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Transcript of Alberni Valley News, October 31, 2013
NEWS ❙ [email protected] DELIVERY ❙ 250-723-6399 SALES ❙ [email protected]
THURSDAY, OCT. 31, 2013 ll EDITORIAL Page A8 LETTERS Page A9 SPORTS Page A21 ENTERTAINMENT Page A22 BC CLASSIFIEDS Pages A18-20
www.albernivalleynews.com Vol. 8 No. 10
NEWSAlberni Valley
Every home ◆ Every Thursday ◆ Every day online
Page 4Class hears poignant message from Ernie Crey.
Page 7Doctor urges people to donate blood, enter contest.
AUTUMN TANNINGWAWMEESH
G. HAMILTONALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
Lonnie Olsen has the appearance of a grunge rocker and a man of the land at the same time.
Dressed in a plaid work shirt, thick work jeans and cowboy boots “that I’ve had forever”, Olsen strides past compost buckets lined up on his back porch and down the stairs into the back yard.
Olsen removes the cover off a container and pulls out a dripping wet deer hide that is dotted with bits of fur and flesh.
He drapes the hide over a slanted wooden pole with a wet slap, swings one leg over the fleshing beam to brace himself, then begins drawing downward on the hide with a scraping tool.
“I’m removing the fur and bits of flesh off it to smooth it out,” Olsen says.
“This is the perfect time of year to do this. You can’t in the summer because of the heat and the smell.”
Olsen provides a running commentary as he prepares the deer hide that he’ll later cut into sections to make shoes, handbags, belts and wallets that he sells through his business, Smokin’ Hides.
“This used to be a hobby of mine but now I’m trying to start a business out of it. It’s a pretty big transition,” he said.
Continued / A3
Lonnie Olsen brings traditional hide curing methods into 21st century.
‘This is the perfect time of year to do
this.’– Lonnie Olsen
Lonnie Olsen stitches a leather pouch in his home workshop in Port Alberni.
WAWMEESH G. HAMILTONALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
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From / A1Tanning is the process
of treating animal skins to make leather. Two methods are used to tan skins: brain tanning, which uses smoke; and bark tanning, which Olsen uses most often.
In bark tanning, Olsen soaks hides in hemlock bark tea, replenishing the tea as it absorbs into the hide.
“It binds with the protein in the hide and soaks up the tannins. It also helps make the hide water resistant,” Olsen said.
Olsen grew up in Merville in the Comox Valley, and was an avid outdoorsman and hunter.
Hide tanning was a natural extension of hunting, he says. “It’s part of making use out of every part of an animal and leaving nothing to waste.”
After looking at properties in the BC Interior and in Nova Scotia, Olsen and his wife, who works as an acupuncturist, settled on moving to Port Alberni where they bought property. “No one is doing what I do. There’s space to do things here and not overlap with anyone,” he says.
“There’s great access to the woods here too. It’s all gated in Comox.”
There was no one to show him how to tan hides when he started seven years ago. Instead, he researched the topic and taught himself how to do it. “Lots of trial and error,” he says.
The first piece of hide he worked with was deer skin, which he smoke tanned. “I still use smoke tanning but mostly for hide stitches,” Olsen says.
(Olsen makes his own material for stitching, which also must be
cured.)Smoke tanning uses no
flame, but oil to soften then wood smoke or soaking. The process softens the hide to a fabric-like texture. Teepee hides, for example, are smoke tanned, Olsen said.
Olsen tans deer, elk,
moose, bear, sheep, and cow hides, and even salmon skin, he said. Other people, hunters in particular, will give him hides or he finds them himself.
There is a process to tanning a hide, he said.
When Olsen skins an
animal, he chooses to pull the hide off by hand instead of with a knife. “Using a knife can cause score marks or holes that cause tears later,” he said.
Afterward, he peels the hide by draping it over a fleshing beam and scraping bits of fur, fat and
meat off with a knife.When this is done he
soaks the skin in a covered container filled with a solution of wood ash or hydrating lime to break down the mucus and glues in the hide.
Soaking can take as little as two weeks for deer hide
or as long as six months for big elk and moose hides, Olsen says.
After soaking, Olsen again scrapes remaining hair and membrane. He soaks it once more in diluted vinegar to return the hide to a natural PH balance.
Continued / A6
Old world tanning for new world man
WAWMEESH G. HAMILTONALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
Hide tanner Lonnie Olsen, far left, draws a sharp tool down a soaking hide to remove hair and fat on a fleshing beam.Olsen, above, hand stitches a pouch he’s making from a hide he cured bark-tan style.A shoe made from a Viking-style pattern is just one of several things Olsen makes from hides he tans.
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‘Dog Days
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Bad Vision Picturing Alberni
The Alberni Valley Bulldogs are playing three games in three days. They play in Coquitlam on Friday, Surrey on Saturday and Chilliwack on Sunday. Sheeew, that’s a lot of games. Wowsers. Check out the action on 93.3 The PEAK.
The craft fair season begins in earnest this weekend with Beaver Creek Community Club’s annual Christmas Craft Fair, Sunday, Nov. 3 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.at the Beaver Creek Hall. The big fair runs Nov. 8-10 at the Athletic Hall, and the Fiesta World Craft Bazaar is back on Saturday, Nov. 9 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Echo Centre.
The Rollin Art Centre’s exhibit “Rights and Wrongs-The Resilience of the World’s Indigenous People” runs until Nov. 9. The exhibit is on loan from North Island College International in Campbell River.
Is your eyesight not what it used to be (whose isn’t but some more than others). A support group for all ages might be for you. The group meets on Monday, Nov. 4 at Valley Vision Optical on Redford Street. Start time: 10 a.m.
You simply must see the new exhibit at the Alberni Valley Museum. “Picturing Alberni” officially opens Nov. 7, but the artwork is up now. The exhibit features 120 pieces of two-dimensional work from the city’s art collection. The museum is open Tuesday to Saturday at 4255 Wallace St.
The Alberni Valley Bulldogs are on a three-game road trip this weekend.
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A6 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 - Alberni Valley News6 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 Alberni Valley News
Process labour intensive
From / A3“If you leave it then
the tannins won’t be able to penetrate the hide,” he said.
He then dries and re-hydrates the hide with another coat of oil to soften it.
Some bark tanned leather was once found in a 400-year-old shipwreck and after drying out was still usable.
“It was still good to go after 400 years at the bottom of the sea,” he says.
Depending what he wants to make, Olsen cuts pieces from the hide using one of several patterns. He makes book bags, laptop bags, purses, fanny packs, belts and wallets. He’s making a pair of shoes taken from the pattern of Viking-style slip-ons, and even made baseball caps.
“For some reason those are really popular. I need to make more of them.”
Olsen sells his goods on his website, SmokinHides.wordpress.com as well as Etsy.com. He even has people ask him to make things for them when they see him wearing them.
The goods sell from between $30–$350. “It’s a real labour-intensive process and I spend hours and hours at it. I even hand-stitch everything,” Olsen said.
Twitter.com/AlberniNews
Survey gauges Pulse of communityReaders of the
Alberni Valley News, a Black Press community newspaper, and sister papers across Vancouver Island have a chance to win a cool $1,000 for completing an online survey that will help local businesses better understand customers in their community.
Black Press has partnered with respected research company Pulse Research to bring the Pulse of Vancouver Island survey to readers. The survey looks at the shopping plans and priorities of our readers and their media reading habits. Reader answers will help gauge the current consumer climate at the local level to help business from mom-and-pop outlets to national retailers craft new ways to serve
their customers.Responses will
be kept completely confidential; reader contact information will only be gathered in order to enter the name into a prize draw for one of five $1,000 cash prizes to be given away on Vancouver Island.
Readers who submit survey before Nov. 15 will also have their name entered into a draw for a $20 grocery gift card.
The online survey will take about 35 to
40 minutes, erasing the need for readers to spend long periods of time on the phone answering questions.
“We are very excited to be a part of this service to the business community,” says Alberni Valley News publisher Teresa Bird. “We are pleased to be able to offer this information and are certain it will be beneficial.”
The Pulse Research survey has already been successful for businesses.
Among the benefits of the study is allowing businesses to identify niche areas of their business, including showing potential areas for growth or expansion.
Pulse Research was founded in 1985 to provide publishing clients with research-based advertising sales and marketing programs designed to get results.
Check out pulseresearch.com/vi to complete the survey.
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Donate blood and win a docSUSAN QUINN
ALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
Doctor Shane Longman can do a lot of things.
But one thing the general practitioner does exceptionally well is donate blood.
On Nov. 5, Longman will make his 100th donation when the Canadian Blood Services clinic comes to the Best Western Barclay Hotel. In honour of this personal milestone and to bring awareness to the need for donating blood, Longman is holding a contest to win Shane-4-A-Day.
All you have to do is go to the clinic between Nov. 5–7 and donate blood, and you can enter the contest. Or, make a donation for the École Alberni Elementary School playground fund, a
project also close to Longman’s heart as two of his four children attend the school.
“I want it to be in the spirit of fun,” says Longman. “There’s certainly a lot of things I can do: I can teach ballroom dancing, I can show you how to make beeswax candles. I have a professional espresso machine I can bring into your office to make everyone espresso.”
He’s also willing to dress up in costume to promote someone’s business or event.
He can rake leaves and babysit, but “I hope people take this in the spirit of what it is: to be fun.”
The blood clinics are Nov. 5–6 from 2–7 p.m. and Nov. 7 from 12:30–5:30 p.m. Call 1-888-236-6283 to book.
BLOOD DRIVE: | Dr. Shane Longman celebrates his 100th donation with fun contest.
SUSAN QUINN/ALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
Want to learn ballroom dancing? Or have a meal cooked by someone else? Donate blood at the next donor clinic Nov. 5–7 at the Best Western Barclay and you could win Dr. Shane Longman for a day.
WAWMEESHG. HAMILTON
ALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
The development permit application for a liquor store on lower Third Avenue is going back to the city for yet more revisions.
City council voted to table the application a second time at their meeting on Oct. 28.
At issue this time is the matter of delivery trucks. According to the site plan, the trucks are expected to stop on Third Avenue then back into the new facility.
Two issues subsequently arose. One, the wrong size truck was used when assessing the turning path. Tests with a correctly sized truck
showed that it passed over two parking spaces when turning in.
The parking spaces were taken out of the equation and the tests ran successfully. A third party transportation planner reviewed the plan and agreed that it accommodated the initial concern.
Coun. Cindy Solda said she canvassed two trucking firms about the truck turning path. One said it couldn’t be done, while the other said it’s not the greatest plan but that it could be done.
Mayor John Douglas asked Solda why she didn’t canvass city staff instead. “Because the city doesn’t have
a semi,” Solda said. “If Mister Watson drove a semi then I’d ask him.”
City manager Ken Watson reminded council that council already approved the re-zoning. Further, that council’s only concern now was with the form and character of the facility and the requirements that needed to be met to that end.
Solda said she had no problem with the business, only with the trucks.
Solda suggested tabling the issue for a second time and having a third-party firm review the plan. Council can do that, Watson replied, “But a third party will likely find the same thing,”
he said. “The review by the third party says it’s workable, not ideal — workable.”
Best Western Barclay Hotel owner Peter Muggleston took issue with the third party consultant used by the proponent, saying that the firm also examined the project on behalf of critics. Conflict aside, the issue of safety with trucks turning onto the property remained.
Council “doesn’t have the information to make an informed decision,” Muggleston said.
Project proponent Bhagwant Mann owns liquor outlets in four different municipalities.
Liquor store plans delayed again
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Principles For Livingby Dr. Carl Weber, BPE (Hon), DC
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Not on my watch“Wow, I sure wish I had started getting Chiropractic care at their age” Barb said as she watched two young children leave the room after their adjust-ment. “I really believe that the next generations will have to take much better care of themselves than my and my parents’ generations did. “Barb spoke from experience. After watching her aging mom lose the dignities of life that we all take for granted, she has earned her opinion. “It’s tough watching my mom lose the health of her hips and knees. I spend half my time taking her to specialists. The system’s too backed up and I don’t think it’s going to get any better. It’s going to be up to people to really work on their health during their entire lifetime.” I couldn’t agree more with Barb. In my 3rd decade as a Chiropractor, I am struck by the sheer number of seniors that only now want to seriously begin working on their health. Many of them have already had knee and hip re-placements. I would like to pose a new health conscience and consciousness. Let’s move from “replacement” thinking and instead devote some of those science and health care dollars to preventive health care for the young and susceptible. Let’s screen children to determine who needs more exercise and what type to preserve the health of their joints. How about nutritional counseling funded by taxing the alcohol, tobacco, fast and junk food industries to ensure that every child and family is educated on health habits with an emphasis on nat-ural and whole food nutrition. Existing health professionals could volunteer their time in exchange for subsidized tuition. Then let’s instill, from birth, a moral obligation to keep ourselves well. We need to not become a burden to each other, to our families, to the health care system, and we need to be made aware of that responsibility from an early age. It’s time for change. There is no room in the system for anything but proactive wellness. Watching the kids leave the adjustment room, I smiled to myself. I know those kids will make great 80 year olds. I know their spine, knees, hips and shoulders, barring catastrophic injury, won’t need replacement. Not on my watch.Peace, Carl
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Thank-you to the Alberni Valley Bulldogs and fans for participating in the Frisbee Toss and raising $294.55 for the Breast Cancer Foundation! Thank-you Andre Guerin and the Port Alberni Firefi ghters for volunteering your time for a great cause. You raised $395!
A8 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 - Alberni Valley News
V ICTORIA – With the B.C. and federal
governments once again struggling to climb out of deep operating deficits, it’s a good time for the release of Mark Milke’s book Tax Me, I’m Canadian.
An update of the same title published 12 years ago, the book retains the history of taxes in Canada, detailing how Canada’s tax system was initially built to mimic the United States system in the late 19th century.
Beyond the history, it is mostly new material. Included are chapters on the global meltdown of 2009, the surge of pension liabilities as the baby boomers retire and the flawed logic behind the “Occupy” and “Idle No More” protests.
Some readers will immediately note that Milke works for the
Fraser Institute and was previously B.C. director of the Canadian Taxpayers’ Federation. But the book is not just an argument for cutting taxes. It also dismantles persistent myths that income taxes are illegal, and launches a broadside on what Milke calls “Canada’s corporate welfare carnival.”
Many people will be able to identify some top names in the government subsidy game: Bombardier, General Motors, even poor old Rolls Royce Canada. Some will also be well aware that our supposedly tight-fisted Conservative federal government has continued to pour out “regional development” and other funds to every part of the country.
But I did not know that Industry Canada grants were handed out to pizza parlours (including the remote pizza-starved village of Kamloops), or to help open gas stations
or convenience stores in Kelowna, Vernon and Chilliwack.
Milke makes a useful point for B.C. about royalty rates for timber, natural gas and other resources. They are resource rents, and if they are too high the tenants will move out. Reducing them isn’t a subsidy, especially if it leads to
big revenue gains as B.C.’s unconventional shale gas incentives have done.
On the Occupy movement: The infamous “one
per cent,” who in Canada earn $250,000 a year or more, earned 10 per cent of all income and paid 20 per cent of all taxes in 2010. The bottom 73 per cent of tax filers paid just 17 per cent of all taxes. About a third paid no tax.
On Idle No More: When Attawapiskat Chief Teresa Spence played to the Ottawa media with her soup strike, former Liberal leader Bob Rae suggested a nearby diamond mine
should share more revenue.
Milke omits the substantial support and employment that mine provides, and glosses over the misguided blockades that disrupted that and other job-creating enterprises. But he does detail the disastrous effects of passive resource wealth bestowed on impoverished aboriginal communities, and contrasts it with the success stories of reserves that build their own enterprises through hard work.
On public sector pensions: Milke notes that historically, public employees traded higher wages for better benefits and job security. Now their wages are generally higher, and taxpayers have to cover their personal pension contributions (as a portion of those wages) as well as the employer contributions, plus the “defined benefit” payout, which has to be subsidized far beyond what the pension fund can support.
Continued / A9
TOM FLETCHERB.C. Views
Perils of running an ‘entitlement state’
To report corrections and clarifications, contact editor Susan Quinn at 250-723-6399 or e-mail: [email protected] or drop by our office at 4656 Margaret St.
Commitmentto accuracyWe welcome your original comments on editorials, columns, on topics in the
Alberni Valley News or any subjects important to you. Only letters that include name, address, and day and evening phone numbers and that are verified by the Alberni Valley News can be considered for publication. Letters to the editor and articles submitted to the Alberni Valley News may be published or distributed in print, electronic or other forms.
The Alberni Valley News is a member of the B.C. Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org.
TO COMMENT …
NEWSAlberni Valley
The Alberni Valley News is published every Thursday by Black Press Ltd., 4656 Margaret St., Port Alberni, B.C. V9Y 6H2. Phone: (250) 723-6399. Fax: (250) 723-6395.Classifieds: 1-855-310-3535.The Alberni Valley News is distributed free to 9,500 households in Port Alberni, Cherry Creek, Sproat Lake and Beaver Creek. The Alberni Valley News is Vancouver Island owned and operated.
Publisher: Teresa BirdEditor: Susan Quinn
EDITORIAL
Foot ferry buoys spirits
It is welcome news that another transportation option wants to set sail from Nanaimo’s shores. Island Ferry Services intends to raise a sunken ship, so to speak, and bring back a fast foot ferry linking downtown Nanaimo to downtown Vancouver.
The plan was pitched to the public last week, and there’s a lot to like. Island
Ferries wants to build its terminal on city-owned land that has already been earmarked as a transportation hub, so any revenue to the municipality at that site is new money.
And this is a service that would benefit people beyond Nanaimo’s borders too. Compared to taking B.C. Ferries to Horseshoe Bay and busing to downtown Vancouver, the ride will basically take half the time, for twice the price. That’s a tradeoff that’s bound to appeal to weary travellers.
Will there be enough of those travellers, though, to make this a successful business venture? The last foot ferry, HarbourLynx, went bankrupt seven years ago.
As with passenger rail, we’ve lived without a foot ferry for so long that we’ve learned to live without it. So even though a foot ferry is an old idea, Island Ferries is, in a way, embarking on a brand-new business venture without really knowing if it’s going to be able to sell tickets.
If it fails, then the municipality might be sinking money into servicing a site, an access road and a parking lot – basically building a transportation hub that goes nowhere.
By all accounts, the two new Island Ferries vessels are seaworthy. We hope the business plan is just as seaworthy, and that in the years to come, these boats become a familiar sight.
— Nanaimo News Bulletin
‘...the book is not just an argument for cutting taxes.’
A8 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday , Oct. 31, 2013 Alberni Valley News
C A N A D I A NCOMMUNITYNEWSPAPERAWARD 2012
2012CCNA
Alberni Valley News - Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 www.albernivalleynews.com A9
Alberni ValleyUnited Church
3747 Church Street, Port AlberniReverend Minnie Hornidge
SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICEPraise Singing - 10:15 am
Worship Service & Children’s Worship -10:30 amwww.albernivalleyuc.com
Phone: 250.723-8332
4109 Kendall, Port AlberniSATURDAY (SABBATH) SERVICES
10:00 am ~ Bible Study11:00 am ~ Family Worship Service
Listen to Christian Family RadioVOAR 104.5 FM in the Alberni ValleyLeave Message: 250.723-6452
Seventh Day Adventist Church
Trinity ChurchAnglican & Lutheran
4766 Angus Street, Port AlberniPastor: George Pell
SUNDAY 10 AMWEDNESDAY 10 AM
Everyone Welcome Phone: 250.724-4921
Trinity Church Port Alberni
Sunday WorshipService -10:30 am
Wed. 9:30am - 11am Bible StudyEveryone welcome to worship with
us at the 7th Day Adventist Church at 4109 Kendall St. • 250.723-7080
CEDAR GROVE CHURCH
A Christian Community of the Reformed Church in Canada
Today is ‘Hallowe’en’, the day before All Saints’ (or ‘All Hallows’) Day. It was on this day in 1517 that Martin Luther posted, on a church door, a list of topics he felt the church needed to discuss. His 95 ‘points for discussion’ began with these words: “Out of love for the truth and the desire to bring it to light.” Luther rec-ognized the need for the church of his day to renew their understanding and practice of faith. That need for reformation was not just a one-time event. In order to be ‘God’s hands, feet, voice, and ears’ in the community, the church needs constant renewal. There is a slogan that rings true; ‘We are a Reformed Church; and always in need of reform.” God grant us the wisdom and humility needed for renewal and reformation.
Pastor’s Pen
◆ OPINION
LettersMail: Letters, Alberni Valley News, 4656 Margaret St., Port Alberni, B.C. V9Y 6H2 Fax: 250-723-6395E-mail: [email protected]
Letters should be no longer than 300 words and will be edited. Include your address and phone number (although those won’t be published) and a first name or two initials. We won’t publish anonymous letters, or letters to third parties.We regret that, due to the volume of letters we receive, not all will be printed.
Mailbag: Feedback on smells, sells and tells
LNG plans for Inlet smell
To the Editor,The idea that a
liquefied natural gas plant located down the Alberni Inlet is “one of the top two sites in B.C.” is utter rubbish. More like the Asian company interested in an LNG plant here was directed to the port authority by the Liberal government who had too many applicants for Prince Rupert and Kitimat, the best sites.
Those cities are far closer to the Orient than we are and are far closer to the fracking sites in Northeastern B.C.
If the origin of the gas supply is in that area, only an idiot would think it’s cheaper to bring natural gas here, probably by new pipelines routed from Northeast B.C. to the Lower Mainland, then to Vancouver Island, and finally to a remote site down the Inlet.
The leading proponent for an LNG plant in B.C. (Petronas) owns Progress Energy which would supply the natural gas, has the money to build a much shorter pipeline to Prince Rupert from which LNG could
be shipped a much shorter distance to Asia, and, lastly, has a guaranteed market there.
The entire wacky, local LNG proposals remind me of the absurd idea for an aluminum smelter in the Alberni Valley, but we didn’t see pigs fly then either.
Richard Berg,Port Alberni
EU deal no good for us
To the Editor,Any endorsement of
the agreement signed between Canada and the EU is premature and misguided. It sings the praises of a treaty whose text is not finalized, therefore unknown, and it lauds the benefits of an agreement that furthers the protection of large investors at the expense of local, regional and provincial control over contracting for services.
In addition, it sets water up as a commodity to be bought and sold on the “open” market, ensuring that a layer of profit will be added to the cost of what should, by rights, be publicly managed.
Those who have benefited from the
FTA and NAFTA will do well under this agreement. Those who have suffered from the offshoring of jobs, environmental degradation, increasing inequity and lack of action in moving to some semblance of sustainability will see their welfare further eroded, along with the value of a vote in a state hog-tied by investor-state regulations stemming from “free” trade agreements.
Dan Schubart,Port Alberni
Fletcher misses tanker point
To the Editor,Re: Oil spill study
misinterpreted, BC Views, Oct. 24.
My response to Tom Fletcher’s various articles on oil energy use, oil transportation, and related subjects is as predictable as his position on the topics.
He often seems to take a position only by taking issue with those who have issues with the whole business. His column run online by the Alberni Valley News on Oct. 22 (and in print Oct. 24) suggests that if no one has been concerned about our terribly
inadequate spill response capability while bulk crude laden tankers have plied our coast for the past 40 years, then they have no business being concerned about new tankers entering the waterways.
It seems to me that on just about any topic that becomes a public concern, there is a history about which we at first know little or nothing, followed by a growing awareness, which at some point hits the radar, then possibly the fan. Citing past ignorance or apathy is no argument against future concern.
In the case of oil transportation on our coast, Fletcher has admitted that oil spill response is inadequate. My response, therefore, is to say now that we have woken up, we should take two positions: beef up our response capabilities to better handle existing traffic, which is now a fact of life; and don’t multiply the probability of an accident by adding new tanker traffic.
Perhaps Fletcher has also noticed that opponents are not all “...US-controlled environmental groups and their aboriginal partners....”
Most are Canadian citizens, including the aboriginal groups.
Indeed, I participate in the discussions as a seventh generation Canadian and descendant of a United Empire Loyalist. My positions are also informed by a career of more than 40 years assessing our biological resources, and facilitating industrial activity while striving for environmental protection and sustainability.
Ken Summers,Abbotsford
Destruction in biblical sense
To the Editor,Re: Science loses
ground to superstition, B.C. Views, Oct. 2.
It’s truly bewildering to see such a headline above yet even more of Tom Fletcher’s demagoguery towards David Suzuki —one who’s an ardent believer and follower of actual science.
If it’s actual science that Fletcher truly seeks, why does he conveniently overlook the blatant anti-science thinking and frightening policy of his bird-of-a-feather Prime Minister Stephen Harper?
Frank G. Sterle, Jr.White Rock
Alberni Valley News Thursday , Oct. 31, 2013 www.albernivalleynews.com 9
From / A8On the debt-financed
welfare state, there are memorable observations, like this one: “For the record, the generous Quebec welfare state and its ostensibly more progressive model are paid for in part with the taxes of other Canadians; Quebec is merely the North American equivalent of Greece.”
The recent B.C.
political crisis over adoption of the harmonized sales tax showed that there is too much emotion and too little knowledge about how taxes work. This book is a step towards addressing that.
Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press and BCLocalNews.com
Twitter:@tomfletcherbc E-mail:
Is Quebec our Greece?
QUESTION
weekof the
Vote at: www.albernivalleynews.comSee us also on Facebook.com
This week’s question:Do you support a liquid natural gas (LNG)
facility in the Alberni Inlet?
If online voting was made available in the next election, would you be more inclined to vote?
Yes – 13 No – 13
? !
A10 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 - Alberni Valley News4 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 Alberni Valley News
Students get lesson from Pickton victim’s brother
WAWMEESH G. HAMILTON/ALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
Ernie Crey was a guest speaker in the ADSS Social Justice 12 class on Monday. Crey spoke to students about his sister Dawn, whose DNA was found on the farm of Robert Williams Pickton.
WAWMEESHG. HAMILTON
ALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
A Social Justice 12 class at Alberni District
Secondary School got a real life lesson about Canada’s most prolific serial killer from the brother of one of his victims.
Ernie Crey addressed a hushed class of 30 students on Monday, telling them about his sister Dawn, a victim of Robert William Pickton.
Pickton is the Port Coquitlam pig farmer who is serving a life sentence for six counts of second-degree murder. He has been accused of murdering 26 more women, including Dawn Crey, whose DNA, but not her body, was found on
the Pickton farm.Bringing personal
experience with a national tragedy to a class in Port Alberni is invaluable, teacher Ann Ostwald said. “I think it is very important to expose my kids to people with different ideas and life experiences,” Ostwald said.
Dawn Crey disappeared from Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside in 2000, Crey told the class. “She’d stopped ordering medications from her doctor and stopped collecting her social assistance cheques,” he said. “She’d also stopped having regular visits with another of my sisters and that’s when it started.”
In 2004, an RCMP officer visited Crey to deliver the news he anticipated but hoped
would never come—that Dawn’s DNA had been found on the Pickton farm.
Dawn Crey’s life may have ended on the pig farm but the seeds to such a tragic ending were sown long before, Ernie said.
Dawn, and for that matter other Pickton victims, were “very much like you and came from communities very much like Port Alberni,” he said.
What separated many of the victims from other people was severe mental illness, which in his sister’s case included auditory and visual hallucinations, Crey said.
As a teen, Dawn suffered from severe anxiety and depression issues that she didn’t understand. “It was far different
from being upset at your mom or dad. It was a more profound psychosis,” he said. “You may know someone struggling with this today.”
Dawn resorted to self-medicating with street drugs and alcohol in an effort to control her condition, he said. The self-medicating led to an addiction.
Time slipped away and Dawn was no longer a pretty 16-year-old girl. Older, and being edged out by younger street workers, Dawn moved to Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside.
“Her mental illness deepened and she was abused and exploited to no end,” Crey said.
Dawn was finally committed to Colony Farms Hospital, a psychiatric facility where she was treated for her condition. She was released though, and found her self back on the Downtown Eastside.
Crey said that what irks him most is people who ask him where the victims’ personal responsibilities are for where they ended up in life.
“It’s not as though they chose to go, chose to be abused and exploited,” he said. “Thirty years ago I probably would have punched them in the face for even making the suggestion.”
One student asked why it took so long for police to catch Pickton. After reflecting for several moments Crey replied that “their hearts weren’t into the investigation.”
Vancouver City Police later apologized for not catching Pickton sooner, he said.
Crey asked that if students take one thing away from his talk with them it should be that the issue of mental illness as well as drug and alcohol addiction underpinned the tragedy of the Pickton murder victims.
“You may become doctors, lawyers, nurses or social workers,” he said. “Remember to take this (story) further into your professional lives.”
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Find more online at
drivewayBC.ca
Safety Tip:As we set our clocks back an hour this Saturday night for the end of Daylight Savings Time, please take extra care as the time change can affect the quality of our driving – poorer
concentration, alertness behind the wheel and slower reaction time.
QuestionOF THE WEEK:
What’s your dream car or truck?
What is it that appeals to you about the car?
Go to drivewayBC.ca to submit your answer and enter to win a $100 Safeway gift cardFeel free to post a photo if you have one.
A big part of the RAM brand success has been built on the sturdy and macho exterior styling. ZACK SPENCER
Rounding up and riding the RAM range2014 RAM RoundupThe full-size truck market is big busi-ness for automakers and a big deal for the businesses and people who depend on them. For almost five decades the Ford F-150 has been the best selling truck, with lit-tle chance they will lose that crown in the near future. What has been happen-ing, over the last few years, is a strong shift from General Motors to RAM in terms of establishing the second best selling truck brand. The rise in RAM popularity can be traced back to a few key changes over the last several years, from muscular styling to class-leading interiors, a refined ride, plus engine and
transmission advancements. While GM was selling the same trucks year after year, RAM moved forward and has been rewarded handsomely. GM too has recently released all-new Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra trucks but the initial sales response has been rather lacklustre. I drove the 2014 RAM model range recently, on a beautiful fall day, just outside of Toronto. The “RAM Round-up” was a great opportunity to get my hands on these new trucks well before they arrive at BC dealerships.
Looks A big part of the RAM brand success has been built on the sturdy
and macho exterior styl-ing. Front and centre is a grille that was enlarged, but better integrated, for the 2013 model year. Depending on the trim the grille finish can be chrome, painted or with a different insert. This feature is one RAM own-ers love so, in this case, larger is better. Behind the grille are “active shutters” that close at higher speeds to help send the wind around the vehicle to improve aerodynamic efficiency. The same idea was also behind the longer side step, which helps reduce buffeting down the side of the trucks. While RAM does not have the clever tailgate stepladder that Ford introduced several years ago, they did update the bed of this truck slightly. The sides of the bed can be equipped with an integrated RAMBox storage system. For 2013 this feature was integrated, along with the tailgate to lock and unlock with the vehicles key fob. This is especially handy for tradespeople that need to lock tools in their bed. One option that I find fascinating, and would seriously consider, is the $1500
air suspension that can be lowered for easier entry into the RAM or loading into the bed. Plus this system auto-matically lowers over 100km/h to also reduce aerodynamic drag. At lower speeds and for off-road duties, the air sus-pension can be raised for better ground clearance. Having had a chance to drive several RAM trucks with this feature I notice the already smooth ride is even better and the cabin is further insulated from vibration. The RAM heavy duty can also be equipped with an air suspension but this is
limited to the rear. This helps level the load in the bed for better handling and towing. Inside In the past trucks were typi-cally used for work. Today, trucks have grown in popularity because they can be rugged on a work site and luxurious for all occupants. Having driven the Ford and new GM trucks recently, I can easily say that RAM still has the lead in interior design and finish with the Chevrolet and GMC right behind.
‘‘It takes dynamite to get a loyal truck owner to change brands but RAM has done a good job of blasting the competition.’’Zack Spencer
continued on next page
…they can be rugged on a work site and
luxurious for all occupants.
Visit the RAM trucks photo gallery at drivewayBC.ca
drivewayBC.ca | Welcome to the driver’s seat
Alberni Valley News Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 www.albernivalleynews.com A11
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A12 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 - Alberni Valley News
RAM is rugged for work and luxurious for play
(Ford is looking dated but look for an all-new F-150 in 2015). The centre console
can be equipped with an 8.3-inch Uconnect commu-nications and entertainment screen. In addition, there is a large 7-inch screen
behind the steering wheel for fully customizable in-stant information readouts. The dash and seats can be trimmed in leather typically
found in luxury cars not long ago. What many RAM buyers might fi nd different is the rotary dial on the dash that changes the 8-speed automatic transmission, 6-speed automatics still get the centre console shifter. This is something that started recently in high-end cars like Jaguar and Range Rover but is now found in RAM. It takes about a day to adjust to the new shift position but after a while the driver forgets.
Drive The biggest change for 2014 includes the first diesel engine found in a light duty 1500 pickup truck. This is an Italian designed engine that has
been used extensively in Europe in Jeep products like the Grand Cherokee. With 420 lb.-ft. or torque, this new “EcoDiesel” has the same output as Ford’s Ecoboost but not the same towing capacity. Rated at 9200 lbs. this truck will be perfect for buyers who want impressive fuel economy and good towing capacity; a balance of usability and thriftiness. This engine has not been rated yet for fuel economy but thanks to a standard 8-speed automatic transmission; this new EcoDiesel is going to get better numbers than the al-ready class-leading gasoline V6 RAM. Look for the new EcoDiesel RAMs arriving
in January of 2014. On the heavy duty side there is also an all-new engine in the form of a 6.4L Hemi V8. The old 5.7L was not a perfect match for gasoline truck buyers but RAM hopes this 429 lb.-ft. engine will attract more buyers.
VerdictAs competitive as the car business is, the truck side is nuclear. Truck buyers take their trucks very seriously and the people building them do too. It takes dy-namite to get a loyal truck owner to change brands but RAM has done a good job of blasting the competition. Most of this success has
been thanks to constant improvements instead of waiting years to update their rigs. With a new diesel engine in the 1500 to an all-new gasoline engine in the heavy-duty trucks, matched to sophisticated transmissions, improved suspensions and cabins, it is no wonder why RAM is on an upward swing.
The Lowdown Power: 3.6L V6, 3.0L V6 turbo diesel, 5.7L V8. 6.4L V8 and 6.7L dieselPrice range: $19,995-$36,495 base prices. The diesel option adds around $4,500
continued from page 11
drivewayBC.ca
[email protected] for the new EcoDiesel RAMs arriving in January of 2014. ZACK SPENCER
A12 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 Alberni Valley News
Shooting for: the perfect drive
I keep hearing TV F1 commentary teams talking about the perfect race in rela� on to the now four-� me world champion Sebas� an Ve� el. As I watched the German driver for In ni� -Red Bull race team take the chequered ag in India on Sunday, the repeated reference to his perfect race reminded me of another open-wheel racer.Back in the early 1990s, Vancouver Indy racer Ross Bentley strived for what he called the ‘Perfect Drive’, not on the track but on the roads of B.C.Ross, now coaching race drivers and street drivers in Washington state, al-ways told me that he
found the racetrack a safer place to drive. And I was reminded of that the other morning when a young driver whizzed by me in the curb lane, then cut in front and crossed two more lanes to turn le� at an inter-sec� on just a block ahead. Of course, he didn’t signal when he got there either!Ross devised a li� le game that he played every day while trav-elling to and from work across town. The Perfect Drive Concept was de-signed to help drivers concentrate and I can’t help it would a great game for us all to play some 20 years on since the idea rst started.“The idea is to drive smoothly at a constant speed with
minimal braking,” explains Ross.“To do so, you must an� cipate light changes and ease off when you approach a stale green. You have to slow in such a way that if your passen-gers had their eyes closed they wouldn’t be aware of the exact point you stopped.”Keeping a healthy distance between your car and the one you are following is key. Others do cut into the space but they disappear as fast as they arrive. And even if you ease off to open it up the gap again, Ross gured if even 10 cars did that to you and stayed during the average trip you might lose a minute in travel � me.“The Perfect Drive can be ruined by oth-
ers so I try to gure out what crazy things they might do and adjust accordingly. If I have to brake jerkily in an� cipa� on of the other driver’s move, I don’t deduct any points!”However, if you hold up traffi c or disrupt the ow then you deduct points. If you can let somebody in smoothly or provide an opportunity for somebody else to turn then you’re assis� ng the ow so he gured that was worth a few bonus points.”“The Perfect Drive can be diff erent for everybody and you can work out your own scoring technique. I keep it simple and gure if I drop four points then that was nowhere near the Perfect Drive.”Give it a try, it’s [email protected] [email protected]
‘‘The idea is to drive smoothly at a constant speed without braking.’’Keith Morgan
Ross Bentley coaching upcoming young US racer Colin Braun.
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Corolla: The car that conquered the world
Toyota Corolla 2010 to 2012More than 30 million Corollas had already been produced when an all-new a tenth-genera� on 2009 Toyota Corolla hit the streets with a new body and chassis, increased interior space, more power and a revised suspension system. It isn’t about what a Corolla does, it’s about what a Corolla doesn’t do – stop working. In fact, Corolla could be a subs� tute for the word ‘durable’ in the dic� onary.While the compe� � on has certainly made great strides to improved product quality, Corolla is s� ll the benchmark and consumer con dence in this compact
car is re ected in used prices.
Ironically, from a used car buyer perspec� ve, it may also be its biggest drawback ... good luck with nding a good used Toyota Corolla at a bargain price.The 2009 Corolla came in CE, S, LE and XRS trim lev-els. The highline Corolla LE (originally $21,495) added power windows and locks, climate control air condi-� oning, a 4-speed automa� c transmission, a wood-grain interior trim package, a push-bu� on keyless start system and more.Most Corolla models come with a 1.8-litre (132-horsepower) engine and the base versions came
with a smooth-shi� ing ve-speed manual with a light, easy to operate clutch. A four speed automa� c was the op� onal transmis-sion and fuel economy is excellent, with a 7.5/5.6 L/100 km city/highway ra� ng. The sporty Corolla XRS (originally $21,925) off ered a bigger engine, be� er brakes and � res plus other stuff . Powered by a 2.4-litre (158-horsepower) engine it came with 17-inch � res on alloy wheels, electronic stability control, trac� on control, rear disc brakes and a strut tower brace. It was also the only version with a 5-speed automa� c op� on.On the inside, this Corolla is roomier than the previ-ous genera� on, with more shoulder room, legroom
and trunk storage space. A � lt/telescop-ing steering column was standard on all trim levels and it came with two glove boxes, as seemingly past owners had complained about a lack of cabin storage space. Almost all Corolla models come with the same safety fea-tures, which includes six airbags and the front seats come with ac� ve head restraints. An an� -lock brake system is also stan-dard, but only the XRS trim has elec-tronic stability and trac� on control.Stability control was included as standard on S and LE trim levels and op� onal on CE, in 2010. In 2011, stability control was made a standard feature on all Corolla trim levels.The Toyota Corolla has a loyal following who appreciate the ner virtue of this car – outstanding product quality.
‘‘The sporty XRS offered a bigger engine, better brakes and tires plus other stuff... On the inside, this Corolla is roomier than the previous generation, with more shoulder room, legroom and trunk storage space. ’’Bob McHugh
Price Check Price Check on the 2009 to 2012 Toyota Corolla (Oc-
tober 2013)
Year Edi on Expect to Pay Today
2009 LE $10,000 to $13,000
2010 LE $11,000 to $14,000
2011 LE $12,500 to $15,500
2012 LE $14,500 to $17,500
Prices vary depending on a used vehicle’s condi on, mileage, usage and history. A completemechanical check should always be performedby a reliable auto technicianprior to purchase.
Corolla is s� ll the benchmark and consumer con dence in this compact car is re ected in used prices.
Alberni Valley News Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 www.albernivalleynews.com A13
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Tire tread inspection and estimatedlifespanLube, oil and filter changeAll fluid levels checked for quality, topped off as needed (brake, power steering, coolant, transmission, etc.)Complete brake inspection (brake pads, brake lines, pedal positioning)Check front-end steering components (tie rods, ball joints, wheel bearings, steering rack, struts, coil springs, control arm bushings)Complete road test check (ignition, start issues, power steering control, car tracking, brake pressure analysis, etc.)Full tire rotation
Brake inspection and adjustmentAlternator drive belt examAir filter checked for fuel economyInspect tune-up & oxygen sensorsTire pressure checked & regulatedLubricate all door latches, locks and hingesConfirm dash control of hot/cool airCheck lines for leaks, corrosion and wearWindshield wipers and sprayers checked, fluids topped off as neededCheck all headlights, turn signals, parking lights, running lightsSome vehicles may require upgrades for filter and oil
Dealer #31178
www.nexcarsales.com SERVICE: 250-724-3225
A14 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 - Alberni Valley News14 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 Alberni Valley News
Valley SENIORS Our writer: Valley Seniors is a monthly feature compiled by Orlando Delano and featuring residents living in Port Alberni
seniors complexes.
Alberni seniors flex sunflower power Rainbow Gardens
(Tsaawaayus) held its annual Sunflower Competition to usher in the beginning of the fall.
The event comes on the heels of the annual Pumpkin Contest, which was held at West Have last year and judged by local pumpkin grower Jake van Kooten.
Visitors and contestants were treated to a warm welcome by the host home residents on a beautiful day in the Valley.
Although the actual plants were not on display, their pictures were available to see. The event, had originally been scheduled for the third week in August,
a prime time for the plants to grow, but had to be postponed due to a flu outbreak that affected some residents.
Rainbow activity coordinator Judy Peterson opened the program by welcoming the visitors by reading a background and history of sunflowers and pointing out their uses in several parts of the world.
Everyone played a guessing game. A jar containing buttons and cotton balls was passed around for the people to guess how many were inside. Three residents were awarded with special prizes for guessing the closest to the actual numbers: Brigette Baranji, Fir Park. Village (first place); Orize Marcotte, Abbeyfield (second place); and Dennis Brooks, Echo Village (third place).
Peterson told stories to the audience’s delight.
The following is the list of the awards. Each home was presented with certificates and prizes:
“The most prolific plant” - West Haven.
“The most self sustainable plant” - Heritage Place.
“The most enthusiastic and dedicated group of gardeners” - Echo Village.
“The most upright group of plants” - West Haven.
“The most independent looking plant” - Abbeyfield.
“The tallest plant” - Rainbow Gardens.
“The most decorative garden plant” - Echo Village.
“Sunflowers in the nicest flower bed” - Fir Park Village.
“The most publicly viewed plant” - Abbeyfield.
“The largest flower” -Heritage Place.
“The most unique ‘smiling’ plant”- Rainbow Gardens.
“The nice smallest plant” - Fir Park.
PHOTO SUBMITTED
Steve Cate, Judy Peterson and George Price from Rainbow Gardens, pictured above, display their award. A “smiling sunflower” from Rainbow Gardens is pictured at the right.
How Age Friendly is the Alberni Valley?What would make it even better?
.
Help Make the Alberni Valley the Most Age Friendly Place to Live!
The City of Port Alberni, in partnership with the Alberni-Clayoquot Continuing Care Society(Fir Park Village and Echo Village), is sponsoring this community wide event through a grant from the Union of BC Municipalities. Results from this survey will be reported to the community at an Open Space gathering in January 2014.
Don’t Miss this Opportunity To Add Your Input! Take the Age Friendly Survey before Nov. 8th
For help with access to Survey or for more Information Contact Barb Stevenson [email protected] or 250-724-6541 ext. 232
and Enter our contest to win your choice of
An IPAD or A Month of Dining Out in Port Alberni
and click on Survey Link (lower right side of page)
Age Friendly Survey
Paper copies of Survey available at:
City Hall Front DeskEcho Centre Front Desk
“We have been afforded a great opportunity to reshape and improve our municipality for the benefit of all citizens. Your input and participation in this survey is critical to the creation of plans, projects and general spending that reflects the needs and priorities of our community.” - Mayor John Douglas, City of Port Alberni
Access Survey Online at:
or Go To City Website at:
www.portalberni.ca/
http://fluidsurveys.com/s/AgeFriendlyAlberniValley/
Alberni Valley Age Friendly Survey
How Age Friendly is the Alberni Valley?What would make it even better?
.
Help Make the Alberni Valley the Most Age Friendly Place to Live!
The City of Port Alberni, in partnership with the Alberni-Clayoquot Continuing Care Society(Fir Park Village and Echo Village), is sponsoring this community wide event through a grant from the Union of BC Municipalities. Results from this survey will be reported to the community at an Open Space gathering in January 2014.
Don’t Miss this Opportunity To Add Your Input! Take the Age Friendly Survey before Nov. 8th
For help with access to Survey or for more Information Contact Barb Stevenson [email protected] or 250-724-6541 ext. 232
and Enter our contest to win your choice of
An IPAD or A Month of Dining Out in Port Alberni
and click on Survey Link (lower right side of page)
Age Friendly Survey
Paper copies of Survey available at:
City Hall Front DeskEcho Centre Front Desk
“We have been afforded a great opportunity to reshape and improve our municipality for the benefit of all citizens. Your input and participation in this survey is critical to the creation of plans, projects and general spending that reflects the needs and priorities of our community.” - Mayor John Douglas, City of Port Alberni
Access Survey Online at:
or Go To City Website at:
www.portalberni.ca/
http://fluidsurveys.com/s/AgeFriendlyAlberniValley/
Alberni Valley Age Friendly Survey
The City of Port Alberni, in partnership with the Alberni-Clayoquot Continuing Care Society (Fir Park Village and Echo Village), is sponsoring this community wide event through a grant from the Union of BC Municipalities. Results from this survey will be reported to the community at an Open Space gathering in January 2014.
“We have been afforded a great opportunity to reshape and improve our municipality for the benefit of all citizens. Your input and participation in this survey is critical to the creation of plans, projects and general spending that reflects the needs and priorities of our community.”
- Mayor John Douglas, City of Port Alberni
Help Make the Alberni Valley the Most Age Friendly Place to Live!
Don’t Miss this Opportunity To Add Your Input!
Take the Age Friendly Survey before Nov. 8thand Enter our contest to win your choice of
An IPAD orA Month of Dining Out in Port Alberni
How Age Friendly is the Alberni Valley?
What would make it even better?
Alberni Valley News - Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 www.albernivalleynews.com A15Alberni Valley News Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 www.albernivalleynews.com 15
WAWMEESH G. HAMILTON/ALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
Forestry paysAlberni Valley Community Forest officials Chris Law, far left, Shawn Flynn, Jim Sears and Chris Duncan present Port Alberni Mayor John Douglas with a cheque for $50,000 on Oct. 28. The money is the second down payment on a $250,000 share purchase in 2010.
WAWMEESHG. HAMILTON
ALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
A disagreement over signage with a local artist has cost the Alberni Valley Chamber of Commerce $4,000.
The chamber awarded Tseshaht artist Gordon Dick a $20,000 contract in 2011 to carve two cedar doors at the chamber building on the Port Alberni Highway.
Dick offered a $4,000 discount on the price of the doors at the time in exchange for erecting a five-foot wide by nine-foot high sign advertising his gallery on the centre’s property, chamber president Teresa Bird said.
Unbeknownst to chamber executive at the time, the deal contravened the regional district’s sign bylaw.
Dick informed the chamber board two
weeks ago that he wants the matter resolved.
“We offered him a couple of other options of where else to place the sign but he’s requested that we pay the difference,” Bird said.
A payment plan has been arranged that will see the chamber pay the $4,000 debt off over a year. “We just didn’t have the money in the budget to pay it off all at once.”
Chamber on hook for door deal
Uptown tax bylaw amended – again
WAWMEESHG. HAMILTON
ALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
The City of Port Alberni Revitalization Tax Bylaw is another step closer to reality.
City councillors voted to amend the bylaw after giving it third reading at their Oct. 28 meeting.
Specifically, the amendments include reducing the footprint of the area impacted by the bylaw by excluding city-owned properties. A second amendment will see the bylaw ensconced within the boundary of Montrose Street to Dunbar Street, and from Fifth Avenue to Harbour Road.
The amendments were consistent with two recommendations made by the civic committee of the Alberni Valley Chamber of Commerce.
The bylaw encourages property owners to create or improve commercial and multi-family
spaces. The amended bylaw
will be brought back to council’s next meeting in November.
Twitter.com/AlberniNews
[more-onlinewww.albernivalleynews.com
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City of Port Alberni
thinking of stArting A business?
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For more information call Stephanie Stevens at 250.720.2835
A16 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 - Alberni Valley News
cene & HeardSonja Drinkwater’s
Call: 250.723-4306 or 250-723-6399
Open: Mon.-Fri: 7:30 am 5 pm Sat: 8:00 am 4 pm
4906 Bute StreetPort Alberni, BC
Tel 250-724-6591Fax 250-724-5799
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4907 Argyle St., Port Alberni, BC V9Y 1V6Fax: 250.724.7117 • Toll Free: 1.800.830.1066
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Hours: Monday - Friday 8:00am - 6:00pm Saturday 9:00am- 5:00pm
OUCH. I HOPE THEY HAD MACDERMOTT’S.
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Pat Schellenberg
Plan ahead FOR ALL THE RIGHT REASONS.
Call for your Personal Planning Guide
Chapel of Memories
VALLEY TOWING & SALVAGE
Locally Owned & OperatedCash Buyer of Scrap Cars, Trucks, Vans, Etc.
$100 to $200 average More for someOver the phone price quotes complete or not
250-730-1672
250-724-1672
Phone/fax 250.724.2271 • Mon - Sat 9:30am - 5:30pm • Sun. 12:00pm-5:00pm
JUST IN TIME FOR
CHRISTMAS!Come by & pick up
the newBradford Exchange
Catalogue
BOTTOM LEFT - Boutique Belles Amies held their Fall into Fashionat a new venue this year, the Starboard Grill on Harbour Quay. Boutique owner Linda Bowers is front right and clockwise are Marilyn Oldfield, Jan Cole, dresser, Jennifer Collette, Penny Cote, Carol Vandenhoorn and Jody Chadwick. ACAWS will receive $350 from this fundraiser.
Weekdays 10am - 5:30pmSaturdays 10am - 5pm
5344 Argyle Street, Port Alberni, B.C. V9Y 1T8Tel: (250) 723-0966 • Fax: (250) 723-4114 • www.boutiquebellesamies.ca
“You’re only as good asthe people who support you.”
Thank you very much Starboard Grill and my dear customers for another successful Fall into Fashion Show.
Carol Linda Jodie
TOP LEFT - The Alberni Valley Curling Club held its 2nd Annual Trade Show at the club last Sunday afternoon. Along with over 15 home based businesses displaying and selling their products, volunteer members of the club donated baked goods to a bake table, raising over $250 for the club improvements and bonspiels. Submitted photo.
Penny Cote
Jennifer Collette
Marilyn Oldfi eld
Alberni Valley News - Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 www.albernivalleynews.com A17
cene & HeardSonja Drinkwater’s
Call: 250.723-4306 or 250-723-6399
#6-5440 Argyle St. (Harbour Quay)250-723-8226
Saturday
Nov. 2
Come down for a taste of
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Come celebrate Day of the DeadBaja Fish Tacos, Mexican Hot Chocolateand More!
Open Tuesday - SaturdaySaturday All-Day Breakfast
Taco Tuesday is back!
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TOP LEFT - Freda Laughlin checks out the beautiful cake that commemorated her special milestone birthday on Saturday. She has three children, 7 grandchildren, 21 great grandchildren and 13 great great grandchildren
TOP RIGHT - Freda Laughlin was surrounded by family at her 100th birthday celebration on Saturday afternoon. Clockwise from lower left are daughter Joy Kurtz and her husband Bob Kurtz, Janet Laughlin and Freda’s son Vic Laughlin, Jerry Nykolshyn and wife Janis, Freda’s daughter. Many family members and friends came by and Freda received over 100 birthday cards.
BOTTOM RIGHT - Richard Anderson, past president of the Sunshine Club sits behind a few of the 11,650 envelopes that 18 volunteers of the club spent the afternoon stuffing for the West Coast General Hospital Foundation. These will be delivered by mail on November 5 and to the West Coast on the 6th. Please give generously.
BOTTOM LEFT - Smiles were the order of the day at the Sunshine club Tea and Bazaar on Saturday. Lionel Cyr poured coffee for Elaine Hentges in the tea room.
Cast AwayAn exhibition of mixed-media worksusing found, used and recycled materials by local artist TODD ROBINSON
You are invited to attend the
opening receptionWednesday, Nov. 6, 2013
7 to 9 PM Show runs Nov. 1 - 30, 2013
5440 Argyle St
250-724-5999Open 10 am to 5 pmTuesday to Saturday
•
250.723.4669 I 4687 Johnston Rd.
Did You Know?• Purchasing a car or light truck is the second largest investment consumers make next to a home.• The best way to protect that investment is to keep your vehicle maintained as set out in the owners’ manual.• Oil and Oil Filter Changes along with Transmission, Radiator, Driveline and Fuel Management System Ser-vices performed according to the manufacturer’s service intervals will protect that investment for many years.• One benefi t to proper maintenance is identifying po-tential problems to help save on expensive repairs later.• The most important benefi t to a properly maintained vehicle is SAFETY.• Protect your family, motor vehicle investment and yourself by having the QUALIFIED TECHNICIANS AT JIFFY LUBE perform the fl uid maintenance on your vehi-cle according to the recommendations in your owners’ manual.
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A18 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 - Alberni Valley NewsA18 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct 31, 2013, Alberni Valley News
Dave RaiMay 30, 1952 – Oct. 25, 2013
It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Dave Rai. Predeceased by daughter Natasha Rai and fa-ther Rhutan Rai. Survived by mother Gurmej Rai, sis-ter Vinni (James) Weening, brother Terry Rai, nephews Jayson and Brandon and step sons Jay and Eric.A Funeral Service will be held at Chapel of Memories, 4005-6th Ave, Port Alberni on Saturday, Nov. 2, 2103, at 11AM followed by a 1:15 PM church service at the Alberni Valley Gurdwara, 4741 Montrose St, Port Al-berni, and a Celebration of Life at the Best Western Barclay Hotel, 4277 Stamp Ave, Port Alberni from 4:30-8:00PM.Stories and condolences may be off ered by visiting www.chapelofmemories.ca . In lieu of fl owers dona-tions may be made to the Heart and Stroke Foundation of BC, 1212 West Broadway, Vancouver, BC, V6H3V2
Chapel of Memories Funeral Directors250-723-3633
Mid-Island Potters
THE ART OF THE FIRE
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26TH11 am to 5 pm
ParksvilleCommunity Centre
Theme... The Living Ocean
FREE ADMISSION - RAFFLE - DEMONSTRATIONSRefreshments & Crafts by Oceanside Grannies
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AUXILIARY EQUIPMENT OPERATORS
Emcon Services Inc, Road and Bridge Maintenance contractor, is looking for Auxiliary Equipment Operators for the current winter season to perform a variety of winter related road maintenance activities including operating snowplows and sanding trucks. Operators are needed for Parksville, Nanaimo, Port Alberni and Ucluelet.
QUALIFICATIONS INCLUDE:
• Valid BC Driver’s Licence (minimum Class 3 / air).
• Proven highway trucking experience
• Experience driving tandem axle vehicles and
• Operating a variety of transmissions.
• Pre-employment drug screening
Qualifi ed applicants are invited to submit résumés, along with photocopy of driver’s licence, an up-to-date driver’s abstract and references to substantiate driving experience to:
Emcon Services Inc.
1435 Springhill Road
Parksville, BC V9P 2T2
Fax: 250-248-5574
* Please specify the area that you would be able to work *
We are currently seeking highly motivated and hard working team members to join Mainstream Canada.
Our company is the Canadian division of the international aquaculture company Cermaq. We are a growth oriented company, focused on being one of the major global salmon farming companies. We strive for quality of our product, safe working environments and sustainable aquaculture.
As a Husbandry Technician you will be responsible for general farm operations including feeding and care of fish stocks. Duties would include operation and basic maintenance of auto feeders, boats and equipment in the marine environment.
Familiarity of the concepts of fish growth and stock management would be an asset. The ability to understand and adhere to our Standard Operating Procedures is essential.
We offer camp-based positions operating 8 days on and 6 day off.
Prerequisites to hiring are a fitness test and criminal record check.
We offer competitive wages, a corporate bonus program, company paid benefits package, and a matching retirement fund plan.
If you have the skills we are looking for, and you would like to become part of our team, please forward a resume, in person, by fax or e-mail to:
Mainstream CanadaSuite 203-916 Island HighwayCampbell River, BC V9W 2C2
Fax: 250-725-1250E-Mail: [email protected]
Please state “Husbandry Technician” in subject lineDEADLINE TO APPLY: November 8, 2013
HUSBANDRY TECHNICIANS
DRIVERS WANTEDAZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 w/ Airbrake
• Guaranteed 40hr. WorkWeek & Overtime
• Paid Travel & Lodging• Meal Allowance
• 4 Weeks Vacation• Excellent Benefi ts Package
Must be able to have extended stays away from home. Up to 6 months. Must have valid AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 with airbrake license and have previous commercial driving experience.Apply at:www.sperryrail.com/
careers and then choosethe FastTRACK Application.
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
DEATHS
COMING EVENTSCOMING EVENTS
DEATHS
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMING EVENTS
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INFORMATION
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DID YOU KNOW? BBB Ac-credited Businesses contractu-ally agree to operate by the BBB’s 8 Standards of Trust. Look for the 2013 BBB Ac-credited Business Directory E-edition on your Black Press Community Newspaper web-site at
www.blackpress.ca.You can also go to
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CAREER OPPORTUNITIES CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
INFORMATION
FIREARMS SAFETY Courses offered and fi rearms pur-chased by Certifi ed Instructor Terry Lee (250)723-9768.
LOST AND FOUND
LOST TABBY cat- gray & black in school area last Fri-day night, no identifi cation, has kidney problems. If found please call (250)724-2118.
TRAVEL
GETAWAYS
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DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
JOBS IN Alberta. Large Beef Processor in High River, Al-berta looking for experienced butchers. $17.00 - $18.70 hour. Call Laszlo: (403)652 8404 or send an email: [email protected]
HELP WANTED
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
WESTCAN - Interested In Be-ing Our Next Ice Road Truck-er? Haul liquid, dry bulk orfreight to the diamond mineson the winter road (ice road)from mid-January to mid-April.Not Interested in driving on theice? Drive resupply fromsouthern locations in Albertato Yellowknife, NT. Apply on-line at: www.westcanbulk.ca orPhone: 1.888.WBT.HIRE(1.888.928.4473) for furtherdetails.
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An Alberta Oilfi eld Company is hiring dozer and excavator op-erators, Lodging and mealsprovided. Drug testing re-quired. Call (780)723-5051 Edson,Alta.
GENERAL LABOURERS
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LOVE TO COOK? Carmoor’s Cookery is looking for experi-ence kitchen help. Apply inperson before 2pm at 5304 Ar-gyle St, Port Alberni.
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Alberni Valley News - Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 www.albernivalleynews.com A19Alberni Valley News Thursday, Oct 31, 2013 www.albernivalleynews.com A19
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We are currently seeking a highly motivated and hard working team member to join Mainstream Canada.Our company is the Canadian division of the international aquaculture company Cermaq. We are a growth oriented company, focusing on being one of the major global salmon farming companies. We strive for quality of our product, safe working environments and sustainable aquaculture.Mainstream recognizes the importance of high fish health standards. As a Fish Health Technician, you will be part of a dynamic team responsible for monitoring and reporting on fish health issues, conducting research and development initiatives and conducting quality assurance sampling programs. The ideal applicant will have extensive experience in salmon aquaculture and superior planning skills. You must have excellent computer and communication skills.The shift schedule for this position operates 4 days on and 3 day off. Camp work may be necessary at times. Prerequisites to hiring are a fitness test and criminal record check.We offer competitive wages, a corporate bonus program, excellent company paid benefits package, and a matching retirement fund plan.If you have the skills we are looking for, and you would like to become part of our team, please forward a resume by November 4th, 2013, in person, by fax or e-mail to:
Mainstream Canada#203 – 919 Island Highway
Campbell River, BC V9W 2C2Fax: (250) 286-0042
E-Mail: [email protected]
FISH HEALTH TECHNICIAN
Tofino, BC
NOW HIRINGWestern Forest Products Inc. is an integrated Canadian forest products company located on Vancouver Island that is committed to the safety of our employees, the culture of performance and the discipline to achieve results.
We currently have the following openings:
Detailed job postings can be viewed athttp://www.westernforest.com/business-value/our-people-employment/careers
WFP offers a competitive salary and a comprehensive benefi t package. If you believe that you have the skills and qualifi cations that we are looking for, please replyin confi dence to:Human Resource Department Facsimile: 1.866.840.9611Email: [email protected]
HD Mechanic (North Island)
Excavator Operator (Gold River) Driller/Blaster (Gold River)
Certified Millwright (Chemainus)
Sawmill Supervisor (GY Shift-Chemainus)
Grapple Yarder Hooktender (Port Alice)
Hand Faller (Woss)
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JOURNEYMAN HEAVY DUTY MECHANIC is required for coastal logging operations near Woss, BC. Year round employment with full benefi ts. Further details can be found atwww.hdlogging.com Please fax resume to 250-287-9259.
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HONEST, RELIABLE, hard working woman seeks house-cleaning. Bondable, have criminal record check. $15/hr. Call Helen (250)723-1960.
DRYWALL
COMPLETE DRYWALL Ser-vices. Boarding, taping & tex-turing. Over 30 years experi-ence. (250)736-1137.
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
FLOORING SALEOver 300 Choices
Lowest Prices Guaranteed!Laminates - $0.69/sq ftEngineered - $1.99/sq ftHardwood - $2.79/sq ft
Overnight Delivery in most of BC!www.kingoffl oors.com1.877.835.6670
TELEPHONE SERVICES
DISCONNECTED PHONE? National Teleconnect Home Phone Service. No One Re-fused! Low Monthly Rate! Call-ing Features and Unlimited Long Distance Available. Call National Teleconnect Today! 1-866-443-4408. Or online at www.nationalteleconnect.com.
PETS
PETS
FREE KITTENS to good home. Call (250)723-7966.
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
BICYCLES
FOR SALE: GIRLS 18” BICY-CLE and accessories. In-cludes helmet and bike horn. In mint condition. The bike has barely been used and is for sale now as the child has grown out of it. Paid $270 and asking $125. Number to call is 250-735-1410 or 250-735-4325.
FREE ITEMS
FREE. 12 BAGS of Maple Leaves from unsprayed tree. Call (250)724-3189 to pick up.
FRIENDLY FRANK
MANUAL TREADMILL- $45. (250)723-8532.
HOBBIES & CRAFTS
GRINSHEEP FIBRE Produc-tions. 1265 Leffl er Rd. (across from the Wildlife Centre in Er-rington) Offering felting, spin-ning, knitting & weaving sup-plies at reasonable rates. Open Tues - Sat., 1 - 5 or by appt. Call 250-248-6306 or email: [email protected]
EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
MEDICAL SUPPLIES
FORTRESS 1700-MOBILITY SCOOTER. New 2 batteries w/charger, fully serviced. Ad-justable Captains Seat. $990. Del Avail. 250-248-1281(eve)
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
E-BIKE- “VELOTEQ Cougar II”, $750. (250)724-2486 or 250-735-7897.
ECOPED BIKE by City Go, (electric bike). Runs well, with charger, $500 obo. Call (250)723-4449, Pt. Alberni.
HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper?
LARGE JVC Cabinet TV. Will trade for fi rewood, fencing, bricks, etc. (250)723-2226.
SMALL MAPLE corner cabi-net $125. Single box spring & mattress, like new $125. An-tique parlor chair, offers. (250)723-3700.
STEEL BUILDINGS/metal buildings 60% off! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for bal-ance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 or visit us online at: www.crownsteelbuildings.ca
MISCELLANEOUS WANTED
SCRAP METAL; Fridges, freezers, washers, dryers, electric/wood stoves, lawn mowers & other recyclable metal, free pick up. Call Rich-ard 250-723-0855.
NEW TO YOU
DEER HIDES, excellent for drum making. 250-724-2932.
FUTON. SOLID black metal frame, wooden arm rest, exc. cond. $150. (250)720-0991
GOOD QUALITY hay in barn, $5.25. Call (250)724-2932.
LOUIS L’AMOUR Western pocket book collection. Hard to fi nd. As new. Great gift! 50 frontier novels. $55. Call (250)724-1059.
REAL ESTATE
APARTMENT/CONDOS
2-BDRM, 1 bath condo with ocean and mountain views. Corner unit with large deck & gas F/P. Quiet, secure adult bldg with elevator. Includes 5 appliances. For more info or viewing call Jim at (778)421-1310 or Ted at (250)723-8089, Pt. Alberni. Asking $175,900.
EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS
REAL ESTATE
HOUSES FOR SALE
33’ CONVERTED Trawler with 6 cylinder Isuzu deisel engine with 2100 hours. Ready to fi sh or cruise. Good electronics, Survey valued at $25,000. Sell for $8500. Call Jim at (778)421-1310 or Ted at (250)723-8089, Pt. Alberni. For more info or viewing.
GREAT STARTER or retire-ment house. 2-bdrm, 1 bath with full walk-out basement. Freshly painted and updated. New roof. Carport in front and alley access to 24x30 garage. Large yard with fruit trees. For info or viewing phone Jim at 778-421-1310 or Ted at 250-723-8089. Pt. Alberni. Asking $165,900.
RENTALS
APARTMENT/CONDO
2 BDRM, 1 bath condo in quiet adult oriented building. F/S, W/D, D/W, gas F/P, storage and covered parking. $750/mo + util’s. Call (250)731-5232.
PORT ALBERNI- 2.5 bdrm spacious apt, w/carport & bal-cony. NS/NP. Avail now. $700. Refs req’d. Call (250)724-4688.
PORT ALBERNI: Carmoor Building at the Harbour Quay, deluxe adult oriented 1 & 2 bdrm loft Apts for lease. 10’ ceilings, F/S, D/W, microwave, W/D, A/C, gas F/P. No pets, no smokers, ref’s req’d. Call (250)724-5040.
SOUTH PORT- 1 bdrm apts, secure entry. No drugs or par-tiers. $650. Call (250)723-4387, (250)720-3190.
SOUTH PORT- large 3 bdrm main fl oor, 1980sq ft. Avail now. No drugs, no partiers. $1050. Call (250)723-4387, (250)720-3190.
EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS
RENTALS
COTTAGES
NICE COTTAGE, small yard, $600 (some util’s incld’d), availimmed. Call (250)999-0139.
DUPLEXES/4PLEXES
SOUTH PORT: 4-plex, 1 bdrm with large patio, quiet area.Incld’s heat, hydro, cable.$625. Tri-plex, large 1 bdrmmain fl oor. Incld’s heat, hydro.$650. 4-plex, 2 and 3 bdrmunits. Incld’s heat, hydro andcable. $680-$850. Call(250)723-4387, (250)720-3190
HOMES FOR RENT
North Port Alberni: Large newly
renovated rancher, 3 bdrm+ offi ce, 2 bath, laun-dry, 1710 sq ft, close to main
malls, schools. Ready for responsible tenants.
$1150. Call (250)723-4387, (250)720-3190
PORT ALBERNI- beautiful 4bdrm townhouse, $950 in-cludes shaw cable, HP inter-net, home phone. Completelyreno’d, double carport, all ap-pliances. Call 1-250-619-1339or email: [email protected]
PORT ALBERNI (good area)-3 bdrm+ ensuite, F/S, D/W.NP/NS, no partiers. Refs req’d.Avail now. $1200. Call(250)723-3684, after 6pm.
SIDNEY 3br 2 bath recroom closeto schools bus shopping.1500Dean778-351-2244
RECREATION
RV RESORT ON THE LAKE
Spots available at Great Rates. Daily, weekly,
monthly. Pool, Hot tub, exercise room, laundry, putting green, hiking,
fi shing, Pickle Ball Court. Free coffee in one of the best clubhouses on the island. Nanaimo area.
www.resortonthelake.com250-754-1975 or
EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS
GARAGE SALES
FINAL MOVING Sale. All items must go! Rain or Shine! 9am-Noon, Sat., Nov. 2nd. 5425 Kitsuksis. Furniture, electronics, misc.
GARAGE SALES
PORT ALBERNI- 5270 Mar St, Sat, Nov 2, 9am-12noon. Tools, household, no earlies!
Garage SalesGarage Sales
CONNECTING JOB SEEKERS AND EMPLOYERS
www.localwork.com
ALL YOU NEED IN PRINT AND ONLINE
bcclassifi ed.com
- BUYING -- RENTING - - SELLING -
bcclassifi ed.com
A20 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 - Alberni Valley NewsA20 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct 31, 2013, Alberni Valley News
Today’s
Solu
tion
Sudoku
Remember no number can occur more than once in any row, column or box.
To solve a Sudoku puzzle,every number 1 to 9must appear in:• Each of the nine vertical columns• Each of the nine horizontal rows• Each of the nine 3 x 3 boxes
Carrier of the WeekEDWARD FULKER
Call for more info! 250-723-6399
NORTH PORT
1000 – Russell & Westport Blvd (70)1009 – Virginia & Leslie1020- Mary & Brown (58)1032 – Strathcona & Marpole (61)
CARRIERSSOUTH PORT
3007 – Strathern & 6th (45)3008 – North Cres & 9th (54)3012- China Cr & 11th (55)3013 – Montrose & 11th (58)3024 – Neill & 4th (64)3028 -Scott & 11th (47)3035- View & 7th (48)
Routes are temporarily covered. We are looking for permanent carriers.
Carriers of the Week receive Black Press merchandise and a $10 gift card from Walmart
Since October 2012, Edward has been delivering 70-plus papers in South Port each week without any complaints. He likes to play video games in his spare time and his paper route earnings go toward new Xbox 360 games. Edward likes being a carrier for the News as it gives him a job.
Are you an energetic adult or active senior who enjoys the outdoors?
Earn extra money while keeping t!• Door-to-door newspaper delivery on Thursdays• Flexible hours/assignments can t your schedule!
Call Circulation 250-723-63994656 Margaret Street
Port Alberni, B.C. V9Y 6H2email: [email protected]
ADULT SUBSTITUTECARRIER WANTED!
RENTALS
SHARED ACCOMMODATION
NORTH NANAIMO: Attention Students/Working Profession-als: fully furnished room, nice, quiet area. Own bathroom, cable, FREE WiFi, shared kitchen and laundry. N/S, N/P, no partiers. $550/mo. Avail. immediately. 250-756-9746
STORAGE
COVERED RV STORAGE. 30’D x 14’ tall, secure & in-sured. $1000./year. Beaver Creek. Frank (250)731-5854.
UNCOVERED RV/ Boat/ Vehi-cle storage. $30./mo. Unlimit-ed size. Frank (250)731-5854.
TRANSPORTATION
AUTO FINANCING
VTRUCKS & ANS
1990 CHEVY truck, 3/4 ton 4x4. Extended cab long box, on propane; work truck. $1000. obo. (250)724-4366.
2005 JIMMY- 2 door, 4x4, 1 owner, 80,000 km, excellent condition. $6000 obo. Call (250)390-9369.
HELP WANTED HELP WANTED
fi l here please
COURTENAY• 1-800-682-88082885 CLIFFE AVENUE
NEXT TO MADMAN MCKAY
SEWING MACHINE REPAIRSOver 35 years experience all makes
All Models sewing machines
COURTENAY• 1-800-682-8808
Affordable Sewing & Vacuum Centre
• Sergers• Industrials• Vacuum Repairs• Scissor Sharpening
24th Annual Nanaimo Professional Craft Fair
GRAND DOOR PRIZE Samsung Galaxy Tab 3.
To be drawn Sunday
November 1-3, 2013 Friday 12-8, Saturday 10-5, Sunday 10-4
• Hourly Door Prizes • Lunch & Refreshments Available
Beban Park Centre 2300 Bowen Rd. Nanaimo
$4 Admission includes return AdmittanceChildren under 12 accompanied by an adult - FREE
Present this ad for $1.00 OFF one AdmissionPresent this ad for $1.00 OFF one AdmissionInfo: 250-797-6544 or [email protected]
TUTORS NEEDEDLiteracy Alberni needs tutors to help our clients with various skills including:
English as a second languageOvercoming learning diffi culties
Learning to readComputer and Life Skills
No teaching experience necessary.For more information call
250-723-7323 or stop by 5100 Tebo Avenue
Th ursday evenings PLEASE keep your outside lights on to ensure delivery of your
FOR OUR CARRIERS’
SAFETY
Th anks for yourcooperation!
20 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 Alberni Valley News
Craft fair season begins
The annual Christmas in the Valley giant craft fair, a much loved Christmas tradition, kicks off its 39th year at the Alberni Athletic Hall Nov. 8–10.
Fairgoers will find great lighting with
lots of room to peruse crafters’ wares and take part in all the fun activities.
This year’s fair has lots of great things in store. Joining the fair this year are artisans Elspeth Watson, with her functional pottery, and Shannon Kjernisted, with unique hand-worked jewellery.
This year’s kitchen is run by the AV Athletic Association to help raise funds for their elevator project.
The fair also has family-oriented activities like a colouring contest and Make-n-Take craft table. Santa will be there on Friday from 5:30–7 p.m, Saturday and Sunday from 1–2:30 p.m. (by donation).
Fair hours are Friday, Nov. 8 from 3–8 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 9 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, Nov. 10 from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Admission is free.
PLEASE RECYCLE
yourClean Plastic
Bags
If you received your newspaper in a
clear plastic bag, please hang on to them & drop them
off at the offi ce next time you’re by.
WE CANRECYCLE ‘EM!The Alberni Valley News4656 Margaret Street
Thank you!
Get an MRI and find out what’s wrong.We use a powerful 1.5T (Tesla) GE MR System, comparable to or exceeding hospital grade scanners.
Consult your physician to discuss
what MRI Study you require.
Now accepting Physician Referrals
250-334-1023www.vimri.ca1211 Ryan Road,
Courtenay, BC V9N 3R6
Our scans give you
and your physician
the detailed information
required to determine
the optimal treatment
that will lead to your
timely recovery.
www.albernivalleynews.com
Alberni Valley News - Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 www.albernivalleynews.com A21Alberni Valley News Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 www.albernivalleynews.com 21
ENTERTAINMENT / Arts Around. A22SPORTSLaCouvee nets props
The Alberni Valley Bulldogs are getting their mettle tested with a three-game road trip.
The Bulldogs play the Express in Coquitlam on Friday, the Surrey Eagles on Saturday and the Chilliwack Chiefs Sunday.
The Bulldogs last action was a 3-2 win over the Trail Smoke Eaters on Oct. 26. Shots on goal favoured the ‘Dog’s 36-35.
In other news, Bulldogs goaltender Connor LaCouvee garnered kudos.
LaCouvee was named the BCHL Player of the Week for the week ending Oct. 27, the league announced Monday.
LaCouvee backstopped the Bulldogs to a pair of wins, including one over the Trail Smoke Eaters on Saturday and a double-overtime victory over Nanaimo last Wednesday.
The 19-year-old Qualicum Beach native made 43 saves and was named third star in the win against Nanaimo. LaCouvee followed stopped 33 shots to earn first star in a win over Trail.
Lacouvee turned away 76 of 82 shots for a .927 save percentage and he recorded 2.86 goals-against average.
“We’re going to go with him until things falter,” Bulldogs head coach Kevin Willison told PEAK FM play-by-play announcer Evan Hammer during a post game interview.
WAWMEESH G. HAMILTON/ALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
Bulldogs forward Jakson Elynuik misses a goal in the first period of a game against the Trail Smoke Eaters in a 3-2 win on Oct. 26. The Bulldogs are on a three-game road trip this weekend.
Lightening ladies champsIt was Thunder and
Lightening in the Port Alberni Ladies Basketball League championship.
When it was all over, Dave Ralla’s Yellow Lightening beat the Dave Ralla Blue Thunder 59-57 to take first place and the league championship.
In the consolation
game, the Mace Electric Phoenixes beat the Mace Electric Shockers 47-44 to take second place. The Phoenix’s lead 28-17 at halftime, but the Shockers fought back and outscored the Phoenixes in the second half. They lost though 47-44. Janine Thompson
had 19 points for the Phoenixes. Heather Kennedy had 23 points for the Shockers.
Dana Williscroft won the most improved player award. Heather Kennedy won most team spirit. And Janine Thompson won the most dedicated player award.
Monday - Friday: 8 am - 5 pm; Saturday: 9 am - 5 pm lbwoodchoppers.com
3509 3rd Avenue
250-723-5841
NEWRENTAL!GENIE Z3434’ Articulating Boom Lift.Dual Fuel. Rough Terrain.
In StockAntarctica Waterproof Collection
STARTING AT ONLY
$22995MSRP $24995 with 16” barMS 170 Gas Chain Saw30.1 cc/1.3 kW
RECEIVE A FREE WOOD-PRO KIT
WITH THE PURCHASE OF THIS SAWAN $85 VALUE!!
STIHL Gas BlowersStarting at only
$17995
November 2, 20134pm - 6pmCost of Vaccine& Flea Control $25Dog owners shouldregister at the SPCA Shelteron Broughton Street andwill be required to register and pre pay on or beforeThursday, October 31stFor more informationcall 250-723-5269
Dr. Alana Symmington (Manzini Animal Hospital)and the Alberni BC SPCAare pleased to assist inprotecting your dogsfrom Parvovirus
Port AlberniDog & Puppy Vaccine Clinic
For Low IncomePet Owners
MANZINI ANIMAL HOSPITAL4423 Margaret Street, Port Alberni, BC
SANTA RIDE
Tickets on saleTuesday, November 5
at theAlberni Valley Museum
SANTA RIDE DATES:Saturday, November 30
Sunday, December 1
TIMES:11 am, 12 noon, 2 pm, and 3 pm each day
Call the Museum at 250-720-2863 for ticket information. Purchase tickets in person or by phone with Visa/Mastercard.
$6.00
per person
A22 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 - Alberni Valley News
$10,000 to transform your space with natural gas...
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MORE THAN JUST A PAINT STORE!Over 2000 Beautiful Colours to Choose From
Local Painters Referred
Find us on FacebookMon.-Sat: 9:00 am - 5:00 pm • CLOSED SUNDAYS • www.albernicolour.net • #1- 4310 10th Ave. • 250-720-0030
NEW
Open til
9 pm
Thurs & Fri!
New weekend yers
at Mark’s!See this weekend’s yer deals
inside this edition of the Alberni Valley News
Hurry in!Sale ends Monday Nov. 4
Located in the Alberni Mall 250-724-6766 www.marks.com
22 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 Alberni Valley News
THE ARTSTHE ARTS FOOD / Do you have good Taste? 23
SONJA DRINKWATERALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
Holden Cole, 13, will compete in the World Dance Championships in Poland later this year.
Cole participated in a workshop last summer with Move the Company, run by Joshua Beamish, and also worked with Danielle Gardner, from So You Think You Can Dance Canada, who is now the coordinator of Team Canada.
Tana Cole, Holden’s mom said, “They e-mailed me and asked if Holden would be a part of this without an audition.”
Holden Cole will be competing in three solos and six group dances. A student at Dance Studio West, he has been dancing since he was eight years old.
The Coles have
travelled to Vancouver every weekend in order for Holden to practice. He
performed three pieces—modern, jazz and classical ballet—for a small crowd at
a fundraiser on the weekend at the PA Black Sheep Rugby Club.
All the world’s his stage
SONJA DRINKWATER/ALBERNI VALLEY NEWS
Holden Cole performs a modern dance piece choreographed by his cousin, Danielle Fisher, at a fundraiser at the rugby club hall on the weekend.
Activity ramps upat Rollin Art Centre
Photo exhibit ends Nov. 9
The Rollin Art Centre’s current exhibit will run until Nov. 9. This exciting photography exhibit is on loan from North Island Collage International in Campbell River.
The Community Arts Council is pleased to introduce Carlos Reyes-Manzo and his collection of photographs titled: “Rights and Wrongs-The Resilience of the Worlds Indigenous People”. Rollin Art Centre Gallery is
located at the corner of Eighth Avenue and Argyle Street and is open from Tuesday to Saturday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., closed Mondays. Wheelchair accessible; admission is by donation.
Still room in kids’ classes
Join artists Kelly Poirier and Dorothy Jarvis at Rollin Arts Centre, for two children’s art workshops.
“Sense”sational Saturday is for children ages five to nine years, for younger children where we will explore the styles of artists from Jackson Pollock to Matisse using all kinds of messy (read:
FUN) techniques.This is a six session
art class that started Oct. 26 and runs until Dec. 7 from 10 a.m. to noon, every Saturday.
“Georgia and the Garden” is a multi-media (watercolour, pastel, acrylic, ink, charcoal) exploration of the work of Georgia O’Keefe (large abstract florals, bones, landscape) using the inspiration of the garden and local materials. Kids seven to 12 years old will learn about colour, value, shading and other art fundamentals.
This class is being offered every Monday afterschool from 3:15-4:30 for six weeks. The class started Oct. 28 and runs until Dec. 9.
Space is limited so sign up now. Call the Rollin Art Centre 250-724-3412 for more info.
Kurucz-ing to great music
The Community Arts Council, sponsored by Capitol Theatre and the Kurucz family, will be holding a concert fundraiser at the theatre on Sunday, Nov. 10 from 1:30–3:30 p.m.
Tickets on sale at Rollin Art Centre and Happy Soles Foot and nail Care at 250-720-0397, advance tickets: $10 or $12 at the door.
Melissa Martin is the Arts Administrator for the Community Arts Council.
MELISSA MARTIN
Arts Around
Alberni Valley News - Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 www.albernivalleynews.com A23
Taste of Alberni
Catch the NHL Action Here!!
Every Thursday is Canucks Game Day
ENTER TO WINa Molson Canadian
Leather Recliner Chair
Daily Drink and Food
Specials
#100-3550 Johnston Rd., Port Alberni, BC 250.723.2622
Large Pizza with Caesar Salad
Medium Pizzas
250-723-2611
$172/$24
Open: 4 pm to Midnight
TAKE OUT OR FREE DELIVERY
Fully Licensed
Holiday Seasonat
PESCADORES
250-736-1100 • 5093 Johnston Rd
Features through the winter:
• PRIME RIB
• GREEK PLATTEREvery Fri & Sat
$1895
Book your party now
Seats up to 50
Special menu upon request
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Santa Fe Ranch Chicken SubBreaded seasoned chicken breast. Your choice of sub bun, veggies,
mozza sub cheese, ranch dressing and sriracha hot sauce!
4539 Gertrude St. 778-421-1782
GET TO KNOW!
offer valid until Dec 31st 2013
Full Sizefor only
$8.00
Voted Best Burgerson Vancouver Island
Open: 10:45 am - 9:45 pm • 7 days a week4422 Gertrude 250-723-6331
$399each
BaconBURGER
NOVEMBER SPECIAL
Prime RibFridays$1495
(formerly Miller’s Place)
4833 Johnston Rd 250-724-5794
FREE DELIVERYDEBIT AT YOUR DOOR
Reservations Recommended
Steak and Seafood Menu AvailableCall for Reservations
5093 Johnston Rd. 250.736.1100
8 oz New York Steak Sandwich$1695
PRE-GAME SPECIAL4-9 pm Friday & Saturday
5-9 pm Friday & SaturdayWINTER SPECIALS:
Prime Rib & Yorkshire $1895
Greek Platter $1895
Date NiteEvery
Wednesday
2 canDine for$29.00
STAMPS CAFE
served with baked potatoand caesar salad
FRIDAY NIGHT RIBS
$1595served from 4 p.m.
4277 Stamp Ave.250-724-7171
Barclay Hotel
per person
A Local Tradition
Since 1969
SUNDAY SMORGASBORD from 4-8 pm
LAST FRIDAY OF EVERY
MONTH723.2474
FAMILYRESTAURANT
DINING FOR THE WHOLE
FAMILYPatio Now Open
TURTLE BEACHFamily Dining
Every SundayBrunch Buffet 9:00 am - 2:00 pm
Adults: $12.95 Seniors: $9.95Children under 10 FREE
Open6am - 10pm
BLUE MARLIN INN 5022 Johnston Road 250-723-5663
- Made by Juanita and Kelly
www.coastcountrykitchen.caOpen for Pick-Up Wednesday 2-6 pm or we welcome pre-arranged pick ups for
YOUR convenience at... 4712 Ires Road
Let us help with your catering needs with our homemade style and touch.
Business meetings, luncheons, dinners, weddings, memorial gatherings.
To Order Call 778-421-4712 or Cell: (Kelly) 250-720-6597 (Juanita) 250-735-0493
or E-mail: [email protected]
WEEK OF NOVEMBER 3* Fresh 1/2 chicken dinner $13.00
* Rib Dinner* Chicken Broccoli Fettucini
* Teriyaki Stir Fry Served withMarinated Pork Kabob
Weekly Menu
Frozen Home-Cooked MealsSenior, Single and Family Portions
WECATER
OPEN 11am TO 8pm7 DAYS A WEEK
DRIVE-IN OR TAKE-OUT 3704 3rd Ave. 250.724.4454
Big Mike’sMozza Bacon
Burger & Deep Fried Pickles
HormoneFreeGrass-FedAlbertaBeef
A24 www.albernivalleynews.com Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 - Alberni Valley News
“The 2012 #1 Top Selling Real Estate Marketing and Sales Team at Coast Realty in the Alberni Valley.”
OPEN HOUSES
2852 Anderson $99,900Move Right In
• 505 sq.ft. rancher• Newly renovated• Upper South Alberni• Appliances included
3966-6th Ave $199,900
Quality in Echo• 3 bedroom & 2 bathroom• Oak fl oors and fi replace• Newer heat pump & roof• Sunroom & covered deck
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
OPEN HOUSE - SAT, NOV 2
4423 Neill St $177,500
Excellent Potential• 4 bedrooms & 3 bathrooms• 60’ x 125’ corner lot• Fenced yard & Garage• Needs some TLC
1:30 PM - 2:30 PM
OPEN HOUSE - SAT, NOV 2
4172 Clegg Cres $259,900Prime Location
• Quality built in 1994• 4 bedrooms & 2 bathrooms• Open concept fl oor plan• Upper South Alberni
2457 Hilton Ave. $129,900Sitting Pretty
• Alberni Inlet & Mountain Views• 2 bdrms and full bathroom• Fir fl oors & thermal windows• Low maintenance yard
8321 Faber Rd $235,000Sproat Lake Views
• 0.68 acre lot• 5 bedrooms & 4 bathrooms• 32’ x 12’ detached worshop• Wrap-around deck with views
3740 Argyle Way $97,500Nicely Updated Condo
• 3 bedroom & full bathroom• New fl ooring & fresh paint• Living room with fi replace• Thermal windows
2503 Hilton Ave $278,000 Quality Family Home
• 4 bedrooms & 2.5 batHs• Heat pump & thermal windows• Large fenced corner lot• Double garage
5681 Falls Rd $279,900
The Complete Package • 1.03 acres of fl at cleared land• 3 bedrooms & 2 bathrooms• 785 sq.ft. workshop• Well maintained w/ updates
4-5131 Gertrude St $164,900Retirement Living
• 2 bedroom & full bath• Fresh paint & some fl ooring• 900 sq.ft. rancher• Carport & storage locker
2171 Anderson Ave. $239,900View from Above
• 4 bedrooms & 3 bathrooms• Very clean & extensive updates• Heat pump & vinyl windows• Private backyard w/ lane access
4015 Montrose St. $259,900House with a Suite
• House built in 1992• 4 bedroom & 3 bathrooms• Plus 1 bedroom suite• Fenced lot & attached garage
5609 Poplar Rd $209,900Peaceful Location
• 0.34 acre on no-thru road• 2,035 sq.ft. family home• Newer roof & thermal windows• Workshop & carport
9330 Central Lk Rd. $389,900Alberni Valley Farm
• 15.39 acres of farmland• Very clean 2,260 sq.ft. home• Great barn & outbuildings• Numerous updates
5427 Gordon Ave.Ticks All The Boxes
• 2.16 acre level lot• 4 bedroom & 2 bathroom• Huge three bay workshop• In-ground pool
$399,900 5949 Grandview Rd. $499,900Modern Country Rancher
• 2,235 sq.ft. home built 2011• 0.92 acre w/ workshop & RV parking• 3 bdrm & 2 quality baths• Elegant cherry kitchen w/island
RESIDENTIAL
NEW LISTING
NEW PRICENEW PRICE
SOLD SOLD
Income Producer• Approx. $2,300/month• 1.3 acre property• Triplex & House• Mobile home pad
7710 Pacifi c Rim Hwy. $249,900
104-2825 3rd Ave. $129,900The Good Life.
• Two bedroom condo• Spacious and well cared for• Gas fi replace & balcony• Close to amenities
5575 Swallow Dr. $299,900Practically New Rancher
• 3 bedrooms & 2 bathrooms• 1,385 sq.ft. built in 2012• Vaulted ceilings & open concept• Covered patio & fenced yard