUCH. Pro-motes healing, pain reduction, relaxation. 30min - $25. Eileen Pedersen 250.364.2488
Misc ServicesDIRTBUSTERS Carpet clean-ing, area rugs, fl ood work, fur-nace & air duct cleaning, 250-364-1484, 250-364-0145
Services
Misc ServicesMOVING / Junk Removal 250-231-8529PLUMBING REPAIRS, Sewer backups, Video Camera in-spection. 24hr Emergency Service. 250-231-8529TRY OUR New Italian Pizza 2 For 1. 24/7 Ordering, Free Delivery, BP HOT FOODS DELI 250-512-9449
Pets & Livestock
Feed & HayAlfalfa, alfalfa mix or straight grass (small square bales) in Lister. Call Jay or Trish at 250-428-9755
Merchandise for Sale
Food Products
BUTCHER SHOPBC INSPECTED
GRADED AA OR BETTERLOCALLY GROWNNATURAL BEEF
Hormone FreeGrass Fed/Grain Finished$100 Packages Available
Quarters/Halves$2.50/lb Hanging WeightExtra Lean Hamburger
$4.00/lbTARZWELL FARMS
250-428-4316 Creston
FurnitureDININGROOM SET with china cabinet, 6 cushioned chairs, 2 leaves, excellent condition $750.; coffee table + round side table $150.250-368-3084GLASS din.table w/4 chairs $250. leather recln loveseat $300. student desk +chair $125. 20” fl at TV +stand $125. shelving unit $50. 368-7521
Garage SalesE.TRAIL, 1744 Noran Street, Sat. & Sun., Oct. 13 & 14, 10am-3pm. No Early Birds.Glenmerry Estate Sale. Sat. Oct. 13. 9am - 2pm. No early birds please. 3955 Woodland Dr. TrailMONTROSE, 710 9th Ave. (@corner of 6th Street). Sat., Oct.13, 8am-2pm. Dressers, ski equipment, vintage items.MOVING Sale: 2184 Highway 3B Fruitvale, Sat. Oct. 13, 8-2.Trail. Birchwood Drive multi family garage sale. Saturday, Oct. 13. 9am - 1pm.
Heavy Duty Machinery
A- STEEL SHIPPING STORAGE CONTAINERS /
Bridges / EquipmentWheel loaders JD 644E & 544A / 63’ & 90’ Stiff boom 5th wheel crane trucks/Excavators EX200-5 & 892D-LC / Small forklifts / F350 C/C “Cabs”20’40’45’53’ New/ Used/ Damaged /Containers Semi Trailers for Hiway & Storage-Call 24 Hrs 1-866-528-7108 Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com
Merchandise for Sale
Misc. for Sale2 GUINEA pigs, cage, food wood chips; 2 captain beds, 1 dresser, 1 twin mattress, hock-ey skates &gear.250-368-3113COMMODE (BEDSIDE) $25 Wheelchair $50, Hospital BedHusky Snowblower $1,400 Firm, 3 yrs old, hardly used, 27” electric start w/light. (250)365-6491.HALLOWEEN WIGS, make-up, decorations. Crafting sup-plies, Christmas lights. Gadgets & More, downtown Trail. 250-364-0404HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/news-paper?Panasonic 27 in TV, digital satellite receiver 305, & dish, exc cond; Raven PR2417 24 pin printer; 350 new plastic 4 L juice jugs; honey. Mike McLennan. 250-442-2933.PRIDE MOBILITY ‘Go Go’ Scooter with charger, basket. $200. OBO. 250-368-8356, 250-921-4310
Misc. WantedPrivate Coin Collector Buying Collections, Accumulations, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins + Chad: 250-863-3082 in Town
Real Estate
Acreage for Sale20 Acres In South Castlegar &
4 Acres in OotischeniaCall 250-365-5663
Houses For SaleFOR Sale. Four bedroom home with mortgage helper suite in Salmo. Many up-grades. Asking $189,000. Ph 250-352-5269
LotsLots for Sale
Two Building Lots in CastlegarFully Serviced,
Call 250-365-5663
Rentals
Apt/Condo for Rent2 bedroom condo for rent in Upper Warfi eld. Bright, reno-vated corner unit. $700. N/S. 1-587-215-5593Bella Vista, Shavers Bench Townhomes. N/S, N/P. 2-3 bdrms. Phone 250.364.1822Ermalinda Apartments, Glen-merry. Adults only. N/P, N/S. 1-2 bdrms. Ph. 250.364.1922Francesco Estates, Glenmer-ry. Adults only. N/P, N/S, 1-3 bdrms. Phone 250.368.6761.ROSSLAND 2bd, furnished or unfurnished, w/d,f/s, N/P, N/S, clean, quiet. 250.362.9473Salmo: Apt 3 bdr W/D, F/S, N/S, N/P, new high effi cient very economical heat pump. ref req. Looking for mature quiet tenant. $550/m + hydro avail Nov 1st 250 357-9753
Rentals
Apt/Condo for RentTRAIL, spacious 2bdrm. apartment. Adult building, per-fect for seniors/ professionals. Cozy, clean, quiet, com-fortable. Must See. 250-368-1312
TRAIL, upper Warfi eld, clean, tidy 2 bedroom condo, free parking, elevator, coin laundry, $750. includes utilities, available now. 250-364-3978WANETA MANOR 2bd $610, NS,NP, Senior oriented, un-derground parking 250-368-8423WARFIELD 2bd condo totally renovated 250-362-7716WARFIELD, large 2Bd. Quiet, secure, storage, coin laundry. $675. 250-367-2154
Duplex / 4 PlexMONTROSE, 1000sq.ft. 2bdrm., 2bth. duplex for rent. Close to bus stop, double pane windows, heat pump, dishwasher. $850. per month. 250-521-1002
Homes for RentE.TRAIL, 2bdrm., near Aquat-ic Centre. $700./mo. Referenc-es. 250-362-7374E.TRAIL, 3bdrm., full base-ment, 2-car garage, f/s, n/s, n/p. $1,000/mo. 250-365-5003ROSSLAND 3bdrm, 2 1/2bth, close to schools. 250-362-9005SMALL 3BDRM. house, good location, level entry, parking, fenced yard. 250-368-1312THIS rental property shows very well. 3 Bedroom 1 bath home, Green Ave, Trail. Im-maculately appointed with all amenities. Private back yard all tree’d in, Veranda with great view of city. Detached 1 car garage. $925 month. Avail Nov 01. 250-231-8499TRAIL 4-bdrm. D/W, W/D,A/C, private river view. $850/mo. Avail. immed Non-smokers only please. 250-231-4546
TownhousesGLENMERRY TOWNHOUSE 3Bd., new fl oor, windows, paint&roof.$900.604-552-8806
Want to RentCouple in 30’s seeks rental in Trail or surrounding area. Must be dog/kid (both well behaved) friendly & near public transit. up to $1000/m for 2 bdrm plus yard. Willing to help with main-tenance on property. Solid ref avai. Sasha @ 250 505-2302 or Dan @ 250 777-3309
Transportation
Auto FinancingDreamCatcher Auto Loans“0” Down, Bankruptcy OK -
Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals1-800-910-6402
www.PreApproval.cc DL# 7557
Houses For Sale Houses For Sale Houses For Sale
CLASSIFIEDS
A20 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, October 12, 2012 Trail Times
Take notice that Trail City Council intends to adopt a bylaw that will allow permissive tax exemptions for 2013 as follows:
Pursuant to Part 7, Division 7, Section 224(2)(a) of the Community Charter: 760 Eldorado Street Lots 11 – 13, Except Parcel A, Block 26, DL 230,
Plan 465A, K.D.
Pursuant to Part 7, Division 7, Section 224(2)(g) of the Community Charter: 3375 Laburnum Drive The West Half of Lot 8, Plan 1921, DL 4598,
K.D.
The properties subject to this bylaw would have generated $4,240 in tax revenues based on the 2012 assessed values and tax rates. The amounts should be similar for 2013 and the following 2 tax years.
Michelle McIsaac Corporate Administrator
City of Trail
NOTICE OF PERMISSIVE
TAX EXEMPTIONS
1st Trail Real Estate
OPEN HOUSE
Sat, Oct 13, 2012 12pm - 2pm 29 N. Kootenay,
Fruitvale $274,900
MLS# K216202Host: Rhonda
Rossland $689,000Tamer Vockeroth 250-368-7477
MLS# K213602
Trail $29,900Tamer Vockeroth 250-368-7477
MLS# K196271
Trail $123,500Rob Burrus 250-231-4420
MLS# K214620
Rossland $259,000Tamer Vockeroth 250-368-7477
MLS# K211841
Montrose $345,000Rob Burrus 250-231-4420
MLS# K214955
Fruitvale $330,000Rhonda van Tent 250-231-7575
MLS# K205510
Fruitvale $409,000 Rob Burrus 250-231-4420
MLS# K213040
Rossland $79,000Tamer Vockeroth 250-368-7477
MLS# K204215
Jack McConnachie250-368-5222
Fred Behrens250-368-1268
Rob Burrus250-231-4420
Patty Leclerc-Zanet 250-231-4490
Rhonda van Tent250-231-7575
Tamer Vockeroth250-368-7477
Marie Claude Germain250-512-1153
Like us on Facebook for your chance to win a FREE iPod!
Trail $139,900Fred Behrens 250-368-1268
MLS# K214881
Solid Home
Trail $259,900Patty Leclerc-Zanet 250-231-4490
MLS# K215314
Trail $479,000Jack McConnachie 250-368-5222
MLS# K215685
New Price
Trail $225,000Fred Behrens 250-368-1268
MLS# K216074
New Listing
Trail $209,900Patty Leclerc-Zanet 250-231-4490
MLS# K211181
New Price
Trail $249,900Patty Leclerc-Zanet 250-231-4490
MLS# K202376
New Price
Rossland $229,900Marie Claude 250-512-1153
MLS# K205409
Amazing
Price
Rossland $180,000Marie Claude 250-512-1153
MLS# K213617
Great Value!
Rossland $384,900Marie Claude 250-512-1153
MLS# K215958
Unique Heritage
Home!
Rossland $95,000Marie Claude 250-512-1153
Incredible
view lot! Redstone
Sat, Oct 13, 2012 12pm - 2pm 1280 Birch Ave Trail $189,000
MLS# K216126Host: Fred
Trail $89,000Rhonda van Tent 250-231-7575
MLS# K215008
LOTS FOR SALE
1252 Bay Avenue, Trail (250) 368-5222 • 1993 Columbia Ave Rossland, BC (250) 362-5200 • www.coldwellbankertrail.com
Transportation
Auto Financing
YOU’RE APPROVED
Call Dennis, Shawn or Paul
for Pre-Approvalwww.amford.com
Houses For Sale
Transportation
Auto Financing
Cars - Domestic2008 Buick CX 34,000 kms,
V-6 fully loaded, leather seats, aluminum wheels, $14,000
Call 250-365-5164
Recreational/SaleFor Sale - 1998, 27’ Sports-master Travel Trailer. Sleeps up to 8 People. Twin Bunks, Pull-out Couch, Table Folds
Down, Queen Pillow-top Mat-tress in Front Bedroom. Air
Conditioner, 3 Burner Stove, Oven, Spacious Bathroom, 2 x
30lb Propane Tanks. Very Clean and in Excellent Condi-tion! $9,400 OBO. Located in
Nakusp. Please call 250-265-9990 or email: tzanier@hotmail.ca
for more info.
Trucks & Vans1996 Mazda pickup. B3000 ext. cab. V6. Long box. Re-liable. $2,800. 250.521.1505
2003 F-150 4X4, Quad Cab, 5.4L, Loaded, with extra set of winters on rims. 180,000kms., excellent condition, detailed and ready to go. $9,800. OBO. Can e-mail pics. 250-231-4034
Houses For Sale
Transportation
Boats BOATING SEASON IS
STILL HERE!!WANNA HAVE SOME FUN
WITH YOUR FAMILY & FRIENDS ON THIS GREAT BOAT ALL YEAR ROUND?
Great for fi shing. Your Cabin on the Lake
The Kootenay Queen
• 1976 30ft cabin cruiser with a 185 merc
• Full galley (fridge, stove, sink, furnace, toilet)
• Fold down table for a queen sized bed
• Fold up bunk beds• VHF radio• Hull is sound, galley is
dated.• Low draft• 200 hrs on new engine• A great boat that needs
some TLC$12,000.00 invested
$8000 OBOCall 250-362-7681 or Cell
250-231-2174 email monikas_2010@
hotmail.com 4 more information & to view
Houses For Sale
Legal Notices
Houses For Sale
Legal Notices
Houses For Sale Houses For Sale Houses For Sale
Return all your empty beverage containersto a Return-It Depot for recycling.
Find locations at encorp.ca/locations
CLASSIFIEDS
REGIONALTrail Times Friday, October 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A21
For Sunday, Oct. 14, 2012 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) This is a lovely day to schmooze with others. Get out and enjoy time with partners and close friends. You need to socialize, and you need to express your thoughts to others. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Team effort at work will be productive today. But not only that, everyone will enjoy participating in
whatever you do. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) This is the perfect day to attend sports events, grab a movie or enjoy playful activities with children. Accept invitations to par-ties and get-togethers. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You’ll be pleased if you have a gathering at home today. It could be for fun, or it could be to share infor-mation. This is also a good
day to check out real-estate opportunities. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Today favors those of you who sell, market, teach, act or write for a living. All communication is upbeat. Enjoy interactions with neighbors and siblings as well. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) This is an excellent day for business and commerce. Trust your moneymaking
ideas. Ka-ching! LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Domestic peace and hap-piness are important for you today. It’s a good day for business, but it’s also a good day to relax and enjoy the company of others. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) It’s easy to have a warm feeling in your tummy today, which is why you have good feelings toward others as well. If you have a chance to do a small kind-ness for someone, you will. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Relations with females will be particularly positive today, especially in group situations. Someone might help you define your future goals.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Certain aspects of your private life probably will be a bit public today, especial-ly in the eyes of authority figures. Be aware of this if you think you have some-thing to hide. (Don’t we all?) AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Try to do something different today, because you need stimulation. Go someplace you’ve never been before. Talk to people from different backgrounds and other countries. Learn something new. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) You need to know where you stand financially, espe-cially in relation to others. What do you owe? What do you own? What do you share? What are your
responsibilities to others? YOU BORN TODAY You like to be in a controlled environment, which is why you keep your life on an even keel. You do things in moderation with quiet composure. (But you like to be in charge, especially at home and in your family.) Because of these qualities, you lend stability to those around you. Your year ahead will focus on part-nerships and close friend-ships. Enjoy! Birthdate of: Stacy Keibler, actress/retired wrestler; Katherine Mansfield, writer; Justin Hayward, musician. (c) 2012 King Features Syndicate, Inc.
SUNDAY HOROSCOPE
By Francis Drake
USE OF CONDUCTED ENERGY WEAPONS
Conducted energy weapons (TASERs) have been used by law enforcement agencies in British Columbia over the past decade. An all-party parliamentary committee is reviewing the implementation of recommendations made in the 2009 Braidwood Commission report Restoring Public Confidence: Restricting the Use of Conducted Energy Weapons.
The Committee’s examination will review the implementation of the Braidwood recommendations regarding the use of conducted energy weapons and the training of law enforcement officers with respect to use of these weapons. In addition, the Committee has a mandate to review new scientific research into the medical risks associated with these devices.
SPECIAL COMMITTEE TO INQUIRE INTO THE USE OF CONDUCTED ENERGY WEAPONS AND TO AUDIT SELECTED POLICE COMPLAINTS
Chair: Murray Coell, MLA (Saanich North and the Islands)Deputy Chair: Kathy Corrigan, MLA (Burnaby-Deer Lake)
PROVIDE YOUR INPUTBritish Columbians are invited to send a submission or to participate in a public hearing on Monday, October 22 in Victoria or Tuesday, October 23 in Vancouver. The deadline for written submissions is Friday, November 2, 2012.
For more information on the work of the Committee, visit our website at: www.leg.bc.ca/cewor contact: Parliamentary Committees Office, Room 224,
Parliament Buildings, Victoria, BC V8V 1X4; tel: 250.356.2933, or toll-free in BC: 1.877.428.8337; fax: 250.356.8172; e-mail: cew@leg.bc.ca
Susan Sourial, Committee Clerk
For the benefit of Kootenay Lake area residents, the following lake levels are provided by FortisBC as a public service.
Queen’s Bay: Present level: 1741.95 ft. 7 day forecast: Holding. 2012 peak:1753.78 ft. 2011 peak:1751.71 ft.
Nelson: Present level: 1741.95 ft. 7 day forecast: Holding.
Levels can change unexpectedly due to weather or other conditions. For more information or to sign-up for unusual lake levels notifications by phone or email, visit www.fortisbc.com or call 1-866-436-7847.
Kootenay Lake LevelsOctober 11, 2012
BY GREG NESTEROFFThe Nelson Star
N e l s o n - C r e s t o n MLA Michelle Mungall is headed for Ukraine next week as part of a Canadian team that will observe the fair-ness of that country’s parliamentary election.
“I’m really excited,” Mungall told the Star. “The concept of democ-racy is a huge passion of mine and being able to contribute to increas-ing democratic fairness around the world is a wonderful opportun-ity.”
Mungall will be part of a 430-strong dele-gation led by federal multiculturalism minis-ter Jason Kenney mon-itoring the October 28 vote.
Eighty-seven parties are seeking seats in the parliament, known as the Verkhovna Rada. Presently the Party of Regions, led by prime minister Mykola Azarov, holds the lar-gest number of seats — 195 of 450.
The election will use a combination of proportional represen-tation and first-past-the-post, with each sys-tem to account for 50 per cent of the seats. (Something similar but not identical was used in 1998 and 2002 elec-tions.)
Mungall has been an international elec-tion observer before, in Zambia in 2006. Following that experi-ence, she added her name the registry of Canadem, the civilian reserve that oversees such delegations.
She was invited to
apply for the Ukraine mission and learned this month that she had been chosen from among over 2,000 applications.
She will be away for about two weeks, first attending training ses-sions in Ottawa before heading to Ukraine ahead of the election.
Mungall says observers are there to report whether the election result reflects the democratic will of voters, but not to inter-fere or intervene.
“It’s really import-ant to be neutral and focus on how the elec-tion itself is being con-ducted,” she says. “We go in without any bias towards any candidate or party and look at ‘Is this process being conducted freely and fairly?’”
However, concerns have already sur-faced from long-term observers around vote-buying and pressure tactics. The former Soviet republic has a chequered electoral history, with allega-tions of corruption.
The 2004 presiden-tial election between Viktor Yanukovych and Victor Yuschenko in particular resulted in the political crisis known as the Orange Revolution after Yuschenko’s support-ers and international observers claimed the vote was rigged. A supreme court decision voided results from a run-off ballot and ordered a new vote, which Yuschenko won.
Mungall said she’s not sure exactly where
she’ll be assigned, but expects it will be to one or several polling sta-tions. In Zambia, she was stationed at the country’s largest poll, in a university.
“It was neat because people there did not take their right to vote for granted at all,” she says. “They lined up for three hours before the polls opened.”
Mungall isn’t sure if any of her fellow MLAs will join her in Ukraine — Mike Farnworth was asked to apply but may not be able to go.
NELSON
MLA to observe election in Ukraine
For Monday, Oct. 15, 2012 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) The New Moon today is the only New Moon opposite your sign all year. That makes this the best day to examine how you are doing in your relationships with others. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Each New Moon is a chance to make resolutions. Today’s New Moon can help you fig-ure out how to improve your job as well as how to improve your health. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Are you happy with the balance of work and play in your life? This is a good day to think about whether or not you’ve achieved this balance to your satisfaction. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) What can you do to improve your relationships with family members? Furthermore, what can you do to improve where you live? LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Think about your style of
communicating to others. Do people really hear you? Do you hear them? Be as clear in your communication as you possibly can be. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) What is your attitude toward money? Your attitude toward anything can affect how it manifests in your life. If you think money is the root of all evil, you won’t hold on to it. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) The only New Moon in your sign all year is taking place today. That makes this the perfect day to look in the mirror to see how you can improve your image. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Give some thought today to your hidden, subconscious desires. When we ignore these impulses, they can make us do crazy things! SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) To a great extent, your friends are a reflection of who you are. Do you hang out with quality people?
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Think about your life direc-tion in general today. Are you headed where you want to go? Where do you want to be five years from now? AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Is there further education or training that will enhance your job? Can you travel somewhere to enrich your life? Today’s New Moon is the best day of the year for you to think about this. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Today’s New Moon urges you to think about the arrangements you have with others regarding shared prop-erty, shared debt and shared possessions. Are you happy with these arrangements? YOU BORN TODAY You have a marvelous sense of humor and a droll wit. You’re very knowledgeable and well-informed about the society around you. You have a mag-netism that attracts others to you. Frequently, people want to know your opinions about
things. Many of you are quite outrageous simply because you enjoy being so. In your year ahead, a major choice might arise. Choose wisely. Birthdate of: Emeril Lagasse, chef; P.G. Wodehouse, novel-ist; Penny Marshall, actress/director.
For Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) This is a lovely, fun-filled day at work. Expect the sup-port of others. You might want to do something to make your workplace more attractive. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) You’re throwing caution to the wind today because you want to have a good time. (No doubt, many of you will go overboard spending money to do so.) GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Many of you will indulge in something quite wonderful for home and family today. You might bring home beau-tiful furniture or gifts for loved ones. (Someone will be happy.) CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You’ll enjoy talking to oth-ers today, especially siblings and relatives, because you’re in an upbeat, friendly mood. You’re in the zone! LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Business and commerce are favored today. The only
downside is you might go overboard or something could look better than it is. Nevertheless, things do look good. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) You feel friendly and socially charming today because fair Venus is in your sign getting a boost from lucky Jupiter. Enjoy schmoozing, but don’t try to be all things to all peo-ple. (It’s impossible.) LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You feel very pleased with yourself today. (This is good.) This is also a good day for behind-the-scenes deals or working quietly on some-thing. You might do a good turn for someone else. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Relations with others, espe-cially in group situations, will be particularly positive today. You easily will convince oth-ers to go along with what you want. Join forces with some-one to get the best results. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Relations with authority fig-ures are good today; in fact, you might develop a crush on your boss. Some of you will be asked to give your creative input on something -- design, layout, colors, whatever. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Grab any chance to travel today, because you’ll love it. This is also an excellent day for publishing, higher educa-
tion, the law, the media and medicine. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) People are good to you today. Keep your pockets open and accept whatever comes your way. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Relations with partners and close friends are warm and pleasant today. Get out and schmooze; you will enjoy the company of others, and vice versa. YOU BORN TODAY You are observant and often make pronouncements about soci-ety around you. You are a lovely combination of earthy commonsense and playful imagination. You are genuine and authentic, and you always walk your talk. Privately, you often are eccentric. Justice and fairness are important to you. Work hard to build or construct something this year, because your rewards soon will follow. Birthdate of: Oscar Wilde, playwright/poet; Caterina Scorsone, actress; John and Edward “Jedward” Grimes, singers. (c) 2012 King Features Syndicate, Inc.
MONDAY/TUESDAYHOROSCOPE
By Francis Drake
SATURDAY’S CROSSWORD
CLASSIFIEDSA22 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, October 12, 2012 Trail Times
Recycle this paper!
(when you’re finished reading it)
CASTLEGAR200-1965 Columbia Ave.
365-6455(250)
KELOWNA2153 Springfield Road
860-2600(250)
NELSONChahko Mika Mall
352-7258(250)
CRANBROOK101 Kootenay St. North
426-8927(250)
TELUS KIOSK
WEST KELOWNA#200 - 2180 Elk Rd.
707-2600(250)
NOW OPEN
A23 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, October 12, 2012 Trail Times
A24 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, October 12, 2012 Trail Times
For additional information
and photos on all of our listings,
please visit
www.kootenayhomes.com
KOOTENAY HOMES INC. a
™
Tonnie Stewart ext 33Cell: 250-365-9665tonniestewart@shaw.cawww.kootenayhomes.com
Deanne Lockhart ext 41Cell: 250-231-0153deannelockhart@shaw.cawww.kootenayhomes.com
Mark Wilson ext 30Cell: 250-231-5591mark.wilson@century21.cawww.kootenayhomes.com
Mary Amantea ext 26Cell: 250-521-0525mamantea@telus.netwww.kootenayhomes.com
Mary Martin ext 28Cell: 250-231-0264mary.martin@century21.cawww.kootenayhomes.com
Richard Daoust ext 24Cell: 250-368-7897richard.daoust@century21.ca www.kootenayhomes.com
Ron Allibone ext 45Cell: 250-368-1162ron@hometeam.cawww.kootenayhomes.com
Terry Alton ext 48Cell: 250-231-1101terryalton@shaw.cawww.kootenayhomes.com
Christine Albo ext 39Cell: 250-512-7653christine.albo@century21.cawww.kootenayhomes.com
Art Forrest ext 42c21art@telus.netwww.kootenayhomes.com
Darlene Abenante ext 23Cell: 250.231.0527darlene@hometeam.cawww.kootenayhomes.com
WE CAN SELL YOUR HOME.
NOBODY HAS THE RESOURCES WE DO!
8494 Highway 22A, Trail $158,000
FANTASTIC STARTER HOME. 3 bdrm/1 bth modern and home located
on a great flat lot close to major shopping center and US border. Roof is 3 yrs
old, great paint colors in interior, newer kitchen, laundry on main floor. Call your REALTOR® today.Call Mark (250) 231-5591
2517 Columbia Avenue, Castlegar
$220,0003 bdrm/2 bath house with main floor laundry & plenty of storage! A 2 car
garage and lots of room to park your rv, extra vehicles or toys! Nice flat lot is just under 1/2 acre with fruit trees and room
for a garden. Just replaced roof Sept., 2012!
Call Terry 250-231-1101
1621 Cooke Avenue, Rossland$339,000
6 bdrm home with oversized 2 bay garageon 90 x 100 lot Drop by!
Call Tonnie (250)-365-9665
2485 LeRoi Avenue, Rossland $179,000
Fantastic Location!! This sunny 2 bedroom home sits on a great 60 x 100 corner lot with great views. Over 1200
sq.ft. on the main floor. Lots of windows, great garden potential and covered
parking. Call Mary A (250) 521-0525
1345 Spokane Street, Rossland $559,000
This amazing heritage family home also operates as popular B&B. Features
include amazing kitchen, office/eating area with wood stove, decor and
bathroom upgrades. It is located close to town, the ski hill and trails and offers
beautiful views. The B&B clientele is growing and has excellent reviews.
Call Mary M (250) 231-0264
202 Kootenay Avenue, Tadanac $319,000
This family home has a terrific floor plan with large living and dining rooms,
sun-room, large kitchen, master bdrm with ensuite on main and 3 bdrms and den up.
The plumbing and electrical have been updated. Don’t miss viewing this
terrific property.Call Mary M (250) 231-0264
1745 Kitchener Ave, Rossland$259,000
4 bdrm family home on 0.24 of an acre. Large walk out basement with bright rec room and wood stove. The living room
boasts awesome mountain views and gas fireplace. Lots of parking for all the toys
Call your REALTOR® today!Call Christine (250) 512-7653
1638 Cedar Avenue, Trail $189,500
TRAIL TREASURE... This amazing 3 bdrm character home is privately
situated, yet a short walk to town. Great oak flooring, main floor laundry, large dining and living room with custom
fireplace. The views are gorgeous. Low maintenance yard and covered parking.
Call Mary M (250) 231-0264
1625 Balsam Street, Trail $239,000
Immaculate Glenmerry townhome with modern floor plan, large master bedroom with walk-in closet and full en-suite bath,
family room, patio, balcony, fireplace, heat pump, vaulted ceilings, and much more! Don’t wait! At this price it will sell quickly.
Call Deanne (250) 231-0153
3245 Lilac Crescent, Trail$209,900
Located on one of Trail’s most beautiful blocks, this home offers 3 bdrms, huge
living room, hardwood floors, and a family/recreation room downstairs. Property offers a back yard with plenty of room for the children
to run and play together with a mature garden area.
Call Art (250) 368-8818
NEW LISTINGNEW LISTING
NEW LISTING
C k A R l d
SOLD1175 & 1185 Green Ave, Trail
$279,000“Investors Alert.” 2 rebuilt homes on 2 titles
close to town. Live in one and rent one. Mint condition inside and out come and see
2050 Green Road, Fruitvale$489,000
Beautiful 4 bdrm, 2.5 bath home on 4.9 acres! Home features deluxe kitchen, covered deck, patio, gazebo, pasture
and fencing, separate shop, and double attached garage.
Call your REALTOR® today.Call Darlene (250) 231-0527 or Ron (250) 368-1162
OPEN HOUSESaturday Oct 13 10am-12pm
OPEN HOUSESaturday Oct 13 11am-1pm
REGIONALIf you’re reading this, then so will many other people.Call today to start your advertising campaign. 250.368.8551
Your business is our business
10am - 6pm • Monday - Saturday 2910 Hwy Dr, Trail 250.368.5552
kootenayoutdoorliving.com
Hot Tubs • Swim SpasBBQs • Saunas
Patio Furniture & HeatersLandscaping & Garden Supplies
Gravel • Tool Rentals
FALL HOT TUB SALE on
now!
Take Out & Delivery250-368-81121201 Bay Ave, Trail
Your taste buds will love Smokin’ Bluz
Smoked meats come with FREEsweet cornbread muffin, BB-Q sauce &
your choice of coleslaw orcountry style pork ‘n’ beans
Open daily 11am to 7pm
Po’ Boy Sandwiches come with a free
fountain drink
ART POWELL PHOTO
Art Powell’s Trail Cam caught this bobcat passing through the backyard of his Sunningdale home earlier this week. If you have a photo you would like to share with our readers email it to editor@trailtimes.ca.
Granby garbage upsets
residentsWHAT YOU SEE ...
BY CASSANDRA CHINGrand Forks GazetteGarbage left along the
shoreline of the Granby River has left nearby Grand Forks residents upset by the mess.
“It’s coming to the end of the season now so the partiers have slowed
down somewhat,” said resident Kathy O’Toole.
“It’s our third sum-mer here and it’s getting progressively worse.
O’Toole noted that there are more people walking their dogs on the trail now and there are some who don’t pick
up after their dogs.“It’s not everyone,
but there are also some people leave cans behind or smash their bottles,” she noted.
Wayne Kopan, the city’s environmental and building construction services manager, noted
that there isn’t a bylaw in place for littering.
“The City of Grand Forks does have garbage collection bylaws, but to the best of my know-ledge we do not have a bylaw that specifically addresses littering,” he said.
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