kitimat northern sentinel, november 21, 2012
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November 21, 2012 edition of the Kitimat Northern SentinelTRANSCRIPT
NorthernSentinelK I T I M A T
Kitimat remembers ... page 8
Volume 57 No. 47 www.northernsentinel.com Wednesday, November 21, 2012 $1.34 INCLUDESTAX
Joseph Pauloski holds the sick eagle he found at the Kitimat Land� ll while working. Staff at the dump called the local animal shelter and the eagle was taken to Prince Rupert where it’s making great progress. Photo submitted
PM477761
Skeena transit gets reviewedCameron Orr
A service review of the Skeena public tran-sit system has brought out a number of recom-mendations, among them increased routes on the Connector bus to Terrace, with the possibility of servicing the airport more frequently.
The draft transit review is currently available for viewing on the District of Kitimat’s website (www.kitimat.ca) and shows a number of possi-ble changes to the transit system, both short term and long term.
Any action on the report would have to come from the Regional District of Kitimat Stikine, which manages the Skeena transit system which services runs beetween Terrace and Kitimat, as well as nearby communities along Highway 16.
The Terrace-Kitimat Connector, the report notes, is often packed full, meaning many pas-sengers need to stand.
“Providing more frequent service would ensure these routes, which are long and involve travelling on roads with many curves, are safe and comfortable for passengers,” the report states.
The report estimates that adding three round-trips to the Connector route in a day would cost an additional $225,000 a year, with the local gov-ernment sharing $82,000 of that.
An extra bus would also be required.Upping the round-trips by three would allow
for two more trips to the airport during the day. As it is now, a bus is scheduled to leave the air-port only once, at 4:18 p.m.
More frequent stops at the airport was just one idea. Another would be to stop airport ser-vice entirely and have all trips serve the Jack Pine community. The report said that plan would be cost neutral.
While plans for more Connector runs is a long-term goal, a more short-term suggestion was to add about 10 minutes to each one-way trip on the Connector from Kitimat to Terrace.
That suggestion, the report says, will help keep the trip on time throughout the year and will also prevent delays on other bus routes that rely on connections with the Connector.
With suggestions in the report to restructure routes within Terrace, it was recommended that changes to the Connector schedule coincide with changes in Terrace.
More weekend service is another area that Skeena transit could change, but the recommen-dation didn’t specify the Connector. BC Transit’s senior regional manager for the North Central zone, Todd Dupuis, said that the Connector was mainly designed to serve people’s medical trans-portation needs.
Continued on page 2
Kitimatian’s kind heart gives a sick eagle a new lease on lifeCameron Orr
Joseph Pauloski was sitting in his excavator at the Kitimat land� ll when he caught sight of something falling into the quarry.
When he went in for a closer look he found an eagle on the ground, its wings extended.
He thought that could mean only a couple of things; it was protecting some food from other birds, or something was wrong.
He gave the eagle � ve minutes be-fore moving in.
“He � ew away once but he couldn’t really get off the ground,” said Pauloski. “I went up to him with my jacket, took my jacket off and threw it around him...he didn’t even struggle.”
He walked the eagle back to the shed and they called the Kitimat Hu-mane Society.
The local shelter manager made the drive to Prince Rupert to get the bird help at the Prince Rupert Wildlife Rehabilita-tion Centre.
Since � nding the eagle last Wednes-day, Nov. 14, and since the eagle was de-livered to Prince Rupert the day after, it has been making great progress back to health.
“He must have ate something bad,” said Gunther Golinia, who runs Prince Rupert’s wildlife shelter with wife Nan-cy. “We treated him with charcoal and electrolytes. He’s really perking up.”
He added that nothing appeared to be broken on the eagle.
He said they receive eagles as far away as Burns Lake and they release them from Prince Rupert once they’re back to health. Eagles are great naviga-tors and know how to travel.
He said they get birds coming in
from the Prince Rupert land� ll at times too, where they had eaten something bad, such as cleaning chemicals mixed with the trash.
“It’s awful hard on the birds,” he said.Their shelter has seen about 40 ea-
gles throughout the year, with eight still in their shelter.
As for Pauloski, he said he wasn’t nervous at all approaching the eagle. The fact the eagle didn’t look nervous about him being there helped.
But Pauloski also has experience with bird rescue. When he was about 12-or-13-years-old on Masset he said he was walking to school and found a trum-peter swan � ailing in the snow.
He did then what he did last week; wrapped it up in his jacket and took it to their animal shelter.
“That made front page news,” he said.
2 Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012
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From page 1“It was created to help connect
people to health services,” said Dupuis. “Therefore the hours of service and Monday-to-Friday nature of the service were designed based on the fact it was servicing health related things.”
The regional district would then have to � nd ways to pay for increased service, he said.
“As always, the Regional District of Kitimat Stikine has the � nal say for service levels,” he added, saying BC Transit’s role is to show what can be
done, provide cost estimates and show other possible needs with changed ser-vices.
The anticipation now is that the re-gional district will receive the draft re-port for further public review before it’s � nalized after Dec. 31.
Charges have been laid against two youths and one adult male who are believed to be in-volved in a rash of vehicle thefts and break-ins in recent days, including a break and enter to a home on Nov. 8.
The adult is identi� ed as Albert Eugene El-mquist, 25, and he has been charged with break and enter, possession of stolen property over $5,000, failing to comply with a probation order, and theft.
The two youths cannot be named under the Youth Criminal Justic Act, but have been charged with a variety of offences, including break and enter, obstruction, breach of undertaking and pos-session of stolen property over $5,000.
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Entertaining, enlightening, and inspiring community through live Performing Arts.
Performances at Mount Elizabeth Theatre, 1491 Kingfisher, Ave., Kitimat
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Saturday, November 24 at 8:00 pm sharp
Brenley MacEachern and Lisa MacIsaac are Madison Violet, a roots duo who have won acclaim and consistently sell out their perfromances in Europe, Great Britain, Australia, and North America. They are also the only Canadians to win the John Lennon Songwriting Contest.
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uPcoMing concErTsSun., Feb 10, 2013 Ballet JörgenSwan Lake at the MET! Don’t miss Ballet Jörgen Canada’s 25th Anniversary celebration performance!Fri., Mar 1, 2013 CadenceFour microphones, four men, no instruments, award winning a cappella.
Fri., Mar 22, 2013 OuterbridgeCanada’s best magicians return to the MET with a new show - Outerbridge - Clockwork Mysteries.Fri., Apr 12, 2013 Red ChamberStraddling traditional and contemporary, these virtuosic performers set the stage on fire!
TickeTs on sale aT:Hollywood Video, kitimat, from any kitimat concert association Board Member,
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Cameron OrrA report has come back to Kitimat Council
which spells out why a playground in Cablecar is not likely to happen.
At council’s Sept. 4 meeting, Phil Germuth moved for administration to prepare a report which would outline the cost and location of a possible kids play area in the rural neighbour-hood.
Leisure Services Director Martin Gould sug-gested at the time that such a project could be challenging in that area but would put together the official report.
With that report now in council’s hands, they voted simply to receive it for information, based on its contents which showed little hope to see one built.
That low-likelihood is based on the fact there is little available land owned by the District of Kitimat in Cablecar. Aside from the housing de-velopments, most of the surrounding lands are Crown land, and permission would have to be re-ceived from the province to develop them.
As well, the report states that “no matter where a playground is situated, it will be difficult for residents of the neighbourhood to access it,” as it could be up to 2km away from certain homes.
Access corridors may also have to be installed through wooded areas to create direct routes to any potential playground.
This is not the first time that a playground was proposed in Cablecar. In 1993, the District of Kitimat received a letter from Perry Smith who wanted to see a playground build in the neigh-bourhood. The proposed locations were the north-east corner of Cablecar, or the Snowflake Fair Grounds.
At the time, council supported the motion in
No playground
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Training keeps rescuers sharpOn Nov. 4, Kitimat
Search and Rescue (KSAR) performed a mock search as part of ongoing training, which is done year round, in all weather conditions.
Sixteen members re-sponded to search for a miss-ing 52-year-old male within the Hirsch Creek Park area. This exercise also gave some of KSAR’s newest recruits, who have recently completed a Ground Search and Rescue (GSAR) course, a taste of
what a real search could en-tail.
The fictitious search closely resembled a recent search the KSAR successfully performed earlier in the week. A command post was set up at the park shelter and under the direction of a Search Manager and three Team Leaders; the teams of searchers systemati-cally searched the network of trails, until the unresponsive subject was located. Once as-sessed, the patient was pack-
aged in a stretcher, and car-ried to a suitable spot in the park, where a handoff to the BC Ambulance Service could have taken place.
KSAR has had a busy year in the community responding to various call outs ranging from missing mushroom pick-ers, missing persons in remote areas, to injured hikers in the backcountry. KSAR also re-sponds to various mutual aid calls from surrounding areas in need of support.
KSAR would like to re-mind persons traveling in the backcountry at this time of year (sledders, snowshoers, backcountry skiers, fisher-men, quaders) to be prepared for the unexpected. Leaving a pre-plan with someone re-sponsible is a must, along with your anticipate return time.
KSAR thanks the small business and corporate sup-port it has received this year, and also from the community in general.
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principal but it appears the idea never received the support of the Cable Car Neighbour-hood Association, and there are no further re-cords of the project in municipal files.
The administra-tion’s report, they note that a fence should be installed around any potential playground
The Kitimat Music Scholarship Society held their first recital of the season and a variety of “odd” characters, as well as some of our piano students, played to a full house. KMSS holds recitals approximately six times a year. Their Christmas recital is on Dec. 16 at the presbyterian church with 2:00 or 4:00 performances. Photo submitted.
in Cablecar to provide protection from wild-life, such as cougars and wolves. www.northernsentinel.com
4 Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012
How did you see the U.S. election? Did you view it as a too-long, drawn-out, incredibly expensive debacle that solved little for the American people? As of this writing, it has been a week since Barack Obama was re-elected with a smaller num-ber of electoral votes than he attained in his initial campaign – something that has never hap-pened before.
Subsequent events have demonstrated that while the election is over, as we ex-pected, not much has changed although many people are unhappy – with a split of all votes that was almost 50-50 – it’s un-derstandable.
In English Canada, we groaned when Pauline Marois’ Parti Quebecois became the government in Quebec. We all knew the separation debate was back on and English and French Quebecers would be back at one anothers’ throats over lan-guage.
However, who would have guessed that in the � rst seven days after the Ameri-can election that some 20 states, most of them conservative, would be into cam-paigns to secede from the Union using a White House website access put in place to promote communications between the government administration and the people.
All told, according to various media, petitions have been � led on the website on behalf of 20 states: Alabama, Arkan-sas, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Indiana,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Missis-sippi, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas. Indications are there will be more as the issue “trends” (a phrase I hate, that comes from Twitter, an introduction I loathe.)
If electors in so many conservative states are unhappy with the results of the election, Canada’s Lord Conrad Black, one of our best and more colourful word-smiths, has delivered some of the harshest (but most readable) criticism of the elec-tion and its result. He describes the elec-tion as “one of the dumbest, most futile elections in American history.”
His is of course a unique perspective and he saves some of his strongest slag-ging for what he calls “a fascistic pros-ecution service,” presumably a reference to the justice system that landed him an American slammer for three years.
I’m sharing this because, while I tend to agree with the general theme of his ar-gument, it’s his purple prose that really warms me up. Under the last two admin-
istrations, Obama and George W. Bush, Black opines that in the US “public health and education stan-dards have collapsed (though not those in the private sector); the whole country is being terrorized by a fascistic prosecution service; and the number of food-stamp re-cipients and the number of people with criminal records are coursing
neck and neck toward 50 million apiece, a shocking � gure in each case. The wealthiest country in history is bankrupt, with 50 million citizens in poverty and the entire middle class on an economic knife-edge.”
There’s so much more, but if you don’t read the Financial Post, you should go online just to check out the two-part disassembling of the election by Black. It’s great entertainment – much of it is on target – but it is an opinion piece and clear-ly, not all will agree.
And don’t think he’s just shilling for Mitt Romney. Black kept some of his bluntest criticism for the Republicans. “Any substantial president would have mopped the � oor with Romney, and any serious challenger would have evicted the incumbent like a derelict squatter,” to quote Mr. Black.
Getting back to the States wanting to secede from the Union, none of that is likely to happen. It’s not that new; it was South Carolina’s attempt at secession in 1860 that launched the civil war, after all.
Continued on page 5
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Viewpoints
No success with seceding plans
by Allan Hewitson
UnderMiscellaneous
Contents Copyrighted -Canadian Publications Mail Product, AgreementNo. 477761, Canada Post Corp., Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash.
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We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Periodical Fund of the Department of Canadian Heritage.
Welcome changesThe province has followed through on
promises to review how they handle emer-gency noti� cations, following the Oct. 27 7.7 earthquake on Haida Gwaii.
Which is great news for those of us who noticed how slow information came from Emergency Management BC (EMBC), the people who we had relied on to give us in-formation on, you know, emergency manage-ment.
There were certainly holes in the system that should have been noted far earlier. My predecessor has on a few occasions told me about tsunami warning drills the province had done in the past where bulletins would be sent out to media.
The punchline from those moments is that our sister paper the Terrace Standard in-deed did receive a tsunami alert. The Kitimat Northern Sentinel, however, did not. If you know your geography, you know why that’s funny. Or tragic.
Now alerts from the West Coast and Alas-ka Tsunami Warning Centre will be auto-for-warded to local authorities and even media will be in on the loop too. (They say “major provincial media” in their press release but we have since been told by their communica-tions people that this paper is, indeed, on the list of organizations to get alerts.)
Some of the other plans include things that I feel should have been in place already (Like a mobile-ready version of EMBC’s blog, and ways to subscribe to it on your phone. Plus template blog posts to speed up the posting of information.) and others which are actually neat and a creative solution. (In-teractive maps of tsunami warning zones, and digital recordings posted to the web through a service called Sound Cloud.)
The real takeaway for myself in all this is how behind a lot of the communication methods are for the province and emergency responders.
Even locally the Kitimat Emergency Pro-gram and the � re department will be looking at ways to take advantage of social media, a medium which � re chief Trent Bossence said circulated a lot of misinformation during the earthquake in question.
In our news room here, we didn’t receive any e-mails from the province, and the main way we heard from the � re hall was through fax, a communication method which has as-tounded me with how long it has lasted.
Continued on page 5
As readers wilI well know, in my previ-ous life as editor of this newspaper I was not ter-ribly kind about premier Christy Clark’s vaunted BC Jobs Plan.
Quite the opposite in fact.
So I read with in-terest - and hope - a November 6 provincial government announcement of a new, near half million dollar training program to help people “learn practical skills for employment in the growing building services sector”.
Finally, I thought, action.Vital action too given the Quick
Facts part of that press release noted BC is projected to have nearly a mil-lion job openings over the next de-cade.
Unfortunately the more I read, the more the bloom came off the rose.
How many people would get this training?
One hundred and forty-four.Yup, 144. Which equals less than one per
cent of the 100,000 jobs the govern-ment says will need to be � lled each and every year between now and 2022.
Ah well, it’s a start.So what exactly are the skills
that those enrolled in the program will acquire?
Back to the press release.“Custodial and chemical safety,
housekeeping practices, infection control, washroom maintenance and window washing, carpet cleaning and � oor care.”
In other words janitorial.Now I am not mocking janitors
- having spent time on a sawmill clean-up crew I know the drill.
And if they work for a big, unionized company they can make darn good money, certainly enough to support themselves and their fam-ily.
But they will only � nd jobs if the major projects like the LNG plants go through.
And as the government knows full well, the skilled labour shortage relating to those projects is not jani-tors.
It is millwrights, electricians, welders and the like.
And this program does absolute-ly nothing to address that.
In short, a desperate announce-ment by a desperate government.
Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012 5
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Educate yourself, your family and your friends about HIV. Visit HIV101.ca today.Educate: The only way to know you are not positive is by getting tested. Request an HIV test today.Test: Please share your new knowledge about HIV with others, and please encourage everyone to get an HIV test.
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HIV is a real concern within our communities. You can contract HIV primarily through unprotected sex and by sharing needles. HIV can live in your body for years without you knowing and all the while you can be passing it to others. At least 25 per cent of people who are HIV+ do not know and these 25 per cent are estimated to be responsible for 75 per cent of new infections. Northern Health, in collaboration with its community partners, is working with the Province of BC to prevent the spread of HIV by expanding HIV testing, treatment, and support services to British Columbians.
Continued from page 4So far, with a re-
ported 22,000 petition signatories Texas, not surprisingly, leads the secession parade. Tex-as, as most of us know, considers itself as a “re-public” anyway. Its pol-iticians enjoy mumbling with secession and even more than Quebec, feel warm about the Lone Star state parting com-pany with the rest of the country.
Tinges of racism emerge. One GOP of� -cial, treasurer of a coun-ty Republican group, wondered in print in a local post-election newsletter why Vermont and Texas should live under the same govern-ment.
His newsletter pro-posed an “amicable di-vorce” from the “mag-gots” who re-elected Obama, since many of them voted on an “eth-nic basis.” No comment on whether any white republicans voted ethni-cally.
State petitions are
Seceding
Changes
by Malcolm Baxter
BaxyardBanter
Jobs plan comes up short
Contined from page 4I’m truly not in-
tending to pick on the � re department, who I think do and have done great work.
It’s merely a sur-prise to see where communication falls through the crack when it’s most needed.
Having the earth-quake was scary, but I am comforted to know the powers-that-be in our province are taking the lessons to heart.
Let just hope we’ll never see how we im-proved.
Cameron Orr
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submitted to the White House’s “We the Peo-ple” website, designed to give “all Americans a way to engage their government on the is-sues that matter to them.” And, at the time of writing, none of the petitions appear to have reached the threshold (the Texas petition has received over 22,000
and needs to hit 25,000 by Dec. 9. Louisiana, with just under 15,000 signatures, needs to hit the threshold by Dec. 7.)
So to me, while there are many malcon-tents in conservative-leaning states, consider-ing the total millions of voters in each, if they can’s drum up 25,000
signatures in 30 days, it’s not in the cards – just as Quebecers turned down leaving Canada.
That doesn’t mean there aren’t plenty of Canadians who wouldn’t really mind having a Canadian pass-port stamped to drive from Cornwall, Ont. to Edmundston, NB.
6 Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012
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Sun., Mon. 8 am - 10 pmTues., Wed., Thurs. - 8 am - 11 pm
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Time to think about HampersA 2011 house-
keeping audit done on Northern Health facilities shows Kitimat did well in cleanliness.
The external audit was conduct-ed by Westech.
All rooms in facility are consid-ered, but the out-side areas are not.
To pass an au-dit a facility must receive at least 85 per cent.
Kitimat Gen-eral Hospital re-ceived a score of 94.36 per cent. For comparison, Ter-race’s Mills Me-morial Hospital received 93.32 per cent.
Christmas 2012 is fast approaching and the Kitimat Christmas Hamper Appeal is once again underway.
In 2011 the citizens of Kitimat and Kitamaat Village, some Terrace businesses, as well as a couple of off-shore corporations, generously do-nated $46,992.91 - our highest amount of dona-tions ever - enabling us to fill over 300 Christmas hampers and to continue assisting the less fortu-nate in Kitimat and Kitamaat Village throughout the year. We also received numerous boxes of food, gifts and toys thanks to you all.
The Christmas Hamper Appeal is under the auspices of the Kitimat Food Bank Society. Our organization is run strictly by volunteers and the majority of the donations are used for the needy with a small portion going for operating expenses. We are the only organization distributing Christ-mas hampers in Kitimat and Kitamaat Village.
Christmas hampers include a voucher (for a turkey, ham or other) along with the trimmings for a Christmas dinner. Schoolchildren, churches and other community groups donate a significant amount of the food.
New toys are included for children 12 and under. We like to include gifts for all teens and
adults and appreciate receiving gift certificates for music downloads, books/magazines, video rent-als, swim/skating passes, phone cards, toiletries, flowers, restaurants, or other gifts suitable for teens, women and men.
Gift certificates from local merchants are a wonderful idea as this enables recipients to pur-chase something they would enjoy as well as sup-porting the local economy. We do not give cloth-ing as gifts, apart from mitts, gloves, toques etc. as sizing is a problem.
We would appreciate receiving unwrapped gifts as we have a Gift/Toy Committee who wrap and mark gifts. This makes it easier for us to know how many gifts we have for each age group.
This year hampers will be delivered on Satur-day, Dec. 15 beginning at 10:00 a.m. We would appreciate receiving donations of food and gifts by December 9 so they can be sorted, wrapped and packed prior to delivery.
Hamper requests must be completed and dropped off at the Salvation Army Thrift Shop or the Food Bank (through mail slot if Food Bank is closed) by Friday, December 7.
Phone requests are not accepted and late forms will go on a waiting list. Hamper request
forms can be picked up at the Food Bank, So-cial Services Office or the Salvation Army Thrift Shop.
This year we have a change in venue for our Sharing Tree. As Wings Travel are in the midst of downsizing their office space, Envision Financial Credit Union have set up a tree in their office and donations of cash, gifts and non-perishable food items may be dropped off there during regular business hours (Monday – Thursday 9:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.; Friday 9:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. and Sat-urday 9:30 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.). As we are obligated to follow the Food Safe Rules for B.C. we are not allowed to accept home canned fruit, vegetables, fish, etc. Cheques may also be dropped off at Thomas Cook Wings Travel during their business hours or mailed to Box 20, V8C 2G6. Receipts are issued for donations of $10 or more for in-come tax purposes. If you wish further informa-tion please call 632-6611, leave a message and someone will contact you.
Thank you all for your ongoing support - we could not continue to function without your gen-erosity.
Marjorie Phelps & Pearl Lennox, Co-chairsChristmas Hamper Appeal
Passing grade
Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012 7
Friday, November 23
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Cannabis Crusader stops in Kitimat during tourCameron Orr
Is Dana Larsen weeding out bad po-lice policy in B.C. or will the whole plan just go up in smoke?
If his numbers are right it’s actually the former, as the Cannabis activist trav-elled Northwest communities, promoting his plan to see a referendum in 2014 that would effectively decriminalize cannabis possession.
Larsen was in Kitimat on Nov. 8 at the library to explain his position.
The self-described Cannabis Crusad-er said his ultimate plan is to implement what he calls the Sensible Policing Act in B.C., the way to get possession decrimi-nalized.
Because the Drugs and Substance Act is under federal jurisdiction, B.C. doesn’t have the power to make the sub-stance outright legal, but the province does have the power to decide how to di-rect their enforcement of the law.
“It would basically instruct all the police in B.C. to leave people alone when it comes to simple possession,” said
Larsen to the Sentinel by phone before his Kitimat appearance.
It’s not a far-out idea; he said in 2003 B.C., along with other provinces, de-cided to refuse to enforce the long-gun registry. He said he and his supporters are looking for a similar di-rective for cannabis.
There are a lot of prob-lems with the system right now, he said, where people can get busted for posses-sion. He said enforcement has done nothing to curb cannabis use, consumption of which has risen over the past 10 years he said. He also believes it’s wasteful of police re-sources, with a justice system already pushed to the limits.
He also said that recent opinion polls show a majority of people in the province support not charging people for posses-sion or use.
“I would say the harm to somebody from getting charged and getting convict-ed for cannabis possession is greater than any potential harm from using cannabis it-self,” he said.
That harm includes dif-� culty � nding work, partici-pating in society or travelling out of country.
Larsen’s tour conclud-ed on Nov. 16 in 100 Mile House but he said they will begin travelling again in March and meeting with the supporters they gathered on
this trip.This will lead to, he hopes, a 2014
referendum to support the Sensible Po-licing Act.
“It’s a big hill we have to climb,” he said, but he remains emboldened thanks to the example of the people who suc-cessfully lobbied for a referendum on the HST.
Dana Larsen
You can read more about the plan at their website, sensiblebc.ca.
8 Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve been talking about the precautions, the safety measures, and the selection criteria involved in the marine elements of the Gateway project — all of them intended to prevent an oil spill on water. I’ve also mentioned, in recent weeks, how Gateway’s marine safety program was examined by an independent risk-assessment group, which determined that the chances of a major spill are once in more than 15,000 years.
Although statistics and reports suggest a marine oil spill is unlikely, you want to know — what if one does occur? How will Gateway be prepared? While the chances are slim, we continue to develop a world-class marine response program.
The Northern Gateway Project includes a spill response capacity that’s more than three times the Canadian regulation. And while the Canadian requirement for oil spill response is 72 hours plus travel time, our response time will be a fraction of that number — 6 to 12 hours in the marine channels. This is a signifi cant increase to the response capability available to B.C.’s north coast. Additionally, for immediate response, our tug escorts will be
equipped with booms, oil skimmers, and fi refi ghting equipment to provide enhanced initial containment, and they will be available to all marine traffi c in the event of an incident.
We will store equipment, such as containment and absorbent booms, skimmers, and waste storage, in multiple well-maintained, readily accessible response bases, providing a wider area of coverage in a shorter amount of time. Barges will also be located throughout the marine channels for additional storage and equipment mobilization. We are committed to having staff, contractors, and partners in place to maintain that enhanced state of readiness.
The Gateway project will likely never see a major marine oil spill. But if it does, we’ll be prepared to protect our coastline.
Janet HolderExecutive Vice PresidentWestern AccessEnbridge Inc.
Spill response plan
GATEWAYperspectives
It’s more than a pipeline. It’s a path to a stronger economy.Join the conversation at northerngateway.ca
©2012 Northern Gateway Pipelines Inc.
©2012 Northern Gateway Pipelines Inc.
Ad
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It’s more than a pipeline. It’s a path to delivering energy safely.Join the conversation at northerngateway.ca
©2012 Northern Gateway Pipelines Inc.
EN9033_Enbridge_Janet_ad_4.3125x8 #10.indd 1 13/11/12 2:28 PM
Kitimat remembers our nation’s heroes
Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012 9
of Our every intention isis ttoo mamakeke tthhe Norththerern n GaGatetewaway y PiPipepelilinene tthehe sstrtronngestst aand safest t ofof iitsts kkinininndd d d ininininin CCCCCanananadadadada.a. AAnd the people oBritish Columbia have told us that we must exceed safety standards if it is to cross this beautiful province. We’ve heard their concerns
and have continually incorporated their feedback into our plans. We have added $500 million in extra safety measures–like thicker pipe, more isolation valves, meticulous pipeline construction techniques, and plans for around the clock monitoring by real people,
in real time, with sophisticated technology.
We will have advanced monitoring and response systems...Constant, diligent monitoring is vital for safe pipeline operation. Northern
Gateway will be monitored on-site and via the control centre 24/7, in
real time to allow operators to rapidly respond to any incidents. As
well, extensive geotechnical investigation and route planning
has taken place and this, combined with sophisticated
monitoring techniques, will provide protection against
geotechnical and other natural hazards. Pump stations in
remote areas will be staffed around the
clock. Dual leak detection systems
will be installed and remotely
operated isolation valves will be used,
increasing their number in BC by 50%.
We will use thicker pipe...Northern Gateway pipe will have
an average thickness of 0.80 inches.
That’s 20% over and above current
Canadian safety standard requirements
for the Northern Gateway Project. The pipe
will be even thicker when it crosses major rivers and tributaries.
It will be welded with exacting precision and its integrity checked
using ultrasonic inspection and hydrostatic testing methods. And
to ensure safe operation, the frequency of high resolution, in-line
inspection surveys will be increased across the entire pipeline system
by a minimum of 50% over and above current practices.
We will practice and be prepared for incidents...Our goal is always zero spills. To help achieve that, the
pipeline will be monitored from the air and the ground and
routinely inspected inside and out to identify and address
any integrity issues. But that doesn’t mean we will not
prepare for an incident. We will adhere to world-leading
practices for oil spill response and recovery systems. Emergency response equipment
and training will be provided and constantly updated and upgraded. Training exercises
with our own operations personnel and local emergency providers will be conducted on a
regular basis. Can we guarantee that there will never be a signifi cant pipeline failure? Our
original pledge to build a safe pipeline combined with further enhancements made after
hearing the concerns of British Columbians puts us closer than any other pipeline system
in the world to providing that guarantee.
We will respect wildlife habitats and migration routes... To address concerns from the public that the construction of the pipeline will affect the
environment, we have pledged to build it in such a way that natural wildlife habitats,
migration routes and fi sh spawning sites will be respected. During the building phase,
disturbances will be kept to a minimum by having construction vehicles access most of
the pipeline using existing forestry roads. Instead of building all new bridge structures, it
will use existing watercourse crossings where possible. When construction is completed
on each section, soil will be returned and shrubs and grasses native to the region will be
planted. If any large trees are removed to make way for the pipeline, a new tree will be
planted in another location as part of Enbridge’s commitment to plant a tree for every
tree we remove to build our projects.
Northern Gateway will be one of the safest energy pipelines because it’s been designed by engineers, safety experts and the people of British Columbia.
It’s more than a pipeline. It’s a path to delivering energy safely.
©2012 Northern Gateway Pipelines Inc.
Discover more about our rigorous design and safety standards and join the conversation at
safety.northerngateway.ca.
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EN9020_BC_PipelineSafety_Version_#2.indd 1 15/11/12 2:17 PM
10 Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012
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eliv
ered
betw
een O
ctob
er 2
, 201
2 an
d Jan
uary
2, 2
013.
Ince
ntiv
e ran
ges f
rom
$15
00 to
$3,
000,
depe
ndin
g on m
odel
purc
hase
d. In
cent
ive m
ay no
t be c
ombi
ned w
ith ce
rtain
othe
r offe
rs. B
y par
ticip
atin
g in t
he C
ash F
or C
lunk
ers p
rogr
am yo
u will
not b
e elig
ible
for a
ny tr
ade-
in va
lue f
or yo
ur ve
hicl
e. S
ee yo
ur pa
rtici
patin
g GM
deal
er fo
r add
ition
al pr
ogra
m co
nditi
ons a
nd de
tails
. GM
CL m
ay m
odify
, ext
end o
r ter
min
ate p
rogr
am in
who
le or
in pa
rt at
any t
ime w
ithou
t not
ice.
CHEVROLET.CASCAN HERE
TO FIND YOURS
Visit your BC Chevrolet dealer today for more great offers!
FOR UP TO 60 MONTHS
*
ON SELECT
2013MODELS
BOXINGDAYS
2LT MODEL SHOWN
2013 SILVERADO LIGHT DUTY
FORPURCHASE FINANCING
OWN IT FOR 0% 60
MONTHS†
2013 SONIC SEDAN LSFINANCE AT 3.99%
WITH$95BI-WEEKLY/84 MONTHS††BASED ON A PURCHASE PRICE OF $14,995*OFFER INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI
$0DOWN
LTZ MODEL SHOWN LTZ EXT CAB SHOWN
LTZ MODEL SHOWN
$99FINANCE AT 4.99%
BI-WEEKLY/72 MONTHSOFFER INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI
WITH $0DOWN
2013 SPARK LSSTARTING FROM
INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI
$13,345* OR
2013 EQUINOX LSLEASE IT FOR OR AVAILABLE
AT$298 0%MONTHLY/48 MONTHS/WITH $2,899 DOWN¥BASED ON A PURCHASE PRICE OF $28,535*OFFER INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI
PURCHASE FINANCING†
0.9%48 MONTHS
ANNOUNCING
INTRODUCINGTHE ALL-NEW
Note to Publication: PLEASE examine this material upon receipt. If it is deficient or does not comply with your requirements, contact: Amberlea Schaab - Production Director 604-601-8573 Adam Buechler - Production Artist 604-601-8577
Production Artist: Art Director: Creative Director:
Production Director: Copywriter: Account Manager:
APPROVALSK 286 CLIENT :DOCKET :
AD # : SIZE : FONTS : RESOLUTION : INSERTION DATE:
PUB : PROOF : DATE :
GMSBCC01482741.10.MMW.2C10” x 196L (12.857”)Gotham Family, Klavika Family220 dpi See MRFTAB1 12.11.16
2013 CRUZE LSLEASE IT FOR
$176MONTHLY/60 MONTHS¥BASED ON A PURCHASE PRICE OF $16,495*OFFER INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI
WITH $0DOWN
AT 0%
LTZ MODEL SHOWN
2LT MODEL SHOWN
FINANCE AT 4.99%FINANCE AT 4.99%
BI-WEEKLY/72 MONTHSBI-WEEKLY/72 MONTHSOFFER INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDIOFFER INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI
WITHWITH $$
BI-WEEKLY/72 MONTHSBI-WEEKLY/72 MONTHSOFFER INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDIOFFER INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI
$$00DOWNDOWN
LTZ EXT CAB SHOWNLTZ EXT CAB SHOWN
2741.10.MMW.2C.indd 1 12-11-16 5:43 PM
NOW
AT
YOUR
BC
CHEV
ROLE
T DE
ALER
S. C
hevr
olet
.ca
1-80
0-GM
-DRI
VE. C
hevr
olet
is
a br
and
of G
ener
al M
otor
s of
Can
ada.
*/†
Offe
rs a
pply
to
the
purc
hase
of
a 20
12 S
ilver
ado
1500
Cre
w C
ab (
Ligh
t Du
ty),
2012
Cru
ze L
S (R
7A),
equi
pped
as
desc
ribed
. Fr
eigh
t in
clud
ed (
$1,4
95).
Lice
nse,
ins
uran
ce,
regi
stra
tion,
PPS
A, a
dmin
istra
tion
fees
and
tax
es n
ot i
nclu
ded.
De
aler
s ar
e fre
e to
set
indi
vidu
al p
rices
. Lim
ited
time
offe
rs w
hich
may
not
be
com
bine
d w
ith o
ther
offe
rs, a
nd a
re s
ubje
ct t
o ch
ange
with
out
notic
e. O
ffers
app
ly t
o qu
alifi
ed r
etai
l cus
tom
ers
in t
he B
C Ch
evro
let
Deal
er M
arke
ting
Asso
ciat
ion
area
onl
y. Li
mite
d qu
antit
ies
of 2
012
mod
els
avai
labl
e -
Deal
er t
rade
may
be
requ
ired.
GM
CL m
ay m
odify
, ext
end
or t
erm
inat
e th
is o
ffer
in w
hole
or
in p
art
at a
ny t
ime
with
out
notic
e. C
ondi
tions
and
lim
itatio
ns a
pply.
See
Che
vrol
et d
eale
r fo
r de
tails
. †0%
pur
chas
e fin
anci
ng o
ffere
d on
app
rove
d cr
edit
by A
lly C
redi
t/TD
Auto
Fin
anci
ng f
or 8
4 m
onth
s on
new
or
dem
onst
rato
r 20
12 C
hevr
olet
Cru
ze. R
ates
fro
m o
ther
lend
ers
will
var
y. Do
wn
paym
ent,
trade
and
/or
secu
rity
depo
sit
may
be
requ
ired.
M
onth
ly p
aym
ent
and
cost
of
borr
owin
g w
ill v
ary
depe
ndin
g on
am
ount
bor
row
ed a
nd d
own
paym
ent/t
rade
. Exa
mpl
e: $
10,0
00 a
t 0%
APR
, the
mon
thly
pay
men
t is
$11
9 fo
r 84
mon
ths.
Cos
t of
bor
row
ing
is $
0, t
otal
obl
igat
ion
is $
10,0
00. 0
% f
inan
cing
offe
rs a
re u
ncon
ditio
nally
inte
rest
-fre
e. u
$11,
500
man
ufac
ture
r to
dea
ler
deliv
ery
cred
it av
aila
ble
on
2012
Silv
erad
o Li
ght
Duty
Cre
w C
ab (
tax
excl
usiv
e) f
or r
etai
l cus
tom
ers
only.
Oth
er c
redi
ts a
vaila
ble
on m
ost
mod
els.
◊To
qua
lify
for
GMCL
’s C
ash
For
Clun
kers
ince
ntiv
e, y
ou m
ust:
(1)
turn
in a
200
6 or
old
er M
Y ve
hicl
e th
at is
in r
unni
ng c
ondi
tion
and
has
been
reg
iste
red
and
prop
erly
insu
red
in y
our
nam
e fo
r th
e la
st 3
mon
ths
(2)
turn
in a
200
6 or
old
er M
Y ve
hicl
e th
at is
in r
unni
ng
cond
ition
and
has
bee
n re
gist
ered
and
pro
perly
insu
red
unde
r a
smal
l bus
ines
s na
me
for
the
last
3 m
onth
s. G
MCL
will
pro
vide
elig
ible
con
sum
ers
with
a m
anuf
actu
rer
to c
onsu
mer
ince
ntiv
e (ta
x in
clus
ive)
to
be u
sed
tow
ards
the
pur
chas
e/fin
ance
/leas
e of
a n
ew e
ligib
le 2
012
or 2
013
MY
Chev
role
t Co
lora
do, G
MC
Cany
on, C
hevr
olet
Silv
erad
o, G
MC
Sier
ra, o
r Ch
evro
let
Aval
anch
e de
liver
ed b
etw
een
Octo
ber
2, 2
012
and
Janu
ary
2, 2
013.
Ince
ntiv
e ra
nges
fro
m $
1500
to
$3,0
00, d
epen
ding
on
mod
el p
urch
ased
. In
cent
ive
may
not
be
com
bine
d w
ith c
erta
in o
ther
offe
rs.
By p
artic
ipat
ing
in t
he C
ash
For
Clun
kers
pro
gram
you
will
not
be
elig
ible
for
any
tra
de-in
val
ue f
or y
our
vehi
cle.
See
you
r pa
rtici
patin
g GM
dea
ler
for
addi
tiona
l pro
gram
co
nditi
ons
and
deta
ils.
GMCL
may
mod
ify,
exte
nd o
r te
rmin
ate
prog
ram
in
who
le o
r in
par
t at
any
tim
e w
ithou
t no
tice.
†*W
hich
ever
com
es f
irst.
Cond
ition
s an
d lim
itatio
ns a
pply.
See
dea
ler
for
deta
ils.
Com
paris
on b
ased
on
late
st c
ompe
titiv
e da
ta a
vaila
ble
at t
ime
of p
rintin
g. ✲
The
Best
Buy
sea
l is
a r
egis
tere
d tra
dem
ark
of C
onsu
mer
s Di
gest
Com
mun
icat
ions
, LL
C,
used
und
er l
icen
se.
+Fo
r m
ore
info
rmat
ion
visi
t iih
s.or
g/ra
tings
. ¥B
ased
on
reta
il re
gist
ratio
ns i
n th
e 12
mon
ths
follo
win
g la
unch
. ¥¥
Cruz
e LS
equ
ippe
d w
ith 6
-spe
ed m
anua
l tra
nsm
issi
on.
Base
d on
Nat
ural
Res
ourc
es C
anad
a’s
2012
Fue
l Co
nsum
ptio
n Ra
tings
for
the
Com
pact
Car
cla
ss.
Excl
udes
hyb
rid a
nd d
iese
l m
odel
s. Y
our
actu
al f
uel
cons
umpt
ion
may
var
y.
VISIT YOUR BC CHEVROLET DEALER TODAY TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE LIMITED TIME OFFERS
I
LTZ modeL shown
Note to Publication: PLEASE examine this material upon receipt. If it is deficient or does not comply with your requirements, contact: Amberlea Schaab - Production Director 604-601-8573 Adam Buechler - Production Artist 604-601-8577
Production Artist: Art Director: Creative Director:
Production Director: Copywriter: Account Manager:
APPROVALSK 286 CLIENT :DOCKET :
AD # : SIZE : FONTS : RESOLUTION : INSERTION DATE:
PUB : PROOF : DATE :
GMSBCC01382687.10.MMW.2C10” x 196L (14”)Gotham Family, Klavika Family220 dpi 10.12.17TAB 2C1 12.10.12
LTZ modeL shown
- Proven V-8 Power withBest-in-Class Fuel Efficiencyt
- Best-In-Class 5 year/160,000km Powertrain Warranty†*
SILVERADO 2012 CHEVROLET
LOWEST PRICEOF THE YEAR
BASED ON A FINANCE PURCHASE PRICE OF $16,135.*OFFER INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI, PLUS $750 FINANCE CASH.
- Fastest Growing Nameplate in Canada¥
- Best-In-Class Highway Fuel Efficiency¥¥
- 2012 IIHS Top Safety Pick†
FINANCE CRUZE LS FOR
$89 AT FORWITH $0 0% 84DOWN FINANCING MONTHS†BIWEEKLY††
CRUZE 2012 CHEVROLET
LOWEST PAYMENT OF THE YEAR
MASSIVE
$11,500WITHUP TO
LOWEST PRICES PAYMENTSAND
OF THE YEARIN mODEL YEAR END CREDITSON SELECT 2012 mODELSu
UPTO
Do your part for the environment by upgraDing your olD vehicle to a new pickup.
$3,000◊Recycle your 2006 model year or older vehicle and receive up to $3,000
towards the cash purchase, financing or leasing of an eligible 2012 or 2013 Chevrolet Silverado.
CHEVROLET.CASCAN HERE
TO FIND YOURS
2687.10.MMW.2C.indd 1 12-10-12 4:35 PM
Kitimat Sentinel - April 14, 2010
Call MacCarthy Motors at 250-635-4941, or visit us at 5004 Highway 16 West, Terrace. [License #5893]
Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012 11
100 MILE,QUESNEL, NELSON, TERRACE, KITIMAT, PR. RUPERT, SMITHERS, HOUSTON, SALMON ARM, SOOKE, COWICHAN, WILLIAMS, TRAIL, CASTLEGAR, WEST KOOTENAY, CRANBROOK, OKOTOKS WEEK 48 50795_ _NOV. 23_FRI_07
Prices effective at all British Columbia and Alberta Safeway stores Friday, November 23, through Sunday, November 25, 2012 only. We reserve the right to limit sales to retail quantities. Some items may not be available at all stores. All items while stocks last. Actual items may vary slightly from illustrations. Some illustrations are serving suggestions
only. Advertised prices do not include GST. ®™ Trademarks of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under license by LoyaltyOne, Inc. and Canada Safeway Limited. Extreme Specials are prices that are so low they are limited to a one time purchase to Safeway Club Card Members within a household. Each household can purchase the
limited items one time during the effective dates. A household is defi ned by all Safeway Club Cards that are linked by the same address and phone number. Each household can purchase the EXTREME SPECIALS during the specifi ed advertisement dates. For purchases over the household limits, regular pricing applies to overlimit purchases. On BUY
ONE GET ONE FREE items, both items must be purchased. Lowest priced item is then free. Online and in-store prices, discounts, and offers may differ.
Gourmet Meat Shoppe Chicken WingsAssorted varieties. Frozen. 908 g. Just heat and serve!Just heat and serve!
1299Club Price
Old Dutch Potato ChipsOr Dutch Crunch. Assorted varieties. 200 g.
Coca-Cola or Pepsi Soft DrinksAssorted varieties. 12 pack. Plus deposit and/or en-viro levy where applicable. LIMIT SIX - Combined varieties.varieties.
Club Price
$10 ea.3for
BUY 6 EARN 40AIR MILES® reward miles
CLUB PRICE
BUY 4 EARN 20or
4for$10
Dr. Oetker Ristorante PizzaOr Casa Di Mama or Panebello Pizza. Assorted varieties. 325-450g. LIMIT THREE.
BlueberriesProduct of Argentina.No. 1 Grade.170 g.HOUSEHOLD LIMIT TWO.3 DAYS ONLY!
CLUB PRICE
Bakery Counter Cheese Breadsticks
2for$5!
Or Cheese Buns or Onion Buns. Package of 6. In store made.
MiniCroissants
Great
Deal!
Package of 15.In store baked.
GreatGreat
Humm Hummus
2for $5!
Assorted varieties.227-255 g.LIMIT SIX - Combined varieties.
Crest Toothpaste
5for $5!
Select varieties. 75 to 130 mL.
Boneless Top Sirloin Steaks
Great
Deal!
Sold in a package of 4 only $12.00 ea. LIMIT SIX.
GreatGreat
Pantry Essentials Sliced Side Bacon
2for$5!
500 g. LIMIT FOUR.
Butcher’s Prime St. Louis Style Pork Side Ribs
From
the Meat
Dept!
Fully cooked. 454 g.LIMIT FOUR.
the Meat the Meat the Meat
Kellogg’s Jumbo Cereal
Great
Deal!
Select varieties. 700 g to 1.3 kg. HOUSEHOLD LIMIT FOUR - Combined vartieties.
24 2523NOVEMBER
Prices in this ad good through NOV. 25th.FRI SAT SUN
Nov. 23 to Nov. 25, 2012
EARN UP TO
AIR MILES®reward miles
®
100AIR MILES®
reward miles
100100 SPEND $100, EARN
100 BONUS AIR MILES® reward miles
With coupon and a
minimum $100 grocery
purchase made in a
single transaction.
VALID NOVEMBER 23 - NOVEMBER 25, 2012
000
000
5113
39
®TM Trademarks of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. used under license by LoyaltyOne, Inc.
®
Limit one Bonus Offer per transaction. Coupon must be presented
at time of purchase. Purchase must be made in a single transaction.
AIR MILES coupons cannot be combined with any other discount offer or
AIR MILES coupon offer including Customer Appreciation Day & Senior’s
Day. Not valid at Safeway Liquor Stores. Coupon excludes prescriptions,
diabetes merchandise, insulin pumps, insulin pump supplies, blood
pressure monitors, tobacco, transit passes, gift cards, enviro levies, bottle
deposits and sales tax. Other exclusions apply. See Customer Service for
complete list of exclusions. Cashiers: Scan the coupon only once to activate
the Bonus Offer. Do not scan more than once.
STOCK-UP FORSTOCK-UP FORSTOCK-UP FORSTOCK-UP FORSTOCK-UP FORSTOCK-UP FORSTOCK-UP FORSTOCK-UP FORSTOCK-UP FORSTOCK-UP FORSTOCK-UP FOR
Gourmet Meat Old Dutch
GREY CUPGGREY CUREY CUPPGREY CUP
3for
$10!
2for
$5!
FRIDAY
23NOVEMBER
From
the Meat From
SATURDAY
24NOVEMBER
SUNDAY
25NOVEMBERFRI.-SAT.-SUN.
3DAYSALE
3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE
$103for3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE
$52for3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE
449ea.
3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE
$5 ea.
3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE
$53 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE
$52for3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE
$52for3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE
$52for3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE
$55for3 DAYS ONLY!
$3ea.steak
12 Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012
WISE BU
YERS RE
AD THE
LEGAL C
OPY: Ve
hicle(s)
may be
shown
with op
tional e
quipm
ent. De
aler ma
y sell o
r lease f
or less.
Limited
time of
fers. Of
fers ma
y be can
celled a
t any tim
e witho
ut notic
e. Deale
r order
or tran
sfer ma
y be req
uired as
invent
ory ma
y vary b
y dealer
. See yo
ur Ford
Dealer f
or com
plete de
tails or
call th
e Ford C
ustome
r Relati
onship
Centre
at 1-80
0-565-
3673. ‡
Until N
ovemb
er 30, 2
012, rec
eive $25
0/ $500
/ $1,00
0/ $1,50
0/ $1,75
0/ $2,00
0/ $2,25
0/ $3,00
0/ $3,75
0/ $4,0
00/ $4,
250/ $4
,750/ $5
,250/ $5
,500/ $5
,750/ $6
,000/ $
6,500/ $
7,000/ $
7,250/ $
8,250/ $
9,000/
$9,250
/ $10,0
00 in M
anufact
urer Re
bates w
ith the
purcha
se or lea
se of a n
ew 201
2 Escap
e I4 Ma
nual; 20
13 Explo
rer Bas
e/ 2012
Edg
e SE/ 20
12 Focu
s S, Exp
lorer Ba
se FWD
; 2013 E
dge FW
D (exclu
ding SE
), Flex S
E, Trans
it Conne
ct (excl
uding e
lectric)
, E-Serie
s, F-150
Regula
r Cab XL
(4x2) V
alue Le
ader/ 2
012 Fie
sta S, E
-Series;
2013 M
ustang V
6 Coupe
, Tauru
s SE/20
12 Flex
SE/ 201
2 Musta
ng Valu
e Leade
r, Tauru
s SE, Tra
nsit Con
nect (e
xcludin
g electr
ic); 201
3 F-350
to F-550
Chassis
Cabs/ 2
012 Fus
ion S/
2012 Fi
esta (ex
cluding
S), Exp
lorer AW
D (exclu
ding Ba
se)/ 201
3 Musta
ng V6 Pr
emium
/ 2012 M
ustang V
6 (exclu
ding Va
lue Lea
der), E
xplorer
FWD (ex
cluding
Base),
F-350 to
F-550 C
hassis C
abs; 20
13 F-250
to F-45
0 (exclu
ding Ch
assis Ca
bs) gas
engine/
2012 Fo
cus (ex
cluding
S), Fus
ion Hyb
rid, Edg
e AWD (e
xcludin
g SE), E
scape (e
xcludin
g I4 Ma
nual)/
2012 Fu
sion I4 (
excludi
ng S and
Hybrid)
, Escap
e V6; 20
13 Musta
ng GT/ 2
012 Fus
ion V6
(exclud
ing S a
nd Hyb
rid)/ 20
12 Musta
ng GT, Ta
urus (e
xcludin
g SE), F
lex (exc
luding
SE); 20
13 F-150
Regula
r Cab (e
xcludin
g XL 4x2
) non-5
.0L/ 201
2 Edge F
WD (ex
cluding
SE)/ 20
13 F-150
Regula
r Cab (e
xcludin
g XL 4x2
) 5.0L,
F-250 to
F-450 (
excludi
ng Chas
sis Cab)
Diesel
Engine/
2012 Ex
peditio
n; 2013
F-150 S
uper Ca
b and Su
per Cre
w non-
5.0L/ 20
13 F-150
Super C
ab and
Super C
rew 5.0
L/ 2012
F-250 t
o F-450
(exclud
ing Cha
ssis Cab
s) Gas E
ngine/
2012 F-
150 Reg
ular Ca
b (Exclu
ding 4x
2) non-
5.0L/ 20
12 F-150
Regula
r Cab (e
xcludin
g XL 4x2
) 5.0L/
2012 F-
150 Sup
er Cab a
nd Sup
er Crew
non-5.0
L, F-250
to F-4
50 (excl
uding C
hassis
Cabs) D
iesel En
gines/
2012 F-
150 Sup
er Cab a
nd Supe
r Crew 5
.0L (all
Raptor,
GT500,
BOSS3
02, and
Mediu
m Truck
models
exclud
ed). Th
is offer
can be
used in
conjun
ction w
ith mo
st retail
consum
er offer
s made
availab
le by Fo
rd of Ca
nada at
either t
he time
of facto
ry orde
r or del
ivery, b
ut not b
oth. Ma
nufactu
rer Reb
ates ar
e not co
mbina
ble wit
h any fl e
et cons
umer in
centive
s. *Pur
chase a
new 201
2 F-150
XLT Sup
er Cab 4
x4 with
5.0L eng
ine/201
2 F-150
XLT Sup
er Crew
4X4 wit
h 5.0L e
ngine/
2012 F-
250 XLT
Super C
ab 4X4 W
estern E
dition w
ith pow
er seat
s for $2
7,885/$
29,885/
$39,999
. Taxes
payabl
e on ful
l amoun
t of pur
chase p
rice aft
er Manu
facture
r Rebat
e of $10
,000/$
10,000/
$7,250 h
as been
deduct
ed. Offe
rs includ
e freigh
t and ai
r tax of
$1,700
but exc
lude va
riable c
harges
of licen
se, fue
l fi ll ch
arge, in
surance
, dealer
PDI (if
applica
ble), reg
istratio
n, PPSA
, admin
istratio
n fees a
nd cha
rges, an
y enviro
nment
al char
ges or f
ees, an
d all ap
plicabl
e taxes
. Manuf
acturer
Rebate
s can be
used in
conjun
ction w
ith mo
st retail
consum
er offer
s made
availab
le by Fo
rd of Ca
nada at
either t
he time
of facto
ry orde
r or del
ivery, b
ut not b
oth. Ma
nufactu
rer Reb
ates ar
e not co
mbina
ble wit
h any fl e
et cons
umer in
centive
s. **Ch
oose 6.
19% ann
ual per
centag
e rate (
APR) pu
rchase fi
nancin
g on a n
ew 201
2 F-150
XLT Sup
er Cab 4
x4 with
5.0L eng
ine/201
2 F-150
XLT Sup
er Crew
4X4 wit
h 5.0L e
ngine/
2012 F-
250 XLT
Super C
ab 4X4
Wester
n Editio
n with
power s
eats fo
r a maxim
um of 7
2 mont
hs to qu
alifi ed
retail c
ustome
rs, on ap
proved
credit
(OAC) f
rom For
d Credit
. Not al
l buyers
will qu
alify fo
r the lo
west AP
R paym
ent. Pu
rchase fi
nancin
g mont
hly pay
ment i
s $431/$
465/$6
17 (the
sum of t
welve (
12) mo
nthly p
ayment
s divide
d by 26
period
s gives
payee a
bi-wee
kly pay
ment o
f $199/
$214/$2
85 with
a down
payme
nt of $2
,000/$
2,000/$
3,000 or
equival
ent tra
de-in. C
ost of b
orrowin
g is $5,
169.65/
5,569.0
8/$7,38
9.30 or A
PR of 6.1
9% and
total t
o be rep
aid is $
31,054.6
5/$33,4
54.08/$
44,388
.30. Off
ers incl
ude a M
anufact
urer Re
bate of
$10,00
0/$10,0
00/$7,2
50 and
freight
and air
tax of $
1,700 b
ut exclu
de varia
ble cha
rges of
license
, fuel fi
ll charg
e, insura
nce, de
aler PD
I (if app
licable)
, registr
ation, P
PSA, ad
ministr
ation fe
es and c
harges
, any en
vironm
ental c
harges
or fees
, and al
l applic
able ta
xes. Ta
xes pay
able on
full am
ount of
purcha
se price
aft er M
anufact
urer Re
bate de
ducted
. Bi-Wee
kly pay
ments
are onl
y availa
ble usin
g a cus
tomer in
itiated
PC (Int
ernet B
anking
) or Pho
ne Pay s
ystem t
hrough
the cus
tomer’s
own ba
nk (if o
ffered b
y that fi
nancia
l institu
tion). T
he custo
mer is
require
d to sig
n a mo
nthly p
ayment
contrac
t with a
fi rst pa
yment d
ate one
month
from t
he cont
ract dat
e and to
ensure
that th
e total
month
ly paym
ent occ
urs by t
he paym
ent due
date. B
i-week
ly paym
ents ca
n be ma
de by m
aking pa
yments
equ
ivalent
to the s
um of 1
2 mont
hly pay
ments
divided
by 26 b
i-weekly
period
s every
two we
eks com
mencin
g on the
contrac
t date. D
ealer m
ay sell f
or less.
Offers
vary by
model
and not
all com
binatio
ns will a
pply. ▲
Offer on
ly valid
from N
ovemb
er 1, 20
12 to N
ovemb
er 30, 2
012 (th
e “Prog
ram Per
iod”) t
o Canad
ian res
ident cu
stomers
who ow
n or are
curren
tly leas
ing (du
ring the
Progra
m Perio
d) certa
in Ford
Pickup
Truck,
Sport U
tility Ve
hicle (S
UV), Cro
ss-Over
Utility V
ehicle (
CUV) or
Minivan
models
(each a
“Qualif
ying Loy
alty Mo
del”), o
r certai
n comp
etitive
pickup t
ruck, SU
V, CUV
or Miniv
an mode
ls (each
a “Qua
lifying
Conque
st Mode
l”) and
purcha
se, leas
e, or fa
ctory or
der (du
ring the
Progra
m Per
iod) a
new 201
2/2013
Ford tr
uck (ex
cluding
Raptor)
, SUV or
CUV (ea
ch an “E
ligible
Vehicle
”). Som
e eligib
ility res
triction
s apply
on Qual
ifying L
oyalty a
nd Conq
uest Mo
dels and
Eligible
Vehicle
s – see
dealer f
or full
offer cri
teria. Q
ualifyi
ng custo
mers w
ill recei
ve $1,00
0 (the “
Incentiv
e”) tow
ards th
e purcha
se or lea
se of th
e Eligib
le Vehic
le, which
must b
e delive
red and
/or fact
ory-ord
ered fro
m your
particip
ating Fo
rd deale
r during
the Pro
gram P
eriod. L
imit on
e (1) In
centive
per Elig
ible Veh
icle sal
e, up to
a maxim
um of t
wo (2)
separa
te Eligi
ble Veh
icle sal
es if va
lid proo
f is pro
vided th
at the c
ustome
r is the
owner
/lessee
of two
(2) sep
arate Q
ualifyi
ng Conq
uest/Lo
yalty M
odels. E
ach cus
tomer w
ill be
require
d to pro
vide pro
of of ow
nership
/registr
ation of
the app
licable
Qualify
ing Con
quest/L
oyalty M
odel an
d the ow
nership
/registr
ation ad
dress m
ust ma
tch the
address
on the
new Buy
er’s Agr
eement
or Leas
e Agreem
ent for
the Elig
ible Veh
icle sal
e. Offer
is tran
sferabl
e only to
person
s living
in the s
ame ho
usehol
d as the
eligible
custom
er. This
offer is
subject
to vehic
le avail
ability
and ma
y be can
celled a
t any tim
e witho
ut notic
e. This
offer ca
n be use
d in con
junctio
n with
most re
tail con
sumer o
ffers m
ade ava
ilable b
y Ford o
f Canad
a at the
time of
factory
-order o
r delive
ry (but
not bot
h). This
offer is
not com
binabl
e with
CPA, GP
C, Daily
Rental
Allowan
ces. Tax
es paya
ble bef
ore Inc
entive
is dedu
cted.
Dealer m
ay sell o
r lease f
or less.
See dea
ler for d
etails.
***Esti
mated
fuel co
nsump
tion rat
ings fo
r mode
l shown
: 2012 F
-150 FFV
4X4 5.0
L V8 6-s
peed au
tomatic
transm
ission:
[14.9L/
100km
(19MPG
) City, 10
.5L/100
km (27
MPG) Hw
y]. Fue
l consu
mption
rating
s based
on Tran
sport C
anada a
pprove
d test m
ethods
. Actua
l fuel c
onsum
ption w
ill vary
based o
n road c
onditio
ns, veh
icle loa
ding, v
ehicle e
quipm
ent, an
d drivin
g habits
. †F-150
: When p
roperly
equipp
ed. Max
. towin
g of 11,3
00 lbs
with 3.
5L EcoB
oost an
d 6.2L 2
valve 4
X2 V8 en
gines.
Max. pa
yload of
3,120 lb
s with
5.0L Ti-V
CT V8 en
gines.
Class is
Full-Siz
e Picku
ps unde
r 8,500
lbs GVW
R, non-
hybrid.
Super D
uty: Ma
x. conve
ntional
towing
capabi
lity
of 17,50
0 lbs. o
n F-350
and ma
x. 5th W
heel to
wing ca
pability
of 24,50
0 lbs. O
n F-450
when p
roperly
equipp
ed. Max
. payloa
d capab
ility of 7
,110 lbs
. on F-3
50 when
proper
ly equi
pped. C
lass is F
ull-Size
Pickup
s over 8
,500 lbs
. GVWR
vs. 201
1/2012 c
ompet
itors. †
†Max. h
orsepow
er of 41
1 and m
ax. torq
ue of 43
4 on F-1
50 6.2L
V8 engi
ne. Clas
s is Full
–Size Pi
ckups u
nder 8,5
00 lbs
GVWR, n
on-hyb
rid vs. 2
011/201
2 comp
arable
compet
itor eng
ines. ◆
Some m
obile p
hones a
nd som
e digita
l media
players
may no
t be ful
ly comp
atible –
check w
ww.syn
cmyride
.com for
a listin
g of mo
bile pho
nes, me
dia pla
yers, an
d featu
res sup
ported
. Drivin
g while
distrac
ted can
result
in loss o
f vehicl
e contro
l, accide
nt and i
njury.
Ford re
comme
nds tha
t driver
s use ca
ution w
hen usi
ng mobi
le phon
es, eve
n with
voice co
mmand
s. Only
use mo
bile pho
nes and
other d
evices, e
ven wit
h voice c
omma
nds, no
t essen
tial to d
riving w
hen it is
safe to
do so.
SYNC is
option
al on m
ost new
Ford ve
hicles.
©2012 S
irius Ca
nada In
c. “Siriu
sXM”, th
e Sirius
XM log
o, chan
nel nam
es and l
ogos ar
e trade
marks
of Siriu
sXM Rad
io Inc. a
nd are u
sed und
er licen
ce. ©20
12 Ford
Motor
Compan
y of Can
ada, Lim
ited. All
rights r
eserved
.
Available in most new Ford vehicles with 6-month
pre-paid subscription
bcford.ca
/FordCanada/FordCanada @FordCanada
FALL IN LOVE WITH A FORD AND SWAP YOUR RIDE. VISIT BCFORD.CA OR YOUR BC FORD STORE FOR DETAILS.VIEW OUR SWAPISODES ONLINE AT FORD.BLOG.CA/SWAPISODES
2012 F-150 XLT SUPER CAB 4X4
$27,885*
Offers includes $10,000 in Manufacturer Rebates and $1,700 freight and air tax.
CASH PURCHASE FOR ONLY
$199**
@ 6.19%APR
for 72 months with $2,000 down payment.
FINANCE BI-WEEKLY FOR ONLY
OR
10.5L/100km 27MPG HWY***
14.9L/100km 19MPG CITY***
‡
Available •PAYLOAD†
•TOWING†
•POWER††
OR STEP UP TO AN F-150 XLT
SUPER CREW 4X4 FOR ONLY
$15** MORE
BI-WEEKLY
AND GETV8 POWER 360 HP380 LB.-FT. OF TORQUEOffer includes $10,000 in Manufacturer Rebates
and $1,700 freight and air tax.
$39,999*
$285**
@ 6.19%APR
for 72 months with $3,000 down payment.Offers includes $7,250 in Manufacture Rebates
and $1,700 freight and air tax.
CASH PURCHASE FOR ONLY
FINANCE BI-WEEKLY FOR ONLY
2012 F-250 XLT SUPER CAB 4X4 WESTERN EDITION
OR
BI-WEEKLY V8 POWER 360 HP380 LB.-FT. OF TORQ$10,000 in Manufacturer Rebates
1,700 freight and air tax.
On most new 2012 and 2013 models
THIS FALL, FALL IN LOVE WITH A FORD.
$1,000▲ LOYALTY & CONQUESTCUSTOMER CASHPLUSFor Qualifying Customers
DOCKET # FNB-ALI-T-27029-3_REV2
REGION BC
LIVE: NoneCOLOURS: BLACK
BLACK
PRODUCTION:Mario Pariselli
CREATIVE: Aaron Doyle
ACCOUNT EXEC: Doug Ramsey
STUDIO: Mathur, Anant
PREV. USER:Lalousis, John
DATE INITIAL
TRIM: 10.3” x 11.7”CLIENT
BLEED: NoneCLIENT: Ford
JOB DESC.: TRUCK Swop You Ride
FILE NAME: FNB-ALI-T-27029-3_REV2
START DATE:
MOD. DATE:
MEDIA TYPE: Template
INSERTION DATE:
REVISION NUMBER: 0
STUDIO
TO PRE-PRESS:
TO PUB:
PRODUCTION
CREATIVE DIR.
ART DIRECTOR
COPYWRITER
ACCOUNT
FONT DISCLAIMER: The fonts and related font software included with the attached electronic mechanical are owned (“Y&R Proprietary Fonts”) and/or licensed (“Y&R Licensed Fonts”) by The Young & Rubicam Group of Companies ULC. They are provided to you as part of our job order for your services, and are to be used only for the execution and the completion of this job order. You are authorized to use the Y&R Proprietary Fonts in the execution of the job order provided that any and all copies of the Y&R Proprietary Fonts shall be deleted from your systems and destroyed upon completion of this job order. You warrant and represent that you have secured the necessary licenses for the use of Y&R Licensed Fonts in order to execute our job order and will abide by the terms thereof.
‡
John F.
“I would defi nitely swap my Ram for an F-150.”
SWAP YOUR RIDE NOW AND GET UP TO
$10,000
IN MANUFACTURER REBATES ON MOST NEW 2012 F-150 MODELS
COMING EVENTSNov. 22ART CLUB of Kiti-mat meets at 7 p.m. in Room 403 at MESS. Negative painting in watercolour. Bring wa-tercolour supplies.Dec. 2Christ the King Parish
is pleased to invite you to attend their Parish Mission. Running from Dec. 2 to Dec. 5 at 7:30 p.m. each evening, the mission is scheduled to last approximately one hour each night. It will be conducted by
Redemptorist Father Eugene O’Reilly.OngoingTHE KITIMAT GIRL GUIDES urgently need new leaders for the local groups. For more info call Lois at 250-632-3446 or
Nancy at 250-632-0135.KITIMAT PUBLIC LIBRARY – Story-Time for pre-schoolers happens every Friday morning from 10:30 a.m. to 11:10 a.m. Bring your little one for a morning of songs, rhymes, and stories. No registration necessary.
Guardian must also at-tend.SILLY YAKS (CE-LIAC) SUPPORT GROUP supporting gluten free eating and helping people with celiac disease feel well and healthy. Participate in discussions around safe foods, foods to avoid, cross contamina-
tion, recipe ideas, etc. The � rst meeting will be held Aug. 23 from 7-8:30 p.m. in the mul-tipurpose room at the Kitimat General Hos-pital. The group is open to anyone interested in learning about celiac disease. For more in-formation please call
250-632-3063KITIMAT SENIORS’ CENTRE is looking for a new leader for their Seniors’ Band. Please contact the Programmer (250 632 3475) for more info if you have the skills, experience and desire to volunteer your time with this group.
Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012 13
All offers expire December 15, 2012. Offers may be cancelled at any time without notice. See Service Advisor for complete details. Applicable taxes and provincial levies not included. Dealer may sell for less. Only available at participating locations. ‡ Applies to single rear wheel vehicles only. Diesel models not eligible. * Up to 5 litres of oil. Disposal fees may be extra. Does not apply to diesel engines. ◊ Based on a Ford Fusion V6 automatic that has a fuel consumption rating of 10L/100 km in combined city/highway driving (properly tuned), a one-year driving distance of 20,000 km and $1.29 per litre for gasoline (based on Environ-ment Canada averages). Improved fuel efficiency and emission reduction levels depend on model, year and condition of vehicle. †† In order to receive a local competitor’s advertised price: (i) tires must be purchased and installed at your participating Ford Dealer; (ii) customer must present the competitor’s actual local advertisement (containing the lower price) which must have been printed within 30 days of the sale; and (iii) the tires being purchased must be the same brand, sidewall, speed and load ratings as shown in the competitive advertisement. Offer only available at participating Ford dealerships. This offer is valid on the cost of the tire only and does not include labour costs, valve stems, mounting, balancing, disposal, and taxes. Offer does not apply to advertised prices outside of Canada, in eBay advertisements, by tire wholesalers and online tire retailers, or closeout, special order, discontinued and clearance/liquidation offers. Limited time offer. Offer may be cancelled or changed at any time without prior notice. See your Service Advisor for details. © 2012 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved.
For more details and offers, visit us at your BC Ford Store or ford.ca
LET US TEST YOUR FORD BEFORE WINTER DOES.Cold weather demands more of your vehicle. Every part has to work harder to
get you where you need to go. Our Ford-Trained Technicians can prepare your
vehicle to perform at its best. They’ll examine your vehicle from headlight to
tailpipe so that when winter does arrive, it fails to make an impact.
TRUST THE EXPERTS WHO KNOW YOUR FORD BEST.
$5999‡
FOR ONLY THE
WORKS‡
There’s more to it than oil* and a fi lter.
POINT INSPECTION 83
UP TO
EVERY HOSE, BELT AND FLUID CHECKED.
$385 UP TO IN POTENTIAL ANNUAL
FUEL SAVINGS
WHEN PERFORMED WITH REGULARLY SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE.◊
COMPREHENSIVE VEHICLE REPORT CARD
$5999‡
FOR ONLY THE
WORKS‡
There’s more to it than oil* and a fi lter.
POINT INSPECTION 83
UP TO
EVERY HOSE, BELT AND FLUID CHECKED.
$385 UP TO IN POTENTIAL ANNUAL
FUEL SAVINGS
WHEN PERFORMED WITH REGULARLY SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE.◊
COMPREHENSIVE VEHICLE REPORT CARD
Each of our Ford-Trained Technicians is certifi ed to check more than your Ford’s
oil and filter. As a complete service package, your vehicle will undergo a
comprehensive inspection of up to 83-points, including rotating and
checking all four tires. So you can drive away knowing everything works the way it should.
PLUS, WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD ON TIRES. ††
o work harder to
can prepare your
rom headlight to
mpact.
Turn winter blues violet
Kathleen Jeffery On Saturday Nov. 24 at 8:00 p.m. please join
the Kitimat Concert Association in welcoming Madison Violet to the stage of the Mount Eliza-beth Theatre. Let this wonderful folk duo use their harmonious melodies to turn your winter blues a delicate shade of “violet’.
Brenley MacEachern and Lisa MacIsaac met in a Toronto green room in 1999. They were strangers who were working in different projects at the time and happened to be playing the same venue. They got to talking and wound up talking about their lineage as they were both from the
East Coast of Canada. Much to their surprise they found out that not only did they know each other’s families but their father’s actually sat together in high school. From such a serendipitous beginning came the duo now called “Madison Violet”.
They first made their mark on the wall of Canadian folk as “Madviolet” with their album “Worry the Jury” in 2004. With each album they’ve released since then it seems that every strummed chord, dreamy harmony, and subtle stroke of the bow brings “Madison Violet” new fans. As they’ve grown together as friends and artists their capac-ity for crafting rich, memorable arrangements has
expanded as well. Their writing styles, though somewhat differ-
ent, reflect their roots and compliment each other wonderfully. MacIsaac grew up surrounded by the Atlantic on Cape Breton Island while MacEach-ern’s family is also from Cape Breton but she was born in southwestern Ontario and her output car-ries a slightly more contemporary tinge.
So please join the Kitimat Concert Associa-tion as we give a big welcome to the lovely and talented “Madison Violet”. Tickets may be pur-chased at the door or get them ahead of time at Hollywood Video.
14 Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012A14 www.northernsentinel.com Wednesday, November 21, 2012 Northern Sentinel
God made a wonderful mother,A mother who never grew old.
He made her smile of sunshine,He molded her heart of pure gold.He made her as nearly an angel
as anyone ever could be,God made a wonderful mother,
and he gave that dear mother to me.
In Loving Memory of
I’ll love you andmiss you forever Mom,
Your daughter, Joanne Monaghan
PearlNickel
June 20, 1912 -November 25, 1999
is available for
DROPBOXES AT:
KITIMAT!
PICK UP FRIDAYS at 6:00 am*
• City Centre Hardware • Riverlodge• Cablecar at 14 GREYLING• Mac’s Convenience/Shell• OK Tire / Rent a Wreck 1700 NALABILA BLVD.• Northern Sentinel Office 626 ENTERPRISE AVE.
• Kildala Grocery• Tony’s Corner Store• Husky Market• Esso• Overwaitea* OPENS AT 8:00 AM• Super Valu* OPENS AT 8:00 AM• Shoppers Drug Mart* OPENS AT 8:00 AM
ALSO AVAILABLE AT:
HELPWANTED
PNGI is looking for a Community Support Worker to work out of our Kitimat office. Ideal candidates will have an ability to think creatively and to see opportunities everywhere. The position involves providing supports adults that have a disability and need some help living as independently in their community as possible. You will work one on one with a few people, working on specific goals. You will have the support of a team for planning and problem solving, but most of your work will be one on one in their home, in the community or in their workplace. You need to have reliable transportation with work insurance, a clear driver’s abstract, complete a Criminal Record check and a flexible schedule that would allow you to do some evening or weekend work if needed. Training will be provided. We are a small company that is strongly guided by our values. We appreciate employees that are creative, flexible, self-motivated, and goal focused. It’s also important to us that you have a good dose of common sense, an ability to get out and network with others in the community, and share our strong belief in diversity and the potential of all people.This position will be part time to start, with the possibility of increasing hours. To apply please email [email protected], or drop off/mail a resume with a descriptive cover letter to our office PROVINCIAL NETWORKING GROUP INC 4730 Lazelle Ave. Terrace, BC V8G 1T2.
Closing date is November 23, 2012.
Carriers Wanted!No Collecting!Direct Deposit Pay!Wednesday & Friday Deliveries.
Call the Northern Sentinel today!Call 250-632-6144, or email
classifi [email protected]
NorthernSentinelK I T I M A T
Trailer CourtsOkanagan, OmenicaWhittlesey, Oersted
Available Routes in Kitimat
Imagine a job that fits your life.
Applications for Team Members, Supervisors and Assistant Managers now being accepted. Please send resumés to [email protected]
NEW STORE OPENING - NOW HIRING
Flexible hoursHealth benefits
Convenient locationScholarship program
Incentive programs
Announcements
Information
ADVERTISE in the LARGEST OUTDOOR PUBLICATION IN BC
The 2013-2015 BC Freshwater Fishing
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reach an incredible number of BC Sportsmen & women.
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PersonalsTREATMENT CENTRE: li-censed detox, drug/alcohol re-habilitation, 30 to 90 day resi-dential care in BC coastal community, paid aftercare in your area. www.prrecovery.ca
Travel
TimeshareCANCEL YOUR Timeshare. NO Risk Program, STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Pay-ments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Con-sultation. Call Us NOW. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248.
TravelCONDOMINIUM HOTEL 1-2-3 bdrm condominiums 825- 1850sq ft. Convenient Beach Access, Heated Pool/Hot Tub In-room Washer/Dryer, Flat Screen TV’s, Free Wi-Fi, Pri-vate Balconies, Daily House-keeping, Handicapped Rooms Available. Weekly/Monthly Rates, Free Local Calls, Free Local Beach Transportation. Conveniently Located to Shops and Restaurants. www.crystalpalmsbeachresort.com 1-888-360-0037. 11605 Gulf Blvd. Treasure Is-land FL 33706.
HAWAII ON the Mainland, healthy low-cost living can be yours. Modern Arenal Maleku Condominiums, 24/7 secured community, Costa Rica, friend-liest country on earth! 1-780-952-0709 www.cantico.ca
Employment
Business Opportunities
ACCOUNTING AND Tax fran-chise - Start your own practice with Canada’s leading ac-counting franchise. Join Pad-gett Business Services’ 400 practices. Taking care of small business needs since 1966. www.padgettfranchises.ca or 1-888-723-4388, ext. 222.
Employment
Career Opportunities
ASSISTANT Manager for Creston Warehouse facility In-dividual with strong work ethic to join fast paced environment. 5-8 yrs logistics/warehousing exp; Min. 5 yrs mgmt exp. For full ad please see online clas-sifi eds. Please submit applica-tion to: [email protected].
SURVEY ASSISTANTS MCELHANNEY seeks Survey Assistants for Prince Rupert branch. Able to work outside, fl ex with travel, exp in con-struction or surveying an asset Info/apply at mcelhanney.com
Drivers/Courier/Trucking
Lakes District MaintenanceLtd. is looking for anAREA MANAGER
in McBride, B.C.
You will be responsible for a small road maintenance crew for the highways and public roads around McBride. High-ways maintenance experienceand management experience are an asset.
Apply in person at the Burns Lake or Tête Jaune
Cache Offi ces, or to [email protected]
or fax to 250-692-3930
For more details on this posting and more, please
visit: www.ldmltd.ca/careers
Education/Trade Schools
GET YOUR Foot in the garage door. Learn basic engine theo-ry, power train, suspension, job safety. First step to auto-motive/heavy duty apprentice-ships. GPRC Fairview Cam-pus. 1-888-999-7882.www.gprc.ab.ca.
GO TO your next job interview with 1st and 2nd Year Heavy Duty Mechanic skills. GPRC, Fairview campus - Heavy Equipment Certifi cate pro-gram. Hands-on training, safety courses, opportunity to write 1st and 2nd HET appren-ticeship exams. Gain 600 hours credit. 1-888-999-7882; www.gprc.ab.ca.
INTERIOR 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
Information
Employment
Education/Trade Schools
LEARN FROM Home. Earn from home. Medical Transcrip-tionists are in demand. Lots of jobs! Enroll today for less than $95 a month. 1-800-466-1535 www.canscribe.com [email protected]
NOW - NEW 8 week courses covering small engine, snow-mobile, quad or marine out-board repair. Take one course or all - fi t your interest and your timeline. GPRC Fairview campus. Affordable residenc-es. 1-888-999-7882;www.gprc.ab.ca.
REV UP Your engine. Now gain 1st and 2nd year Appren-ticeship Motorcycle Mechanic skills. GPRC Fairview campus. Hands-on training - street, off-road, dual sport bikes. Write AB MCM exams - gain 320 hours credit. 1-888-999-7882; www.gprc.ab.ca.
Obituaries
Help Wanted
Employment
Education/Trade Schools
THE ONE, The only author-ized Harley-Davidson techni-cian training program in all of Canada. You’ll work on all types of HD bikes. Quality in-struction and state-of-the-art training aids. GPRC Fairview Campus, Fairview Alberta. 1-888-999-7882.
TRAIN TO Be an Apart-ment/Condominium Manager at home! We have jobs across Canada. Thousands of gradu-ates working. 31 years of suc-cess! Government certifi ed. www.RMTI.ca or 1-800-665-8339, 604-681-5456.
YOUR NEW Career is as close as your computer. On-line Active Aging Fitness Practitioner Certifi cate. Work with older adult fi tness pro-grams, coach master athletes. GPRC Grande Prairie, Alberta. 1-888-539-4774 www.gprc.ab.ca
Obituaries
Help Wanted
Employment
Help WantedAUTO SERVICE Journeyman Technician required immedi-ately at EJ Klassen GM in Port Hardy, Vancouver Island. Above average wages and benefi ts. Fax resume 250-949-7440 email: [email protected]
Employment
Help Wanted
DRIVERS NEEDEDKitimat - Class 2 or higher. Logging road experience an asset. Also Needed - Person to clean buses.
250-639-0165
Your community. Your classifi eds.
250.632.6144
fax 250.639.9373 email classifi [email protected]
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Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012 15Northern Sentinel Wednesday, November 21, 2012 www.northernsentinel.com A15
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BC’S LARGEST ONE STOP SHOP FOR QUALITY MANUFACTURED & MODULAR HOMES
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Tahtsa Timber Ltd. has the following full time positions available
LOADER OPERATOR (BUTTON TOP AND HEEL BOOM)
Top rates and bene ts pa age.
lease all or email to [email protected]
THINK SAFE! BE SAFE!
TRADES HELPER (Regular Full-time Position)
The District of Kitimat is seeking to fill the position of Trades Helper. Under the supervision of various tradesmen, assists or works independently on maintaining the municipal equipment fleet, utilities and buildings.Candidates will have:
• High School Graduation• Good mechanical aptitude• Working knowledge of motorized equipment, utility and building maintenance• Knowledge of WCB, confined space entry, and work site procedures• Driver’s license, Class 5 minimum• WHMIS
Wage rate - $30.57 per hour based on a 40 hour week plus a full benefit package.Applications should be submitted by November 28, 2012, 4:30 pm, to
Personnel, District of Kitimat, 270 City Centre, Kitimat BC, V8C 2H7, Fax 250-632-4995, email [email protected].
Only those candidates selected for further consideration will be contacted.
CARPENTERS and APPRENTICES
required for the
Kitimat Modernization Project.
Contact: BC Regional Council of Carpenters.
Phone 250-383-8116, fax 250-383-1603 or
email [email protected]
Employment
Help WantedACCESSORIES INSTALLER/ Journeyman Technicians. Hanna Chrysler Ltd. (Hanna, Alberta) needs a few more good people. Busy, modern shop. Competitive wages, benefi ts. Great community. In-quire or send resume. Fax 403-854-2845; Email [email protected] 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.
Busy Automotive Shop in Kitimat is looking for a 4th year or certifi ed Auto Tech-nician. Must be multi-skilled, a productive team player, able to meet dead-lines/targets, self-motivated, organized and able to multi-task. Wage $25-$30/hr. Drop off resume at
312B Enterprise Ave.Kitimat, B.C.
or call 250-632-2262
EXPERIENCED PARTS Per-son for a progressive auto/in-dustrial supplier. Hired appli-cant will receive top wages, full benefi ts and RRSP bonus-es plus moving allowances. Our 26,000 sq.ft store is locat-ed 2.5 hours N.E. of Edmon-ton, Alberta. See our commu-nity at LacLaBicheRegion.com Send resume to: Sapphire Au-to, Box 306, Lac La Biche, AB, T0A 2C0. Email: [email protected]
KITIMAT DRIVERS WANTED
Full and Part time for Coastal Taxi.
We are also hiring part time dispatchers.
Send resume & drivers abstract to
PO Box 56 Kitimat, BC V8C 2G6
No phone calls
Required for an Alberta Truck-ing Company. One Class 1 Driver. Must have a minimum of 5 years experience pulling low boys and driving off road. Candidate must be able to pass a drug test and be willing to relocate to Edson, Alberta. Fax resumes to: 780-725-4430
Employment
Help WantedNorth Valley Gymnastics So-ciety is seeking • Certifi ed Full or Part-Time Gymnastics Coaches • Full or part-time Manager for our new gym (prefer certifi ed coach). Please email your resume to: [email protected] FAX it to: 1 250 545 4793 or CALL: 1 250 545 0516
Wonderful Opportunity in a busy restaurant.
Rosario’sRestaurant
has openings for a full time EXPERIENCED COOKS
and SERVERS. Days and Evenings. Please email [email protected] or bring resume to Rosario’s in
Kitimat. No phone calls please
Income OpportunityATTN: COMPUTER Work. Work from anywhere 24/7. Up to $1,500 part time to $7,500/ mo full time. Training provided. highincomesfromhome.com
Trades, TechnicalFLAGSTAFF COUNTY, Sedgewick, Alberta requires a full-time Licensed or 2nd to 4th year Apprentice, Heavy Duty Mechanic. Fax or email resume by 12 p.m., Decem-ber 10, 2012. Attention: Kevin Kinzer, Fax: 780-384-3635; Email: kkinzer@fl agstaff.ab.caWOLFTEK Industries in Prince George is looking for: Controls/Automation Specialist Working Knowledge of: - PLC programming - HMI develop-ment - Variable frequency drives Education: - Electrical Engineering degree or Tech-nologist/Technician (Electri-cal/Electronics) diploma. - Wolftek Industries is willing to train the right candidate and offers competitive wages and benefi ts. Please submit your resume in confi dence to [email protected] or by fax to: 250-561-0235
Services
Health ProductsHERBAL MAGIC. With Herbal Magic lose up to 20 pounds by New Year’s Eve and keep it off. Results guaranteed! Start today, call 1-800-854-5176.
ServicesFinancial Services
DROWNING IN debt? Helping Canadians 25 years. Lower payments by 30%, or cut debts 70% thru Settlements. Avoid bankruptcy! Free con-sultation. Toll-free 1-877-556-3500 www.mydebtsolution.com
GET 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
IF YOU own a home or real estate, Alpine Credits can lend you money: it’s that simple. Your credit/age/income is not an issue. 1-800-587-2161.
INCOME TAX PROBLEMS? Have you been audited, reas-sessed or disallowed certain claims by Canada Revenue Agency? Call Bob Allen @ 250-542-0295 35yrs. Income Tax experience, 8.5yrs. with Revenue Canada. Email: [email protected]
LOAN HELP. Consolidate all your credit cards, bank loans, income tax debt and payday loans into one small interest-free monthly payment. Contact us asap toll-free 1-888-528-4920.
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Legal ServicesCRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certifi -cation, adoption property ren-tal opportunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.
Help Wanted
Merchandise for SaleHeavy 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
Misc. for SaleBlack Samick Piano
Lesson books, piano bench.$1,700.00
250-632-4820 Kitimat
CHILLSPOT IS The Coolest Dog Bed-A new and innova-tive, thermodynamically cooled dog bed, that enhances the cool tile surfaces our pets rely on during the warm weather months. www.chillspot.bizHOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/news-paper?
KITIMATBOXES, BOXES, BOXES
You need them and we have them. Buy one bundle of 10 for $5.00 and we will give you a bundle for free.Come down to the Kitimat Northern Sentinel offi ce at 626 Enterprise Avenue
between 9 and 4:30 or call 250.632.6144
Real Estate
For Sale By Owner15 DAVY ST. KITIMAT
3 bedroom, 2 bath,garage, built-in vac,newer appliances.
$173,000 obo.250-632-4039 or
780-750-9877
KITIMATTownhouse close to down-town. Well-kept three storey, 4 bedroom, 2 full bath. Lots of updates. Fenced yard with great view.
250-632-5295 or250-632-1409
Rentals
Apt/Condo for RentFREE HEAT AND HOT WATER
Bachelor 1 and 2 bedroom
APARTMENTS Largest, Brightest SuitesShiny Hardwood Floors
Unfurnished & FurnishedDaily - Weekly - Monthly
ABSOLUTELY NO PARTIERSRENT starting from $575
INCLUDES HEAT!
OCEANVIEW APTS(250)632-2822 Kitimat
Rentals
Apt/Condo for Rent
HILLCREST PLACE
APARTMENTS1631 Haisla Blvd.
Kitimat, BC2 bedroom suitessecurity building
New: dishwasher, appliances & cabinets.
All New: windows, plumbing, electrical, drywall,
kitchen & bathroom- sound insulated
- electric heat. 1 yr lease
Starting at $995 per month
N/S, N/PFor complete details or to request an application,
please call 250.632.7814
Hillcrest Place Apartments
Bachelor & two bedroomNo Smoking, No Pets
Starting at $475 monthly250.632.7814 Kitimat
KITIMAT APTSBEST VALUE
• Starting at $550• Balconies• Security Entrances• Cameras for your safety• Now includes basic
cableEmail:
www.apartments.comPhone: 250.632.APTS
(2787)
KITIMAT
MIDTOWN APARTMENTS
Free heat & Free Hot WaterFurnished & Unfurnished
1 & 2 bedroomsSecurity Entrances
No Pets. No Smoking250.632.7179
QUATSINO APTSKITIMAT
• Downtown location• Balconies• Security Entrances• Some furnished suites
Call for an appointment250.632.4511
www.kitimatapartments.com
SANDPIPER APTSKITIMAT
Newer BuildingsElevators
Security EntrancesCovered Parking
Balconieswww.kitimatapartments.com
250.632.4254
Help Wanted
Rentals
Apt/Condo for RentVIEWPOINT
APARTMENTSKitimat 1,2,3 bdrms
Clean & QuietHeat & hot water included
Call (250)632-2824 or email
Homes for RentBEAUTIFULLY remodeled 2 bedroom home in Kitimat available December 1, 2012. Galley style kitchen with stain-less steel appliances lead to a bright and sunny dining room. French doors from the dining room open to a large living room. Numerous large win-dows provide lots of natural light. Radiant in-fl oor heating provides comfortable, even heating. Laminate fl oors throughout with tile in the kitchen. Fenced in back yard with large mature trees. Room for 2 vehicles in the driveway. $1,100/month plus utilities. References and damage de-posit required. Email: [email protected] or call (250) 427-7439 to view.CLEAN Houses and Town-houses for rent in Kitimat - Call Stan 780-974-3945 or email [email protected] or www.rentboard.caFOR Rent Furnished execu-tive home for rent. 4 Bed-rooms, 3 bathrooms, beautiful view of the Douglas Channel from Albatross Ave. Hardwood and carpet throughout. $1500/ month, plus utilities. If interest-ed, please contact Tim at (403) 730-6192. For a viewing, call Lorraine at (250) 632-9943
HOUSE FOR RENTKitimat - Don’t miss out on this cozy, 4 bedroom, 2 bath, storey and a half. Can be rented furnished or unfur-nished. Close to high school and golf course. Fully fenced back yard. Pets will be con-sidered. Available Dec 1. $1,450/mo plus utilities, in-cludes monthly monitoring fees for alarm system. D/D and refs req. To view, please call:
250-632-1879
HOUSE FOR rent or lease on preferred street in Kitimat,BC. 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, F/S/D/W/D, double car garage, fenced yard, close to schools and all amenities. $1300 month plus utilities. Referenc-es required. Availability imme-diately. 250-425-2900(H) or 250-401-8272. e-mail [email protected].
Suites, Upper
Kitimat - 1 bedroom suite available immediately. Ideal location. Recently renovated with berber carpet through-out. Living space backs onto patio. Must be seen to be appreciated. n/s, n/p. To view, please call after 6:30pm:
250-632-6659
Modular Homes
Rentals
Townhouses2 & 3 BEDROOM TOWN-HOUSES - Starting at $850, avail now 250-847-8061 / [email protected]
NEW & Completely Renovated 2 Bedroom & 3 Bedroom two storey Townhomes with full height basement available for December 1st and January 1st. Starting from $850.00 per month......First months free rent to fi rst 3 qualifi ed tenant applicants. Call 604-725-4872 or visit our photo gallery at: h t t p : / / w w w . h o u s i n g -dudes.com/properties_kitimat.-asp
NEWLY updated three bed-room townhouses with 1500 sq ft of usable space. Close to all services. Please call 250-279-2727 for appointment.
TOWNHOMES in KITIMAT3 bdrm, 1 ½ bath, carportStart $700. Sorry no Pets.
Call Greg 639-0110
Transportation
Cars - Sports & Imports
1997 Volkswagen GolfNew engine. C/D. Mags.
$3,000 obo. Kitimat250-632-3589
Trucks & Vans
1976 FJ40 ToyotaLand Cruiser
Runs great but needs body work. Lots of extra spare parts. $4,000 obo.
250-632-6239
1997 GMCKitimat - 1/2 ton short box, sidestep. 4.3 litre, 6 cyl. 5 speed standard. Very re-liable. Includes canopy and boat holder. $2,500 o.b.o. Contact John at:
250-632-3618 or250-632-1725
Modular Homes
classifi [email protected]
NorthernSentinelK I T I M A T
To Serve You Better
www.northernsentinel.com
16 Northern Sentinel, Wednesday, November 21, 2012
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Mariah Carvalho, left, and Kendra Brousseau stand on the ice at the Kitimat Ice Arena after their trip to Parksville.
Skaters stand tall at sectionalsTwo Snow Valley Skating Club skaters took
to sectionals in Parksville earlier this month and said it was a great learning experience to prepare them for more competition next year.
Mariah Carvalho and Kendra Brousseau were the only two skaters from Kitimat who � t the con-ditions for attending the sectionals.
They say they’ll take what they learned to im-prove their performance for next year.
“It was a good skate, I think I did okay,” said Kendra.
Head Coach Cynthia Medeiros said that com-petitions are good for local skaters because lo-cally there just isn’t the opportunity to see higher level skating.
The skaters in Parksville, by comparison, are from all over the province and in the top � ights of their division.
Skating performances are done twice. They
start with a short skate where they do three jumps, two spins and some footwork sequences.
Then they follow later with a longer perfor-mance that is a bit more � exible, said Medeiros.
She added that the two girls did better in the short skate than they did in the long one.
Kendra competes at the novice level and Mar-riah is in the pre-novice category.
Competitively this is the end of the season for them. The sections were a quali� er to go to higher levels like nationals but with Kenda in 19th place and Mariah in 52nd they are happy to just come home and make sure they shine even brighter the next time.
And it’s certainly not to be considered a loss. Kendra revels in the opportunity to meet people and friends, while Mariah said the highlights for her is just being able to perform in front of a much larger crowd.
Demons scorch RupertSubmitted
The Kitimat Ice Demons spoiled the Prince Rupert Rampage’s be-lated home opener with a great two goal bounce back from trailing 3-1 with two minutes left in the second period by scoring twice in 90 sec-onds and going on to clinch the af-fair, 5-3 in the third.
This was a fast, hard hitting, but essentially clean game, with few penalty calls, only one minor each in the third period when a great goal-tending duel took place between Ke-ano Wilson in the Rampage net and young Tyson Craven, again between the posts for the Ice Demons. Both goaltenders made some saves that the crowd really appreciated and actually applauded, along with the groans from both sets of fans.
The Ice Demons out-shot (14-to-5) and out-played the Rampage in the � rst period but could not beat Wilson. The closest to a goal was a post hit behind Craven on a long shoot in from centre.
The Rampage began to get their skating legs in the second period and were quick to answer an opening goal that put the Demons ahead by Derek Wakita, coming to take a pass back from Kory Finn to beat Wilson high. Terry Whelan also assisted.
That was at 3:55 into the period and the Rampage scored the tying power-play goal (D. Wakita, high sticking) at 6:39, on a passing play � nished off by Tom Robinson (Kory Movold, Greg Sheppard).
Motivated, the Rampage got two more goals quickly � ve minutes later when Kory Movald slid a cross crease pass from Tom Robinson be-hind Craven to give the Rampage the lead. They made it 3-1 on a de-fensive lapse that sent Sid Spracklin in alone on Craven three minutes later. Craven made the � rst stop but Spracklin heft the rebound into the net at 14.40.
The third period was mostly all Demons, except for a couple of surges by the Rampage, which were met by good defensive blocking and about four exceptional glove grabs by Craven.
Demons took the lead at the 8.16 mark on a goal by Dave Venman moments after he returned to the ice after a two minute unsportsmanlike penalty and a 10 minute misconduct for arguing too strenuously with the referee in the second follow-ing the third goal by the Rampage. Venman picked up the pass from Mildenberger at the Rampage blue line, deked the defense and roofed
The Kitimat Ice Demons beat the Prince Rupert Rampage 5-3 in this game.
Martina Perry photo
the puck from close in on Wilson, who had no chance. Terry Whelan got his second assist of the night on the play.
The clincher goal came at 17.41 with a nicely combined pass-ing play that saw Der-ek DeLisser appear to � nish with a hard shot (Jon Aiken, Dave Ven-man) but DeLisser said afterwards Terry Whel-
an re-directed the puck and should have been credited with the score.
The Demons kept the puck mostly in Rampage territory to run out the time to the � nal whistle.