smithers interior news, february 11, 2015
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February 11, 2015 edition of the Smithers Interior NewsTRANSCRIPT
GETTING “GREASY” The Harpoonist and the Axe Murderer in town Sunday.
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MALADJUSTED A play about mental health Hazelton.
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By Chris GareauSmithers/Interior News
Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs put the provincial and federal governments on notice last week over land jurisdiction when it comes to making LNG deal.
Chief John Ridsdale (Na’Moks) of the Beaver Clan said the timing of the notice was due to the recent signing of provincial LNG agreements with band councils.
“For thousands of years, we are the ones that represent the territory on behalf of our people. We have the houses and the clans on the 22,000 square kilometres, and we’re non-treaty. We’ve never ceded nor surrendered our authority on the land,” said Ridsdale.
Aboriginal Relations Minister John Rustad made the province’s position clear after signing an agreement in December with the elected band council of Wet’suwet’en First Nation near Burns Lake.
“They have asserted their territories
and we work with the elected chief and councils,” Rustad then told The Interior News.
Ridsdale said the federal government was included because First Nation reserves fall under federal jurisdiction, and that the province takes it lead from it.
“They work hand in hand, one instructs the other,” said Ridsdale.
TransCanada Pipelines representatives for the Coastal GasLink pipeline project said they were still trying to work out a deal with the hereditary chiefs on their own.
“We’ll continue to speak with them but they got to understand the jurisdiction of the hereditary chiefs. That is first and foremost. This trying to go around us and doing these end games, putting out public releases saying that we’re in agreement. They may have probably a lower ranking chief, and not the majority of people support it. It was just so confusing to the public, we thought we’d address this through the provincial and federal governments and make the press release public,” said Ridsdale.
Spring Awakening
Young love blossoms in Saturday’s performance of the Tony Award-winning musical Spring Awakening, which blends modern rock and teens challenging 19th century sensibilities. The last two performances are Thursday and Friday. See page A11 for more.
SEASON OVERSteelheads sunk in Terrace.
SPORTS/B1
Joseph seeks legal advice over RCMP incident
By Alicia BridgesSmithers/Interior News
Irene Joseph, a 61-year-old Wet’suwet’en woman who made a formal complaint against a Smithers RCMP officer in December, is seeking legal advice because she wants to pursue charges.
Joseph claims the officer used excessive force when he tried to handcuff her outside the Smithers Mark’s clothing store on Dec. 6.
At the time she made a formal complaint to the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission (CRCC) for the RCMP.
Joseph said the officer had hurt her knees and chest and damaged her walker and glasses when he knocked her down trying to handcuff her.
The incident occurred when she was being questioned about a suspect in a theft at the store.
An RCMP spokesperson told The Interior News Joseph was detained because she did not comply with verbal directions from the officer.
The local detachment helped Joseph file the complaint to the CRCC for the RCMP.
Joseph said last week she had received two letters from the commission saying the investigation was ongoing.
However, she said she is seeking legal advice about how to press charges against the officer.
“I just want him to be punished for what he did to me,” she said.
“I didn’t do anything wrong.” Joseph said she had always
wanted to pursue charges against the officer but she was waiting for an opportunity to meet with a lawyer.
The RCMP will advise Joseph when the investigation is complete but the results will not be released publicly.
Chiefs serve notice
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A2 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Telkwa considers moving meetingsBy Kendra WongTelkwa/Interior News
The Village of Telkwa is looking into potentially moving council meetings to a larger venue outside the village office.
In the six months leading up to the municipal election in November, there were few members of the public present at the Monday council meetings.
However, since the new council took office late last year, dozens of people have packed the council chambers to watch the councillors in action.
At the Jan. 26 council meeting, fire chief Randy Cunningham issued a report noting that at a previous meeting there were 37 people, six people over the 31-occupant maximum.
“The key for me is that we’re never going to ever turn away someone from a council meeting,” said Mayor Darcy
Repen. “It’s an important civil
liberty of people to be able to attend these public meetings . . . I don’t know if all meetings will be like that, but I certainly don’t want a meeting where we’re turning people away.”
He added that potential meeting places include the Telkwa Community Hall or making the current council space larger.
Coun. Brad Layton said it would be a good idea to move the meeting, but it’s something the village will have to invest money into.
“I think that we’re going
to have to invest a little bit of money in moving to those other places. One of them being, we have no Internet service for our paperless meeting agendas anywhere else except for this building,” he said during the meeting.
“I think we should brainstorm and find a place where we can host a lot more people.”
Other councillors are hoping to take a wait-and-see approach to see if the numbers die down over the coming months before they officially decide to move.
“If we look back in the
past, the first few meetings you always have lots [of people]. Are we maybe not jumping the gun on this and maybe just wait and see how this goes before we make these decisions to spend more money and get a bigger venue?” asked Coun. Leroy Dekens.
Repen couldn’t say exactly why there has been an increase in attendance since the new council took over, but noted they are actively trying to get the word out there.
“I think we’re advertising the meetings quite well. They’re being promoted with signage beside the road . . . I think it’s just trying to invite people out,” said Repen.
“It’s not just that people are coming to the meetings and sitting there, people are coming to the meetings and speaking up about the things that they really care about.”
The matter has been referred to village staff to look into the financial implications of such a move.
“The key for me is that we’re never going to ever turn away someone,”
-Darcy RepenTelkwa mayor
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By Alicia Bridges Smithers/Interior News
The 74-year-old driver of a car that rolled down a steep embankment near Smithers on Tuesday has had his licence revoked for impaired driving.
Emergency services rushed to the scene of the accident on Highway 16, near the junction of Old Babine Lake Road east of Smithers, after reports a vehicle had left the road at about 11 a.m.
They found the vehicle in a gully on the westbound side of the highway, where it had come to rest after careening off a steep embankment.
An RCMP spokesperson said the Telkwa driver was showing symptoms
of liquor impairment when police arrived.
An “immediate roadside prohibition” was used to revoke the man’s licence at the scene of the crash after he allegedly failed two blood-alcohol breathalyzer tests.
Issued under the Motor Vehicle Act, the prohibition makes it illegal for him to drive for 90 days.
Police did not report the man had any injuries but he was taken to Bulkley Valley District Hospital as a precaution.
The eastbound lane was closed temporarily to make way for ambulance, fire department and police vehicles at the scene.
The RCMP could not confirm how the vehicle left the road.
Crash driver loses licence
Mom tries to say goodbye
Francis Namox’s mother Martina Joseph smudges her heart at his vigil Sunday in Smithers. Chris Gareau photo
By Chris GareauSmithers/Interior News
“When people asked what they were doing for Family Day, I said I was bringing junior’s casket home.”
Those were the heartbreaking words of Martina Joseph, speaking at her son’s vigil Sunday in Smithers.
Francis Namox Jr. was killed at the age of 26 last Feb. 7 in an apartment on Main Street. His accused killer Kelly Andrew Johnson’s pre-trial starts June 8.
His mother seeks justice, but on Sunday she sought some closure.
“In our culture, we’re supposed to let him go after one year. I find it really hard to do that.”
See NAMOX on A10
NEWSA4 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
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Advance Public Notice
Pursuant to Section 66 of the Transportation Act, and to provisions of the Commercial Transport Act, notice is hereby given that load restrictions may be placed on short notice in the near future on all highways within the Bulkley Stikine District, including areas from Burns Lake west to Kitwanga and north to the Yukon border, including Atlin. Restrictions will be imposed in each service area as conditions warrant.
The restrictions will limit vehicles to 100 per cent, 70 per cent or 50 per cent legal axle loading. Overweight permits will not be granted and all term overweight permits are invalid for the duration of the restrictions.
Trucking and transportation companies, as well as the general public, should govern themselves accordingly. If you normally receive bulk deliveries of water, fuel, livestock feed or other produce, please plan ahead so interruption to your deliveries will be minimized.
Your cooperation in adhering to the above regulations is appreciated.
Dated in Smithers, British Columbia, this 26th day of January, 2015.
Carl Lutz, District ManagerMinistry of Transportation and InfrastructureBulkley Stikine District
For more information about load restrictions,please contact local Operations Technician
Caitlin Dobson at 250 847-7403or visit the Load Restrictions section of www.DriveBC.ca.
Bulkley Stikine Load Restrictions
LNG feedback sought By Alicia BridgesHazelton/Interior News
Feedback from a community meeting in Hazelton last week will be used in a report urging the provincial government to launch a “big picture” assessment of the combined environmental impacts of proposed LNG projects in northern B.C.
About 25 people gathered at St. Peter’s Anglican Church in Hazelton on Feb. 5 for a meeting organized by the Northwest Institute for Bioregional Research and West Coast Environmental Law (WCEL).
Both not-for-profit organizations are pushing the provincial government to undertake a “regional strategic environmental assessment” which would investigate the cumulative impacts of LNG projects.
Feedback from the community meetings, which are being held
throughout the North, will be compiled in a report to help campaign for the assessment.
If implemented, WCEL lawyer Hannah Askew said the assessment would help fill gaps in the current environmental assessment process.
“Right now the province doesn’t have a process in place to consider what the combined impacts of those projects might be,” she said.
“When each project goes through an environmental assessment it is considered independently but not in terms of how each project might interact with other projects past, present and future.”
She said the purpose of holding meetings like the one in Hazelton was to find out more about what they value and what the assessment process would be protecting.
“The idea is to get input from
communities in particular regions to find out what are the things that they really value, why do they love living in the region, what do they want to protect for themselves and for their children, and then to work backwards from those values to figure out if particular projects fit into a development plan that is going to continue to protect those values,” she said.
Askew said the report would also include feedback on socio-economic issues related to LNG.
The Ministry of Natural Gas Development said it was working with the Ministry of Natural Resource Operations and the Ministry of Environment to develop a cumulative effects assessment framework which would include development related to LNG.
Askew said the report would be completed in April or May.
www.interior-news.com A5 The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
In an historic blockbuster decision that breaks with a 20-year-old legal precedent,
the Supreme Court of Canada confirmed today that Canadians have the constitutional right to choose medical assistance in dying. The Supreme Court struck down the laws that make physician-assisted dying illegal in Canada, ruling that the Charter of Rights and Freedoms protects the right to die with dignity.The BC Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA), the civil liberties watchdog responsible for launching the case, hailed the decision as a victory for seriously and incurably ill Canadians, who are suffering against their wishes at the end of life.
“We’re thrilled with the decision. It gives seriously and incurably ill Canadians the right to seek physician assistance to end their lives in a humane way,” said Grace Pastine, Litigation Director for the BCCLA. “We’re very relieved that Canadians will have choice at the end of life. The Court ruled that seriously ill Canadians deserve a peaceful and dignified choice, rather than being forced to suffer and live in fear about how they will die. We expect that the federal and provincial governments will honour this ruling and recognize that physician-assisted dying is one of many choices that competent patients can make as part of compassionate end-of-life medical care.”
The Supreme Court ruled that the criminal prohibition on physician-assisted dying is unconstitutional. The Court determined that the ban violates section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, because it forces seriously and incurably ill Canadians to endure unnecessary pain and suffering at the end of life, and takes away their freedom to choose a more dignified and peaceful death.
The Supreme Court of Canada stated: “The sanctity of life is one of our most fundamental societal values. Section 7 (of the Charter of
Rights and Freedoms) is rooted in a profound respect for the value of human life. But s. 7 also encompasses life, liberty and security of the person during the passage to death. It is for this reason that the sanctity of life “is no longer seen to require that all human life be preserved at all costs.” And it is for this reason that the law has come to recognize that, in certain circumstances, an individual’s choice about the end of her life is entitled to respect.” (paragraph 63)
The Court’s ruling is limited in its application to competent adults where (1) the person affected clearly consents to the termination of life, and (2) the person has a grievous and irremediable medical condition (including an illness, disease or disability) that causes ensuring suffering that is intolerable to the individual in the circumstances of his or her condition. The criminal law prohibition against non-medical professionals providing assistance in dying remains in place.
The Court determined that the federal government cannot use its criminal law power to restrict a patient’s choice to have a physician-assisted death. The court recognized that the federal Parliament and provincial legislatures may – “should they so choose” – both validly legislate to regulate physician-assisted dying, so long as they respect the Charter right of Canadians to access this medical service. The Court did not impose any requirement to pass a new law. The Court suspended the effect of its ruling for 12 months.
Québec has already enacted legislation to regulate assistance in dying. Other provinces could now follow suit, but Pastine pointed out that that is not necessary in the BCCLA’s view, adding: “Physician-assisted dying is now recognized for what it is – a medical service. As a result of this ruling, it automatically falls under
existing provincial laws that apply to health matters and the professional standards and regulations governing the medical profession across Canada, just like any other form of end of life care. No further legislative action is needed.”
Sheila Tucker, co-lead lawyer for the plaintiffs said, “We are thrilled that the Supreme Court of Canada has found that the constitution gives Canadians the choice to seek what they consider to be a good death, including the option of a physician-assisted dying for seriously and incurably ill, mentally competent adults. The court confirmed what we’ve been arguing all along - inflicting unbearable suffering on patients who wish to end their lives with dignity is unjust and unconstitutional.”
The lawsuit filed by the BCCLA in April 2011 challenged the laws that make it a criminal offense to assist seriously and incurably ill individuals to die with dignity. The suit was filed on behalf of Ms. Lee Carter and Mr. Hollis Johnson, a married couple of Roberts Creek, B.C., who accompanied Lee’s 89-year-old mother, Kathleen (“Kay”) Carter, to Switzerland to peacefully end her life. Ms. Carter and Mr. Johnson have lived in the fear that they could be criminally prosecuted for helping Kay Carter. Kay Carter suffered from spinal stenosis, a degenerative condition that confined her to a wheelchair, unable to feed herself or go to the bathroom without assistance and suffering from chronic pain. Gloria Taylor, who was terminally ill with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease was also a plaintiff in the case. Gloria died of natural causes in 2012.
Ms. Carter said, “We are overjoyed by the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision. My mother raised five children who all respected her choice. She lived with independence and resolve
and refused to suffer needlessly at the end of her life. We’re so proud that this case will be my mother’s legacy and that she helped reignite a national debate. My mother never should’ve been forced to seek a death outside of Canada – away from her home – and without all her family by her side. Now Canadians who follow will have a choice for a dignified and peaceful dying process. Words can’t express our joy and relief that the Court has upheld the fundamental rights of the sick and dying.”
Mr. Johnson said, “My beloved mother-in-law was a vibrant, intelligent, woman who engaged with the pressing social and political issues of our time. She dreamed of legal change for all Canadians, because she believed that the laws forced people like her to suffer needlessly at the end of life. We are so proud that this case will be her legacy.”
The maximum penalty for assisting suicide is 14 years imprisonment. In June 2012, the B.C. Supreme Court struck down the criminal prohibition on physician-assisted dying, ruling that the laws violated the rights of Gloria Taylor, who suffered from ALS, and the rights of two other plaintiffs in the lawsuit, Lee Carter and Hollis Johnson. Gloria Taylor became the first person in Canadian history to have the legal right to seek an order allowing her to have the assistance of a physician to hasten her death. The federal government appealed the decision. In October 2013, a majority of the B.C. Court of Appeal ruled that it could not reverse the Supreme Court of Canada’s 1993 decision in Rodriguez v. B.C., effectively leaving the case for the Supreme Court to sort out. The BCCLA appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada, which heard arguments in the case in October 2014.
The BCCLA argued that the laws prohibiting
physician-assisted dying are unconstitutional because they deny individuals the right to have control over choices that are fundamental to their lives and prevent unnecessary suffering. The BCCLA also argued that the laws restrict the liberty of physicians to deliver compassionate end of life care to incurably ill patients. Finally, the BCCLA argued that the prohibition denies equality to the physically disabled by criminalizing a choice – the choice to end suffering through suicide — that is available to the able-bodied. The Court did not rule on the question of whether the prohibition violates equality rights.
Joseph Arvay, Q.C., co-lead lawyer for the plaintiffs said, “The Court has shown tremendous courage in its decision today. It has recognized that it is for the Court to protect the fundamental rights and freedoms of Canadians when Parliament fails or refuses to do so. Its decision today is for all Canadians and not just those who are today suffering from horrible illnesses. It provides all Canadians with the peace of mind that should they be so unfortunate to face such an illness in the future that they will have the choice of seeking the assistance of a kind and caring doctor in their death.”
Alison Latimer, lawyer for the plaintiffs said, “The choice to die with dignity should be available to all competent Canadians who suffer from serious and irremediable medical conditions. We applaud the ruling of Supreme Court of Canada. Countries around the world as well as a number of states in the U.S. now allow for physician assisted dying. Now Canada can follow their lead. All Canadians deserve compassionate care at the end of life, including for some the option of a physician assisted death.”
BC Civil Liberties Association
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BCCLA wins historic death with dignity case
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Wednesday, February 11, 2015
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C A N A D I A NCOMMUNITYNEWSPAPERAWARD 2012
A6 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Change rhetoric on physician-
assisted suicide
Editor:With Friday’s
Supreme Court ruling regarding Canada’s laws surrounding physician-assisted suicide there is renewed vigour in our public discussion, and rhetoric, surrounding the issue. One such piece of unchallenged rhetoric is this: that “physician-assisted suicide allows death with dignity”. The phrase carries considerable rhetorical weight, yet it’s highly assumptive and is seldom challenged.
The phrase’s assumption is this: that one’s dignity is derived from one’s ability to choose—to choose how one will live, suffer, and ultimately die. We have tied the idea of ‘choice’ to the idea of ‘dignity.’ No choice, no dignity.
There is good reason to challenge this assumption. The term “dignity” has to apply not to what we choose but to what we are. If my dignity is violated whenever I encounter a life (or death) situation in which I have no choice, then indeed a significant part of my existence is without dignity. I have not chosen my genes, my native language, my family, my intellect, and so on. Certainly I’ve made choices given these pre-conditions, but my dignity is not violated by my inability to choose these. If ‘dignity’ applies only (or most basically) to our capacity to choose, we have to conclude that the poor, the imprisoned, the disenfranchised, and indeed all of us cannot be said to be
possessors of dignity with relation to our life situation. This is my point: moral agency (the ability to make a meaningful moral choice) is a result of our dignity, not the basis of it. Those without choice still possess dignity. Choice arises from my dignity, it doesn’t establish it.
One might respond by saying, “OK, granted…my choice about physician-assisted suicide is an exercise of my dignity.” That may very well be possible, but then the phrase “death with dignity” is a non-starter. It adds nothing to the conversation, because one has dignity whether or not one has the ability to choose physician-assisted suicide. I still have dignity even without the ability to choose PAS.
If “death with dignity” means, as is often rhetorically offered, “the option to choose my death” then the vast majority of our ancestors and contemporaries have died without dignity. I cannot accept this. I, as all of us, have seen friends and family suffer and die with incredible pain and suffering—without choice but with great dignity.
My hope is this: that regardless of our position on physician-assisted suicide, we will stop referring to it as “death with dignity.” Doing so denigrates those who have died in incredible suffering (which they did not choose) with their dignity fully intact. We are possessors of dignity whether or not we have the ability to choose our death. I hope that the “death with dignity” rhetoric will make a hasty
exit from our public dialogue about PAS.
Tom GrasmeyerSmithers
Do not agree with hereditary
hierarchy
Editor:I have heard a lot
about our hereditary chief system that should make the decisions on the territories, and I do not agree with the hierarchy system for a government because it is not democratic.
The hereditary system should be used only for our cultural activities and other business. The hereditary system only benefits certain groups when it is time to negotiate these deals and the benefits do not reach all of our people.
We need a democracy so we can be united and prosper or we will have all these small different groups fighting each other for control and never be able to make a decision that can help our people move on. We all have the right to be heard and have an opinion, let us be free and vote for our leaders to represent us.
Moricetown Band member
Harvey Gunanoot
Chief should step down
Editor:Re: comment the
Moricetown elected chief made about our elders who have gone to the Supreme Court to fight for our traditional territory, our sovereign rights to our Wet’suwet’en nation. I’m proud to speak out for the elders who have passed and those who are alive today, to all my relation.
The March,1991 publication of the reasons for Judgment in the Gitxsan-Wet’suwet’en land claims case by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of British Columbia marked the culmination of only one phase of an epic trial. The trail had lasted 374 days between May 11, 1987 and June 30, 1990, but preparation for the trail went back many years. In fact, the federal government accepted the Gitxsan-Wet’suwet’en declaration for land claims negotiation in 1977, three years after the Supreme Court of Canada ruled on the Nisga’a’s Calder case which sought recognition of Aboriginal title to their traditionally occupied territory. The Gitxsan-Wet’suwet’en had never signed treaty. Even today we as the
Gitxsan-Wet’suwet’en continue to harvest the fish, fowl, game, and plants on their traditional territories. About the Moricetown elected chief comment not recognizing the Wet’suwet’en elders who have gone to the Supreme Court for the rights and title, I think that the Moricetown elected chief should step down from his position. These elders want our children to see and keep our fresh water going through our territory. Thank you people!
Kneekap NikalSmithers
Payback time for eastern Canada
Editor:There is an
interesting scenario playing out right now with Premiers Wynne of Ontario and Coulliard of Quebec putting the breaks on the Energy East Pipeline, which proposes to transport Tar sands bitumen to Atlantic tidewater.
Twenty five years ago, one of the main proposals included in Pierre Trudeau’s much maligned National Energy Program was an eastern oil pipeline that would allow maritime and eastern provinces to share in the benefits of Alberta’s oil boom instead of having
to rely on imported OPEC oil. At the time Alberta screamed blue murder because they could make more money shipping oil south to the US, and so the program was scrapped.
Had Alberta’s politicians been a bit more visionary and magnanimous (not to say selfish and greedy) that oil pipeline would have been in place by now and Canada would have been in a much better position to weather the economic storm caused by low oil prices.
Pierre Trudeau must be laughing in his grave. Or, given the man, more likely weeping.
Mel CoulsonQuick
Do we go gently into the night?
Editor:“Do not go
gentle into that good night....” Lately I’ve been spending a lot of time thinking about Bill 51, the new federal anti-terrorist legislation. Over the last couple of years I’ve been an involved citizen freely speaking, writing, singing and, with any possible means, publicly stating my dissent towards new pipelines, especially our local favourites, Northern Gateway and now LNG.
This new legislation worries me. Joe Oliver, one of Mr. Harper’s right-hand men, has called myself and many of us anti-pipeline northern BCers “radicals” and eco-terrorists. He is quoted as saying,
“There are environmental and other radical groups that would seek to block (the)
opportunity to diversify our trade....Their goal is to stop any major project no matter what the cost to Canadian families in lost jobs and economic growth. No forestry. No mining. No oil. No gas. No more hydro-electric dams...These groups threaten to hijack our regulatory system to achieve their radical ideological agenda.” (Jan. 9, 2012)
That makes me a terrorist I guess, even though I’m just protesting the new pipelines.
Under the proposed Harper legislation I can be incarcerated for a week without legal recourse, without committing a crime, and without having any evidence I will commit a crime. All I have to do is be suspected of wanting to commit a crime. In Orwell’s 1984 this was called a “Thoughtcrime” and I would be shuffled off to jail, tortured, psychological cleansed, then released to future days of sitting under an apple tree singing idle muses.
The new law as it stands, once I’m incarcerated, only prohibits CSIS from abusing the “course of justice” (a vague, ill-defined constraint) or bodily harm (according to the Canadian Criminal Code means any injury to a person that interferes with the health or comfort of a person and that is more than merely transient or trifling in nature) or sexual violation. All very poorly defined and open ended without concrete oversight and prohibitions.
Do we carry on and dissent... or do we go gently into the night?
Keith CummingsTelkwa
THE EDITORTO:
Letters to the editor policyLetters are welcomed up to a maximum of 250 words. Letters are subject to editing for clarity, brevity and legality. All letters must include the writer’s name, daytime telephone number and hometown for verifi cation purposes. Anonymous, or pen names will not be permitted. Not all submissions will be published. Letters may be e-mailed to: [email protected].
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www.interior-news.com A7 The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
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Chairlift closure costs Hudson Bay thousands
By Kendra WongSmithers/Interior News
First Nations people experience discrimination in the health care system in Canada because of their race, according to a new report.
The report, titled First Peoples, Second Class Treatment and put out by the Wellesley Institute, suggests racism against aboriginal people in the health care system is pervasive and a factor in substandard health among native people in Canada.
“I think we’re hoping it will bring forward change by putting the conversation on the table in places where it’s been either not on the table before or not taken seriously,” said Billie Allan, post-doctoral researcher with Well Living House and co-author of the report.
Hazelton’s Pauline Cole, along with three other First Nations people in the area, filed a class-action lawsuit
against the Wrinch Memorial Hospital in February 2013.
In a previous issue of the Interior News, Cole’s lawyer Lindsay Waddell said they were discriminated against because they were aboriginal.
“This case is about whether Northern Health, the [B.C.] Ministry of Health and the United Church Health services Society are discriminating — perhaps unintentionally — against First Nations people in the Hazelton area by failing to adequately fund and deliver medical services,” said Waddell.
Cole claims she didn’t get proper care because she is a First Nations person.
“In my opinion, there is racism going on here,” said Cole. “But I can’t really say who’s doing it and stuff like that, but there is a lot of racism going on here.”
Cole isn’t alone in her fight for proper health care.
Cindy Blackstock, executive director of First Nations Child and Family Care Society of Canada and a member of the
Gitksan First Nation, said aboriginal children are also discriminated against in the health care system and many end up falling by the wayside.
“We find it to be pervasive across the country where First Nations children on reserves are not receiving the same range or quality of health care that is available to non-aboriginal children,” said Blackstock.
“There shouldn’t be added hurtles for children to jump just because they’re First Nations . . . it’s very clear that these inequalities exist.”
The report also includes a list of solutions in dealing with discrimination, including implementing community-directed aboriginal services.
The First Nations Health Authority is one of those services in B.C.
As part of an agreement signed in 2011, health services from Health Canada’s First Nations and Inuit Health Branch Pacific Region were transferred to the B.C. First
Nations Health Authority, giving them the power to provide ancillary services.
According to Evan Adams, chief medical officer with the authority, the program has been very successful in providing First Nations with proper health care, while simultaneously working towards decreasing discrimination.
“We definitely are seeing changes in health indicators or health outcome data from when we started to today, even though it’s only been a very short period of time,” said Adams.
“We’re trying to invest in areas that haven’t been invested in, in the past, and we’re trying to correct those inherited inequities.”
Adam noted workers are required to take a course on how to be “culturally competent.”
Allan believes services such as the First Nations Health Authority are models that other provinces should seek to
mimic. “I think the FNHA is this
amazing opporutntiy to have the community decide what’s needed, how do they want to provide it according to the needs of their people and I think it’s a model that other people are looking at across the country,” she said.
Specifically in the North, Cormac Hikisch said Northern Health actively works to break down barriers such as discrimination.
“We all have inherent biases in how we’re raised and how we grow and the more we’re aware of those, the more we’re able to provide objective and high quality services, health care or otherwise,” said Hikisch.
Northern Health has aboriginal patient liaison workers in Smithers and Hazelton who support hospital and community care, providing culturally-relevant care to First Nations. Roughly 30 per cent of staff have also taken cultural competency training, among other initiatives.
Crews worked furiously to get the chairlift working after it broke down on Jan. 30.
Contributed photo
Aboriginals face discrimination in health care: report
By Kendra WongSmithers/Interior News
Hudson Bay Mountain suffered a five-figure loss after its chairlift stopped working for the majority of last week.
“It’s affected our business quite dramatically and the reason for that is that we had the best snow in probably about three years,” said Chrissy Chapman, resort services manager.
She would not comment on the exact dollar amount she believes they lost in the nine days the lift was non-operational.
“The snow kept coming and with the chair being
down, the locals really love that side of the mountain. It’s just longer runs, if you’re an intermediate skier, you really want to be on that side,” she said.
The chairlift that been non-operational since a power outage that forced the mountain to close on Friday, Jan. 30, is the main method of transportation to many of the more advanced runs on the mountain.
All of last week, crews (Frank, Damien and Brandon) and mechanics from Bulkley Valley Electric worked furiously to get the two-kilometre chairlift working again.
It was finally up and running again at noon last
Saturday.According to Frank
McBride, manager of hills and trails, there were several problems with the lift.
“We had a bit of a surge when the power went out last week and it affected several components of the chairlift; one of them being a milliamp meter and couple of limit switches which are all part of the safety system,” said McBride.
“It’s kind of part of the brain of the safety system. When it’s not working, nothing works, which was the case . . . It’s a pretty key component.”
The mountain ended up borrowing a milliamp
meter from Apex Mountain to get the lift operational again and will return it when the new part arrives so that business is not disrupted again.
The new part is worth $11,000 and they ordered roughly $3,000 worth of switches as well.
“This was an expensive loss for us,” said Chapman.
“Season ticket holders were so awesome. Some people understood and some people didn’t. There was nothing we could have done faster or better.
“We thank the community for our patience, this was completely out of our hands.”
A8 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
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90 Day
Community CalendarTo list your nonprofit coming events please drop off your listing at The Interior News, 3764 Broadway Ave., fax us at 250-847-2995, or email [email protected]. More information is available through our Online Community Calendar at www.interior-news.com. Deadline for submissions is Fridays at noon. Maximum 25 words. Limited space is available. We regret we cannot accept items over the phone.
Symphony of the Soil Thursday, Feb. 12, 7:30 p.m. at NWCC. Marc Shuffert Range Officer, Skeena Stikine District, MFLNRO will be showing a video about how important soil and soil ecosystems are.Spring Awakening – The Musical Feb. 12, 13, 7:30 p.m. at the Della Herman Theatre. Presented by Victoria BC’s Go Bull Theatre.Tickets at Interior Stationery, Mountain Eagle Books and at the door.Smithers Film Series Force Majeure Sunday, Feb. 15, 7:30 p.m. at the Roi Theatre. A what-would-you-do pshychodrama from Sweden.Heritage Speakers Night Wednesday, Feb. 18, 7-9 p.m. at the Old Church. Join Harry Kruisselbrink, Joan Warmerdam and Jackie Hoskins for informative and engaging presentations. Gift shop items and a raffle.Northern Saddle Club Bingo, 7 p.m. at The Old Church. Wednesdays, Feb. 19, March 5 & 19, April 2. Doors open at 6:30. Prizes up to $1,400.Creative Roots Performing Showcase Saturday, Feb.
21, 7-8 p.m. at the Della Herman Theatre. Guest pianists from Broadway Music Studio. Donations go to Festival entry fees across the North.Get Ready to Rock! A drop-in playgroup for tots (ages 0-5) and their caregivers exploring music. Mondays 10-11:30 a.m., Jan. 19 to Feb. 23 at the Telkwa Christian Reformed Church. Supported by: Most for Children.BV Museum AGM Wednesday, Feb. 25, 7 p.m. at The Old Church. Anyone with an interest in the Museum is invited to attend the meeting. Only active memberships vote. Memberships available at the Bulkley Valley Museum, or at the event.Smithers Film Series Two Days, OneNight Sunday, March 1, 7:30 p.m. at the Roi Theatre. A timely message of honesty and clear-eyed compassion. Tim Neufeld & The Glory Boys Concert Wednesday, March 4, 7-9 p.m. at Della Herman Theatre. Joyride Tour, cross-generational community concert featuring bluegrass-infused modern worship music.
You Did It!!Congratulations on 40 years together!
St. Joseph’s School students last week received prizes from the Smithers Royal Canadian Legion for winning a poster competition.
Contributed photo
Legion awards studentsBy Alicia Bridges Smithers/Interior News
Young artists and poets have received prizes from the Smithers Royal Canadian Legion for work they created in honour of soldiers and veterans.
Every year the legion runs a poster and literary contest to coincide with Remembrance Day.
Children can enter a black and white or colour poster or a poem in one of three
age categories. Using funds from
its annual Poppy Campaign, the legion awards cash prizes, a certificate and a pin to the winning entrants.
In 2014, a large chunk of the winners were St. Joseph’s School students, who submitted more than 75 entries to the contest.
Smithers legion vice-president Sue Utz and secretary Terry Widen presented about 20 winners with their prizes at the St. Joseph’s assembly last week.
By Alicia BridgesSmithers/Interior News
It was gearing up to be a busy Saturday night at the Little Onion, a popular restaurant on Main Street in Smithers, when the sous chef walked out and left a gaping hole in its kitchen staff in early 1997.
Some time in the afternoon John Wimbush popped the door to the kitchen, as he often did, to share a coffee and talk jazz with restaurant owner and chef George Szasz.
When the chef told his friend about the gap in his team, Wimbush thought he might have a solution.
His 18-year-old daughter, Aimee, was free that evening and he thought she was ready for the challenge.
Now a popular food-blogger and the author of a new cookbook entitled Brown Eggs and Jam Jars, Aimee Wimbush-Bourque remembers how she felt after her first night in a professional kitchen.
“I worked a night and it was kind of an instant, like a light-bulb moment for me,” she said.
“I loved the adrenaline of a professional kitchen.
“At the end of the night George poured me a glass of wine and said ‘you’re a natural, do you want a job?’ and that launched a 10 year career in restaurants.”
Before she stepped into the kitchen that night, Wimbush-Bourque had been honing her skills at home.
She watched her mother’s handiwork in the kitchen and baked butter tarts for the farmers’ markets in Telkwa using a recipe that appears in her new book.
“I’ve been cooking ever since I was very, very young and it was more my mother that shaped that and instilled a passion for scratch cooking and using real ingredients,” she said.
The values she learned during her own childhood, and her teenage years in Smithers, form the basis of her food blog Simple
Bites.On it, Wimbush-Bourque
pairs her recipes with tales of family life in greater Montreal, where she lives with her husband Danny, three children and six hens.
Her images show simple dishes, prepared using whole foods and home-grown vegetables, arranged in earthy settings of timber and other elements of the natural world.
“It’s really a website devoted to wholesome family food with a little urban homesteading in the mix,” she said.
“I hold a lot of weight for a healthy, family food culture which is just a fancy way of saying ‘knowing where your food comes from, cooking as much of it from scratch as possible, being conscious of how it was prepared and being conscious of food waste’.
“That’s a big, big part of how we are raising our kids.”
Family is the number one
priority for the former chef, who left the restaurant world to focus on raising her children.
She and her husband married the contrasting worlds of their childhoods, hers in the country and his in metropolitan Montreal, by choosing to live on a bigger parcel of land in the city’s outskirts.
But leaving the restaurant industry didn’t stop Wimbush-Bourque experimenting with food at home.
She started blogging, just for fun, as an outlet for sharing her recipes.
“I was still creating a lot in the kitchen and I’ve always loved writing so someone suggested ‘hey, start a food blog’ and again, it was something I was just instantly addicted to.
“I loved the immediate response you could get from the reader.
“I loved the community and the connections that I’d made.
“It was a way I could challenge
myself and still stay at home with my kids.”
In 2013, three years after Wimbush-Bourque started running the blog as a professional venture, she won the Saveur Best Food Blog Award for the best kids’ cooking blog.
Within weeks she held several book offers, something she was prepared for, albeit accidentally.
She said had never intended to write a cookbook but, driven by her desire to share the urban homesteading lifestyle she was passionate about, it had started “writing itself.”
“It really just was something burning inside me, stories I wanted to tell and just this whole lifestyle, this urban homesteading with the family at the centre was something that I really, really felt that I wanted to share,” she said.
“They asked ‘have you ever though of writing a book’ and I said ‘yes I have, here’s my agent and here’s my proposal’.”
The result is Brown Eggs
and Jam Jars, which pairs the author’s recipes with her core values of family food culture, the importance of the shared meal and how that can be the foundation of family life.
To coincide with the book’s Feb. 10 launch, Wimbush-Bourque is currently on a book tour of major Canadian cities, and one other location that’s a little off the beaten path.
“I’m doing Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver and then Smithers and everyone’s like ‘what, how did that get in there, why not Calgary’ and I’m like ‘because, I have to go back to my homeland’,” she said.
Wimbush-Bourque learned to snowboard on the Twinkle Toes ski run at Hudson Bay Mountain. She fell in love with her husband hiking at Silver King. She did swimming lessons at Round Lake.
After she moved to Montreal, it was five years before the author returned to Smithers, where her brother Josh lives with his own young family.
When she finally set foot on local soil again in November last year, she wondered why she hadn’t returned sooner.
“It was a really, really emotional trip and I was like ‘why have I stayed away for so long’?” she said.
“It’s so far to come and now that we have children, flying out there is so expensive but I vowed to, we are actually going to come back next summer and bring the kids and just discover it again.
“[What I love is] definitely the physical landscape and the beauty.
“The warmth of the people and also just the memories that are etched in my mind from my childhood.”
She said it would feel like a true homecoming when she returns for a book-signing event at Two Sisters cafe this Sunday.
“I feel kind of like coming home from the hospital with the baby or something,” she laughed.
The book also features photographs by her father, John.
Aimee Wimbush-Bourque will be at Two Sisters from 2 - 4 p.m. on Sunday for a Q&A and to share samples from the recipes in her book.
www.interior-news.com A9 The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
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Popular food blogger returns to her roots in Smithers
Aimee Wimbush-Bourque, who spent her teenage years in Smithers, returns on Sunday to launch her new book, entitled Brown Eggs & Jam Jars.
Contributed photo
A10 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
COMMUNITY
KINDERGARTENKindergarten registrations will be accepted during the week of February 16-20, 2015 at all of SD#54’s elementary schools for entry into school in September 2015 for children who will be five (5) years old on or before December 31, 2015. Registration during this time is required to assist for planning and organizing of our local schools.
Proof of age (original birth certificate) and BC Care Card must be presented at the time of registration.
Registration in regular school programs should take place at a resident’s neighbourhood school (see list below).
If you have any other questions, please call your neighbourhood elementary school.
Lake Kathlyn Elementary 7620 Highway 16 West Smithers, BC 250-847-9427
Bulkley Valley Education Connection 7620 Highway 16 West Smithers, BC 250-847-9427
Muheim Memorial Elementary 3659 – 3rd Avenue Smithers, BC 250-847-2688
Telkwa Elementary 1000 Hankin Avenue Telkwa, BC 250-846-5851
Silverthorne Elementary 3455 – 13th Avenue Houston, BC 250-845-2228
Twain Sullivan Elementary 1771 Hungerford Drive Houston, BC 250-845-2227
Walnut Park Elementary 4092 Mountainview Drive Smithers, BC 250-847-4464
REGISTER EARLY FOR FALL 2015
SCHOOL DISTRICT #54 (BULKLEY VALLEY)
Ground to Griddle Neighbourhood Kitchen
FOOD CHALLENGE
Here is our second bi-weekly food challenge!
At the G2G Kitchen in January, we cooked whole chickens 3 different ways:
Mexico Congo Sweden
How do you cook a whole chicken?
Email submissions by Sunday, February 15th to [email protected], including:
Your name A picture of the dish A one-line description of the dish
Watch for your photo in next week’s Interior News and check back in two weeks for the next challenge which will also be posted to the Ground to Griddle blog on the SCSA website (www.scsa.ca).
Questions? Contact: Kimberly Lipscombe
250-847-9515
The Mental Health Family Resource Centre has Moved!
Find us now on 3876 Broadway Avenue as part of the Broadway Wellness Centre.
Of� ce Hours: Wed. - Fri. from 9am - 5 pm.
We provide a reason to hope & the means to cope to family members of people living with mental illness.
Call: Clara Donnelly - Regional Coordinator( 250 ) 847-9779 OR email: [email protected]
It is with great joy that Jack & Lucy Stam, along with Bob & Norma Dunkley, announce the marriage of their children
Daniel Jordanand
Marli AlexandraTheir beautiful barn wedding took place at
Shady Acres Farm in Smithers on August 16, 2014
Namox rememberedPhotos of Namox
with his son Aiden, who just turned three, were displayed for the dozens of family and friends gathered outside the building where he was killed.
“His dad will never get to teach him how to play baseball, ride his first bike, things dads do for their kids,” said the tearful mom.
Two balloon with the words “I love you” were released for Aiden and his mother Shawna Shaw
alongside 26 others, one for each year of the young father’s life.
Joseph and others spoke of the way Namox was always willing to lend a hand. It was in that helpful spirit that found him helping his mom open up Fort Babine Lodge. It was there he discovered a love for fishing. Fish that Namox canned was served at the vigil.
“They went fishing every single day... He was learning from the people out at Fort
Babine how to fish and hunt,” said Joseph.
The vigil also remembered Namox’s
cousin and friend Lionel Thomes, who lost his life to suicide the previous fall.
Balloons are released, one for each year of Namox’s life plus two for his son and girlfriend.
Chris Gareau photo
From GOODBYE on A3
www.interior-news.com A11 The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Midsummer Festival has something for you.
Volunteer for FREE STUFF!
• midsummer music festival • bvfms.org • •
• Call Norma or Greg 250.847.9077 or 778.210.1149 •donated by the Interior News
SPRING AWAKENING SHOWERS GREAT TALENT ON SMITHERSThursday and Friday are the last chances to experience the blooming talent that balances humour, insight, drama and great musical performances to cre-ate a show that is as fresh as a deep breath on the � rst day of spring. Local boy Joseph Goble and co-director Noelle Antonsen’s version of Tony Award-winning musical Spring Awakening includes Smithers drama teacher Heather Lee (right) and Telkwa talent Alan Doll. Tickets are on sale at Interior Stationary and Mountain Eagle Books for the Della Herman Theatre shows. There is an advisory for well-placed mature themes, nudity, and strong language
Chris Gareau photos
“Greasy” sound comes to Smithers
Shawn ‘The Harpoonist’ Hall and Matthew ‘The Axe Murderer’ Rogers are in town Sunday night. Contributed photo
By Chris GareauSmithers/Interior News
They are greasy, and that is the way they like it.
Bulkley Valley music fans may recognize Juno-nominated duo The Harpoonist and the Axe Murderer from the Kispiox Music Festival. They will be spreading their blues-influenced sound at the Della Herman Theatre this Sunday as part of their first tour of northern B.C., which finishes up Monday at the Canada Winter Games in Prince George.
“Raw, greasy, soulful blues that’s kind of infectious,” said singer Shawn Hall, explaining the band’s sound hours before its first show in Prince Rupert Saturday.
“We’ve been doing weekend tours, and every theatre we played was sold out and it looked like a night club. People weren’t behaving like it was a theatre, it gets people out of their seats,” said Hall.
The Vancouver bandmates, who have been together since getting together for a radio jingle in 2002, play a plethora of instruments that give a full sound. They decided to travel on their Northern Exposure Tour in February believing it was the best time to get people out and engaged.
“It’s a decent time to come up and hit places and actually be able to engage with a good chunk of the community because people are thirsty, because a lot of bands don’t come up at this time of year, so we figured we would,” said Hall.
The show starts at 8 p.m. and tickets are available at Mountain Eagle Books.
A12 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
A & E
38th Annual Game Banquet and Fundraiser
Saturday, February 28th, 2015
6:00pm at the Clubhouse • 6436 Glacier Gulch Road
Great food on the wild side!!!
Prizes, Auctions, Photo Contest!!
$25.00 per person. Tickets on sale at: • Outdoor Essentials • Smithers Lumber Yard
• Oscar’s Source for Adventure • Free-Lance AutomotiveMore information email us at [email protected] or check out our website at www.bvrodandgun.ca
Enter our Facebook contest to win a $100.00 GiftCerti� cate from Sedaz Lingerie.
www.daddios5.com
Eat Your Heart OutValentine’s Day Menu on Facebook
Reservations for:5, 6:15 & 7:30 pm
Daddio’sFAMILY RESTAURANT
3735 Alfred Avenue250-847-2255
Saturday,February 14
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In partnership with
Trail Mix: Journey to Wellbeing
Please join the Mental Health Family Resource Centre for a series of video and discussion events
Friday January 30 Living with Depression 12-2pm
Friday February 06 Living with Anxiety 12-2pm
Friday February 13 Living with Schizophrenia 12-2pm
Friday February 20 Living with Dementia 12-2pm
Friday February 27 Living with Personality Disorders 12-2pm
Refreshments provided
Healthy Living Centre • 1071 Main Street For Information: Moira 250-847-9273 or Clara 250-847.9779
Advertising space donated by The Interior News
New to the Community?New Baby?
Contact Welcome Wagon Today!
Laura 250-643-3237
It’s absolutely FREE!Bringing Local Community information & gifts
or 250-846-5742
*Babies 9 months or younger*New within a year*Covering Smithers & Area
Insurance products and services distributed through I.G. Insurance Services Inc. Insurance license sponsored by The Great-West Life Assurance Company. Trademarks, including Investors Group, are owned by IGM Financial Inc. and licensed to its subsidiary corporations. MP1685 (02/2014)
KELLY J. JONES CFP, CLU, Senior Financial ConsultantInvestors Group Financial Services Inc. Tel: (250) 847-9620 | [email protected]
Are you retired and unsure where you stand financially? If you’re concerned about ensuring your money will last as long as you need it, I can help. The time to call is now.
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Insurance products and services distributed through I.G. Insurance Services Inc. Insurance license sponsored by The Great-West Life Assurance Company. Trademarks, including Investors Group, are owned by IGM Financial Inc. and licensed to its subsidiary corporations. MP1685 (02/2014)
KELLY J. JONES CFP, CLU, Senior Financial ConsultantInvestors Group Financial Services Inc. Tel: (250) 847-9620 | [email protected]
Are you retired and unsure where you stand financially? If you’re concerned about ensuring your money will last as long as you need it, I can help. The time to call is now.
Will your retirement savings last?
Insurance products and services distributed through I.G. Insurance Services Inc. Insurance license sponsored by The Great-West Life Assurance Company. Trademarks, including Investors Group, are owned by IGM Financial Inc. and licensed to its subsidiary corporations. MP1685 (02/2014)
KELLY J. JONES CFP, CLU, Senior Financial ConsultantInvestors Group Financial Services Inc. Tel: (250) 847-9620 | [email protected]
Are you retired and unsure where you stand financially? If you’re concerned about ensuring your money will last as long as you need it, I can help. The time to call is now.
Will your retirement savings last?
Insurance products and services distributed through I.G. Insurance Services Inc. Insurance license sponsored by The Great-West Life Assurance Company. Trademarks, including Investors Group, are owned by IGM Financial Inc. and licensed to its subsidiary corporations. MP1685 (02/2014)
KELLY J. JONES CFP, CLU, Senior Financial ConsultantInvestors Group Financial Services Inc. Tel: (250) 847-9620 | [email protected]
Are you retired and unsure where you stand financially? If you’re concerned about ensuring your money will last as long as you need it, I can help. The time to call is now.
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B.V. Driving School Ltd. is offering an air brakes course in Houston on
Friday (evening) February 27th, Saturday, February 28th & Sunday, March 1st, 2015.
Spaces are limited so call ASAPEmail: [email protected] • www.bvdrivingschool.ca
AIR BRAKES COURSE
Anyone interested in taking the course or wants more information about the air brakes course, please call
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DrivewayCanada.ca
This week’s feature:Now you’re talking... new Jeep Renegade —with an accent!
Follow Us@SmithersNews
LOCAL PAINTERS MEET PATRONS
Artists Dawn Reming-ton, David Mio and Sherry Nielsen at the reception for their art exhibits at the Smith-ers Art Gallery Friday night.Hemington and Nielsen’s This Place We Call Home por-traits of the North and Mio’s Expressions oil paintings are on dis-play until Mar. 14.
Chris Gareau photo
www.interior-news.com A13The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
THREE RIVERS REPORT
For a limited time only.All items subject to applicable taxes.At participating McDonald’s® restaurants in Canada.
©2015 McDonald’s.
Shane and Sasha Doodson Owner Operator3720 Hwy 16, Smithers
maladjusted, a play about mental health, will be performed at the Hazelton Secondary School tonight. Admission is free.
Contributed photo
School changes need time, resources: unionsBy Alicia BridgesHazeltons/Interior News
Teachers’ union leaders from Kitimat and Terrace, where Grade 7s were moved out of elementary schools two years ago, say the Coast Mountains School District should research how the change has affected those schools before it makes similar changes in the Hazeltons.
Hazeltons parents last
week expressed concerns about a plan to move Grade 7 students to the Hazelton Secondary School in September 2015.
Their concerns relate to a lack of consultation in the lead up to the move, longer travel times for younger students, bullying, and issues with Grade 7s sharing the school with older students.
Opposition to the plan was also voiced at the Jan. 26 meeting
of the Hazelton Grade Reconfiguration Committee, which was created by the district to investigate the best model for the move.
School district board chair Art Erasmus told The Interior News last week that the transition was aimed at improving graduation rates.
Two years ago, the district moved Kitimat’s Grade 7s to Mt. Elizabeth as part of a district-wide
shift towards the middle school model.
Unlike Terrace, where the Skeena Middle School for Grades 7–9 has its own school site, Grade 7s at Mt. Elizabeth share the building with Grades 8–12s.
The transition planned for the Hazeltons would be closer to the model used in Kitimat.
Cathy Lambright, the president of the Terrace District Teachers’ Union,
said Coast Mountains had not done enough research into how reconfiguring grades had affected those schools.
“My concern is this, let’s take a look at our own district,” she said.
“Kitimat is a school within a school, just like Hazelton.
“What were some of the concerns and pressures from the parents there, from the kids, from the teachers, what worked and
what didn’t? “Let’s take a look
at that before we rush headlong into making possibly similar mistakes in Hazelton.”
She said the union was not opposed to the move itself but the timeframe.
She believes it would be a mistake to introduce changes in Hazelton this year because the school was not prepared.
Touring play addresses � aws in the mental health system
See TEACHER on A15
By Alicia Bridges Hazeltons/Interior News
The challenges of seeking help through the mental health system, as told by patients and caregivers, is the focus of a touring play which will be performed in Hazelton tonight.
maladjusted, a production from Vancouver-based Theatre for Living, aims to humanize mental health by addressing issues with the public system.
Originally produced in 2013, the play was created and performed by patients and caregivers who applied their real-life experiences to their performances on stage.
Following three personal narratives, it tackles issues such as misdiagnosed illnesses, problems with dispensing prescription medication and the limitations on caregivers working in a mechanized system.
Tonight’s show at Hazelton
Secondary School is part of a tour of 26 communities across B.C. and Alberta.
Director David Diamond, who has a close personal connection to the Hazeltons and the Gitxsan people having toured there many times, said there were a number of reasons the company wanted to bring the production to small communities.
“I think just at a cultural level it’s really important to bring quality theatre to people who don’t get to see it,” he said.
“This is a very powerful, well-produced evening of theatre.
“On the issues side, the theatre is a wonderful way to have conversations that are very difficult to have.”
For the 2015 tour, four of the original cast members have been reunited on stage alongside two new faces, Christine Germano and Columpa Bobb.
Bobb, a First Nations woman, said the impacts
of residential schools and enforced reserves made mental health an issue that affected her entire community.
She hoped local audiences would be empowered by the show.
“What I hope the audience takes away when they leave is a belief in their right to crack through the silence and be heard, be seen, be cherished, be believed and held in a good light,” she said.
“I think if they can go away believing that then they will have a stronger foundation on which to fight for themselves inside the mechanization of the health system and other parts of our health and welfare systems that exist in our country today.”
Despite the show’s serious subject matter, Diamond and Bobb said it was both entertaining and funny.
maladjusted starts at 7 p.m. at Hazelton Secondary School tonight. Admission is free.
PROCESS
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THREE RIVERS REPORT
Police Beat
Jan. 29 — At 1:30 p.m., police attended a collision near the Hagwilget Bridge on Highway 62.
A vehicle had been crossing the bridge when its left rear tire disconnected from the axle.
The loose tire then struck two other vehicles causing minor damage.
Jan. 30 — At 6:50 p.m., police were called to a residence on the 4900 block of Seventh Avenue in New Hazelton. A suspect or suspects had entered the home through a broken rear window. Some low value items were stolen.
Feb. 2 — At 12:26 p.m., RCMP received a call concerning a hit and run collision from Jan. 31.
A grey Ford F150 had been parked in the parking lot of the Kispiox Community Hall that evening. A second vehicle struck the passenger side rear door and quarter panel causing minor damage.
The New Hazelton RCMP reminded the community that the annual RCMP Junior Youth Academy will be held on Mar. 7 at the Gitwangak Community Hall between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. Youths aged five-12 are invited to attend to learn about policing duties and training. Lunch will be provided.
New Hazelton RCMP
responded to 79 calls from Jan. 29-Feb. 4
New home for Hazelton writing and poetry groupThe Hazelton Free-Range
Writers group has moved out of its former home at the riverboat
and into a new location. The group’s meetings will
now be held at the Roche View
Lodge in New Hazelton. Between five and 12 people
attend the group for writers, held
on the first and third Mondays of each month during the winter.
Most of the regular group write poetry but some work in prose.
www.interior-news.com A15The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
THREE RIVERS REPORT
Charlie McClary Re/Max Bulkley Valley - Smithers Office (250) 847-5999 Fax (250) 847-9039 (250)877-1770 Cellular
A1 CAR WASH—Houston $ 684,000.00
Subdivision Po-tential Tyhee Lake $484,500.00 • Proposed 124 lots • 55+ acres • Great views & build-ing sites
Look at these TWO TURNKEY Business OPPORTUNITIES...
Hay Farm • Suskwa $375,000.00
• 220 acres (130 cultivated) • 3+ ton per acre of hay • Modest 1200 sf. Home • Year round creek • Great mountain views MLS # N4502895
From Charlie’s Desk…. I have a number of clients looking for residential properties. Give me a call if you are thinking of selling in the Smithers or Telkwa limits. Special requests : Smaller 1000 sq.ft. rancher hill top area/ Larger home needing reno and TLC/ Older home for rental investment/ Duplex unit. I am more than happy to get together with you for a free evalution on your home and help you with the deci-sion process. Call me anytime to set up an appointment.
Hay Land • Smithers $500,000.00 • 100 acres (75 cultivated) • Zoned H2 • Subdivision opportunity • Sub irrigated by creek MLS # N4501568
• SEARS, Greyhound & more $100K Gross • 3 yr old 60 X 28 modular building on a 132’x122’ Com-mercial Lot one block off Hwy 16.
Multi Business Operation—Hazelton # 260,000.00 Aspen Croft Ranch Smithers $729,000.00
• 260 acres • Large country home • hayland & pasture • Spectacular views • Crown range attached
Hobby Farm Telkwa $484,000.00 • 160 acres • 18 kms E of Town • House & barns • Hayland & pasture MLS #
Coyote Creek Ranch Smithers $484,000.00 •Family ranchette • 2 storey home • Outbuildings & corrals MLS # N4502640
4 sources of revenue, 2 heated car wash bays, auto repair bay, retail sales,equipment rental &office . Located in Houston Industrial Park on 2 acres with room for expansion. Great opportunity!
Charlie McClary Re/Max Bulkley Valley - Smithers Office (250) 847-5999 Fax (250) 847-9039 (250)877-1770 Cellular
A1 CAR WASH—Houston $ 684,000.00
Subdivision Po-tential Tyhee Lake $484,500.00 • Proposed 124 lots • 55+ acres • Great views & build-ing sites
Look at these TWO TURNKEY Business OPPORTUNITIES...
Hay Farm • Suskwa $375,000.00
• 220 acres (130 cultivated) • 3+ ton per acre of hay • Modest 1200 sf. Home • Year round creek • Great mountain views MLS # N4502895
From Charlie’s Desk…. I have a number of clients looking for residential properties. Give me a call if you are thinking of selling in the Smithers or Telkwa limits. Special requests : Smaller 1000 sq.ft. rancher hill top area/ Larger home needing reno and TLC/ Older home for rental investment/ Duplex unit. I am more than happy to get together with you for a free evalution on your home and help you with the deci-sion process. Call me anytime to set up an appointment.
Hay Land • Smithers $500,000.00 • 100 acres (75 cultivated) • Zoned H2 • Subdivision opportunity • Sub irrigated by creek MLS # N4501568
• SEARS, Greyhound & more $100K Gross • 3 yr old 60 X 28 modular building on a 132’x122’ Com-mercial Lot one block off Hwy 16.
Multi Business Operation—Hazelton # 260,000.00 Aspen Croft Ranch Smithers $729,000.00
• 260 acres • Large country home • hayland & pasture • Spectacular views • Crown range attached
Hobby Farm Telkwa $484,000.00 • 160 acres • 18 kms E of Town • House & barns • Hayland & pasture MLS #
Coyote Creek Ranch Smithers $484,000.00 •Family ranchette • 2 storey home • Outbuildings & corrals MLS # N4502640
4 sources of revenue, 2 heated car wash bays, auto repair bay, retail sales,equipment rental &office . Located in Houston Industrial Park on 2 acres with room for expansion. Great opportunity!
Charlie McClary Re/Max Bulkley Valley - Smithers Office (250) 847-5999 Fax (250) 847-9039 (250)877-1770 Cellular
A1 CAR WASH—Houston $ 684,000.00
Subdivision Po-tential Tyhee Lake $484,500.00 • Proposed 124 lots • 55+ acres • Great views & build-ing sites
Look at these TWO TURNKEY Business OPPORTUNITIES...
Hay Farm • Suskwa $375,000.00
• 220 acres (130 cultivated) • 3+ ton per acre of hay • Modest 1200 sf. Home • Year round creek • Great mountain views MLS # N4502895
From Charlie’s Desk…. I have a number of clients looking for residential properties. Give me a call if you are thinking of selling in the Smithers or Telkwa limits. Special requests : Smaller 1000 sq.ft. rancher hill top area/ Larger home needing reno and TLC/ Older home for rental investment/ Duplex unit. I am more than happy to get together with you for a free evalution on your home and help you with the deci-sion process. Call me anytime to set up an appointment.
Hay Land • Smithers $500,000.00 • 100 acres (75 cultivated) • Zoned H2 • Subdivision opportunity • Sub irrigated by creek MLS # N4501568
• SEARS, Greyhound & more $100K Gross • 3 yr old 60 X 28 modular building on a 132’x122’ Com-mercial Lot one block off Hwy 16.
Multi Business Operation—Hazelton # 260,000.00 Aspen Croft Ranch Smithers $729,000.00
• 260 acres • Large country home • hayland & pasture • Spectacular views • Crown range attached
Hobby Farm Telkwa $484,000.00 • 160 acres • 18 kms E of Town • House & barns • Hayland & pasture MLS #
Coyote Creek Ranch Smithers $484,000.00 •Family ranchette • 2 storey home • Outbuildings & corrals MLS # N4502640
4 sources of revenue, 2 heated car wash bays, auto repair bay, retail sales,equipment rental &office . Located in Houston Industrial Park on 2 acres with room for expansion. Great opportunity!
Valley Food & Farm Update
Charlie McClary is proud to bring you this week’s...
Submitted by the Smithers Farmers’ InstituteThe Bulkley Valley Farmers’ Market is indoors again this winter at the Smithers Curling Club! In-door markets runs 9am - noon. Winter markets will be held on Feb. 14 & 28, Mar. 14 & 28 & April 11 & 25.
Missed the Farmers’ Market? The 2014 BV Local Food Directory is available at Smithers Feed, the Sausage Factory, Rudolph’s Pure Sausage and the Learning Shop in Hazelton. It is also available online at the Smithers Farmers’ Institute website: www.smithersfarmersinstitute.com.
Notes for Producers: The Smithers Farmers’ Institute is planning a conference ‘From Carrots to Cattle: Food Production in the Northwest’ for February 20th and 21st at the Hudson Bay Lodge in Smithers. Details will are posted here: www.smithersfarmersinstitute.com/conference.html, or phone Megan at 250-846-9854.• Brian Minter is coming up to do a keynote
presentation on fruit tree and berry produc-tion. He is speaking on Friday from 4pm to 6pm. There is a dinner Friday after Brian Minter’s presentation.
• Saturday is a full day, featuring a line-up of excellent presenters speaking to topics such as: climate change, alternative energy, winter feeding site management, composting, production breeding of poultry and heritage breeds, greenhouse design and season extension, and pasture rejuvenation.
• There will also be a panel made up of rep-resentatives from local agriculture organiza-tions.
• A Tradeshow will be running concurrently with the Conference, with lots of great information and knowledgeable experts.
Come out and help celebrate and promote agricul-ture in the northwest!!
The BC Government has just announced a new water pricing structure under the new Water Sustainability Act. Ground water users will now re-quire a license, and are required to pay water fees and rentals. For more information, go to http://en-gage.gov.bc.ca/watersustainabilityact/2015/02/05/blog-post-15-pricing-changes-support-protection-of-b-c-water/.
Note for Cattle Producers – the BCCA is still accepting Cattle Loss Surveys even though the January 31 deadline has passed.
Beyond the Market is holding a Farm Business Planning Bootcamp in Smithers on March 7 and 8 at the Hudson Bay Lodge. Workshops are free, registration is required. Register at: http://beyon-dthemarket.eventbrite.com/ .
Upcoming Annual General Meetings:The Skeena Regional Cattlemen’s Association Annual General Meeting will be held on February 28th at the Hudson Bay Lodge. Tradeshow opens at noon, meeting starts at 1:00pm.
Responses
Whether it be the violence in Nige-ria, Iraq or indeed in Ottawa, we all experience emotions ranging from frustra-tion to downright anger when we read about these events. But how do we as Christians respond in a godly way? It’s a question which has puzzled Christians from the beginning of our faith. Did not Peter cut off the ear of the servant of the high priest when his master was threat-ened? And did not Jesus correct him?
Two lines of Chris-tian thinking have evolved – the just war and pacifism. The just war thinkers echo the thought of Romans 13 that be-cause Jesus is Lord, authorities have been established by God and do not ‘bear the sword for no reason’. Qualified personal involve-ment is acceptable because Christians are citizens of both heavenly and earthly kingdoms. Any war nevertheless must correct a serious
injustice. Pacifists, on the other hand, reflect Jesus’s words in the Sermon on the Mount and ‘turn the other cheek’. In their view, there can be no personal involve-ment in any kind of violence
There are no easy answers. But, first, what both views have in common is the belief that there are two different spheres, church and state, and that it is the state’s legitimate role to promote jus-tice and suppress sin. As Paul says in Ro-mans 13, ‘rulers are not a terror to good conduct, but to bad’. Second, Christians should make every effort to promote peace at a personal level. Personal ven-geance and violence are not an option. However, how this is personally promoted at a national level will vary. Finally, we as Christians can offer hope: one day the evil and deprav-ity we see now will be abolished when Jesus returns and establishes perfect and lasting peace on earth. Come, Lord Jesus, come!
Baptist ChurchChris Kibble 250.847-3725
Faith Matters
Submitted by the Smithers Ministerial Association
AGMThe Bulkley Valley Historical
and Museum Societywill be holding the Annual General Meeting in the Old Church (corner of King and 1st Street) on February 25, 2015 at 7:00pm.
Monday – Friday 9 am – 9 pmSaturday 9 am – 6 pm • Sunday & Holidays 10 am – 5 pmSeniors’ Day every day • 10% OFF (some exclusions may apply)
3752 4th Avenue • Smithers
Bulkley Village Shopping Centre
250-847-4474
Book a Makeoverfor Valentine’s Day
... or Donate a minimum of $20 to the Northern Lights Wildlife Shelter and receive $10 o� your next fragrance purchase . (makeover’s can be booked any time in February )
� is is a great opportunity to help out li� le Valentine the Grizzly from Golden and his friends! We will be collecting donations until Feb. 21st. All proceeds go to the Northern Lights Wildlife Shelter.
Municipal Appointment (Volunteer)FINANCE COMMITTEE
The Village of Telkwa is inviting applications from residents wishing to become involved in local government by sitting as a volunteer member of its Finance Committee. Appointed members must be willing to sit for an unspecified term and to attend regular meetings, as required. The Finance Committee will consist of the Director of Finance, two village Councillors and two members of the public. The role of the Finance Committee will be to review and provide input on Telkwa’s long-term financial goals and strategies, and the annual budget. The committee will also carry out special projects of a financial nature, at the request of Council, which may include operational and performance analysis. Municipal finance or other finance experience would be an asset. To apply: Send a letter setting out your relevant experience by e-mail to [email protected], by facsimile to (250) 846-9572 to Post Office Box 220, Telkwa, BC, V0J 2X0, or in person at 1415 Hankin Avenue, Telkwa, BC, by 4:00 pm on February 18, 2015.
“I think that trying to do it in too short a time can be really harmful because the high school is certainly not organized or set up for a group of students to move into HSS at this point in time for Sept. 1,” she said.
She called on the school district to provide more evidence to support its claim that the change was beneficial to students.
Kitimat District Teachers’ Association president Kim Meyers does not believe the transition has helped students at the Mt. Elizabeth Secondary School.
She said she would not recommend a similar model
being introduced in the Hazeltons because resources at Mt. Elizabeth had been stretched by the move.
She believes a middle school that operated separately, like the one in Terrace, would be more successful.
“A true middle school model provides for collaboration and team-building and kids doing collective activities but that’s just not possible when they are in the same building ... it just doesn’t work when you’re all in one building and sharing resources,” she said.
“In Kitimat we were assured over and over that the students would be kept separate ... but there is no
separation and there is no way to do it.”
Meyer agreed with concerns raised by Hazelton parents that younger students were more vulnerable in a high school environment, “for a lot of different reasons”.
“I find it cause for concern, absolutely,” she said.
In her opinion, a similar move in Hazelton would not “hurt” Grade 7 students academically but it would not improve their graduation rates.
Board chair Erasmus said last week the district was receiving positive feedback from parents, students and teachers at the Terrace and Kitimat
schools. He said the board would
consider how to respond to community concerns at its next meeting on Feb. 18.
“Given the amount of ‘we don’t want to do this’ that we had at the meeting ... clearly the board will be advised from the meeting ... that it’s not smooth sailing and what do we need to consider as a board in order to provide services to the students and families in the Hazeltons.”
The Interior News requested more information about whether the district had researched how the changes affected students in Terrace and Kitimat but the district declined to comment further.
From SCHOOL on A13
Teacher says middle school not working
www.interior-news.com A16The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
THREE RIVERS REPORT
Enjoy stories of our local Cattle Ranching operators whose work over the decades has helped build the Bulkley Valley. Look for these near the end of each month in the Interior News.
Your Valley Ranches
build the Bulkley Valley. Look for these near the end of each month in the Interior News.build the Bulkley Valley. Look for these near the end of each month in the Interior News.Proudly brought to you by Smithers Feed, BV Home Centre, Sausage Factory,
B.V. Cattlemen’s Association and the Interior News.
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Minding Your Money Mortgage insurance that works for YOU
This column, written and published by Investors Group Financial Services Inc. (in Québec – a Financial Services Firm), presents general information only and is not a solicitation to buy or sell any investments. Contact your own advisor for specific advice about your circumstances. For more information on this topic please contact your Investors Group Consultant.
A mortgage is usually the biggest, single debt any Canadian will ever take on. That’s enough to make anybody nervous and it’s why most of us seek the protection of mortgage insurance to make sure our home will always be there for our family come what may. And it is the right and prudent thing to do. What isn’t always the best solution is assuming that mortgage life insurance is the only option for this protection. Sure, it’s easy to do as mortgage life insurance is typically offered as part of your lender’s mortgage pack-age and the cost of coverage is simply folded into your monthly mortgage payment. But that may not be the best option for you. Here’s why:
When you get mortgage insurance from your lender …• The lender is the beneficiary of the policy. There are no cash values and coverage expires when the
mortgage is paid off.• Coverage decreases as the mortgage is paid down but your premiums remain the same or increase over
the term of the mortgage.• The lender’s policies may allow them to adjust your premiums or even change or cancel the policy at
any time.• If you decide to move your mortgage to another lending institution for a better rate, it is likely your
existing mortgage life insurance may not be moved.• The mortgage insurance is not customized to your situation, and may not provide the right type of
insurance coverage for your needs.
When you use a personal insurance plan to cover mortgage debt …• YOU own the policy and your designated beneficiaries can choose how to use the funds to pay off the
mortgage, provide a monthly income, or take care of immediate needs.• YOUR coverage doesn’t decline with your mortgage balance. Coverage continues after the mortgage is
paid, protecting your beneficiaries for the life of the plan.• YOU, and only you, can cancel or make changes to your personal plan. And premiums are guaranteed
for the life of the plan.• Move to another home, move to another mortgage, and your personal insurance plan goes with YOU.• Your premium is based on YOU, your age, health and smoking status.• Your policy is designed for YOU by an expert consultant to be exactly what you need, with premiums
that suit your budget.Mortgage protection is the right and prudent thing to do, but be sure it protects YOU and not the lender. Your professional advisor can help you choose protection that works for YOU and integrates seamlessly with your overall financial plan.
Carl EddyConsultant
KElly JonEs, CFP ClUsenior Financial Consultant
shaUna PEtErson, CFPFinancial Consultant
trEvor BrUintJEsConsultant
By Alicia BridgesHazeltons/Interior News
The Coast Mountains School District is developing a training program which will offer courses in five trades from a facility in Terrace.
The new program, which will be rolled out over three years, was outlined in the 2015 to 2017 Strategic Plan for Trades Training released by the district last week.
Its goal is to improve trades training for secondary high school students by delivering it through the school system, reducing the district’s dependency on external agencies such as the Northwest Community College.
Under the plan, courses in welding, cosmetology, carpentry, culinary arts and heavy equipment operation will be offered in Terrace.
School District
82 board chair Art Erasmus said the strategic plan and the training program was needed to prioritize secondary student access to courses.
“We’ve got some students that leave high school either before they graduate or when they graduate and they are not able to get a job and the trades training, which has all basically been done by the college, has dealt with adults first so our students are still waiting,” he said.
He hoped it would help some students start forging their career path sooner.
Students from other towns, such as Hazelton, would need to travel to Terrace to undergo their training.
To get the plan underway, the district needs to establish partnerships with colleges, employers and First Nations.
Erasmus said the program would not clash with courses
that were already being offered by the Northwest Community College because it was targeting a different student demographic.
“We are targeting a younger group and that group is at a significant disadvantage at the moment because they’re not ready for the college and they don’t have job skills,” he said.
NWCC Dean of Trades Brent Speidel said there might be some overlap of programs offered by the school and the institution but those students would eventually enter the college system.
“One way or the other if those students get this foundations training and then move into apprenticeships then they are going to ladder into our next levels of level two, three and four in those apprenticeship programs that we offer,” he said.
New training centre plan
A17 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Question of the WeekOur lead test driver Zack Spencer today writes about the fantasy car of millions—the Chevrolet Corvette. If you were offered a chance to take a sports car on a track what would you choose and why?
Safety Tip:If you’re taking a road trip over the long weekend, be sure to
visit drivebc.ca to check road and weather conditions beforehand as they can be unpredictable in the winter. Make sure your vehicle is properly equipped and adjust your speed to the conditions you encounter.
follow us…
/Driveway
@DrivewayCanada
OF THE WEEK!
?QUESTION
Go to DrivewayCanada.ca for question of the week
DrivewayCanada.ca | Welcome to the driver’s seat e driver’s seat
Jeep: designed in Motor City, made in ItalySan Jose, California – A new little Jeep with an Italian accent, called Renegade, will soon be available in Canadian dealerships. It’s designed in Detroit and built in Italy, but the iconic Jeep Wrangler influences are easy to spot. The Renegade is a contem-porary and more playful interpretation of Jeep, offering passenger-friendly utility, good on-road performance and fuel econ-omy combined with surprisingly impressive off-road prowess. The new model presents a fresh and cheerful overall design attitude that’s sure to appeal to younger buyers. An “X” motif that appears in numerous places, including the taillights, was taken from the rear-mounted jerry can on the original Willys army vehicle. A cleverly designed lightweight removable (MySpace) dou-ble-sunroof, which stores neatly under the rear cargo area, also adds to the mischie-vous character of Renegade. Jeep points to the Nissan Juke, Mini Countryman and Buick Encore as the expected prime competitors of Renegade. There are, however, a couple of aging compact utilities, Patriot and Compass, already in the Jeep line. So you have to wonder how much longer they’ll be around. Renegade will have a start price of just $19,995 (Sport edition) and comes in two 4x2 trim levels and four 4x4 trim levels, with prices topping out at $31,995. The base 4x2 Sport edition comes with a turbocharged 1.4-litre (Multiair) engine mated to a 6-speed manual trans-mission. The optional ($1,500) powertrain is a 2.4-litre (Multiair Tigershark) engine, paired (no swapping) with a 9-speed automatic. North, with 4x2 or 4x4 drivetrains, is expected to be most popular trim level with all-in pricing in the mid twenties.
Jeep is pushing Renegade as a vehicle with genuine off-road warrior capabili-ties. A Trailhawk 4x4 edition comes with additional ride height, skid plates plus front and rear tow hooks. Unique front/rear fascias improve both approach and departure angle capability and it comes with 17-inch wheels with more aggressive tires. Trailhawk is designed to provide up to 482 mm of water fording capability and it comes with a Jeep Selec-Terrain system that includes a rock mode, Active Drive Low (with 20:1 crawl ratio) and Hill-descent Control.To prove prowess, Jeep included a three-hour stop at Hollister Hills SVRA, an off-road and dirt-biking Mecca about a hour from San Jose, in the drive route. The serious Jeep side of Renegade quickly became apparent as it tackled an arduous obstacle course and a steep hill climbing trail with ease. A short wheelbase makes it highly manoeuvrable in tricky situations and it’s aided by a
fully independent suspension with up to 205 mm (8.1 inches) of wheel articulation. Jeep’s fully automated off-road drive system is also second-to-none.Almost all of the driving tour was in a Renegade equipped with the 2.4-litre (180-horsepower) engine/automatic combination, which will probably be the most popular pairing. The steering is on the light side and is quicker acting than I’m used to in a Jeep. This high-revving engine is also a more refined and quieter power provider than in Wrangler. Impressively slick in operation, the nine-speed speed automatic is certainly setup for best fuel economy, with four overdrive gears.The turbocharged 1.4-litre (160-horsepower) base engine offers surprising oomph and seemed to make Renegade a bit quicker off the line. The 6-speed manual
is a little vague and has a notchy engagement feel, but I did like the cue ball style shift leaver. While official fuel economy numbers were not available, Jeep is expecting a combined fuel rating of about 8.1 L/100km, which would be excellent. The 4x4 versions of Renegade also feature a unique disconnecting rear axle feature that should provide fuel economy numbers that are close to the 4x2 versions.Tek-Tonic is what Jeep designers dubbed the Ren-egade’s funky yet functional interior. The Wrangler theme is also evident inside and includes the requisite passenger grab handle. It’s a softer, more comfortable Jeep people place with practical features such as the fold-forward front-passenger seat and a removable, reversible and height-adjustable cargo floor panel. Renegade is also tall folk friendly with oodles of head-room, so they could even wear a hat. A minor tall-roof drawback was noted, however, when I tried to reach for a distant sun visor above the upright windshield.Jeep claims Renegade has up to 70 standard and available safety and security features. There are seven standard air bags, including a driver’s knee air bag. On top of that you can layer an impressive list of optional active safety features that includes Forward Collision Warning with Active Braking, Lane Departure Warning, Blind-spot Monitoring, Rear Cross Path detection, ParkView and a Rear Backup Camera.The all-new 2015 Jeep Renegade is in a word…how you say…Stupendo!
‘‘The Renegade is a contemporary and more playful interpretation of Jeep, offering passenger-friendly utility, good on-road performance and fuel economy combined with surprisingly impressive off-road prowess.’’Bob McHugh
Visit the Jeep Renegade gallery at DrivewayCanada.ca
Brought to you by the Interior News
Support the businesses who support you, shop local.
A18 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
drivewayBC.ca ON
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
bra
nd o
f Gen
eral
Mot
ors
of C
anad
a. O
ffers
app
ly to
the
leas
e of
a 2
015
Chev
role
t Tra
x LS
Air
& Au
to a
nd E
quin
ox L
S FW
D. F
reig
ht ($
1,65
0) a
nd P
DI in
clud
ed. L
icen
se, i
nsur
ance
, reg
istra
tion,
adm
inis
tratio
n fe
es, d
eale
r fee
s, P
PSA
and
appl
icab
le ta
xes
not i
nclu
ded.
Dea
lers
are
free
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 to
cha
nge
with
out n
otic
e. O
ffers
app
ly to
qua
lifie
d re
tail
cust
omer
s in
BC
Chev
role
t Dea
ler M
arke
ting
Asso
ciat
ion
area
onl
y. De
aler
ord
er o
r tra
de m
ay b
e re
quire
d. *
Offe
r val
id to
elig
ible
reta
il le
ssee
s in
Can
ada
who
hav
e ob
tain
ed c
redi
t app
rova
l by
and
ente
red
into
a le
ase
agre
emen
t with
GM
Fin
anci
al, a
nd w
ho a
ccep
t del
iver
y fro
m F
ebru
ary
3 th
roug
h M
arch
2, 2
015
of a
ny n
ew o
r dem
onst
rato
r 201
5 m
odel
yea
r Che
vrol
et (e
xcep
t 201
5 M
Y Ch
evro
let C
olor
ado
2SA)
. City
Exp
ress
exc
lude
d at
out
set o
f pro
gram
; will
be
elig
ible
onc
e re
sidu
als
beco
me
avai
labl
e. G
ener
al M
otor
s of
Can
ada
will
pay
the
first
two
bi-w
eekl
y le
ase
paym
ents
as
defin
ed o
n th
e le
ase
agre
emen
t (in
clus
ive
of ta
xes)
. Afte
r the
firs
t tw
o bi
-wee
kly
paym
ents
, les
see
will
be
requ
ired
to m
ake
all r
emai
ning
sch
edul
ed p
aym
ents
ove
r the
rem
aini
ng te
rm o
f the
leas
e ag
reem
ent.
PPSA
/RDP
RM is
not
due
. Con
sum
er m
ay b
e re
quire
d to
pay
dea
ler f
ees.
Insu
ranc
e, li
cens
e, a
nd a
pplic
able
taxe
s no
t inc
lude
d. A
dditi
onal
con
ditio
ns a
nd li
mita
tions
app
ly. G
M re
serv
es
the
right
to m
odify
or t
erm
inat
e th
is o
ffer a
t any
tim
e w
ithou
t prio
r not
ice.
See
dea
ler f
or d
etai
ls. †
† Of
fer a
pplie
s to
elig
ible
cur
rent
ow
ners
or l
esse
es o
f any
mod
el y
ear 1
999
or n
ewer
car
that
has
bee
n re
gist
ered
and
insu
red
in C
anad
a in
the
cust
omer
’s n
ame
for t
he p
revi
ous
cons
ecut
ive
six
(6) m
onth
s. C
redi
t val
id to
war
ds th
e re
tail
purc
hase
or l
ease
of o
ne e
ligib
le 2
015
mod
el
year
Che
vrol
et c
ar, S
UV, c
ross
over
and
pic
kup
mod
els
deliv
ered
in C
anad
a be
twee
n Fe
brua
ry 3
and
Mar
ch 2
, 201
5. C
redi
t is
a m
anuf
actu
rer t
o co
nsum
er in
cent
ive
(tax
incl
usiv
e) a
nd c
redi
t val
ue d
epen
ds o
n m
odel
pur
chas
ed: $
750
cred
it av
aila
ble
on e
ligib
le C
hevr
olet
veh
icle
(exc
ept C
olor
ado
2SA,
Cor
vette
, Cam
aro
Z28,
Mal
ibu
LS, S
ilver
ado
1500
and
HD)
. Offe
r app
lies
to e
ligib
le
curr
ent o
wne
rs o
r les
sees
of a
ny P
ontia
c/Sa
turn
/SAA
B/Hu
mm
er/O
ldsm
obile
mod
el y
ear 1
999
or n
ewer
car
or C
hevr
olet
Cob
alt o
r HHR
that
has
bee
n re
gist
ered
and
insu
red
in C
anad
a in
the
cust
omer
’s n
ame
for t
he p
revi
ous
cons
ecut
ive
six
(6) m
onth
s. C
redi
t val
id to
war
ds th
e re
tail
purc
hase
or l
ease
of o
ne e
ligib
le 2
015
mod
el y
ear C
hevr
olet
car
, SUV
, cro
ssov
er a
nd p
icku
ps m
odel
s de
liver
ed in
Can
ada
betw
een
Febr
uary
3 a
nd M
arch
2, 2
015.
Cre
dit i
s a
man
ufac
ture
r to
cons
umer
ince
ntiv
e (ta
x in
clus
ive)
: $1,
500
cred
it av
aila
ble
on e
ligib
le C
hevr
olet
veh
icle
s (e
xcep
t Col
orad
o 2S
A, C
orve
tte, C
amar
o Z2
8, a
nd M
alib
u LS
). Of
fer i
s tra
nsfe
rabl
e to
a fa
mily
mem
ber l
ivin
g w
ithin
the
sam
e ho
useh
old
(pro
of o
f add
ress
requ
ired)
. As
part
of th
e tra
nsac
tion,
dea
ler m
ay
requ
est d
ocum
enta
tion
and
cont
act G
ener
al M
otor
s of
Can
ada
Lim
ited
(GM
CL) t
o ve
rify
elig
ibili
ty. T
his
offe
r may
not
be
rede
emed
for c
ash
and
may
not
be
com
bine
d w
ith c
erta
in o
ther
con
sum
er in
cent
ives
. Cer
tain
lim
itatio
ns o
r con
ditio
ns a
pply.
Voi
d w
here
pro
hibi
ted.
See
you
r GM
CL d
eale
r for
det
ails
. GM
CL re
serv
es th
e rig
ht to
am
end
or te
rmin
ate
offe
rs fo
r any
reas
on in
who
le
or in
par
t at a
ny ti
me
with
out p
rior n
otic
e. †
Bas
ed o
n GM
Tes
ting
in a
ccor
danc
e w
ith a
ppro
ved
Tran
spor
t Can
ada
test
met
hods
. You
r act
ual f
uel c
onsu
mpt
ion
may
var
y. >
Bas
ed o
n W
ards
Auto
.com
201
2 Up
per S
mal
l seg
men
t, ex
clud
ing
Hybr
id a
nd D
iese
l pow
ertra
ins.
Sta
ndar
d 10
airb
ags,
ABS
, tra
ctio
n co
ntro
l and
Sta
biliT
rak.
~ R
equi
res
com
patib
le m
obile
dev
ice,
act
ive
OnSt
ar
serv
ice
and
data
pla
n. V
isit
onst
ar.c
a fo
r cov
erag
e m
aps,
det
ails
and
sys
tem
lim
itatio
ns. S
ervi
ces
and
conn
ectiv
ity m
ay v
ary
by m
odel
and
con
ditio
ns. O
nSta
r with
4G
LTE
conn
ectiv
ity is
ava
ilabl
e on
cer
tain
veh
icle
s an
d in
sel
ect m
arke
ts. C
usto
mer
s w
ill b
e ab
le to
acc
ess
this
ser
vice
onl
y if
they
acc
ept t
he O
nSta
r Use
r Ter
ms
and
Priv
acy
Stat
emen
t (in
clud
ing
softw
are
term
s). ¥
Le
ase
base
d on
a p
urch
ase
pric
e of
$22
,685
/$26
,435
(inc
ludi
ng $
0/$1
,000
leas
e cr
edit
and
a $7
50 O
wne
r Cas
h) fo
r a 2
015
Trax
LS
Air &
Aut
o (1
SA) a
nd E
quin
ox L
S FW
D (1
SA).
Bi-w
eekl
y pa
ymen
t is
$119
/$13
9 fo
r 48
mon
ths
at 0
.5%
/0.9
% A
PR a
nd in
clud
es F
reig
ht a
nd A
ir Ta
x, o
n ap
prov
ed c
redi
t to
qual
ified
reta
il cu
stom
ers
by G
M F
inan
cial
. Ann
ual k
ilom
eter
s lim
it of
20,
000
km, $
0.16
per
exc
ess
kilo
met
er. $
1,67
5/$1
,600
dow
n pa
ymen
t req
uire
d. P
aym
ent m
ay v
ary
depe
ndin
g on
dow
n pa
ymen
t tra
de. T
otal
obl
igat
ion
is $
14,0
39/$
16,1
23, p
lus
appl
icab
le ta
xes.
Opt
ion
to p
urch
ase
at le
ase
end
is $
8,96
0/$1
0,98
0. P
rice
and
tota
l obl
igat
ion
excl
udes
lice
nse,
insu
ranc
e, re
gist
ratio
n, ta
xes,
dea
ler f
ees,
opt
iona
l equ
ipm
ent.
Othe
r lea
se o
ptio
ns a
re a
vaila
ble.
De
aler
s ar
e fre
e to
set
indi
vidu
al p
rices
. Lim
ited
time
offe
r whi
ch m
ay n
ot b
e co
mbi
ned
with
oth
er o
ffers
. See
you
r dea
ler f
or c
ondi
tions
and
det
ails
. Gen
eral
Mot
ors
of C
anad
a Li
mite
d re
serv
es th
e rig
ht to
am
end
or te
rmin
ate
this
offe
r, in
who
le o
r in
part,
at a
ny ti
me
with
out p
rior n
otic
e. ¥
¥ Co
mpa
rison
bas
ed o
n 20
13 P
olk
segm
enta
tion:
Com
pact
SUV
and
late
st c
ompe
titiv
e da
ta
avai
labl
e an
d ba
sed
on th
e m
axim
um le
groo
m a
vaila
ble.
Exc
lude
s ot
her G
M b
rand
s. ^
Whi
chev
er c
omes
firs
t. Li
mit
of fo
ur A
CDel
co L
ube-
Oil-F
ilter
ser
vice
s in
tota
l. Fl
uid
top-
offs
, ins
pect
ions
, tire
rota
tions
, whe
el a
lignm
ents
and
bal
anci
ng, e
tc.,
are
not c
over
ed. A
dditi
onal
con
ditio
ns a
nd li
mita
tions
app
ly. S
ee d
eale
r for
det
ails
. ^^
Whi
chev
er c
omes
firs
t. Se
e de
aler
for d
etai
ls.
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Call Coast Mountain Chevrolet Buick GMC at 250-847-2214, or visit us at 4038 Yellowhead Highway 16 West, Smithers. [License #10041]
Prius Woody Edition
The owner of this Toyota Prius is clearly a carpenter.Imagine the work that went into creating those wooden taillight
surrounds, the wooden rear bumper and the wooden trim on the
rear doors. Wouldn’t a trip to the body shop been a little easier?
– After all, it appears the car was rear ended so the fix should
have been paid by the driver who crashed into the Prius. Ah, this
was shot south of the border and some people don’t carry car
insurance there . . . . we hear.
Pic of the Week
Drives-U-CrazyBeauticians say that applying mascara properly is a task that requires great concentration, like driving.
Wonder why the woman in the car next to me figured she could embark upon that task during the red and complete it as she crossed the intersection on the green.
What [email protected]
www.interior-news.com A19The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Studio
Retoucher
Proofreader
Print Mgr.
Art Director
Copywriter
Creative Dir.
Acct. Mgmt.
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www.interior-news.com B1The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
SPORTS [email protected]
250-847-2828 1314 Main Street
Smithers
Hours: Mon-Thurs 11-8 Fri 11–9Sat 11-8 Sun 10-8
Sunday Breakfast Buffet
Ask us about your frequent diner card.Limited time left
Celebrate Valentines with us.
Come in for a delicious dinner for two.
2015 SmithersSpirit of the Mountains Winter Festival
January 28 - February 7, 2015The Town of Smithers extends a BIG thank you to all those who helped to make this year’s Spirit of the Mountains Winter Festival a success. We hope you enjoyed the eleven days of activities and events that were planned.
Our Event Providers include:
B & T Wagon Rides Bulkley Backcountry Ski SocietyBulkley Valley Cross Country Ski ClubBV Pool & Recreation CentreHudson Bay MountainMOST for Children ECDSmithers Figure Skating Club Smithers Snowmobile Association Smithers Steelheads Hockey groupSmithers Recreation staffSmithers Works and Operations staffTrails North
If you would like to host an activityduring next year’s Festival, please contact the Department of Recreation, Parks & Cultureat 250.847.1600.
Thank You!
Steelheads make early exit from playoffsBy Kendra WongTerrace/Interior News
The Smithers Steelheads won’t be going for the four-peat this year after the team lost 4-3 to the Terrace River Kings in a do-or-die game on the road over the weekend.
It was a problem that plagued the team the entire season and eventually did them in: a short bench.
“We had a pretty limited lineup again,” said assistant coach Darryl Devries. “It’s a working man’s league and I’d say our top four to five players had to go out and work in the last week. That was a big loss for us.”
On Saturday, the team suited up and made the trek to Terrace with just 12 players for game two of the best-of-three series — a far cry from the full bench they had during last week’s home game.
Penalties got the team into trouble early with Devon Hayhurst
taking a penalty in the first. The River Kings wasted no time
capitalizing on the powerplay with a shot from forward Jordan Peddle past netminder David Little to open the scoring.
Seven minutes later, forward Brendan Devries drew a tripping penalty and rookie Jayden Janzen
beat goalie Patrick Leal to even it up.
In the second, the River Kings doubled their lead to make it 4-2, one of which was a short-handed goal.
“A lot of players from our third and fourth lines really stepped up for us and they did a great job,”
said Devries. In the end, the River Kings
staved off elimination, winning 5-3 to force game three the following day.
For Sunday’s game, the return of defenceman Ian Smith helped the team out on the back end.
Coach Devries had to rely on Randall Groot on both defence and offence, starting him on the blueline, before moving him back to forward in one last push to get them on the board in the final frame.
“Playing [defence] I was just keeping it simple, and then I got to go up front the last 10 minutes and the puck bounced my way and I was able to bury my chances,” said Groot. “We almost came back.”
Their early exit from the playoffs marks the end of yet another season.
“We really develop year in and year out,” said Devries.
“The new players that come in, they develop that same energy and ways to win.”
Steelheads forward Brendan Devries tries to get one past a River Kings player in the � rst period of Saturday’s 5-3 loss.
Kendra Wong photo
VS.
4
Terrace River Kings
Smithers Steelheads
3
B2 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
SPORTS
Have you been hurt in a car crash or other accident through someone else’s fault? Has this cut into your ability to earn income? You may be entitled to compensation.
As the injured person, you have to prove that your income earning capacity is less. In a recent case, our B.C. Court of Appeal discussed the right approach when assessing this kind of compensation and the evidence the court will consider.
Janet (name changed), 31, was hurt in a car accident in 2009. She had just obtained her law degree and was articling (a kind of apprenticeship for recent law graduates). She suffered shoulder injuries which, at the trial four years later, still caused her pain during many activities.
Her injuries also meant she could only work at about 70% of the level of a full-time private practice lawyer, given all the stresses, demands and deadlines of a full-time practice. But she could still pursue other careers in law – possibly as an academic after getting a Ph.D. The trial judge decided her future lost earning ability was $300,000. The defendant challenged this.
But the appeal court said the trial judge correctly decided Janet’s compensation. Income earning capacity is a capital asset. Where that asset is impaired, as a starting point it’s appropriate to look at the average income of the class of workers to which the injured person belongs. That should be proved to the court by expert evidence.
In Janet’s case, an economist gave a report on the incomes of a class of roughly equivalent female lawyers in B.C., using the best available statistics. The court said this sort of statistical data was routinely used by economic experts. Then, said the appeal court, appropriate adjustments should be made, based on the circumstances of the injured person.
For example, Janet had been interested in environmental, immigration and Aboriginal law or perhaps working in a non-pro� t organization. Do lawyers in these careers earn less money than, say, lawyers who do business law? Would Janet have earned less than the “average” lawyer in her class? The defendant argued that lawyers working in a govern-ment-funded environmental law clinic might make $60,000 a year on average – less than other lawyers in B.C. None of these points were proved, however, by the defendant.
The Court of Appeal said it needed to be cautious about arbitrarily deducting for a “negative contingency,” especially as there was no evidence to support the deduction.
It said: “She was not yet settled in a career. It was not an error, in my view, for the judge to start the assessment on the footing that her career path was likely to resemble that of any other female practicing law in British Columbia and that her pre-injury earning capacity was unlikely to be signi� cantly above or below average.”
The appeal court therefore didn’t change the $300,000 compensation award made by the trial judge for Janet’s reduced earning capacity. If you’re hurt in an accident, you should see a lawyer.
Written by Janice and George Mucalov, LL.B.s with contribution by GILLESPIE & COMPANY LLP. This column provides information only and must not be relied on for legal advice. Please contact GILLESPIE & COMPANY LLP at 250.374.4463 or [email protected] for legal advice concerning your particular case.Lawyer Janice Mucalov is an award-winning legal writer. “You and the Law” is a registered trade-mark. © Janice and George Mucalov
Written by Janice and George Mucalov, LL.B.s with contribution by GILLESPIE & COMPANY LLP. This column provides information only and must not be relied on for legal advice. Please contact GILLESPIE & COMPANY LLP at 250.374.4463 or [email protected] for legal advice concerning your particular case.Lawyer Janice Mucalov is an award-winning legal writer. “You and the Law” is a registered trade-mark. © Janice and George Mucalov
You LAW
Rick Garner Erin Hughes Jeff Jakel
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Personal health insurance • RRSPs • Guaranteed investments
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Roy Fowler* FCM Financial Services Inc. Tel: [email protected]/roy.fowler PO Box 3249, 3756 1st Avenue Smithers, BC V0J 2N4
We can help with your goals. Let’s talk about Money for Life.
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Trever Morris* B.Comm FCM Financial Services Inc. Tel: [email protected]/trever.morris PO Box 3249, 3756 1st Avenue Smithers, BC V0J 2N4
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Roy Fowler* FCM Financial Services Inc. Tel: [email protected]/roy.fowler PO Box 3249, 3756 1st Avenue Smithers, BC V0J 2N4
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RECREATION EDUCATION ENVIRONMENT ARTS SOCIAL SERVICES
COMMUNITY MAKES YOU.YOU MAKE YOUR COMMUNITY.
BV Community Foundationbvcf.ca • 250.847.3310
Because of endowment funds such as the Sports Legacy Fund the Bulkley Valley Community Foundation has been able to provide grants to organizations for projects that support community development through sports including recent grants for ski equipment for the Morice Mountain Nordic Ski Club and to the Smithers Saltos Gymnastics Club to assist with the purchase of new matting.
The foundation of my Community starts with you and me.
X-Country skiing in full swingBy Kendra WongSmithers/Interior News
The Bulkley Valley Nordic Club kicked off the race season with the Chris Dahlie open last weekend.
Roughly 60 locals participated in the freestyle mass start under perfect weather conditions.
Patrick Williston came in first in the masters men 7.5-kilometre race, finishing in just over 42 minutes.
“It’s a very supportive environment for cross-country ski racing and a fun family atmosphere,” said Williston, whose two daughters also participated in other age groups.
For Williston, the the uphill climb was a battle.
“It’s just very strenuous to climb hills like that when you’re skate skiing and terrific
way to test your fitness,” he said.
According to Brant Dahlie, who helped set up the race track (the race is named after his grandfather Chris Dahlie), local racers will use this in preparation for larger provincial races.
“It’s a good healthy
race for locals. It’s professionally done so when people go away to bigger races they have a taste of what to expect,” he said.
Other winners include Finlay and Owen Feed, Catherine De Gisi, Hamish Woods, Peter Krause, and Kate Woods.
Zoe Hallman (left) and Mia Recknell take off during the midget girls 3.5-kilometre freestyle mass start race at the nordic centre Sunday.
Kendra Wong photo
www.interior-news.com B3The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Authorized Telus & Shaw
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1215 Main St. Smithers | Phone: 250.847.4499Email: [email protected]
Bulkley ValleyCREDIT UNION
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Bulkley Valley Credit Union July 2007EPS Logos to be supplied to Newspapers
Pantone colours: Pantone 287 Blue Pantone 356 Green Pantone 139 Harvest
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The only locally owned Insurance Brokerage in the Valley.
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@GenomeBC #bghsmithers
Bringing Genomics Home “Genomics: Changing the Way We Mine”
Please join us to explore the potential role for genomics in mining.
Presented by Dr. Susan Baldwin, Professor, Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, UBC
Wednesday, February 18th, 2015 12:00pm – 1:00pm Northwest Community College, Room 109 3966 2nd Avenue, Smithers
Registration is required: www.genomebc.ca/bghsmithers
This event is presented in conjunction with:
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Get up-to-date news, event info, classifi eds & more!
Royals go undefeated over the weekend
By Kendra WongSmithers/Interior News
The BVCS senior girls’ basketball team went undefeated during a play day, beating Hazelton and Smithers Secondary School last weekend.
“It was good, everybody is getting lots of playing time which is good because we have a couple of injuries,” said head coach Ron Van Driel.
“It’s good for our team to see that we don’t lose anything just because someone is hurt.”
First up, the Royals tipped off against the Hazelton Spartans at home. The Royals’ offence gave Hazelton a run for their money and easily went up 25-0 in the first quarter.
It wasn’t until the second quarter when the Spartans finally found the backboard.
The Royals more than quadrupled their lead, winning 77-16.
“The competition allowed us to do a lot of things that we need to work on,” said Van Driel, noting that 10 of 12 players scored points.
“Our layups were better, our passing was really good. We were more balanced in our scoring, which is better for our team in the long-run.”
Forward Flora Badi finished the game with 16 points.
“We got to practice our offensive plays that we’re definitely going to need,” said Badi, adding that the team had solid passing and communication.
Shortly after, the Royals had a tougher time against the Smithers Secondary Gryphons.
It was a lot of back of forth between the two teams. The Royals were up 24-10 after the second quarter. The Gryphons managed to come within eight points after Morgan Monkman sunk a fowl shot late in the fourth.
But the Royals managed to hold the Gryphons at bay and pulled out the win, 50-42.
“It was a little bit more of a test for us,” said Van Driel. “We just went back to our offence, which is just pushing the ball up the floor and we got some fast-break baskets which is good for us.”
“I thought we moved the ball well and transitioned. We scored a lot of fast-break points, we communicated not bad on defence and we had a couple of big three-pointers., said Gryphons head coach Matt Lowndes.
The Gryhpons were supposed to play the Spartans, but Hazelton left early after a disappointing loss to the Royals.
Charles Hayes Secondary was supposed to play as well, but the road conditions prevented them from making the trip.
B4 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
SPORTS
CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH
Sunday Worship Services at 10 a.m.
Sunday School for ages 3-6during the morning worship service.
Pastor Ken Vander Horst1471 Columbia [email protected]
Phone 250-847-2333
“Groundwork”on The Peak at 9:30 am Sundays
Come worship with us at
FAITH REFORMED CHURCH OF TELKWA
Pastor James Folkerts(URC-NA)
1170 Hwy 16, Telkwa
Services at 10 am & 2:30 pm
Listen to “Whitehorse Inn program”
Sundays at 9 am on The Peak 870 am
FELLOWSHIP FELLOWSHIP FELLOWSHIP FELLOWSHIP FELLOWSHIP FELLOWSHIP FELLOWSHIP FELLOWSHIP FELLOWSHIP FELLOWSHIP FELLOWSHIP FELLOWSHIP FELLOWSHIP BAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCH
on the corner of Queen St. and 7th Ave.
Morning Worship 10:45 am with Junior
Church and Nursery
Pastor Chris Kibblewww.smithersbaptist.ca
250-847-3725
Saturday Service• Everyone Welcome •
Seventh Day AdventistContact 250-847-5983
3696 4th Avenue
SMITHERS UNITED CHURCH
250-847-3333
Rev. Alyssa AndersonSunday 10:00 AM
Worship & Children’s Program
At the corner of Queen St. & 8th
Main St. Christian
FellowshipSunday mornings 10:30 a.m.
Pastor Rick Apperson
1065 Main St., SmithersPhone:
250-847-1059
CANADIANREFORMED CHURCH
This proof has been carefully prepared by THE INTERIOR NEWS according to our understanding of your specifications. It may contain errors, please check for proper spelling of names, prices and phone
numbers. Fax changes to us at 847-2995
Pastor James Slaa2788 Upper Viewmount Rd.
All welcome to attend!Contact number 250-847-5879
www.smitherscanrc.org
Sunday WorshipServices
10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.
Affiliated with the PAOC
Welcomes You!Sunday Celebration Service
10:30 a.m.Children’s Ministries during serviceCorner of Viewmount Rd South & Hwy 16
250-847-2466www.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.comwww.mvachurch.com
FAITH REFORMED CHURCH OF TELKWA
BAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCHBAPTIST CHURCH
Christian FellowshipSunday mornings 10:30 a.m.
1065 Main St., Smithers
Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Join us for Services. Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH!Renew your FAITH! We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitors We welcome visitorsand new members.and new members.and new members.and new members.and new members.and new members.and new members.and new members.and new members.and new members.and new members.and new members.and new members.and new members.and new members.
Faith Alive
Upper floor Fitness Northwest Centre, Broadway Ave.
10-12 noon SundaysYouth meeting Fridays at 7 pm
Rev. Don Mott,Phone 250-847-3864
Christian Fellowship
ST. JAMESANGLICAN CHURCH
Rev. Jacob WorleySunday10:00 am - Service and Sunday School
4th Sunday2:00 pm service at St. John the Divine, Quick250-847-6155 • Quick250-847-9881 • Smithers
1636 Princess StreetWelcomes you to worship with us 10 am & 2:30 pm every Sunday
3115 Gould Place
Smithers
Pastor Lou Slagter
250-847-2080
Bethel Reformed
Church
Meeting in the Historic St. Stephen’s Church
1620 Highway 16 in Telkwa
Sunday Morning Worship 10 am
For information e.mail [email protected]
Mount ZionLutheran Church
Rev. Dwayne GoertzenPastor Trevor Brawdy
250-847-2929Email: [email protected]
Website: www.smithersefc.orgServices at 9 & 11:15 a.m.Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
1838 Main St.
EVANGELICAL FREE
CHURCH
Come Cheer your Champions
Admission:Adults $8.00
Seniors & Children $5.00 at the Door.
See you next
Season!
Thanks for a great season
& all your support!
Come Cheer Come Cheer Drive Safely and
ON A ROLLFour-year-old Peyton Pettigrew goes for a spare during the Four Steps to Stardom tournament at Smithers Bowl Sunday. More than 25 locals participated in the zone competition against bowl-ers from Terrace, Quesnel, Prince George, and Williams Lake.
Kendra Wong photo ECONO ADS Ph. 847-3266 Fax 847-29953764 Broadway Avenue, SmithersItems FOR SALE up to $500
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www.interior-news.com B5The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
B6 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
These aphrodisiacs
make for great gifts this
Valentine’s Day
If ever there was a day to rev up the libido and enjoy amorous If ever there was a day to rev up the libido and enjoy amorous Ifeelings, that day is Valentine’s Day. The official day for love Ifeelings, that day is Valentine’s Day. The official day for love Iand romance offers couples the chance to spend time together and express their feelings of affection for each other.
People have enjoyed foods purported to be aphrodisiacs for centuries. Believed to boost the libido, aphrodisiacs were enjoyed by Cleopatra and Casanova, and they were commonly used among ancient Greeks.
Aphrodisiacs are agents that work on the mind and body to increase sexual desire and arousal. Foods affect the body in different ways and can have a positive impact on how a person feels. Certain foods can help promote feelings of intimacy, increase blood flow and create euphoria.
With Valentine’s Day upon us once again, here are some purported aphrodisiacs that can be incorporated into special dinners with a sweetheart.
* Almonds: This nut has been regarded as a fertility symbol through the years. While it has been said almond aroma can incite passion, there is no concrete proof. Still, almonds are a good source of essential fatty acids and important B vitamins that can help prevent coronary artery disease.
* Asparagus: This vegetable may inspire lust in men and women, but it also is a good source of various vitamins. Asparagus is a member of the lily family that is nutrient-dense, containing folic acid, potassium, fiber, vitamin B6, and thiamin.
* Avocados: This fruit has a shape that could put people in the mood. In fact, centuries ago Catholic priests from Spain who visited Mexico found commonly grown avocados to be obscene and prohibited their consumption.
* Bananas: Potassium is a key nutrient for muscle strength. Muscle contractions will be more intense and the body will have greater endurance after consuming bananas.
* Chocolate: Chocolate and romance have often gone hand-in-hand. Chocolate contains the chemical phenylethylamine, a stimulant that releases dopamine and produces feelings of well-being and excitement.
* Figs: This sweet fruit has been revered as an aphrodisiac for thousands of years. In many cultures, figs are considered to be a symbol of fertility. Figs are very high in fiber and have a higher mineral profile than any other fruit or vegetable.
* Hot peppers: Chili peppers and others that contain capsaicin help to increase circulation and stimulate nerve endings. A spicy meal may lead to a spicy ending to the night.
* Oysters: This shellfish is one of the better-known aphrodisiacs. However, not every person finds seafood palatable. Oysters are high in zinc, the mineral known to increase libido. Therefore, it stands to reason that other foods high in zinc might be just as effective at inspiring romantic notions.
* Pomegranates: This fruit owes its power to the antioxidants within. Antioxidants help protect the lining of blood vessels, allowing more blood to flow through and increasing sensitivity around the body.
* Salmon: This pink fish is packed with omega-3 fatty acids that aid in the production of key hormones in the body, including estrogen and testosterone.
A variety of foods that are hailed as aphrodisiacs may add some spice to Valentine’s Day celebrations.
If ever there was a day to rev up the libido and enjoy amorous If ever there was a day to rev up the libido and enjoy amorous I * Bananas: Potassium is a key nutrient for muscle strength. Muscle
Valentine’s Day
Gift&DiningGuide
Larkspur Floral250.847.2445
101-1238 Main St.www.larkspurfloral.com
Deliveries on Valentines Available!
Cloud NinePurchase a Gift Certificate $50.00 or over and receive a Long Stem Purdy’s Chocolate Rose
February 1st - 14th
3830 - 2nd Avenue • 250.847.4621www.cloud9smithers.ca
www.sedazlingerie.com
Show your Valentine
how gorgeous you think they are,
with something sensual ..
Love is the Moment all other moments stop for.Enter in store for a chance to win a night of
romance. See in store for details.
La Petite Maison ~ Main Street Smithers
Salon 11801180 Main Street250.847.4441facebook.com/Salon1180
Expect Valentine’s Day to be a busy night for dining out and plan ahead.
Reservations recommended on Valentine’s Day.
All food made with love!
Check for Valentine’s Day specials.
1126 Main Street, Smithers | 250.847.5629
facebook.com/Salon1180
www.interior-news.com B7The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
As one of North America’s leading energy infrastructure companies, TransCanada believes in building a strong foundation in the communities where we live and work.
We’re playing a leading role in B.C.’s LNG industry, which will generate opportunities across the province for many years to come.
As a member of the Northern B.C. community, we’re proud to sponsor the 2015 Canada Winter Games in Prince George and help to build a legacy of leadership and healthy competition through sports for future generations.
Visit www.TCSponsorship.com to learn more and watch TransCanada’s 2015 Canada Winter Games sponsorship video.
Building a lasting legacy
Building a lasting legacy_5.81x7_Prince Rupert Northern View_V4.indd 1 2/3/2015 11:08:30 AM
Valentine’s DayDrawwin a Gift Certificateand Ski Passes drawn on February 11th
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Spotlight
Follow these clues & create a sentence.clues & create clues & create
• A3: bottom ad, 1st word
• A11: top caption, 11th word
• B1: Steelheads article, 4th
paragraph, 2nd word
SPORTS
Defenceman Eric Smith prepares for game two against the Terrace River Kings on Saturday.
Kendra Wong photo
On the road with the SteelheadsBy Kendra WongSmithers/Interior News
The Smithers Steelheads’ bus isn’t anything fancy.
It’s a commercial bus that fits more than 30 people.
On Saturday, some two dozen people sit stretched out in the seats side-by-side.
With the faint
sound of country music in the background, the team bus pulls out of the arena parking lot destined for Terrace.
It’s not as noisy as you would expect a bus full of hockey players to be.
Conversations are quiet; most players seem to be concentrated on the task at hand —
playing game two of the best-of-three playoff series against the Terrace River Kings.
Each of the 12 players on this road trip has their own way of preparing for the game.
Some listen to music, others joke around and many take the two-and-a-half-hour long bus ride to
rest up. “I think about the
game before I go on the road trip,” said assistant coach Darryl Devries.
See SEASON on B12
Advertising space donated by The Interior News
B8 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
The Interior News
Help Wanted Help Wanted
The Bulkley Valley Exhibition
14 hours/week (Monday/Tuesday) February 23 – March 31, 2015
QUalifications:
• Proficiency in the use of computer programs, including, Word, Excel • Filing, sorting, data entry, inventory and attention to detail• Excellent phone skills necessary• Valid driver’s license necessary• A friendly, professional manner in dealing with the public.• Ability to handle pressure situations• Work independently• Ability to lift 40 lb boxes. • Be prepared for manual labor inside or out if the need arises.Please, contact BVX at [email protected] for a detailed job description. Applicants must submit a cover letter and detailed resume outlining qualifications, experience and wage requirements. Please include 3 references. Remuneration will be determined by skills and experience.
Email or Fax Resume and Cover Letter to: [email protected] or fax to 1.888.754.5361 RE: Office Assistant Part Time.
DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: Friday February 20th, 2015. Please note the starting date of the position; February 23rd.
Office Assistant (part time)
www.bvfair.ca
Keep the good feeling going by asking for your returns to be
donated to the BC Special Olympics at the Smithers Bottle Depot
Wasn’t that a party?!
www.interior-news.com B9 Wednesday, February 11, 2015
- INVITATION TO TENDER -
The Bulkley Valley Child Development Centre is inviting qualified contractors to
submit a bid for the Phase 1 renovation of the new Bulkley Valley Child
Development Centre.
Bidding packages are available at Bidding packages are available at www.bvcdc.ca and the BVCDC office
located at 3350 Poplar Road, Smithers BC.
Deadline for tender submission is February 16th, 2015 at 4 pm.
For more information contact:Kerri Bassett:Kerri Bassett:
[email protected] Phone: 250-847-4122
B10 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
$57,200
1316 Kitwanga Road, Kitwanga• 3 acres, 3 bedroom mobile home• Veg garden, fruit trees, green house• Mountain views, shop, storage shed• Close to great fishing&backcountry
Jantina & Kiesha mls n235383
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4922 Fourth Avenue• Excellent location near Golf Course• Large executive home• 2 car garage, inlaw suite,many extras• Stunning view
Sandra Hinchliffe mls n241418
$385,000
3524 Fifteenth Avenue• 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 2 storey + bsmt• Shop, paved drive, fenced yard• Family room & rec, f/p, ensuite• www.realestatesmithers.com
Leo Lubbers mls n240406
$395,000
1580 Aldermere Ridge• New “saferhome”, 1 level rancher• 2/3 bedrooms, 2 full bathrooms• Tile and hardwood flooring• Ridge location, garage, concrete dw
Donna Grudgfield mls n240572
$35,000-39,900
Lots 7,9,10,11 Grantham Road• Four rural 5 acres lots• Sloping, treed, some open meadow• 45 minutes to Smithers, hydro avail• www.smithershomes.com
Ron Lapadat
$234,900
2200 Hankin Ave, Telkwa• Unique home, converted church• Living area has 14’ ceilings• Many upgrades including furnace• Pellet stove, OSBE, garage
Karen Benson mls n237700
$299,000
12792 Alder Road• 5 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms• 5 acres on paved road• 30x30 heated, wired shop• Drilled well, new approved septic
Sandra Hinchliffe mls n238540
$459,000
4346 Whalen Road• 5 acres, paved road, 4 bedrooms• New kitchen, bathrm, exterior stucco• In-law suite or home based space• www.realestatesmithers.com
Leo Lubbers mls n241601
$369,500
1637 Queen Street• Large modern rancher w/ basement• Huge 132x122 lot• Great hill section location• Updates too numerous to mention
Sandra Hinchliffe mls n239848
$439.500
4391 Reiseter Avenue• Immaculate rancher, walk out bsmt• Vaulted ceilings, 4 bdrms, 3 baths• West exposure,Silvering subdivision• www.smithershomes.com
Ron Lapadat mls n242062
$85,000
57 Chapman Street, Granisle• Well maintained & looked after• Newer roof, furnace & hotwater tank• 3 bdrm upstairs, lg rec room in bsmt• Garage, beautifully landscaped, deck
Jantina Meints mls n239364
$279,000
3436 Victoria Drive• Industrial M-2 bare land site• Great location on this 2.41 acres• Water at site line, septic required• Access off Victoria/Fulton Drive
Charlie McClary mls n4506733
$315,000
3757 Thirteenth Avenue• Immaculate 3-4 bdrm, 2 bath house• Updated, move in condition• Big back yard with beautiful view• www.smithershomes.com
Ron Lapadat mls n238229
$525,000
3348 Highway 16 W, Smithers• Far west building, prime location• C-3 zoned, ½ acre lot• 10,500 square ft divided into 3 units• Shop bays, 2 storeys of office space
Ron & Charlie mls n4507093
$283,500
3840 Ninth Avenue• Affordable 5 bdrm+den family home• Well maintained & immaculate• Central location, new flooring• Established gardens/greenhouse
Karen Benson mls n242081
$339,500
3557 Sixteenth Avenue• Immaculate 5 bedroom home• Many upgrades, windows, doors• Roof, siding, flooring & paint• Large fenced yard & gardens
Peter Lund mls n237276
$369,000
1435 Columbia Drive• 3 bdrm, 3 bath rancher, fenced yard• 2810 sf of quality living space• Many features, oak hardwood floors• Spacious 20x30 attached garage
Charlie McClary mls n241322
$289,500
4256 Broadway Avenue• Updated & spacious 5 bdrm, 2 baths• Lg modern kitchen, appliances incl• Big fenced yard, quick possession• www.smithershomes.com
Ron Lapadat mls n241642
$269,000
4245 Third Avenue• 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms• Lots of recent upgrades• Fenced backyard, 66x125 lot• Parking for RV, near arena & school
Donna Grudgfield mls n240979
$595,000
7523 Lake Kathlyn Road• Stunning log home• 3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms• 5 acres, only mins west of Smithers• Wonderful views of lake & more
Kiesha Matthews mls n242026
$164,000
3223 Laurier St, New Hazelton• 1845 sf, 4 bedroom rancher• New hazelton prime residential area• Open design, wheelchair friendly• Huge park like lot
Ron & Charlie mls n237285
$299,500
4252 Second Avenue• One owner, 5 bdrm, 2½ bathroom• Beautiful 99x125 fenced/hedged yd• Vaulted ceiling, hardwood, fireplace• Quick possession available
Ron Lapadat mls n240649
$69,500
#71 Hudson Bay MHP• 3 bedrooms, 14’ wide mobile• 8x12 addition, huge kitchen• Roof, furance & windows new 2007• Covered porch, quick possession
Donna Grudgfield mls n242021
$99,000
#13-9265 George Frontage Rd• Affordable river front living• 3 bedrooms, large fully fenced yard• Beautifully renovated, great view• Quick possession possible
Jantina Meints mls n242071
$289,000
330 Cherry Crescent, Telkwa• 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms• Garage, concrete driveway• Heated floors, HRV system• Built in vacuum, newer sundeck
Donna Grudgfield mls n241969
$249,900
1666 Princess Street• Updated 4 bdrm, 2 bathroom home• Great location near shopping centre• High eff furnace, low heating costs• www.smithershomes.com
Ron Lapadat mls n240761
$79,500
#6 Fulton Street, Granisle• 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms• Carport, sundeck, woodstove• Eating area in kitchen + dining room• 90x100 landscaped lot
Donna Grudgfield mls n240135
$269,000
1308 Morice Drive• Great family neighbourhood• Four bedrooms, covered deck• Updates incl new furnace & hw tank• Paved drive, carport, fenced yard
Sandra Hinchliffe mls n241449
Peter LundRes. 847-3435
Leo LubbersCell. 847-1292
Ron LapadatCell. 847-0335
Sandra HinchliffeCell. 847-0725
Charlie McClaryCell. 877-1770
Karen BensonCell. 847-0548
Donna Grudgfi eldCell. 847-1228
Kiesha MatthewsCell. 876-8420
Jantina MeintsCell. 847-3144
Real Estate Real Estate Real Estate Real Estate Real Estate Real Estate Real Estate Real Estate
250-847-5999Bulkley Valley Real Estate Email: [email protected]
Located in the Log Office at 3568 Hwy. 16Each Office Independently Owned & Operated
Pick up your FREE copy of our Real Estate Flyer and our map of the Bulkley Valley. View more of our listings online at www.remaxsmithersbc.ca or on Facebook.
NEW LISTING
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www.interior-news.com B11The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Jasmynn Mary Schmidt
Born Jan. 19, 2015 at 10:31 a.m. weighing 7 lbs 12 oz
to David and Michelle Schimdt
Adults: $25
Senior: $20 (60+)
Youth: $16 (18 & under)Youth:
Sunday, Feb. 15, 2015Doors open: 7 pm
A mashup of good-times bar blues, old-fashioned Chuck Berry-style rock and roll and Talking Heads-like funk breakdowns.
The Harpoonistand the Axe Murderer
Brought to you by
3772 4th Avenue, Smithers 250-847-4612
SmithersLions Club
Club 222 Raffle 2015
Advertising space donated by The Interior News
January 1 Shane Doodson 14January 8 John Wreggitt 68January 15 Clara Hopps 120January 22 Tinka Von Keyserlingk 190January 29 Ronan / Shae Angman 135
The Interior News 250-847-3266
B12 www.interior-news.com The Interior News Wednesday, February 11, 2015
SPORTS
spread the word on wednesday February 25th.
book your space in our pinkshirtday section. $30 oF each ad will go
to local anti-bullying initiatives.
contact nick or grant at the interior news
250.847.3266e.Mail [email protected]
order your shirts at www.pinkshirtday.ca
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“I think when you come on the bus, you don’t think about the game too often. You just have a good time,” added Devries.
Rookie Wyatt Vanderheyden uses the days leading up to the trip to focus.
“Just make sure you’re eating right, drinking lots of water, preparing yourself mentally, knowing that you gotta put it all out there and get the [win],” said Vanderheyden.
A handful of guys have been playing together for years and are used to life on the road.
While for others, it is their first season with the team.
But one thing is clear — their sense of camaraderie both on and off the ice.
“I enjoy being on the road, it’s fun. You get to hang out with everyone, it’s kind of a bonding thing,” said forward Skylar Hasell, a former Houston Lucky.
Devries agreed.“Everyone gets along and I don’t
think there’s another team in the league who has as good of a time as us, who gels like us,” he said.
Win or lose, each player packs up his gear, the same way they did only hours earlier and loads it back onto the bus for the long ride home.
The country music comes on the system again and they are off, almost as soon as they came, trying to put a 5-3 loss behind them.
Saturday’s game was disappointing for the team — one coaches shared as well.
On Sunday, the Steelheads dropped the final playoff game 4-3 to the River Kings, signaling the end of another year.
The season ended similar to how it began — on the road playing against their west divsion rivals..
From STEELHEADS on B7
Steelheads round out season on the road
Randall Groot laces up his skates before Saturday’s game.
Kendra Wong photo