Hope Standard, October 01, 2015
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Transcript of Hope Standard, October 01, 2015
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ALL CANDIDATES MEETINGFederal Election Candidates | Thursday, October 1, 2015 at 7:30pm
Presented by:
Media Sponsor:
Hope Recreation Centre, Conference Room (Access is available through back parking lot)
10/15H_DHC1
TONIGHT!
Thanksgiving Food Drive a sensationFrom left to right: Dallas Fahl, grade 8, Jenna Barnes, grade 8, Ben Taivai, grade 8, and Coralie Johnston, grade 6, along with a host of other volunteer companions, sift through remaining packages of goods at the Hope Community Services Food Bank on Thursday.
ERIN KNUTSON/HOPE STANDARD
INSIDEOpinion . .. . . . . . . . . . 6Community . . . . . . 4Sports .............. . 16Classifi eds . . . . . . 18
O f f i c e : 6 0 4 . 8 6 9 . 2 4 2 1 w w w . h o p e s t a n d a r d . c o m n e w s @ h o p e s t a n d a r d . c o m
StandardThe Hope THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2015FirePreventionWeek hasarrived — for fi re safety and word from the Chief pages10 and 11
8 GOLDEN LARCHESIN MANNING PARKThe advent of fall has
brought an extraordinary
vista of colour to
the resort
9 NOTARY WINS AWARDScott Simpson is the
recipient of the
Presidential Award of
Excellence
12 OCTOBER BACKROOM EXHIBITSynergy a Couple’s
Journey to Abstraction will
be featured
at the Hope Arts Gallery
all month longErin KnutsonHope Standard
An anomaly occurred for the Th anksgiving Food Drive through Hope Community Services, which was a huge success this past week, as Hope broke food bank records. Th ings were looking bleak on the shelves of the downtown location, but with the help of a missionary couple from Calgary who stepped in and lent a hand, a ripple eff ect was sparked in the community that will put food in mouths and melt hearts.
“We were given the opportunity to help out at the food bank and that is where we learned of the tre-mendous need and the bare shelves,” said volunteer and missionary from Th e Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Leslie Shaughnessy, who volun-teered with her husband Gary as part of a mission trip the two started in May.
“It was heart-breaking and so sad to see the empty shelves, knowing that people were coming to get help and there was no food.”
With a strategy in mind and a little help from maps printed at District Hall, the couple mobilized troops and set out to fi ll the empty shelves.
“We needed to do something — so a seed of Hope was planted and we started the process of getting organized,” she said. “I put a note on the Hope Bulletin Facebook Page, and that’s when we truly found out what kind of people call Hope home — there was an outpouring of off ers to help with the drive; so, with the logistics, maps, bags donated from Coopers and a group of youth to attach all 3,000 fl yers to the bags, we began to see the spirit of the people shine.”
Th e entire community of Hope stepped up in a combined eff ort that resulted in the culmination of 8000 pounds of food donations and $2,000 in mon-
etary contributions. Th e Shaughnessy’s plan to unite diff erent neighbourhoods, conscript the scouts, the schools, the Fire Department, their Church and any-body with an extra pair of hands was wildly success-ful. Th e couple anticipated 20 per cent of their ideal quota and it was exceeded at an astounding 50 per cent. Mounds of bags crowded the 3rd avenue food bank location, as the donations kept pouring in.
“Keeping up with everything has been a chal-lenge,” said Shaughnessy of the inpouring of goods and volunteer services.
Dedicated volunteers of all ages, tunneled relent-lessly through piles upon piles of cans and goodies, pet food, tea and coff ee to get the job done, in fact, they were still sorting late Th ursday evening.
“We are ecstatic —it’s been heart warming to see,” said Hope Community Services Executive Director,” Michele Th ornhill.
Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard2 www.hopestandard.com
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Local politicians split over environmental ‘rights’Tom FletcherBlack Press
Over vocal objections from some repre-sentatives, local politicians have narrowly endorsed a call for an "environmental bill of rights" for B.C. at their annual convention.
Calling it "an idea whose time has come," Richmond Coun. Harold Steves sponsored the motion Wednesday at the Union of B.C. Municipalities convention in Vancouver. It calls for recognition of a right to "live in a healthy environment, including the right to clean air, clean water, clean food and vibrant ecosystems."
Steves reminded delegates of a summer of smoke from forest fires and a drought that saw his Cache Creek farm run out of water. He noted the bill of rights has been supported by 36 municipalities around B.C., after a tour of local councils by the David Suzuki Foundation's Blue Dot campaign.
The idea was quickly challenged."How is this resolution going to prevent
forest fires and create clean air?" North Cowichan Coun. Al Siebring asked. "It's not."
Williams Lake Mayor Walt Cobb dis-missed the bill of rights movement as "David Suzuki propaganda" backed by urban people who don't understand that mining and for-estry provide the lumber, copper and other products that build their homes and com-munities.
Cobb said it already takes years of envi-ronmental review before resource extrac-tion can be approved, "and if this passes, it will be another nail in the coffin of rural B.C."
Chilliwack Mayor Sharon Gaetz urged support for the bill of rights, arguing it would "raise our consciousness." Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps quoted from a presenta-tion to council by an 11-year-old boy and
joined other delegates in call-ing for the resolution to sup-port future generations.
Coquitlam Coun. Terry O'Neill listed a dozen pro-vincial laws governing clean water, air pollution, public health and food safety, calling on the convention to focus on specific measures instead of asserting rights that are actu-ally "a demand for others to do something for you."
Nanaimo Regional District director Julian Fell agreed, saying four of the six rights proposed to his board are actu-ally "entitlements." He called for the UBCM to declare that water and air should be legally guaranteed to remain public assets.
Tom FletcherBlack Press
B.C. teachers switching to the education minis-try's new curriculum this year will use 10 hours of classroom time to train on it.
Education Minister Mike Bernier announced the training plan Monday at the B.C. legislature, with teacher, trustee and parent representatives along-side. Bernier said training the first 2,000 teachers to deliver the new curriculum this year will cost $1 million and take the equivalent of two teaching days.
It's up to local school districts to decide how that time is organized, but it may mean extra non-instruc-tional days or parts of days when students would be sent home early. The new curriculum is being piloted this year for kindergarten through Grade 9 and will become mandatory across the province starting next fall. Curriculum updates for the higher grades are still in development. For the next two years, teachers across B.C. will use one of their current professional development days for curriculum training and an additional five hours, the equivalent of one classroom day, will also be devoted to the new curriculum.
Bernier confirmed that the program is being implemented within existing budgets. The addi-tional $1 million this year is to fund teacher training seminars and travel costs for rural teachers where the training isn't offered in their home districts. The training plan was announced with representatives of the B.C. Teachers' Federation, the B.C. School Trustees' Association, superintendents, principals and vice principals, parent advisory councils, inde-pendent schools, and the First Nations Steering Committee. BCSTA president Teresa Rezansoff said school boards will decide how to structure the training to "best meet the needs of teachers while minimizing any impact on student learning time."
News
Delegates vote on resolutions Wednesday at the Union of B.C. Municipalities convention in Vancouver.
FILE PHOTO / BLACK PRESS
New training a pain
The Hope Standard Thursday, October 1, 2015 www.hopestandard.com 3
“United We ing”
10/15H_UWS1
A Community Sing-A-Long Hope United Church
(Corner of 3rd Ave. & Queen St.)First Wednesday of each month
October 7, 2015 at 1:30pm
CELEBRATETHANKSGIVINGWITH SONG
Proudly sponsored by GARDNER GMGARDNER GM
Light refreshments served. All are welcome, invite your friends!invite your friends!
,
CCTTWW
Light refreshmenLight refreshmen
235 Wallace St. 604-869-2486
Store Hours:Mon.-Fri: 9am-7pmSaturday: 9am-6pmSun & Holidays: 10am-5pm
CAPSULE COMMENTS
OPEN SUNDAYS... BECAUSE HEALTH DOESN’T WAIT!Use the app...
UrmillaShinde-Surabathula
Mike McLoughlin Lindsay Kufta Anna Eldridge
nursing services include:
• callus & corn care
• nail packing
• ingrown toenails
• hygiene & footwear education
• assessment & referral
• nail cutting
WALK WELL FOOTCARE
Before the modern age of drug
therapy, many medications
came as liquid extracts of natural
products. Whiskey, in strengths of
up to 60%, was the main ingredient
in many of these products. It was
felt that the alcohol was very good
for its sedative effects, particularly
in young children. Times have
changed……..
Portion size is still one of the most
powerful methods of losing weight.
This is particularly important when
we travel. We tend to be a little
more liberal in our eating habits on
holidays and this can often lead to
weight-gain.
Guidelines about coffee
consumption seem to agree that
four cups daily is a safe quantity
to drink. For pregnant women and
children the amount is a lot less….
about one cup.
Ever since 1998, when drugs
became available to enhance men’s
sexual health, drug companies
have been working hard to nd a
female equivalent. One company
has found such a drug but results
are mixed and there are some side
effects. It has recently become
approved by the Food and Drug
Administration in the U.S. but it is
still not approved in Canada.
Research is carried on worldwide
to nd new drugs to treat all the
diseases that plague us. We try to
keep current on that drug research
and when a new drug does come
onto the market, chances are
that we will know about it. We
encourage your question about
new and old drugs. Drop in
soon!
10/15H
_PS1
Phone for appointment.
386 Fort St., Hope • 604.869.2560 • www.foe2690hopebc.com
Thanks to you our Brigade Days weekend was a great success!
Without volunteers our organization would not be able to raise the funds
that we do. Our motto “PEOPLE HELPING PEOPLE” means YOU!!
Fraternal Order of Eagles Hope Aerie 2690
Would like to thank the following volunteers for all their eff ort and hard work during the Brigade Days weekend.
Bud Gardner at Gardner GM
Hope Towing
Dick at Hope Towing
Don at Hope Ice
Larry Kellum & Kay Thorne
Bev & Roy Hickinbottom
John & Angela Playle
Don & Elaine Dixon and granddaughter Alexa
Wineva Hawkins
Fran & Rod Berthiaume
Creighton Tays
Aris Tays
Charlie Mitchell
Stephanie Staves
Doug Staves Jr.
Ingrid Corcese
Leslie Wright
Diane Lee
Shannon Page
Joe Jmaeff
Dave Allen
Vera Murphy
Angela Kovacs
Marie McAbee
Ian Mackenzie
10/15H
_E01
Currently seeking applications to fi ll a vacancy on the AdvantageHOPE Board of Directors.
Applications can be picked up at the Hope Visitor Centre at 919 Water Avenue, or online at hopebc.ca/about. Applications for the current vacancy will be accepted until October 23, 2015.
BOARD VACANCY
10/15H_AH01
Black Press
The following is the seventh question in an ongoing series of election questions posed to Chilliwack-Hope candidates posted at ChilliwackVotes.com.
Security has been a major issue this election. Security, how-ever, is broadly defined and attached to many different circum-stances ranging from the environment, energy and the economy, to public safety and terrorism. What is the most immediate and pressing threat to our security and why?
Thomas Cheney (Green)
In regards to security, it is vital to admit that we live in an incredibly safe country. We need to ensure security laws do not needlessly impede civil liberties.
Concerning coincidences regarding the security services and groups ideologically opposed to government policy have already occurred. An example (of many) involves our former MP Chuck Strahl who was a lobbyist for Enbridge while sitting on the intel-ligence and security review committee (Strahl did resign once this became public). Based on this, it is concerning that groups opposed to the Northern Gateway Pipeline such as Dogwood Initiative and Forest Ethics were spied on by CSIS.
The problem with the emphasis on security in a neverend-ing "war on terror" is that it allows gross violations of due pro-cess. There is a saying from Ancient Rome, “Inter arma enim silent leges” which means “in war the law falls silent”.
Louis De Jaeger (Liberal)
Rather than pander to the politics of fear, voters in this election want a government focused on economic security.
Incomes are not keeping up with the cost of living and we are all falling further behind. Liberals have a strong economic plan that will create more jobs by nearly doubling federal infrastruc-ture investment to almost $125 billion over the next 10 years. By cutting the middle class tax bracket by seven per cent we will put more money in your pockets. We will invest in much needed social infrastructure that will include affordable housing and accessible, inclusive child-care spaces. Nine out of 10 families in Chilliwack-Hope will receive more from the Canada Child Benefit program, lifting 315,000 Canadian children out of poverty.
Our seniors' economic security will also be bolstered by an enhanced Canada Pension Plan and an increase in the Guaranteed Income Supplement for single, lower income seniors.
Canadians know that a secure economy that works for the middle class means a country that works for everyone.
Alexander Johnson (Libertarian)
We need to ask how can we ensure the safety and security of all Canadians.
We can start by protecting their property. Allowing people to own the air above and ground below; not just the soil on top of their land. Remove protections of corporations and allow citizens to seek financial compensation from those who harm their prop-erty or devalue a resource such as poisoning well water with toxic run-off. We can allow safe and responsible gun ownership to be free from federal burden, free up $100 million of taxpayer money by removing the Chief Firearms Officer, and let provinces issue their own mandates that will better suit those people.
We can turn the attention of CSIS away from Canadian citizens and towards foreign visitors and migrants.
And we can bring our troops home, stop poking a bees nest
with a stick and asking why we keep getting stung.
Seonaigh MacPherson (NDP)For generations, Canada’s security has been built on a reputa-
tion as a honest broker and a partner for peace. Stephen Harper has badly damaged that reputation and reduced our standing in the world, so much so that Canada lost its seat at the UN Security Council. I look forward to working in a Tom Mulcair government to undo this damage. Together, we can restore Canada's global stature and provide leadership on key global issues like poverty and climate change.
Even as he abandoned our traditional peacekeeping role, Stephen Harper has slashed veterans' benefits and closed Veterans Affairs offices across the country. Over the past decade, we have lost more Canadian soldiers to suicide than to combat in Afghanistan. This is profoundly wrong.
New Democrats know that Canada must honour its obliga-tions to women and men in uniform when they go into harm's way to uphold our security.
Mark Strahl (Conservative)
Our Conservative government has been focused on keeping Canadians secure. We’ve cracked down on crime to protect our communities; taken the threat of jihadi terrorism seriously, both at home and abroad; and protected the economic well-being of Canadians by keeping taxes low, returning to a balanced budget and providing significant direct support to families and seniors.
Protecting our fragile economy during this time of global eco-nomic uncertainty is our number one priority.
While the other parties are promising higher taxes on families and seniors, higher payroll taxes on workers and employers and higher taxes on job creators, our Conservative government has a four year Economic Action Plan which will cut taxes and keep them low. Canada can’t afford the massive tax hikes and permanent deficits proposed by the Liberals and the NDP. Now is the time to protect our economy with the proven economic leadership of our Conservative government. NP Dorothy-Jean O'Donnell was not asked to answer this question as she had not been confirmed as a candidate when the question went out.
Chilliwack-Hope candidates answer question on security
Chilliwack-Hope 2015 federal election candidates; clockwise from top left; Thomas Cheney (Green); Louis De Jaeger (Liberal); Alexander Johnson (Libertarian); Mark Strahl (Conservative); Dorothy-Jean O’Donnell (Marxist-Leninist) and Seonaigh MacPherson (NDP).
News
Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard4 www.hopestandard.com
Think your pet has what it takes to be picked as one of the cutest in town?
Send us your favorite photo of your pet and it may be displayed on a calendar produced by
604.824.1411Unit F 800 Third Ave. Hope
Contest Rules:• Amateurs only. No previously published print or web photos• Enter as often as you like• Winners will be chosen by a panel of judges• The Hope Standard and SNYP will have the copyrights to the photos and they may appear in print, on the website and/or Facebook
page of these organizations.• Submissions may be made in person at The Hope Standard offi ce, 540 Wallace St. or at Animal House Pets and Supplies, 800 Third
Ave. or by email to [email protected] with your name and contact info along with pet’s name.• Deadline for entry is October 7, 2015.
Winners will be notifi ed by phone and no further correspondence will be entered into. Employees of The Hope Standard and Animal House may not enter. The Hope Standard and SNYP are not responsible for lost or damaged photos. SNYP is a non-profi t society for dogs and cats.
ay appear in print, on the website and/or Facebook
CUTEST CRITTERPhoto Contest
9/15H_
AH24
BUY 2 GET 1 FREE
Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. Not valid with any other offer. Valid until October 7, 2015
CANNED PET FOOD
895 Third Ave., Hope | freereinassociates.caCall Today 604-869-2279
FIRST AID COURSESon Demand
Business / PersonalCustom Courses
10/15H
_FR01
www.chilliwackchiefs.net 604.392.4433
2015-16 SEASON TICKETS ON SALE NOW!
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DIVISION CHAMPS!DIVISION CHAMPS!
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SUBMITTED PHOTO/ THE STANDARD
Supporters and event enthusiasts turned out to this year’s Terry Fox Run. A total of $2,700 was raised to put toward cancer research efforts, on behalf of Terry’s memory and those struggling with the disease and their families. The amount is on the rise according to Mandy Arbuckle, assistant manager at the FVRD Recreation, Culture and Airpark Services Centre.
TERRY FOX RUN GETS RESULTS!
The Hope Standard Thursday, October 1, 2015 www.hopestandard.com 5
Purple light bulbs available by donation at :Hope Public Library
1011 - 6th Ave.Hope RCMP
690 Old Princeton HWY.District of Hope
325 Wallace St.Pharmasave
235 Wallace St.Hope Rec. Centre 1005 6th Ave.
HOPEHOPE Bike Park
Volunteer & Sponsor Appreciation BBQ
TO ALL
VOLUNTEERS & SPONSORS
Friday, Oct. 2, 2015 @ Memorial ParkRegistration at 5:30 pm at District Hall, 325 Wallace Street, BBQ to FollowIf you are able to attend, please reply to Wendy Dalmanat 604-869-5671, Ext. 307 or [email protected] look forward to seeing you there!
With sincere appreciation for making the Hope Bike Park possible, the District of Hope Mayor and Council cordially invites you to attend an appreciation barbeque:
10-15H_DOH1
Community NewsBANNING TOGETHERIn descending order
of appearance:
Maxine Bouthot,
manager at Envision
Hope grabbed
what she could to
increase donations
for the Food Bank
Thanksgiving Drive
in partnership with
Buy & Save; Cops
for Cancer made an
appearance at the
Rec Centre with
Dennis Adamson
(far left,) Milly
Marshall (centre)
and RCMP officers
to kick off their tour
to raise funds and
awareness for the
deadly disease; The
Hope Quilting Club
donated quilts to
Marianne Brueckert
of UFVRD RCMP
Victim Services at
the first-ever Hope
quilt show.
Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard6 www.hopestandard.com
Clark spends on rural communities, fire prevention
OpinionPublished by Black Press Limited at 540 Wallace St., Hope, BC V0X 1L0
Do balanced budgets really matter?
UNION LABEL
CEP SCEP
226
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EDITORERIN KNUTSON604-869-4992
ADVERTISINGPATTIE DESJARDINS
604-869-4990
StandardThe Hope
E-MAIL: [email protected]
PUBLISHERCARLY
FERGUSON
604-869-
OFFICE HOURSTuesday - Friday
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
CLASSIFIED/CIRCULATION
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Display AdsMonday 12
p.m.
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p.m.
DEADLINESMAILBox 1090
Hope, B.C. VOX 1LO
CANADIAN
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540 Wallace St., Hope, B.C. every Thursday by Black Press.We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the
Canada Periodical Fund of the Department of Canadian Heritage for our publishing activi-ties.
Copyright and/or property rights sub sist in all material appearing in this issue. The publisher shall not be liable for minor changes or er rors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. The pub lish er’s liability for other errors or omis-
sions is limited to publication of the ad ver tise ment in a subsequent issue or
refund of monies paid for the ad ver tise ment.BC Press Council: The Standard is a member of the British Columbia 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
2013CCNABLUE
RIBBON
Tom FletcherBlack Press
Premier Christy Clark peppered her annual address to local politicians with spending announcements Friday, mostly aimed at smaller and rural communities.
Clark emphasized the outsized contribution of small resource communities to the provincial economy, and said the extra help is made possible by the B.C. government's spending control that has left three straight budget sur-pluses.
A $75 million "rural dividend" will be available over three years to communities of fewer than 25,000 people that are outside urban areas. The fund is to diversify local econo-mies, but details won't be released until March 2016.
Clark warned of increasingly severe forest fire seasons due to planetary warming, announcing a $10 million top-up to B.C.'s forest fire prevention program to control fuel in interface areas. The program started in 2004 and has been criticized for focusing on local plans rather than action. The forests ministry says more than 780 square kilometres have been treated so far.
Clark also announced a $90 million extension to the infrastructure fund for small communities, which started
last year and is funded 50-50 by the federal and provin-cial governments. It's available to communities under 100,000 people, covering up to two thirds of eligible projects, with applications accepted starting Oct. 30.
Urban communities will likely benefit most from a $5 million addition to the province's "guns and gangs" strategy, which targets prolific and gang-related offend-ers and school programs to warn young people away from gang involvement.
While Clark received a standing ovation before and after her speech to the Union of B.C. Municipalities convention in Vancouver, discussion before her arrival showed not everyone is pleased with the government's direction.
An event that began with a small protest outside against the Site C dam project, beginning on the Peace River, ended with a resolution to reverse Victoria's forced exclusion of the affected land from the agricul-tural land reserve.
The province imposed four-year election terms on local governments before last year's municipal elections. At the convention, delegates reversed their long-stand-ing position and called on the province to provide recall legislation for local councils. Premier Christy Clark speaks to Union of B.C. Municipalities convention
Friday in Vancouver.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
The federal election campaign has produced a jumble of conflicting claims about whether or not Canada has a balanced budget or a deficit, how it was determined, and whether it even matters. The definitive word on this came out last week, with the release of the Government of Canada Annual Financial Report, signed off by Auditor General Michael Ferguson.
“The government posted a budgetary surplus of $1.9 billion for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2015, compared to a budgetary deficit of $5.2 billion in 2013-14,” the report says. “Revenues increased by $10.7 billion, or 3.9 per cent, from 2013-14, reflecting increases across all major revenue streams. Program expenses increased by $5.2 billion, reflecting increases in major transfers to persons and other levels of government, offset in part by a decrease in direct program expenses.”
The Conservative government’s pre-election budget calculated that last year was in deficit, and this year would be the first in the black since 2008. Ottawa pundits say this “surprise surplus” was engineered with intentionally pessimistic budget estimates, so Prime Minister Stephen Harper would get a boost right about now.
Liberal leader Justin Trudeau claimed last year’s surplus was partly generated by cuts to Veterans’ Affairs and Aboriginal Affairs. Wrong and wrong. Veterans’ Affairs spending was up 13 per cent, and Aboriginal Affairs spending rose nearly 30 per cent. (See page 16 of this report for details.) Trudeau has also insisted Canada is in recession now, which helps his suddenly adopted position that a Liberal govern-ment would run deficits for the next three years to build infrastructure. Harper ran the biggest deficits in Canadian history after the 2009 crash, bailing out auto makers and building lots of “shovel ready” infrastructure, as did the U.S. and other countries. The question raised by Trudeau’s plan is whether it’s a good idea to keep doing that without a financial crisis. France, for example, has run operating deficits every year since the early 1970s, although the current Socialist government vows to balance the books by 2017. France’s operating debt is now equal to 91 per cent of its Gross Domestic Product. Canada’s net debt-to-GDP ratio is currently around 30 per cent, down from frightening levels in the 1990s before the Chrétien government finally balanced the budget. (Fun fact: then-finance minister Paul Martin not only cut transfers to provinces, unlike the current government, he inflicted the largest-ever cuts to the CBC. Harper’s CBC cuts were part of government-wide reductions, again due to that 2009 crisis.) NDP leader Thomas Mulcair has promised to balance the budget every year of his mandate, should he form Canada’s first-ever socialist government. He will spend the rest of the campaign trying to reconcile this promise with the grandiose spending plans he has piled up. Meanwhile in B.C., Finance Minister Mike de Jong may have benefited from Harper’s lowball budget. In his first quarter update last week, de Jong reported that his February budget forecast is on track, with a $277 million surplus. This is despite a $300 million bill for forest fire-fighting, thanks to personal and corporate income tax revenue expected to be $374 million higher than budgeted. B.C. bases its tax revenue figures on federal estimates, and the ones they got early this year were clearly low. Understated or not, this is a nice problem to have.
The Hope Standard Thursday, October 1, 2015 www.hopestandard.com 7
No one does community news better. From quill to computer, platforms may change,
but our commitment to you will not.
10/15H_AH01
Public Input SessionTuesday, October 67:00pm – 9:00pm
Economic Development
Strategy Update
Conference Centre at the Hope Recreation Centre1005 – 6th Avenue, Hope, BC
The Economic Development Strategy Update is a joint initiative of
As per the current District of Hope Grant in Aid policy, $5,000 has been allocated towards Grant in Aids for 2016. The budgeted funds are to be distributed amongst the applicants, at Council’s discretion, however funds are currently under review and may be subject to change.
Applications will be accepted up to October 15, 2015 and applicants must provide the following details:
Services of the applicant must:• Strengthen and enhance the well being of our
community; • Promote volunteerism;• Be a District of Hope and area registered
non-profi t society.
Services of the applicant must not:• Offer direct fi nancial assistance to individuals or
families;• Duplicate services that fall within the mandate
of either a senior government or a local service agency;
• Be part of a provincial or national fundraising campaign
2016 Grants in Aid
325 Wallace St., PO Box 609, Hope, BC V0X ILOPh: 604-869-5671 F: 604-869-2275
[email protected] | www.hope.ca
Applications are available at the District Offi ce and on our web site at www.hope.ca (select “Documents” and then select “Policies”)
10/1
5H_D
OH1
The 3rd Avenue Capital Road Construction Project may commence on October 5th, 2015. Closures will occur between Commission Street and Park Street. There will be some access on 3rd Avenue to Commission.
We thank you in advance for your patience during this time.
District of Hope, Public WorksRoss Blackwell, Roads and Drainage Foreman
Attention Property Owner/Tenant
325 Wallace St., PO Box 609, Hope, BC V0X ILOPh: 604-869-5671 F: 604-869-2275
[email protected] | www.hope.ca
Re: 3rd Avenue Capital Road Construction
10/1
5H_D
OH1
Letters
The Hope Standard welcomes letters from our readers.
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phone number for verification purposes.Letters should be no longer than 300 words. The Standard edits letters for accuracy,
taste, clarity and length.The Standard reserves the right to not
publish letters.
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Letters
Editorial DepartmentTo discuss any
news story idea you may have – or any story we have recently published – please call the editor at 604-869-4992.
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property rights subsists in all advertisements and in all other mate-rial appearing in this edition of THE HOPE STANDARD. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatso-ever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writ-ing from the pub-lisher.
U n a u t h o r i z e d publication will be subject to recourse by law.
“I am a Canadian. Free to speak without fear, free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think is right; free to oppose what I think is wrong, or free to choose those who shall govern my country. This heritage of freedom I pledge to uphold for myself and for all mankind.” - John Diefenbaker
After the horrors of the Second World War and the tragedy of the intern-ment of Japanese Canadians, John D i e f e n b a k e r, our 13th Prime Minister, saw the need of a
Canadian Bill of Rights. His concern for women and native peoples was genuine and his work for civil and political rights shaped our nation for years to come.
In just a few weeks, we as Canadians will have the political right, the honor, the privilege and the duty to vote for those who will lead our country during this important time in our world. This is the time to actively seek answers to our questions, research party priorities, be diligent in making informed decisions and to purposefully cast our ballot.
Voting is something we take for granted in this part of the world. For over a decade, I lived in a nation where the president declared himself to be in power for life and military
coups were the norm for changing govern-ments. The people could only hope and pray for democratic process, the respect of human rights and the freedom of expression.
All of this we currently enjoy in Canada but apathy and indifference could eventually cost us these very things. Other Canadians sacrificed much so that we could enjoy this freedom of democracy!
Many ridings in the past election were lost or won by only a few hundred votes. Your vote makes a difference! Don’t squander your political right, your chance to have a say, or your freedom to determine who will govern our great nation!
Sue Martin
Don’t squander your political right to vote
Robin Hood approach for Trudeau?
The oil companies are raping this country with destruction and poor ethics. They have gone to self-serve stations to get rid of employees!
This not only got rid of jobs, it also decreased safety in our streets and highways, with little or no thought to public safety. Their safety and environmental records are appalling. The prices of fuel are appalling and we should have full service with those prices.
For more information, visit http://action.sumofus.org/a/shell-21-day-blowout/
Victor Mitchell
Oil ethics astray?
The policy proposal being suggested by Justin Trudeau to increase the income tax paid by the top 1 per cent of income earners must have been borrowed from Robin Hood – steal from the rich and give to the poor. As it happens this is what virtually all govern-ments around the world have been doing for years – including Canada. Approximately half of our current federal government revenues consist of income tax payments amounting to 135 billion dollars. The top 1 per cent currently pay about 18 per cent of all income tax paid. The top 10 per cent of income earners pay about 55 per cent of these taxes and the bottom 50 per cent pay only 4 percent. I would say the top earners are paying a rather substantial share.
If you look at the top rate of income tax charged
in other areas of the world, Canada is roughly in the middle at a combined federal and provincial income tax rate of 45.7 per cent. The United States has an aver-age rate of about 47. 8 per cent.The Netherlands are at about 52 per cent and the average for all of Western Europe is 45.7 per cent — the same as Canada. Switzerland brags about its 20 per cent tax rate. It may be feasible to raise the top rate by a point or two, but a lot of people at these high income levels tend to have some flexibility as to where they call home and pay taxes. The Robin Hood approach may be attractive, but Trudeau should be careful not to kill the goose laying the golden eggs.
Jack Carradice
I have voted in Yale for the past 53 years. Today I received my federal voting card by mail and my poll no. is 025 Hatzic Prairie Hall 10845 Farms Road Mission. B.C. No one in Yale is too happy this morning. There is a disclaimer under the address on the card that this site meets 15 accessibility criteria. At 82, I will probably need them all.
Walter Kassian
Voting polls too far
Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard8 www.hopestandard.com
ANSWERS FOR THIS WEEK’S CROSSWORD PUZZLE CAN BE FOUND IN THE CLASSIFIED SECTION OF THIS PAPER
OCTOBER 1 CROSSWORD PUZZLEACROSS 1. Mythological bird 4. Norwegian sea inlets 10. Military mailbox 11. Curved span 12. One hundred grams 14. Chest muscle (slang) 15. Old Portuguese pennies 16. Remove connection 18. Gas storage container 19. Conakry is the capital 20. Erstwhile 24. W. Australian capital 26. Dr. Laura’s initials 27. Death notice 28. Irtysh River city 30. So. Am. country 31. Last in an large series 34. Term for alternative musical
passage
36. 12 37. A nestling hawk or falcon 39. Vice president 40. Detailed criteria for a piece
of work 41. Six 42. Gossipy 46. Relating to the body 48. Incendiary liquid used in
fi rebombs 51. Plunder 52. Niger capital 53. Game of chukkas 54. Genus Hedera 55. Government prosecutor 56. Plural of genus 58. Born of 59. Livebearers tropical fi shes 60. Doctor of Education
DOWN 1. Plundering 2. Can-_____, kitchen tool 3. Crested Australian parrot 4. 4th tone of scale 5. Author of “The Rings” 6. Mains 7. Major European river 8. PC publishing 9. 40th state 12. A tight embrace 13. Large African antelope 17. Impertinence 21. Wild Eurasian mountain goat 22. City in Malaysia 23. Small ornamental bag 25. Nelson’s ship 29. Point midway between S
and SE 31. “Untouchables” Elliot
32. Misprint 33. Heme 35. Italian mountain range 38. Surgical knife 41. Purple 43. Forfeited 44. Fixed a female cat 45. An edible tuberous root 47. Formerly included in genus
Cedrela 49. Headed up 50. Soft shelled clam genus 56. Country doctor 57. Equally 58. Wrong prefi x
HOW TO
PLAY:
• Fill in the grid so that every row, every column & every 3 x 3 box contains the numbers 1 through 9 only once.
• Each 3 x 3 box is outlined with a darker line. You already have a few numbers to get you started. Remember: you must not repeat the numbers 1 through 9 in the same line, column or 3 x 3 box.
3 7 7 O l d H o p e Pr i n ce to n Way, H o p e, B. C . 6 0 4 - 8 6 9 - 8 4 8 4
SUDOKUOCTOBER 1
ANSWERS IN THE CLASSIFIED SECTION OF THIS PAPER
OPEN Tuesday - Sunday11am - 2pm
3:30pm - 9 pmCLOSED Mondays
Eat-In OR Take Out
Community
Golden Larches delight at Manning ParkRobyn BarkerSpecial to The Standard
As the leaves on the trees turn into a riot of colours, and the kiddies head back to school, every-one shifts gears toward a new season.
Autumn is the perfect time to visit Manning Park Resort. There are lots of activities to take advantage of without the summer crowds.
Lightning Lake is peaceful, quiet and the perfect setting to take a canoe and watch the birds. Bring along the old fishing rod and snag some of the trout that have eluded capture all summer.
There are still boat rentals available at Lightning Lake on weekends, and mid-week boat rentals are available from the lodge until Thanksgiving.
If you look up toward Mount Frosty — you can clearly see the larch trees have changed. Larches are the only coniferous trees that have needles and change colour from green to electric yellow, season-ally. This is happening now and usually lasts until the beginning of October. The larch stand on Mount Frosty is the prime spot to see them in all their glory.
If you haven’t hiked to the peak of Mount Frosty yet, the cooler weather of fall is the perfect time to do it. It’s a nine-hour round-trip hike with an 1150 m-elevation gain. It’s great exercise and all hikers are rewarded not only with the yellow larch forest, but amazing views of the surrounding mountains
from the top. As it gets a little cooler, snow, dusting the moun-
taintops around the Fraser Valley may become evident. This means it’s time to gear up for winter to make sure you’re ready to hit the slopes this December. The Season Pass Early Bird rates are in effect only until October 31, 2015.
Manning was among the only ski hills last winter that was open the entire winter season, with a base of more than a metre of snow for the majority of the season.
By virtue of being at a slightly higher elevation and further inland, Manning fared better than most local mountains. Both the Alpine and the Nordic areas saw great conditions consistently all season long, even before the Nordic trails opened at the end of November, there was still great snowshoeing to be had.
The mountain and its staff are looking forward to the same exceptional conditions this winter.
Manning Park Resort is a four season family resort 45 minutes east of Hope on Highway 3, that offers year-round camping and accommodation, hiking, canoeing, skiing/boarding, 64 km of Nordic trails, snowshoeing and an outdoor ice rink.
For more information please phone: 1-800-330-3321, or checkout the Park’s website at www.man-ningpark.com
Manning Park Resort is in the bloom of fall and its beautiful larch trees are rapidly changing colour.SUBMITTED PHOTO
The Hope Standard Thursday, October 1, 2015 www.hopestandard.com 9
BRIGADE DAYS WOULD LIKE TO SAY
LOCAL SPONSORS
PROUD PARTNERS
SPECIAL THANKS TO
Of course a big thank you to all the volunteers who donated their time helping out where needed. You help make this event a success!
CORPORATE SPONSORS
UPCOMING EVENTS
UPCOMING EVENTS
WEEKLY ACTIVITIESWEEKLY ACTIVITIES
Community Community CalendarCalendar
Tuesday Oct. 6GLOW-UP MEETING
Trails Crossing Friendship Centre
Corner of 6th & Wallace Hope,
7 pm [email protected]
Wednesday Oct. 7
SERVICE CANADA & WORK BC
Hope Library
1005A Sixth Ave. Hope
6:30pm - 7:30pm • 604-869-2313
Tuesday Oct. 13AUXILIARY TO FRASER CANYON
HOSPITAL AND FRASER HOPE
LODGE MONTHLY MEETING
Fraser Canyon Hospital, Conference
Room1 - 3pm • 604-869-3517
ThursdaysSENIOR KEEP FITCanyon Golden Agers Club560 Douglas Street Hope9 am - 10 am cost $2.00 drop in604-869-8435
FridaysTOPS MEETINGAnglican Church Hall 681 Fraser St Hope8:15 - 10:30 am
604-869-0323
SundaysHAPPY KNIT HOPE1005A 6th Ave. Hope 1:30 pm - 3 pm
604-869-2313
MondaysHOPE AL-ANON GROUPFraser Canyon Hospital
Meeting Room1275 7th Ave, Hope8:00 pm - 9:00 pmKathleen A: 604-869-7078
TuesdaysSENIOR KEEP FITCanyon Golden Agers Club560 Douglas Street Hope9:00 am - 10:00 am
cost $2.00 drop in604-869-8435
CONVERSATION CIRCLESHope Library1005A Sixth Ave, Hope10:30 - 11:30 am
TOPS MEETINGAnglican Church Hall681 Fraser St HopeTuesdays 5:30 - 8:00 pm604-869-2204
The winners will be notifi ed by phone. Prizes will be accepted as awarded and no further correspondence will be entered into.
Drop off your entry at The Hope Standard, 540 Wallace St. by October 14 @ 5pm
In Recognition of National Newspaper Week
You could WIN a year’s subscription to
Name:Phone:
Notary wins prestigious awardCommunity
The Society of Notaries Public of BC, recently bestowed the Presidential Award of Excellence to Chilliwack-Hope Notary Scott Simpson at their semi-annual conference in Whistler.
The President Award of Excellence is award-ed to Notaries who demonstrate exemplary service and commitment to their communities and the Notary profession. It is not awarded annually or with any time specificity. It’s only awarded when a particular Notary’s achieve-ments warrant special recognition.
“Scott Simpson is without question an exem-plary Notary,” said Akash Sablok, outgoing President of BC Notaries. “He has contributed to our Society through participation on our board and committees and innumerable other projects. He is involved in many community projects in Chilliwack and surrounding areas through his long time participation in Rotary and by his own philanthropic endeavors.”
Scott has contributed to the development of local mountain bike trails, fundraising for cycling events, and developing a multi-use trail system to better connect communities. He has also been involved in annual Rotary Club fundraising din-ners and the creation of a publicly accessible fitness park in Chilliwack. Along with his wife Jacquie, they have participated in youth programs and hosting young people from around the world. “I was hon-oured to receive the award,” Simpson told The Hope Standard.”I thought it was something to do with my family, because they are all notaries, so I was shocked when they called my name to the podium.”
Simpson Notaries, which has been owned by the
Simpson family since, 1968, has offices in Chilliwack, Abbotsford and Hope. The Society of Notaries Public of BC represents more than 340 highly trained Notary professionals. Most have locally owned and operated offices and all provide personal assistance to clients around the province. Individuals, families and businesses seek the services of BC Notaries for a wide range of non-contentious legal matters, includ-ing residential and commercial real estate transfers, mortgage refinancing, wills and advanced healthcare planning and other important documents.
“The community of Hope is beautiful, and it’s nice to be able to offer my services to the people here,” he said.
Scott Simpson of Simpson Notaries receives prestigious awardSUBMITTED PHOTO
Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard12 www.hopestandard.com Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard www.hopestandard.com 13
FRASER FRASER CANYON GLASS CANYON GLASS LTD.LTD.531 Corbett St.604-869-9514
Install smoke Install smoke detectors on detectors on every oor and every oor and in the sleeping in the sleeping areas of your areas of your home. home.
Fire safety on,Fire safety on,accidents gone!
www.bluemoosecafe.com322 Wallace St. • Hope, BC• 604-869-0729
Whatever burns never
returns.
308 Wallace St 604.869.5654
TOY’S PHARMACY
604.869.2486 235 Wallace St.
Practice fi re safety - watch what you heat.
761 WATER AVENUE761 WATER AVENUEPhone: 604-869-2700Phone: 604-869-2700
Fax: 604-869-2800Fax: 604-869-2800
Stop, drop, Stop, drop, and roll.and roll.
Rolly’sFAMILY RESTAURANT
888 FRASER AVE. 604.869.7448
JUST IN CASE,HAVE A MEETING PLACE.
FAMILY RESTAURANT
888 FRASER AVE. 604.869.7448
JUST IN CASE,JUST IN CASE,A MEETING PLACE.A MEETING PLACE.HAVE A MEETING PLACE.
Fire catches, so don’t
play with matches
725 4th Ave310-0001
Wheeler Cheam Realty366A Wallace St.
604-869-2165
Test yoursmoke
detectors every month.
535 Wallace St 604.869.9030
CANYON AUTOMOTIVE
Fire safety on, accidents gone.
GroveGrove BOOKKEEPING BOOKKEEPING
366C Wallace St. 604.869.9667
Think of Think of fi re before fi re before it starts.it starts.
Cooking food’s hot, so don’t touch
the pot!559 Old Hope Princeton Hwy 604.869.3663
CANYONSHELL
191 Hope-Princeton Hwy. 604.869.9661
Have an escape plan and Have an escape plan and practice it with your family.practice it with your family.
453 Old Hope Princeton Way
Be very cautious around open ames.
i’m Lovin’ it!™ 591 A Wallace St. 604.869.7468
STAY FIRE SAFE!
Nyda Realty
®
Gather your clan, make a
fi re plan.
287 Wallace St.604-869-2945
Boston Bar
604.867.9614604.867.9614 48075 Trans-Canada Hwy, Boston Bar
SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL FIREFIGHTERS!
CANYON CARPETSGather your clan, make a fi re plan.
326 Wallace St. 604.869.2727
Fire safety Fire safety goes, danger goes, danger
Doug Araki, CFP1-800-778-1133 ext 213
Carelessness is the biggest cause of fi re.
Hope Ready MixHope Ready Mix604.869.5322
Get outquick, before
the smokegets thick!
604.869.9511
GARDNERCHEV-BUICK-GMC
945 Water Ave. 930 6th Ave. 604.869.9036
Electrical safety leads to fi re safety
CANYON CABLE1175 4th Avenue, Hope BCEsso: 604.860.4422 A&W: 604.860.4446
If you play with If you play with fi re, you’re gonna fi re, you’re gonna get burned.get burned.
Don’t let your dreams go up in smoke –
practice fi re safety.
BUY & SAVE FOODSBUY & SAVE FOODS WHERE THE LOCALS SHOP WHERE THE LOCALS SHOP
5th Ave. & Wallace St. 604-869-5318
“Best Ice in BC”1005-6th [email protected] www.fvrd.bc.ca
Fire catches, so don’t play with matches.
Hear the
BEEPwhere you
SLeepFIRE PREVENTION WEEKOCTOBER 4 - 10
fi repreventionweek.org
EVERY BEDROOMNEEDS A WORKINGSMOKE ALARM.
Protect Your Family ENTER TO WIN!
Get the BEEP out!
Drop your entry off at the Hope Rona 840 - 5th Ave., OR The Hope Standard, 540 Wallace Street by Friday, October 9
Name:Phone:
KIDDE SMOKE
DETECTORS 1 of 3
The winners will be notifi ed by phone. Prizes will be accepted as awarded and no further correspondence will be entered into.
Sponsored by:
Fire Prevention Week is upon us and
this year’s theme is “hear the beep
before you sleep.” An alarming
number of B.C. residences are missing
smoke alarms, according to a recent
study conducted by the University of
Fraser Valley.
Results suggest, close to 70 per cent
of structures that caught fi re in B.C.
between 2006-2011 were missing a
proper smoke alarm. Findings indicate
that over half of home related deaths
caused by fi re occur between the hours
of 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. during prime
sleep hours.
The provincial
government and
Fire Chief’s across
B.C. have banned
together in a
province-wide
initiative to
educate the
public about the
risks of poor
fi re safety,
e s p e c i a l l y ,
the absence
of properly
fi tted and
up-to-date fi re prevention
gear around the home.
Local Fire Chief Tom DeSorcy is on
board for the discussion, and is intent
on spreading the message of safety,
awareness, and fi re prevention online
and through the prestigious 2015
campaign, which runs from October 4
to October 10.
DeSorcy gave a candid tour of the
three Fire Hall’s he currently oversees
to The Hope Standard in a recent and
enlightening outing. The District of
Hope Fire Department was created
in 1999 and the three halls are a
combination of the Kawkawa Lake,
Flood/Laidlaw/Silver Creek and Hope
Fire Departments.
Each hall has its own specifi c task,
whether it be storage, supplies, clean-
up, hose drying, main operations,
educational purposes or a combination
of uses. Hope’s three fi re halls are home
to various fi re apparatus including
three Engines, two Tenders, a CAFS
Squad and Incident Support Unit.
“Our training teaches safety — to
be safe while driving, or operating
equipment,” said DeSorcy. “We have
had no casualties, and accidents are
rare because of our safety fi rst policy
— buildings will burn, not people.”
Often, movies like Backdraft create an
image of false bravado prevalent in
the consciousness of Canadian people,
but the reality of the Fire Department is
far removed from the traditional pomp
associated with Hollywood.
“There’s this idea of bravery related to
dying on the job, but that’s not what
we signed up for,” said DeSorcy on the
mentality of the men and women who
currently volunteer at the District of
Hope Fire Department.
Members train for basics on the job
and on fi rst aid, as well as
occupational health
and safety.
Only three
members of
the department
are medically
trained and
act as licensed
fi rst responders.
DeSorcy is
adamant that
the skill-set of
his members be
effectively matched
with his/her duties.
Volunteer fi refi ghters
sacrifi ce their time and families on the
job and are required to go out of town
on Justice Institute of British Columbia
(JIBC) training certifi cations.
Often family dinners, celebrations and
holidays are broken-up when the pager
goes off and mom/dad or husband/wife
has to leave for duty — opportunities
such as family friendly programs, ease
the burden a bit according to DeSorcy.
“There is a fi refi ghters program with
JI that allows spouses and children
to come to the weekend training
sessions,” he said. “That means a lot to
the families.”
Properly outfi tting and training new
members takes resources, but DeSorcy
stressed the importance of having
a strong representation within the
organization, while encouraging all
Hope residents to practice correct fi re
safety protocol.
“If you don’t have a smoke alarm — I
will make sure you have one,” said
Desorcy.
For more information about the “hear
the beep before you sleep” campaign
please checkout fi repreventionweek.org.
Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard10 www.hopestandard.com Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard www.hopestandard.com 11
FRASER FRASER CANYON GLASS CANYON GLASS LTD.LTD.531 Corbett St.604-869-9514
Install smoke Install smoke detectors on detectors on every oor and every oor and in the sleeping in the sleeping areas of your areas of your home. home.
Fire safety on,Fire safety on,accidents gone!
www.bluemoosecafe.com322 Wallace St. • Hope, BC• 604-869-0729
Whatever burns never
returns.
308 Wallace St 604.869.5654
TOY’S PHARMACY
604.869.2486 235 Wallace St.
Practice fi re safety - watch what you heat.
761 WATER AVENUE761 WATER AVENUEPhone: 604-869-2700Phone: 604-869-2700
Fax: 604-869-2800Fax: 604-869-2800
Stop, drop, Stop, drop, and roll.and roll.
Rolly’sFAMILY RESTAURANT
888 FRASER AVE. 604.869.7448
JUST IN CASE,HAVE A MEETING PLACE.
FAMILY RESTAURANT
888 FRASER AVE. 604.869.7448
JUST IN CASE,JUST IN CASE,A MEETING PLACE.A MEETING PLACE.HAVE A MEETING PLACE.
Fire catches, so don’t
play with matches
725 4th Ave310-0001
Wheeler Cheam Realty366A Wallace St.
604-869-2165
Test yoursmoke
detectors every month.
535 Wallace St 604.869.9030
CANYON AUTOMOTIVE
Fire safety on, accidents gone.
GroveGrove BOOKKEEPING BOOKKEEPING
366C Wallace St. 604.869.9667
Think of Think of fi re before fi re before it starts.it starts.
Cooking food’s hot, so don’t touch
the pot!559 Old Hope Princeton Hwy 604.869.3663
CANYONSHELL
191 Hope-Princeton Hwy. 604.869.9661
Have an escape plan and Have an escape plan and practice it with your family.practice it with your family.
453 Old Hope Princeton Way
Be very cautious around open ames.
i’m Lovin’ it!™ 591 A Wallace St. 604.869.7468
STAY FIRE SAFE!
Nyda Realty
®
Gather your clan, make a
fi re plan.
287 Wallace St.604-869-2945
Boston Bar
604.867.9614604.867.9614 48075 Trans-Canada Hwy, Boston Bar
SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL FIREFIGHTERS!
CANYON CARPETSGather your clan, make a fi re plan.
326 Wallace St. 604.869.2727
Fire safety Fire safety goes, danger goes, danger
Doug Araki, CFP1-800-778-1133 ext 213
Carelessness is the biggest cause of fi re.
Hope Ready MixHope Ready Mix604.869.5322
Get outquick, before
the smokegets thick!
604.869.9511
GARDNERCHEV-BUICK-GMC
945 Water Ave. 930 6th Ave. 604.869.9036
Electrical safety leads to fi re safety
CANYON CABLE1175 4th Avenue, Hope BCEsso: 604.860.4422 A&W: 604.860.4446
If you play with If you play with fi re, you’re gonna fi re, you’re gonna get burned.get burned.
Don’t let your dreams go up in smoke –
practice fi re safety.
BUY & SAVE FOODSBUY & SAVE FOODS WHERE THE LOCALS SHOP WHERE THE LOCALS SHOP
5th Ave. & Wallace St. 604-869-5318
“Best Ice in BC”1005-6th [email protected] www.fvrd.bc.ca
Fire catches, so don’t play with matches.
Hear the
BEEPwhere you
SLeepFIRE PREVENTION WEEKOCTOBER 4 - 10
fi repreventionweek.org
EVERY BEDROOMNEEDS A WORKINGSMOKE ALARM.
Protect Your Family ENTER TO WIN!
Get the BEEP out!
Drop your entry off at the Hope Rona 840 - 5th Ave., OR The Hope Standard, 540 Wallace Street by Friday, October 9
Name:Phone:
KIDDE SMOKE
DETECTORS 1 of 3
The winners will be notifi ed by phone. Prizes will be accepted as awarded and no further correspondence will be entered into.
Sponsored by:
Fire Prevention Week is upon us and
this year’s theme is “hear the beep
before you sleep.” An alarming
number of B.C. residences are missing
smoke alarms, according to a recent
study conducted by the University of
Fraser Valley.
Results suggest, close to 70 per cent
of structures that caught fi re in B.C.
between 2006-2011 were missing a
proper smoke alarm. Findings indicate
that over half of home related deaths
caused by fi re occur between the hours
of 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. during prime
sleep hours.
The provincial
government and
Fire Chief’s across
B.C. have banned
together in a
province-wide
initiative to
educate the
public about the
risks of poor
fi re safety,
e s p e c i a l l y ,
the absence
of properly
fi tted and
up-to-date fi re prevention
gear around the home.
Local Fire Chief Tom DeSorcy is on
board for the discussion, and is intent
on spreading the message of safety,
awareness, and fi re prevention online
and through the prestigious 2015
campaign, which runs from October 4
to October 10.
DeSorcy gave a candid tour of the
three Fire Hall’s he currently oversees
to The Hope Standard in a recent and
enlightening outing. The District of
Hope Fire Department was created
in 1999 and the three halls are a
combination of the Kawkawa Lake,
Flood/Laidlaw/Silver Creek and Hope
Fire Departments.
Each hall has its own specifi c task,
whether it be storage, supplies, clean-
up, hose drying, main operations,
educational purposes or a combination
of uses. Hope’s three fi re halls are home
to various fi re apparatus including
three Engines, two Tenders, a CAFS
Squad and Incident Support Unit.
“Our training teaches safety — to
be safe while driving, or operating
equipment,” said DeSorcy. “We have
had no casualties, and accidents are
rare because of our safety fi rst policy
— buildings will burn, not people.”
Often, movies like Backdraft create an
image of false bravado prevalent in
the consciousness of Canadian people,
but the reality of the Fire Department is
far removed from the traditional pomp
associated with Hollywood.
“There’s this idea of bravery related to
dying on the job, but that’s not what
we signed up for,” said DeSorcy on the
mentality of the men and women who
currently volunteer at the District of
Hope Fire Department.
Members train for basics on the job
and on fi rst aid, as well as
occupational health
and safety.
Only three
members of
the department
are medically
trained and
act as licensed
fi rst responders.
DeSorcy is
adamant that
the skill-set of
his members be
effectively matched
with his/her duties.
Volunteer fi refi ghters
sacrifi ce their time and families on the
job and are required to go out of town
on Justice Institute of British Columbia
(JIBC) training certifi cations.
Often family dinners, celebrations and
holidays are broken-up when the pager
goes off and mom/dad or husband/wife
has to leave for duty — opportunities
such as family friendly programs, ease
the burden a bit according to DeSorcy.
“There is a fi refi ghters program with
JI that allows spouses and children
to come to the weekend training
sessions,” he said. “That means a lot to
the families.”
Properly outfi tting and training new
members takes resources, but DeSorcy
stressed the importance of having
a strong representation within the
organization, while encouraging all
Hope residents to practice correct fi re
safety protocol.
“If you don’t have a smoke alarm — I
will make sure you have one,” said
Desorcy.
For more information about the “hear
the beep before you sleep” campaign
please checkout fi repreventionweek.org.
Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard12 www.hopestandard.com Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard www.hopestandard.com 13
FRASER FRASER CANYON GLASS CANYON GLASS LTD.LTD.531 Corbett St.604-869-9514
Install smoke Install smoke detectors on detectors on every oor and every oor and in the sleeping in the sleeping areas of your areas of your home. home.
Fire safety on,Fire safety on,accidents gone!
www.bluemoosecafe.com322 Wallace St. • Hope, BC• 604-869-0729
Whatever burns never
returns.
308 Wallace St 604.869.5654
TOY’S PHARMACY
604.869.2486 235 Wallace St.
Practice fi re safety - watch what you heat.
761 WATER AVENUE761 WATER AVENUEPhone: 604-869-2700Phone: 604-869-2700
Fax: 604-869-2800Fax: 604-869-2800
Stop, drop, Stop, drop, and roll.and roll.
Rolly’sFAMILY RESTAURANT
888 FRASER AVE. 604.869.7448
JUST IN CASE,HAVE A MEETING PLACE.
FAMILY RESTAURANT
888 FRASER AVE. 604.869.7448
JUST IN CASE,JUST IN CASE,A MEETING PLACE.A MEETING PLACE.HAVE A MEETING PLACE.
Fire catches, so don’t
play with matches
725 4th Ave310-0001
Wheeler Cheam Realty366A Wallace St.
604-869-2165
Test yoursmoke
detectors every month.
535 Wallace St 604.869.9030
CANYON AUTOMOTIVE
Fire safety on, accidents gone.
GroveGrove BOOKKEEPING BOOKKEEPING
366C Wallace St. 604.869.9667
Think of Think of fi re before fi re before it starts.it starts.
Cooking food’s hot, so don’t touch
the pot!559 Old Hope Princeton Hwy 604.869.3663
CANYONSHELL
191 Hope-Princeton Hwy. 604.869.9661
Have an escape plan and Have an escape plan and practice it with your family.practice it with your family.
453 Old Hope Princeton Way
Be very cautious around open ames.
i’m Lovin’ it!™ 591 A Wallace St. 604.869.7468
STAY FIRE SAFE!
Nyda Realty
®
Gather your clan, make a
fi re plan.
287 Wallace St.604-869-2945
Boston Bar
604.867.9614604.867.9614 48075 Trans-Canada Hwy, Boston Bar
SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL FIREFIGHTERS!
CANYON CARPETSGather your clan, make a fi re plan.
326 Wallace St. 604.869.2727
Fire safety Fire safety goes, danger goes, danger
Doug Araki, CFP1-800-778-1133 ext 213
Carelessness is the biggest cause of fi re.
Hope Ready MixHope Ready Mix604.869.5322
Get outquick, before
the smokegets thick!
604.869.9511
GARDNERCHEV-BUICK-GMC
945 Water Ave. 930 6th Ave. 604.869.9036
Electrical safety leads to fi re safety
CANYON CABLE1175 4th Avenue, Hope BCEsso: 604.860.4422 A&W: 604.860.4446
If you play with If you play with fi re, you’re gonna fi re, you’re gonna get burned.get burned.
Don’t let your dreams go up in smoke –
practice fi re safety.
BUY & SAVE FOODSBUY & SAVE FOODS WHERE THE LOCALS SHOP WHERE THE LOCALS SHOP
5th Ave. & Wallace St. 604-869-5318
“Best Ice in BC”1005-6th [email protected] www.fvrd.bc.ca
Fire catches, so don’t play with matches.
Hear the
BEEPwhere you
SLeepFIRE PREVENTION WEEKOCTOBER 4 - 10
fi repreventionweek.org
EVERY BEDROOMNEEDS A WORKINGSMOKE ALARM.
Protect Your Family ENTER TO WIN!
Get the BEEP out!
Drop your entry off at the Hope Rona 840 - 5th Ave., OR The Hope Standard, 540 Wallace Street by Friday, October 9
Name:Phone:
KIDDE SMOKE
DETECTORS 1 of 3
The winners will be notifi ed by phone. Prizes will be accepted as awarded and no further correspondence will be entered into.
Sponsored by:
Fire Prevention Week is upon us and
this year’s theme is “hear the beep
before you sleep.” An alarming
number of B.C. residences are missing
smoke alarms, according to a recent
study conducted by the University of
Fraser Valley.
Results suggest, close to 70 per cent
of structures that caught fi re in B.C.
between 2006-2011 were missing a
proper smoke alarm. Findings indicate
that over half of home related deaths
caused by fi re occur between the hours
of 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. during prime
sleep hours.
The provincial
government and
Fire Chief’s across
B.C. have banned
together in a
province-wide
initiative to
educate the
public about the
risks of poor
fi re safety,
e s p e c i a l l y ,
the absence
of properly
fi tted and
up-to-date fi re prevention
gear around the home.
Local Fire Chief Tom DeSorcy is on
board for the discussion, and is intent
on spreading the message of safety,
awareness, and fi re prevention online
and through the prestigious 2015
campaign, which runs from October 4
to October 10.
DeSorcy gave a candid tour of the
three Fire Hall’s he currently oversees
to The Hope Standard in a recent and
enlightening outing. The District of
Hope Fire Department was created
in 1999 and the three halls are a
combination of the Kawkawa Lake,
Flood/Laidlaw/Silver Creek and Hope
Fire Departments.
Each hall has its own specifi c task,
whether it be storage, supplies, clean-
up, hose drying, main operations,
educational purposes or a combination
of uses. Hope’s three fi re halls are home
to various fi re apparatus including
three Engines, two Tenders, a CAFS
Squad and Incident Support Unit.
“Our training teaches safety — to
be safe while driving, or operating
equipment,” said DeSorcy. “We have
had no casualties, and accidents are
rare because of our safety fi rst policy
— buildings will burn, not people.”
Often, movies like Backdraft create an
image of false bravado prevalent in
the consciousness of Canadian people,
but the reality of the Fire Department is
far removed from the traditional pomp
associated with Hollywood.
“There’s this idea of bravery related to
dying on the job, but that’s not what
we signed up for,” said DeSorcy on the
mentality of the men and women who
currently volunteer at the District of
Hope Fire Department.
Members train for basics on the job
and on fi rst aid, as well as
occupational health
and safety.
Only three
members of
the department
are medically
trained and
act as licensed
fi rst responders.
DeSorcy is
adamant that
the skill-set of
his members be
effectively matched
with his/her duties.
Volunteer fi refi ghters
sacrifi ce their time and families on the
job and are required to go out of town
on Justice Institute of British Columbia
(JIBC) training certifi cations.
Often family dinners, celebrations and
holidays are broken-up when the pager
goes off and mom/dad or husband/wife
has to leave for duty — opportunities
such as family friendly programs, ease
the burden a bit according to DeSorcy.
“There is a fi refi ghters program with
JI that allows spouses and children
to come to the weekend training
sessions,” he said. “That means a lot to
the families.”
Properly outfi tting and training new
members takes resources, but DeSorcy
stressed the importance of having
a strong representation within the
organization, while encouraging all
Hope residents to practice correct fi re
safety protocol.
“If you don’t have a smoke alarm — I
will make sure you have one,” said
Desorcy.
For more information about the “hear
the beep before you sleep” campaign
please checkout fi repreventionweek.org.
Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard10 www.hopestandard.com Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard www.hopestandard.com 11
FRASER FRASER CANYON GLASS CANYON GLASS LTD.LTD.531 Corbett St.604-869-9514
Install smoke Install smoke detectors on detectors on every oor and every oor and in the sleeping in the sleeping areas of your areas of your home. home.
Fire safety on,Fire safety on,accidents gone!
www.bluemoosecafe.com322 Wallace St. • Hope, BC• 604-869-0729
Whatever burns never
returns.
308 Wallace St 604.869.5654
TOY’S PHARMACY
604.869.2486 235 Wallace St.
Practice fi re safety - watch what you heat.
761 WATER AVENUE761 WATER AVENUEPhone: 604-869-2700Phone: 604-869-2700
Fax: 604-869-2800Fax: 604-869-2800
Stop, drop, Stop, drop, and roll.and roll.
Rolly’sFAMILY RESTAURANT
888 FRASER AVE. 604.869.7448
JUST IN CASE,HAVE A MEETING PLACE.
FAMILY RESTAURANT
888 FRASER AVE. 604.869.7448
JUST IN CASE,JUST IN CASE,A MEETING PLACE.A MEETING PLACE.HAVE A MEETING PLACE.
Fire catches, so don’t
play with matches
725 4th Ave310-0001
Wheeler Cheam Realty366A Wallace St.
604-869-2165
Test yoursmoke
detectors every month.
535 Wallace St 604.869.9030
CANYON AUTOMOTIVE
Fire safety on, accidents gone.
GroveGrove BOOKKEEPING BOOKKEEPING
366C Wallace St. 604.869.9667
Think of Think of fi re before fi re before it starts.it starts.
Cooking food’s hot, so don’t touch
the pot!559 Old Hope Princeton Hwy 604.869.3663
CANYONSHELL
191 Hope-Princeton Hwy. 604.869.9661
Have an escape plan and Have an escape plan and practice it with your family.practice it with your family.
453 Old Hope Princeton Way
Be very cautious around open ames.
i’m Lovin’ it!™ 591 A Wallace St. 604.869.7468
STAY FIRE SAFE!
Nyda Realty
®
Gather your clan, make a
fi re plan.
287 Wallace St.604-869-2945
Boston Bar
604.867.9614604.867.9614 48075 Trans-Canada Hwy, Boston Bar
SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL FIREFIGHTERS!
CANYON CARPETSGather your clan, make a fi re plan.
326 Wallace St. 604.869.2727
Fire safety Fire safety goes, danger goes, danger
Doug Araki, CFP1-800-778-1133 ext 213
Carelessness is the biggest cause of fi re.
Hope Ready MixHope Ready Mix604.869.5322
Get outquick, before
the smokegets thick!
604.869.9511
GARDNERCHEV-BUICK-GMC
945 Water Ave. 930 6th Ave. 604.869.9036
Electrical safety leads to fi re safety
CANYON CABLE1175 4th Avenue, Hope BCEsso: 604.860.4422 A&W: 604.860.4446
If you play with If you play with fi re, you’re gonna fi re, you’re gonna get burned.get burned.
Don’t let your dreams go up in smoke –
practice fi re safety.
BUY & SAVE FOODSBUY & SAVE FOODS WHERE THE LOCALS SHOP WHERE THE LOCALS SHOP
5th Ave. & Wallace St. 604-869-5318
“Best Ice in BC”1005-6th [email protected] www.fvrd.bc.ca
Fire catches, so don’t play with matches.
Hear the
BEEPwhere you
SLeepFIRE PREVENTION WEEKOCTOBER 4 - 10
fi repreventionweek.org
EVERY BEDROOMNEEDS A WORKINGSMOKE ALARM.
Protect Your Family ENTER TO WIN!
Get the BEEP out!
Drop your entry off at the Hope Rona 840 - 5th Ave., OR The Hope Standard, 540 Wallace Street by Friday, October 9
Name:Phone:
KIDDE SMOKE
DETECTORS 1 of 3
The winners will be notifi ed by phone. Prizes will be accepted as awarded and no further correspondence will be entered into.
Sponsored by:
Fire Prevention Week is upon us and
this year’s theme is “hear the beep
before you sleep.” An alarming
number of B.C. residences are missing
smoke alarms, according to a recent
study conducted by the University of
Fraser Valley.
Results suggest, close to 70 per cent
of structures that caught fi re in B.C.
between 2006-2011 were missing a
proper smoke alarm. Findings indicate
that over half of home related deaths
caused by fi re occur between the hours
of 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. during prime
sleep hours.
The provincial
government and
Fire Chief’s across
B.C. have banned
together in a
province-wide
initiative to
educate the
public about the
risks of poor
fi re safety,
e s p e c i a l l y ,
the absence
of properly
fi tted and
up-to-date fi re prevention
gear around the home.
Local Fire Chief Tom DeSorcy is on
board for the discussion, and is intent
on spreading the message of safety,
awareness, and fi re prevention online
and through the prestigious 2015
campaign, which runs from October 4
to October 10.
DeSorcy gave a candid tour of the
three Fire Hall’s he currently oversees
to The Hope Standard in a recent and
enlightening outing. The District of
Hope Fire Department was created
in 1999 and the three halls are a
combination of the Kawkawa Lake,
Flood/Laidlaw/Silver Creek and Hope
Fire Departments.
Each hall has its own specifi c task,
whether it be storage, supplies, clean-
up, hose drying, main operations,
educational purposes or a combination
of uses. Hope’s three fi re halls are home
to various fi re apparatus including
three Engines, two Tenders, a CAFS
Squad and Incident Support Unit.
“Our training teaches safety — to
be safe while driving, or operating
equipment,” said DeSorcy. “We have
had no casualties, and accidents are
rare because of our safety fi rst policy
— buildings will burn, not people.”
Often, movies like Backdraft create an
image of false bravado prevalent in
the consciousness of Canadian people,
but the reality of the Fire Department is
far removed from the traditional pomp
associated with Hollywood.
“There’s this idea of bravery related to
dying on the job, but that’s not what
we signed up for,” said DeSorcy on the
mentality of the men and women who
currently volunteer at the District of
Hope Fire Department.
Members train for basics on the job
and on fi rst aid, as well as
occupational health
and safety.
Only three
members of
the department
are medically
trained and
act as licensed
fi rst responders.
DeSorcy is
adamant that
the skill-set of
his members be
effectively matched
with his/her duties.
Volunteer fi refi ghters
sacrifi ce their time and families on the
job and are required to go out of town
on Justice Institute of British Columbia
(JIBC) training certifi cations.
Often family dinners, celebrations and
holidays are broken-up when the pager
goes off and mom/dad or husband/wife
has to leave for duty — opportunities
such as family friendly programs, ease
the burden a bit according to DeSorcy.
“There is a fi refi ghters program with
JI that allows spouses and children
to come to the weekend training
sessions,” he said. “That means a lot to
the families.”
Properly outfi tting and training new
members takes resources, but DeSorcy
stressed the importance of having
a strong representation within the
organization, while encouraging all
Hope residents to practice correct fi re
safety protocol.
“If you don’t have a smoke alarm — I
will make sure you have one,” said
Desorcy.
For more information about the “hear
the beep before you sleep” campaign
please checkout fi repreventionweek.org.
Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard12 www.hopestandard.com10
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2014 ESCAPE TITANIUM 4X4
1 owner, no 1 owner, no accidents,navigation, accidents,navigation, moonroof, leather, moonroof, leather, 17,139kms, #99-153017,139kms, #99-1530WAS $34,995WAS $34,995
$$29,887
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2014 MUSTANG GT CONVERTIBLE
$35,9715.0L, leather, 5.0L, leather, navigation, 15,330 navigation, 15,330 Kms, #99-7490Kms, #99-7490Was $38,995Was $38,995
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2012 F-350 LARIAT CREW CAB
$53,2811 owner, moonroof, FX4, 1 owner, moonroof, FX4, 32,721 kms32,721 kms#99-9327#99-9327WAS $55,900WAS $55,900
Save$2619
2014 E-350 CARGO VAN
$28,558
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2014 EDGE SEL AWD
$33,123Leather, moonroof, Leather, moonroof, navigation, 25,885 kms, navigation, 25,885 kms, #R9-6995#R9-6995Was $34,995Was $34,995
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2013 FIESTA TITANIUM H/B
$14,8881 owner, no accidents, 1 owner, no accidents, 24,159kms, #88-703024,159kms, #88-7030Was $15,995Was $15,995
Save$1107
2013 F-150 XTR CREW CAB 4X4
$35,3331 owner, ecoboost, max 1 owner, ecoboost, max trailer tow pkg, trailer trailer tow pkg, trailer mirrors, 20,316Kmsmirrors, 20,316Kms#99-5208 #99-5208 Was $36,777Was $36,777
Save$1444
2015 TAURUS SEL AWD
$29,931Leather, moonroof, Leather, moonroof, navigation, 9,437kms, navigation, 9,437kms, #R8-9570#R8-9570Was $31,495Was $31,495
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$15,906Reverse Camera, Reverse Camera, Low kms #88-8074 Low kms #88-8074 Was $17,495Was $17,495
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EndsTODAY!!
5.4L, 1 owner, no 5.4L, 1 owner, no accidents, tow pkg, accidents, tow pkg, 15,618Kms, #99-161215,618Kms, #99-1612WAS $32,995WAS $32,995
Arts&EntertainmentLena YacyshenSpecial to The Standard
Synergy a Couple's Journey to Abstraction is the new exhibit at the Hope Arts Gallery featuring the work of local artists Sylvia and William Edmonds. The show will start October 1st and run through the 28 with an opening reception held Saturday, October 3rd from 6 p.m. To 8 p.m.
Creating art is an important part of the Hope couple's life. Both artists are interested in taking on what is typically overlooked by combining abstraction and technology, but in very unique and different ways. Sylvia is a self taught artist who is drawn to and intrigued by angle, tex-ture and form. She creates digitally rendered paintings printed on rag paper, depicting visual abstractions that she reforms into art. Sylvia is an extremely driven, creative and artistically innovative person who also creates one of a kind wearable art. Blessed with a kiln, her artis-tic expression has expanded to glass (specifi-cally jewelry making.) She uses both mediums to their fullest extent and her work is bursting with colour, life, and movement.
Sylvia’s husband William plays with abstrac-tion and technology, but in a much different way. William is interested in how people inter-act with technology. His current body of work questions anonymity, the release of personal information and relationships over the internet. William's rendering style is reflective of the triv-ial and influx landscape this presents. With an artistic process that utilizes many materials and mediums, he leaves the viewer enough visual clues, using text and photos, to try and find a meaning in the abstraction. Combining several different types of media, along with a labour intensive final printing process, demonstrates a deep layer in the artist’s visual exploration while
revealing the charged undercurrents of these online interactions. William is a very accom-plished artist, having shown all over B.C., along with international shows in New York and Kazakhstan. Both artists are extremely pleased and proud to be able to show their work in the town they live in. Patrons can support the art-ists and community arts programming in town
by visiting the Hope Arts Gallery. The Gallery is part of local arts and cultural programming under the Hope & District Arts Council and is operated by volunteers. The Hope Arts Gallery, located at 349 Fort Street, Hope BC is open Tuesday through Sunday from 10 - 4 pm. For more information please contact the Gallery at 604-869-3400 or [email protected].
October Backroom Exhibit is here
Synergy a Couple’s Journey to Abstraction will be featured at the Hope Arts Gallery for the month of October.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
The Hope Standard Thursday, October 1, 2015 www.hopestandard.com 13
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Erin KnutsonHope Standard
Local artist and fashion designer Teresa Walker is opening a new studio/shop space called Heaven N Earth Native Art in Hope, that offers a plethora of courses in art and design, as well as a place to showcase her unique and prolific body of work.
Teresa considers herself a mixed-media art-ist and fashion designer, using different medi-ums to express her vision.
A British Columbian by birth and an Aboriginal of Nlahzkampx, Okanogan and Lakota descent, Teresa is self taught and uses art as a platform in which she combines both traditional and contemporary mediums, while exploring her native heritage — a heritage she was largely divorced from earlier in her life.
“People would ask me to put a native spin on something and I thought, why should I know that?” she told The Hope Standard of people seeing her as First Nations first. “I never thought of myself as a First Nations artist ini-tially — I was just an artist.”
Teresa’s studio is spacious, creative, and fun. Envisioning a place where people could
come together to learn and grow creatively, while exploring hidden talents in a safe envi-ronment, was paramount to acquiring the space for the artist/teacher.
“Native women have long been forgotten and ignored,” she said of her people, and of her desire to allow First Nations and non-First Nations men and women a voice in her studio.
A shelf full of fierce and feminine warrior masks are on display in the studio, depicting important rituals of Teresa’s people and their warrior like symbolism, which includes an inclusion of the role of women.
Teresa was in the middle of completing her final pieces for the Fashion Speaks Couture Fashion Show in Kamloops mid-September when she met with The Hope Standard — a red themed show dedicated to and in honour of
First Nations girls and women, who have been victims of violence and are missing, or have been murdered.
Several items in red, were laid out on display in her sewing area.
“I normally don’t like red, but I’ve pulled some fabrics for this show,” she said. Her red themed pieces include a mini skirt, and she was in the middle of creating a traditional red coat for the theme.
After making the transition from the film industry in Vancouver, where she spent over thirty years and taught at the Vancouver Film School, Teresa decided to delve into the explo-ration of her own identity and style as an artist in Boston Bar, before relocating to Hope.
Teresa has spent the past decade devoted to researching traditional fibers, and focusing on
clothing, jewelry, hats, bags and footwear, com-bining traditional and contemporary elements such as mixed media baskets, throwing-pottery and clay.
The innovative artist is working with tradi-tional materials such as pine needles, clay tiles with images, cedar bark, birch bark, soapstone, horn, silver and bone in her work.
Now based in Hope with her two girls, Teresa is taking her experience and opening her doors to the public. The studio/shop is still in the process of fine tuning, but classes have commenced and she has a list of upcoming classes and events on her Facebook page.
For more information or to check out her designs please contact Teresa at 604-860-3276, [email protected], or facebook.com/Heaven N Earth Native Art.
Open house with local artist
Teresa Walker above in her studio/shop holds up a piece she was working on for the recent Fashion Speaks Couture Fashion Show in Kamloops.
ERIN KNUTSON / THE STANDARD
Lyn Kay Peters’ legendary white buckskin dress
From left to right: Charity Joe, Judith Pete, Demi Peters, Ruth Peters — Ashley Callingbull is featured with local fashion designer Lyn Kay Peters
(centre) in the white buckskin dress she originally appeared in for the talent portion of Mrs. Universe (she recently wore the dress at the Kamloops
Fashion Speaks Couture Fashion Show on September 16,) Eric Prytula, Trisha Charlie, Sherice Hulbert, Melody Andrews and Dayna Nelson. In our
September 24 edition (page 2,) a photograph of 2015 Mrs. Universe adorned in the white buckskin creation of Peters’ was absent. She reports that
she is thrilled with Callingbull’s win and is excited for what this means for First Nations people across Canada.
Arts&Life
Woman in white
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard14 www.hopestandard.com
If you got this card, you’re ready to vote!
Federal election day is October 19.
Did your voter information card arrive in the mail? It tells you that you’re registered to vote, and explains when and where you can vote.
If you didn’t receive one, or if it has the wrong name or address, check, update or complete your registration at elections.ca. Or call 1-800-463-6868 ( TTY 1-800-361-8935).
Elections Canada has all the information you need to be ready to vote.
CHRIST CHURCHANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA
& National Historic SiteCONSECRATED 1861
Invites you to worship SUNDAYS 10AM
REV. DAVE PRICE(Priest In Charge)
www.anglican-hope.caCorner of Park & Fraser St.
604-869-5402
ANGLICAN CHURCH OF THE RESURRECTION
Invites you to WorshipEvery Sunday at 9:30am
Anglican Network in Canada604-869-5599
888 Third Ave.2nd Sunday Rev. Bob Bailey
4th Sunday Pastor Barclay Mayo(Priest in Charge)
Grace BaptistChurch
“People connecting to God, each other and
the World”www.gbchope.com
949-3rd Ave. • 604.869.5524“Helping people take one step
closer to Jesus...”
MT. HOPE SEVENTH-DAYADVENTIST CHURCH
SATURDAY MORNING Study Hour 9:15 a.m.
Worship Hour 11:00amPrayer Meeting - Tuesday, 7pm
1300 Ryder St.
Pastor Tim Nagy604-869-2363
HOPE UNITED CHURCH590 Third Ave.
604-869-9381
SUNDAY SERVICE: 10amRev. Dianne Astle
604.795.9709Jill Last CDM 604.860.3653
SUNDAY WORSHIP: 10:30 AM
Northwest Harvest Church
A PASSION FOR CHRISTAND HIS KINGDOM
888 - THIRD AVE.604-869-9969
(MESSAGE ONLY)
Join us in Worship
Community of Hope Church Directory
10/15H_C01
HOPE PENTECOSTALASSEMBLY
10:30am Morning Worship & Children’s Sunday School
Pentecostal Assemblies of CanadaCorner of 5th & Fort
604-869-9717Pastor Jim Cornock
UNITED WE SINGCommunity Sing A Long
(1st Wed. of each month)
Community
PHOTO BY GEORGE PRESTON
The Rod & Gun Club had an excellent turnout at the their World Rivers Day clean-up event on the weekend. Robin Alexander, did a great job of organizing this event, as the group cleaned up several of the fishing areas along the Fraser River and filled up the dumpster at their clubhouse.
World Rivers Day clean-up crew
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Ashley Callingbull (above) with Eric Prytula made history when she won 2015 Mrs. Universe in Russia
Buckskin legacy continued from pg 13
With real estate prices and affordable hous-ing a frequent topic of discussion throughout the province, The Society of Notaries Public of BC is offering tips and resources to help B.C.’s seniors stay in their homes, find appropriate new housing or connect with available support in recognition of National Seniors’ Day today.
Know the strata lawsMany active aging
boomers are downsiz-ing to free-up funds for retirement or travel, or to make life simpler after their children leave home. If you’re considering a strata property, make sure you read and understand the strata minutes and bylaws, particularly on the topics of noise, pets, smoking and parking, which are the most fre-quent points of concern in most strata commu-nities. People who have owned freehold proper-ties for most of their lives may not be accustomed to some of the expecta-tions of strata living so it’s important to make sure you’re comfortable with the rules that will apply to both you and your neighbours before you make a purchase.
Deferring taxesIf you’re over 55, you
might qualify to defer all or part of your current year’s property taxes. You’ll be charged interest and the Province will hold a lien on your property, but this might be a viable option if your home has increased substantially in value, as the deferred costs would be settled as part of your estate – or paid back if you sell your home.
Grants for seniorsIf you’re over 65 and
your property is your prin-cipal residence, you may also be eligible for a home-owner grant of up to $845 ($1045 in northern and rural areas) against your property taxes.
Funding optionsAdapting your home
in small ways can help you stay in your home longer and more safely. There are a number of programs available that might help fund these improvements includ-ing Home Adaptations for Independence and the BC Seniors’ Home Renovation Tax Credit.
Over 60 fundingBC residents over 60
with low to moderate incomes who rent their homes may be eligible for the Shelter Aid for Elderly Renters (SAFER) pro-gram, which provides monthly cash payment to subsidize rent, includ-ing homes in the private rental market.
Supportive housingIf you or your parent
are looking for supportive housing—typically modi-fied rental homes for low-income seniors and people with disabilities—or assist-ed living housing facilities
that offer a range of care services, BC Housing provides more information.
Home swappingAnother little-known tip is a provision in the
Property Transfer Tax Act that eliminates the requirement for this tax when a principal resi-dence is transferred between related individu-als, including a parent and child. This means
parents and children could “swap” homes, or a child could move into and purchase a parent’s home without paying property transfer tax if the parent moves on to supported housing without paying property transfer tax, if they meet spe-cific guidelines.
Keep planning documents up-to-dateIt’s important to remember that whenever your
housing situation changes, it may affect your over-all estate planning needs.
It’s important to ensure your Will, Power of Attorney and other important documents are up to date.
This is particularly important if yours is a blended family as the type of ownership of the home impacts your estate plan.
The Hope Standard Thursday, October 1, 2015 www.hopestandard.com 15
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FinanceOffering essential housing tips for National Seniors’ Day
Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard16 www.hopestandard.com
fall programs
8/14H HR28
For more information,
please view our online scheduleonline schedule
1005-6th Ave | 604-869-2304 | www.fvrd.bc.ca | [email protected] “Best Ice in BC”
10/15H
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BIKE SKILLS FOR ADULTS Saturday & SundayOctober 24 - 25
HOME ALONE PROGRAM
FridayOctober 23
CHAIR YOGA
TuesdaysOctober 6 - 27
RED CROSS CHILD CARE EMERGENCY FIRST AID
Saturday October 10
Sports
Barry StewartHope Standard
The Hope Secondary boys’ soccer season started off with a fun game that coach Jeremy Smith hopes will become an annual tradition. If it includes what happened before the game, that would be quite an event.
Representatives from the Mondelez food company presented Hope Secondary and Hope Minor Soccer with a cheque for $5,000.
Smith said it all started in April, during the lead-up Women’s World Cup. Mondelez was sponsor-ing a contest to get soccer clubs involved in a spirit-raising event called “Pride and Joy.”
“You had to register, then get as many people as you could to download an app and use it during Canada’s game against China, in Vancouver,” said Smith.
Organizations that got the most supporters to take part could win $5,000. Once the app was started on your phone or tablet, you could choose a noisemaker that generated noise through your device when you shook it.
“I took a couple of students down to the fan centre outside BC Place (on June 6) and we watched the game on the big screen and shook our phones through most of the first half,” said Smith. “You could see the $5,000 adding up on the app.”
Smith said the community really got behind the event. Hope and a soccer organization in Burnaby were the two groups in B.C. that won the top prize. There are a few areas where the money could be spent, that are still to be finalized. These areas could include uniforms for minor soccer, more equipment, or hosting tournaments in Hope. The exhibition game placed a combined team of HSS girls and boys against HSS grads, school staff and RCMP members from Hope and Boston Bar. By the end of the game, the adults had adopted the name of “Team Hodge Podge.”
Hodge Podge got on the board at six minutes, when Yvon McKay scored on a penalty kick. Rob Tumbas of the Boston Bar RCMP scored another off a volleyed cross at 18 minutes and Matt de Groot made good on a breakaway at 34 minutes, making it 3-0.
HSS Mustang, Marcus Aubin, beat RCMP keeper Adam Tallboy just before the half. Aubin had a couple of clear chances in the second half that would have made for a tight score, but he put them over the net.
McKay got his second past HSS keeper Nik Gauthier, early in the second half but Jacob Chisholm scored a beauty, 10 minutes into the half, connecting on a corner kick at knee height. Tallboy had no chance.
With just under 10 minutes to go, Constable Rob Skinner brought Hodge Podge to a 5-2 lead and the kids answered back when Dryden Hambly slammed a shot off the crossbar. It fell to the feet of Ryan Wallace for a tap-in past Tallboy.
Matt de Groot — who plays with McKay and Smith on the Valley Helicopters-sponsored Valley Choppers men’s team — unleashed a low, curling shot off the posts and in, from 25 yards out and Blake Deschenes made it a 7-3 final, when he dangled into the penalty area and scored in the final minute. Coach Smith, who played against the students, said he was pleased to see the Mustangs put three past his team.
“It’s my first year coaching the boys and they’ve been a good group to work with. The game was a good chance to get people out and to see how the boys would work. We’ve only been practicing for about two weeks.”
Silver Creek principal and Hope Minor Soccer president Bruce Becker is helping coach the team and the school’s athletics coordinator, Jason Fisher, is acting as fitness trainer. The boys started their season on the road, Tuesday, against Unity Christian. Their first home game is this Thursday, October 1 versus Abbotsford’s St. Jean Brébeuf. On October 15, they host Abby Christian.
RCMP and HSS soccer face-off
An exhibition game placed a combined team of HSS girls and boys against HSS grads, school staff and RCMP members from Hope and Boston Bar on Friday. By the end of the game, the adults had adopted the name of “Team Hodge Podge.”
ERIN KNUTSON/ THE STANDARD
The Hope Standard Thursday, October 1, 2015 www.hopestandard.com 17
Your source for quality local professionals.ADVERTISING DEADLINE: Fridays at 4:30pm
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Hope Auto Body Ltd.Hope Auto Body Ltd.
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CARPENTRY
L. HISLOP CONTRACTINGCustom Woodworking Solutions
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A18 Hope Standard, Thursday, October 1, 2015
WOOKEY, Patricia (Pat)November 11, 1933 - September 24, 2015
It is with heavy hearts that the family announces the passing of Pat Wookey (formerly of the Kispiox Valley and Smithers), in the comfort of her home in Hope, BC, with family and Cindy (one of her home support an-gels) by her side.She was predeceased by her infant daughter Wanda and recently, her son Gene and daughter Deniece. She is survived by her daughter-in-law Vicky of Edmonton, son-in-law Barry of Vancouver, her children Larry (Lois)
and John (Marney) of Hazelton, Wendy (Eric) of Hope, Leonard (Bonnie) of Prince George, daughter-in-law Linda of Kamloops, 14 grandchildren, 21 great-grandchildren, siblings Carol, Phyllis, Shar-on, Joan, Sue, Edith & John and many nieces and nephews.Her infectious smile, generosity, and friendliness will be missed by all those whose lives she touched.A special thank you to Linda for her devotion and support to help care for her the past few months; to Caren for being there in our time of need and to all “her girls” from Home Support that she looked so forward to everyday. The family invites you to join them for a celebration of her life on Sunday, October 11, 2015 at 1:00 pm at the Fraternal Order of Ea-gles Hall, 386 Fort St, Hope, BC.Visit www.mbfunerals.com to send a private condolence.
YAKMISSIONLillian (nee Lukie)
Mrs. Lillian Edna Yakmission (nee Lukie) of Abbotsford, BC, passed away peacefully on September 27th, 2015, at the age of 76 of heart and lung dis-ease. The funeral service will be held at 1:00 pm October 3rd, 2015 at Henderson’s Fraser Valley Funeral Home, 34537 Marshall Road, Abbotsford, BC. Lillian was born in Grandview, Manitoba on October 9th, 1938. She spent all of her adult life in BC, living in Greater Vancouver, Hope, residing the last 34 years in Abbotsford. Lillian is preceded in death by her husband, Victor
and her brother, Fred. Lillian is survived by her loving children, Jamie (Glenn), Joe (Susan), and Jaret (Michelle); grandchil-dren, Mackenzie, Jessie, Darius, Tyler, Lilly, Alysia, Thomas and great-grandson, Brian; sister, Nettie; brothers, Jack and Glenn, other family and friends. Lillian loved to travel, play cards, and engage in lively debates about politics but home is where her heart was. In lieu of fl owers memorial donations may be given to childrenswish.ca. The family of Lillian Edna Yakmis-sion wishes to thank the ICU unit of the Abbotsford Regional Hospital.
Henderson’s Funeral Home604-854-5534
RYCHTER, Edith Mary (Molly)November 5, 1927 - September 21, 2015
It is with great sadness that we an-nounce the passing of our beloved, mom, grandma, sister and friend, Molly. Molly passed away on Mon-day, September 21, 2015 at the Hope Fraser Lodge which she hap-pily called her home for the past two years.Molly was born in London, England and during WW2 she met the love of her life, Eddie. They were mar-ried in 1949 and shortly after they
immigrated to Vancouver, BC. Molly came over on the boat fi rst by herself; this shows a sense of her strong character and her adven-turous side and was joined by Eddie a few months later. They resid-ed in the Vancouver, Surrey area for many years and then in 1972 they purchased the Red and White grocery store in Agassiz. They spent many happy years there and in 1978 they decided to become motel operators. They purchased the Imperial Motel and ran that as a family business for many years. Mom eventually retired around 1996 and lived in her beautiful house overlooking Lake of the Woods.Molly was predeceased by her husband, Eddie, her parents and her sisters, Anne and Olive. Molly leaves to mourn her son, George (Barb), her sister Kay in the UK and the light of her life her grand-children: Sam(Gord) and Hedy (Joey). Hedy, even though you were not able to be with Grandma your loving and special secret (in let-ting grandma know of the baby’s name) was treasured and meant more to her than you know.Molly was a prolifi c reader and knitter and enjoyed many writing classes. Molly especially loved to play Scrabble and Crib and at this time would like to say a big thank you to her wonderful Scrabble group who continued to go every Thursday up to the Lodge to play a game or two with her. We hope you know how much this meant to our mom, and we sincerely thank you for your kind friendship with Molly. We also send our sincere thank you to the Fraser Hope Lodge and all the staff for being so kind and helpful to our mom. Molly really thought of you all as her family and so enjoyed the care and attention she was given. Special thanks to Marja Losier, Crystal and Linda Yearwood and to Sam for the gentle gift of your love, re-spect and caring in her twilight hours. This meant everything to all of us and most especially Grandma.We will miss you mom and we have many fond, loving memories that we shall cherish forever. We shall all play a game of Scrabble and tell a few stories about Grandma. www.blackpress.ca
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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
33 INFORMATION
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108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
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109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
START A NEW CAREER in Graph-ic Arts, Healthcare, Business, Edu-cation or Information Tech. If you have a GED, call: 855-670-9765
TRAILERMECHANIC
Required for Shadow Truck Lines Langley, a local transportation company.
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7 OBITUARIES
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
111 CARETAKERS/RESIDENTIAL MANAGERS
RESIDENTIAL MANAGER
Living suite provided, all in-clusive. Terms and fi nances negotiable. Prefer a couple with previous experience. Non smoker and no pets preferred. Apply in person to:
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115 EDUCATION
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130 HELP WANTED
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HOUSEKEEPERNeeded
Please apply in person. No phone calls.Bring your resume to:
Colonial 900 Motel900 Old Hope Princeton Way
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES 109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES 109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
INDEX IN BRIEFFAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS ............... 1-8
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ... 9-57
TRAVEL............................................. 61-76
CHILDREN ........................................ 80-98
EMPLOYMENT ............................. 102-198
BUSINESS SERVICES ................... 203-387
PETS & LIVESTOCK ...................... 453-483
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE........... 503-587
REAL ESTATE ............................... 603-696
RENTALS ...................................... 703-757
AUTOMOTIVE .............................. 804-862
MARINE ....................................... 903-920
7 OBITUARIES
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FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
Thursday, October 1, 2015, Hope Standard A19
604-869-2486 235 Wallace St. www.hopepharmasave.com
PHARMASAVE HOPE
Position: HEALTHY LIVING ADVISOR, part-timeResponsibilities: Helping our Pharmasave customers with Natural Products and supplements. Also, helping with healthy lifestyle choices and doing product demo’s.
Must be enthusiastic and have good communication and customer service skills. Previous experience with Natural Health products would be an asset.
Submit resume in person at the store, Monday - Friday or by email: [email protected]: October 9, 2015
* Only successful applicants will be contacted for an interview
Would You Like to be Part of Our Team?
Vantage Way
Pressroom Helpers/StackersWe have several openings for Press Helpers/Stackers at our Delta location.
Preference given to those with experience in this fi eld, but is not necessary. Shifts are 12 hours/3 shifts per week or 9.5 hours/4 shifts per week. Must be willing to work nights and weekends. References required. Starting wage is $14.31/hr.
Interested applicants should email their resume and references to Linda Wischoff at:[email protected]
Competition closes: October 7, 2015We thank all those who are interested in this position, however only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
blackpress.ca bclocalnews.com
7979 Vantage Way, Delta, V4G 1A6
This week’s puzzle
answers!
WITH YOUR GARAGE SALEAD YOU RECEIVE:• garage sale signs, stickers, balloons & 1” Box Adall for only $1342
Advertise your garage sale with us!
CALL 604-869-2421 - BOOKING DEADLINE IS TUESDAY AT 2:30PM !
06/15H_GS1106/15H_GS11
+ TAX+ TAX
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
130 HELP WANTED
General Nursery LaborerQualitree Propagators, located in Rosedale BC, is seeking general nursery laborers. Duties may in-clude planting, weeding, pruning, loading orders etc. Applicants should be physically capable of performing job duties and able to work in all weather conditions. Prior nursery work experience an asset but not required. February to October 2016. Various start dates available till May 1st. Monday to Friday 7:30am to 5:00pm. (Some Satur-days & overtime will be required) Job is seasonal full time. Starting wage $10.45/hr Please fax resumes to Qualitree Propagators Inc. 604-794-3378 or email to [email protected].
PERSONAL SERVICES
182 FINANCIAL SERVICES
GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB.
1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com
130 HELP WANTED
WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassified.com
PERSONAL SERVICES
182 FINANCIAL SERVICES
LARGE FUNDBorrowers Wanted
Start saving hundreds of dollars today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income.
Call Anytime1-800-639-2274 or
604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca
LARGE FUNDBorrowers Wanted
Start saving hundreds of dollars today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income.
Call Anytime1-800-639-2274 or
604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca
NEED A LOAN? Own Property? Have Bad Credit? We can help! Call toll free 1 866 405 1228 www.fi rstandsecondmortgages.ca
130 HELP WANTED
RENTALS: These listings coverall types of rentals from apartments,
condos, office space, houseboats andvacation homes. So if you’re in the market
to rent, or looking for a roommate, starthere. bcclassified.com
PERSONAL SERVICES
182 FINANCIAL SERVICES
.Need Cash, Own Vehicle? Borrow up to $25,000. SnapCarCash. 604-777-5046
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
221 CARPENTRY
L.HISLOP CONTRACTING, custom woodworking solutions, complete renovations. Call 604-869-3449
233 CHIMNEY SERVICES
CHIMNEY cleaning, wood & pellet stove installs, repairs, upgrades & inspections. WETT certifi ed. black-velvetchimneysweeps.com 604-869-5888
245 CONTRACTORS
BARCLAY FLETCHER CON-TRACTING, complete home reno’s, additions & more. (604)869-1686
260 ELECTRICAL
KENLIN ELECTRIC, residential, ru-ral, commercial, new construction, reno’s. Call (604)860-8605
275 FLOOR REFINISHING/INSTALLATIONS
CANYON CARPETS, 549 Wallace St., Hope. For all your fl oor cover-ing needs! Call 604-869-2727
283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS
GUTTER & ROOF Cleaning/Power Washing since 1982. WCB/Liability insurance. Simon, 604-230-0627
300 LANDSCAPING
GLEN TRAUN LANDSCAPING, Commercial & Residential yard maintenance. Call 604-869-2767
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
www.paintspecial.com 778-322-2378 Lower Mainland
604-996-8128 Fraser ValleyRunning this ad for 10yrs
PAINT SPECIAL3 rooms for $299
2 coats any colour(Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls
Cloverdale Premium quality paint.NO PAYMENT until Job is
completed. Ask us about ourLaminate Flooring.
SUDS n WASHThe holidays are coming,
are your walls ready?Have your interior painting done now. 27 years experi-
ence. Call Phil or Pam today to book your free estimate.
(604)703-3319
338 PLUMBING
Full Service Plumbing from Parker Dean. Fast, reliable, 24/7 service. Take $50 off your next job if you present this ad. Vancouver area.1-800-573-2928
BRO MARV PLUMBING Plumbing, heating, clogged drains BBB. (604)582-1598, bromarv.com
BLUE’S PLUMBING, hot water tanks, gas fi tter, water lines, drain-age. Licensed. Call (604)750-0159
377 UPHOLSTERYNEED A GOOD HOME for a good dog or a good dog for a good home? We adopt dogs! Call 604-856-3647 or www.856-dogs.com
ROGER’S UPHOLSTERY, furni-ture, windows, fabric, in-home & on-line estimates. Call 604-860-0939
387 WINDOWSFRASER CANYON GLASS, for all your glass repairs, windshields do-mestic & imports. (604)869-9514
PETS
477 PETSCATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866
CATS OF ALL DESCRIPTION in need of caring homes!
All cats are spayed, neutered, vaccinated and dewormed.
Visit us at: fraservalleyhumanesociety.com
or call 1 (604)820-2977
ITALIAN MASTIFF(Cane Corso)
1 Female, 3 Male blue Purebred1st shots, tails / d c removed.
ULTIMATE FAMILY GUARDIANPet homes. $1000. 604-308-5665
Short-haired Bernese Mountainpups, family raised, gentle, vetchecked, 1st shots, dewormed.$900 each. 604-795-7662.
YORKIE PUPPY, female, 12 weeks ,all shots current, $800. Call (604)824-9351
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
506 APPLIANCES
DISHWASHER, portable “GE” apartment sized, Sears 3 yr warran-ty, stainless steel interior, 4 months old. $450. Call (604)869-7002
560 MISC. FOR SALE
STEEL BUILDINGS... “SUMMER MADNESS SALE!” All Buildings, All Models. You’ll think we’ve gone MAD DEALS. Call Now and get your DEAL. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422 www.pioneersteel.ca
563 MISC. WANTED
Have Unwanted Firearms?Have unwanted or inherited fi rearms in your possession?Don’t know how to dispose of them safely and legally?Contact Wanstalls and we will come and pick them up and pay you fair value for them.Wanstalls has been proudly serving the Lower Mainland fi rearms community since 1973.We are a government licensed fi rearms business with fully certifi ed verifi ers, armorers and appraisers.
Call today to set up anappointment 604-467-9232 Wanstalls Tactical & Sporting Arms
581 SOUND/DVD/TV
PVR Shaw Gateway whole home, all your TV’s one HDPVR, 4 re-motes, 3 portal controls. $250. Call (604)869-5001
REAL ESTATE
626 HOUSES FOR SALE
HOPE 1 or 2 bdrm mobile homes for sale in a senior’s community. Call Gale for details 604-860-3578
627 HOMES WANTED
Yes, We PayCASH!Check us out!
www.webuyhomesbc.com604-626-9647
A proud BBB Member
633 MOBILE HOMES & PARKS
New SRI *1296 s/f Double wides fr $94,900. *New SRI 14’ wides
fr $72,900. Chuck 604-830-1960 www.glenbrookhomes.net
MANUFACTURED HOMES.MOBILE HOMES. MODULAR HOMES.
Searching for your dream homeor selling it? This is the location. Listings
include everything from acreage, farms/ranchesto condos and waterfront homes.
bcclassified.com
RENTALS
706 APARTMENT/CONDO
HOPE, 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT., for rent $575 - $650, Park Royal, heat & hot water inc., balcony, covered parking, 55, NP, NS. Best Loc Hope. Ref’s required. Call (604)860-0236 Linda or (604) 825-1444
HOPE, 1 bdrm apt., newer, $675/ mon., includes hot water, N/S. Call 604-819-6122 or 604-819-6422
721 HALLS
HALL RENTALfor your
Birthdays, Anniversaries, Weddings or Meetings
Hope Curling Club1055 6th Ave
604-869-9344 or 604-869-5119
733 MOBILE HOMES & PADS
HOPE, Silver Hope Mobile Park. Cabin, Mobile homes, and R/V pads for monthly rentals, cable in-cluded. Call (604)869-1203 or (604)860-0652
736 HOMES FOR RENT
HOPE,1 BEDROOM CABIN - Cari-boo Trailer Park,Unfurnished, F/S and utilities included. Ref’s. Req’d. D/D, must be willing to do criminal record check. Call 604-869-9024
HOPE 1 or 2 bdrm mobile homes for rent in a seniors community.Call Gale for details 604-860-3578
TRANSPORTATION
812 AUTO SERVICES
HOPE AUTO BODY, complete colli-sion repair & restoration. www.ho-peautobody.ca Call (604)869-5244
851 TRUCKS & VANS
KEY TRACK AUTO SALES
Abbotsford30255 Cedar Lane
DL# 31038 604-855-0666
2005 DODGE NEON, auto 4 dr sedan, a/c. STK#701. $1,995.2003 HONDA CIVIC, auto 4 dr sedan loaded STK#666. $4,9002004 ACURA EL 1.7 4dr sedan leather, sunroof, loaded, Only this week! STK#724. $5,900.2005 NISSAN ALTIMA, auto, fully loaded, 4 dr, sedan.STK#699. Only! $5,900.2007 DODGE CALIBER, 4 dr, auto. STK#602. $5,900.2005 HONDA CIVIC, 4 dr, au-to, loaded. STK#710. $6,900.2005 HONDA CIVIC, 4 dr, au-to, loaded. STK#672. $6,900.2009 FORD FOCUS 4dr,sedan loaded, auto STK#687 $6,900.2008 HONDA CIVIC 4 dr auto, loaded. STK#691. $7,900.2009 NISSAN ALTIMA, 4 dr, sedan, fully loaded, auto. STK#697. $7,900.2007 PONTIAC TORRENT 4 dr, AWD, fully loaded, only 99K kms. STK#657 $9,900.2011 NISSAN Versa 4dr auto, h/bk, loaded, STK#721 $9,900.2004 ACURA MDX 4dr auto, 7 psgr, loaded, DVD, Navigation STK#254 $10,900.2010 TOYOTA COROLLA 4dr, sedan, auto, fully loaded, STK# 731. $11,900.2012 NISSAN SENTRA 4dr, sedan, auto, fully loaded, STK#723. $11,900.2011 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA4 dr, auto, fully loaded. This week only! STK#721 $12,900.2012 HONDA CIVIC 4 dr, auto, loaded, STK#695. $14,900.2008 CHEV 1500 LT. Crew cab, 4X4, auto, short box, fully loaded. STK#600. $16,900.
33166 South Fraser WayDL# 40083 778-908-5888
2004 MAZDA 3 Auto, 4 dr, Only this wk! STK#673 $4,900.2004 DODGE CARAVAN 7psgr, loaded STK#525 $2,900. 2003 FORD FOCUS 4 dr, au-to, Aircared, STK#545, $3,900.2003 HONDA ODYSSEY 7psg full load, runs good, Aircared STK#530, $3,900.2002 FORD F150 crew cab 4X4 auto, fully loaded, short box. STK#686 $5,900.2007 DODGE Caravan 7 psgr, Aircared, STK#524 $5,900.2008 KIA RONDO 4 dr, auto, 7 psgr, leather, runs good, STK#424. $9,900.2009 TOYOTA COROLLA 4 dr sedan, loaded. No trade. STK#504. $10,900.
Financing Availablewww.keytrackautosales.ca
551 GARAGE SALES
HOPE
500 King StSat., Oct 3
8 am - 2 pmHUGE MOVING SALE
Everything Must Go
HOPE
660 Ogilvie RdSat., Oct 3
9 am - 2 pmfridge, 1970 sofa, fi shing gear, antiques, clothes, tools, 50th Anniversary decorations
551 GARAGE SALES
LAIDLAW
58608 McKay RdSat., Oct 3
8 am - 4 pmMOVING SALE
furniture & household items
604-869-2421
604-869-2421
EXTRA INCOMEClassified ads are a direct line to extraincome. Somewhere there is a buyer for the things you no longer want or need.Call bcclassified.com 604-869-2421
Thursday, October 1, 2015 The Hope Standard20 www.hopestandard.com
Payton & Buckle F I N E F O O T W E A R
www.paytonandbuckle.com
45930 Wellington AveDowntown Chilliwack604.792.2375
102 - 32883 S. Fraser WayAbbotsford next to KFC604.859.2330
380-19800 Lougheed HwyPitt Meadows604.457.3375
9/15W_PB30
FALL 2015 ARRIVALS!FALL 2015 ARRIVALS!
ENTER TO
WINA PAIR OF
CLARKS SHOES!
SEE STORE FOR
DETAILS.