July 17, 2012

8
Your Community Newspaper since 1982 Our Community in Review PART 1 of 5 ~ 1982-1987 We are pleased to share our beginnings right here in 1982!

description

Section Y of the July 17, 2012 edition of the Parksville Qualicum Beach News

Transcript of July 17, 2012

Your Community Newspaper since 1982

Our Community in Review PART 1 of 5 ~ 1982-1987

We are pleased to share our beginnings right here in 1982!

B2 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, July 17, 2012 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News30th Anniversary Series

Community in Review ~ 1982

• January 1982: the Coombs fi re depart-ment got the go-ahead for a new fi re hall to be built. The new hall, to be sited at Hilliers Road, would replace a garage.

• February: What to do with urban deer in Qualicum Beach? Mayor Art Skipsey had an idea. Since firing guns within town limits was illegal, he suggested perhaps a professional bowman could be hired.

• March: Parksville alderman Anton Kruyt was mad as heck about the new roof applied to the historic Knox United Church, saying it look too new.

• April: • Bowlers at the Sunset Lanes in Parksville got some good news when an ap-plication for a liquor licence at the establish-ment was approved.

• May: The Cheekeye-Dunsmuir power substation in Qualicum Bay was the target of a bomb in May. A group calling itself Direct Action claimed responsibility for the blast.

• June: Parksville’s budget shortfall to the layoff of 10 municipal workers.

• July: The Town of Qualicum Beach f of-fi cials had to revoke the license of a young lad who sold ice cream at the beach because were contravening their own zoning bylaw.

• August: The naming of Bill Vander Zalm as Minister of Education in August didn’t sit well with the Mount Arrowsmith Teachers’s Association.

• September: More than 2,500 pounds of wet marijiuana was seized by Parks-ville RCMP when they conducted a raid of Lasqueti Island.

• October: Gas wars in Parksville saw gas prices j dipping as low as 42.9 cents per litre.

• November: More than 120 people jammed into the Little Qualicum Hall in December to discuss the formation of a class three fire protection district.

• December: Over 85 per cent of those polled about the need for an indoor swim-ming pool said it was a good idea.

TOP STORIES Welcome to our 30th anniversary editionThis incarnation of The News is part of a long history of talking about you

Welcome to the fi rst instal-ment of our look back at 30 years of covering the is-sues and events that mat-

ter to residents of Parksville, Qualicum Beach, Bowser, Coombs, Errington, Nanoose Bay and Deep Bay.

While perusing the pages of our shared past, we realized that the cur-

rent staff of the PARKSVILLE QUALICUM BEACH NEWS are just the latest collection of dedicated and hard-working profes-sionals whose work has graced these pages over the past three decades.

That’s humbling in a way, but also reassuring, as we know that even as we give our all to covering the community, selling advertisements to help local

businesses or deliver the fi nishd prod-uct to your doorstep, we know we are part of a proud tradition in the area that will continue long after all of us have moved on.

We hope you fi nd lots to read in this peek into the past and that you t you enjoy reading it even half as much as much as we enjoyed producing it.

Even as the structure for the new high school took shape in Qualicum Beach, controversy was raging about what it should be named, with the school board opting for Kwalikum and others calling for it to be named Qualicum.

Hospital call for mid-IslandA special ad-hoc committee was

formed in November to discuss the feasibility of locating an acute care hospital in District 69.

Parksville alderman Audrey An-derson was appointed to the com-mittee and met with Qualicum Beach Mayor Art Skipsey and vari-ous representatives of community

organizations to discuss acute care needs in detail. Anderson added that, alternatively, a few acute care beds could be added at Trillium Lodge.

“It’s wrong that people in this area have to travel all the way to Nanaimo to receive proper care,” she said.

Fears of a possible nuclear war were very much on people’s minds in 1982 and Parksville was no exception.

While the city opted to hold a referendum on nuclear disarmanent placed on the 1983 elec-tion ballot, local peace activists were not satis-fi ed, calling for a much earlier vote on the mat-ter.

Although council argued holding an extra vote would cost taxpayers $4,000, Maureen Curle said the issue was far too important to be put off for a year.

“To wait until the November 1983 election as suggestedby Alerman Audrey Anderson does not acknowledge the urgency of this opportu-nity that Canadians have to demonstrate the in-fl uence of public opinion in a democratic coun-try,” she said.

Alderman Anton Kruyt agreed to meet with Curle following his visit to the Federation of Canadian Municipalities meeting in Ottawa in June. Organizers held a rally to drum up sup-port for the referendum in June. In the mean-time, disarmament supporters fanned out to pass out literature to Parksville shoppers.

Curle gave up on the separate referendum plan, conceding it was too expensive, but urged that it be included in the 1983 election ballot.

The call for a bomb ban resolution didn’t go anywhere in the Regional District of Nanaimo however. Board chair Paul Smith said he liked the idea it espoused, but it was well beyond the board’s jurisdiction. Board members agreed and the issue was dropped.

Fear of nuclear war a hot topic 1982 sees call for city, RDN to declare opposition to weapons

Watch out for the rabid batsResidents in the central Island

got the word from the Central Van-couver Island Health Unit in May that they should be on the lookout for bats.

Dr. Peter Reynolds said rabid

bats may be found in the district.“No bats found in daylight

should be handled with bare hands,” Reynolds said. Parents should advise their children not to pick up any bat at any time.”

Parksville’s Premiere Event on the Beach!Parksville’s Premiere Event on the Beach! Come see the Sand Sculpting on Display.... JULY 16 to AUGUST 19 • 9am - 9pm

www.parksvillebeachfest.ca

Artisans at the Artisans at the each eachJuly 28 & 29 July 28 & 29 11am-7pm11am-7pm

The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, July 17, 2012 www.pqbnews.com B330th Anniversary Series

Community in Review ~ 1983

• January, 1983: Students come out in droves to sign up for Malaspinia College courses on offer in the spring in the Parksville and Qualicum Beach area.

• February: Business is growing in the backwash of recession, as local real estate company Golden West Realty rides into town with up-and-comers Diane Fulmer, Betsy Davies, Frank Fairley, Tony Baker, Ian Lindsay and Kevin Clayton.

• March: Parksville and Qualicum Beach grocery stores in a low price war. Parksville’s Foodmaster, K&R Foods of Parksville and the new Qualicum Foods in Qualicum Beach have stepped up competition.

• May: By a margin of 230 votes, NDP can-didate Karen Sanford defeated George Smith of the Social Credit party for the area’s MLA in Victoria.

• June: The News-Advertiser marks its fi rst anniversary with a newspaper redesign and a commitment to better coverage and commu-nity service.

• July: Port Alberni mayor Paul Reitsma wants Howie Meeker to move his hockey school from Parksville to Port, but Meeker says he won’.

• August: After two years in planning, the Fairwinds residential and 18-hole golf course development in Nanoose Bay is announced.

• September: The Island Hall hotel, worth an estimated $4.5 million, goes up for sale. Owner Tom Sutherland says the owners need capital to improve the resort.

• November: Island fi sherman picket the Parksville Royal Bank branch, who they say is partially responsible for a potential loss of $2 million when the Cassiar Packing Co. was placed in receivership, which could lead to job losses.

• November 22, 1983: Allen Hustwick is re-elected Parksville mayor. In Qualicum Beach, Art Skipsey ran unopposed.

• December: District 69 residents donated more than $19,000 to the Society of Organized Services’ Christmas campaign.

TOP STORIES

The News-Advertiser asked folks in District 69 about their predictions for 1983.

As far back as 1983, the people of Qualicum Beach had a pretty specific vision of their community — a vision that continues today.

The threat of nuclear war loomed large in the pages of the News-Advertiser in the early to mid-1980s. Throughout the ‘80s, there would be protests and court cases with the Canadian Forces base in Nanoose Bay.

Congratulations to our downtown business neighbour Parksville-Qualicum Beach News on 30 years of publishing excellence and

community service. Thank you for your ongoing support of Parksville Downtown.

—The Board, Staff and the more than 240 members of the Parksville Downtown Business Association

B4 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, July 17, 2012 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News30th Anniversary Series

Community in Review ~ 1984

• January, 1984: Parksville municipal offi -cials are grappling with the question of what will their town be — a tourist resort, retire-ment community, a commercial-industrial centre, or something more — as they work on the offi cial community plan.

• January: The News-Advertiser was been sold from Island Publishers to Cariboo Press and its owner David Black. The new company will still be called Island Publishers. David Black still owns both papers today (2012) un-der the company name Black Press.

• February: The last of District 69’s little red school houses, the Horne Lake School and old Bowser School, will close this month, as stu-dents will now attend the new Bowser School on Faye Road.

• May: A special report from Lasqueti Island details residents’ concern over a lack of police presence — unless it’s the annual marijuana round-up. “People feel on guard and not very well protected,” said Island community asso-ciation president Dan Rubin.

• June: Malaspina College announced that it will remain in Parksville, after earlier rum-blings that it could close its local campus. Funding for the Parksville campus remained a big issue at the time.

• July: Nanaimo engineer Brian Chatwin and developer Ken Tiderington propose a $2.5 million waterslide at Craig’s Crossing in Parksville.

• August: For sale: Everything. Local hotels are up for sale — Schooner Cove Resort, Sand Pebbles Inn, Island Hall, Bayside Inn and Quallcum Beach’s George Inn.

• September: As Parksville council pushes for a four-lane highway through town, Quali-cum Beach council would rather see the money spent on a bypass.

• October: Picketers were in front of the News-Advertiser this week, on strike to sup-port a demand for the reinstatement of re-porters John Nolan and Walter Franczyk, terminated, said the paper, for economic rea-sons. The Graphic Arts International Union and Island Publishers were in the middle of negotiating their fi rst contract.

TOP STORIES

Parksville council urges downtown business owners to clean up their properties and show some civic pride.

The last of the district’s little red schoolhouses plans to close in 1984.

Merchants’ group logo in 1984.

The News-Advertiser took notice of special people who made an impact on people’s lives in the community.

❦❦

❦ ❦

292 Crescent Rd E, Qualicum Beach • www.crownmansion.com250.752.5776100 Years of History in our Communityf i i C

The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, July 17, 2012 www.pqbnews.com B530th Anniversary Series

Community in Review ~ 1985

• January, 1985: A bypass of Qualicum Beach and Parksville is proposed, as residents complain of the diffi culties in crossing High-way 19. The B.C. highways ministry created a study, calling such a route the Qualicum North Bypass and local debate has just begun.

• February: Parksville city council approves the site for a new post offi ce building on Cor-fi eld Street. Some 500 residents signed a peti-tion against the site, citing it was to far away from the downtown core.

• March: Malaspina College again says it’ll close its Parksville campus due to budget constraints, eliminating a staff of three. Pub-lic pressure in March of 1984 kept the campus offi ces open.

• March: The Regional District of Nanaimo okays a referendum on the proposed aquatic centre in the Parksville, Qualicum Beach area. While the fi nal location had not been fi nal-ized, the cost was estimated to be $2.9 mil-lion.

• May: Nanoose Conservation Campaign-ers camping at the entrance to the Canadian Forces Maritime Experimental and Test Range (CFMETR) are told to move on by the Regional District of Nanaimo. The campers are protest-ing Canada’s involvement in the nuclear arms race; the RDN wants them to stop camping in public places.

• June: The B.C. government has passed on a bypass of Parksville and Qualicum Beach.

• July5: The old District 69 school board of-fi ce may become an art gallery by next year if all works out as planned by the District 69 Arts Council. The building, on Fern Road in Qualicum Beach, was left vacant when the district moved its offi ces to Parksville.

• September: Parksville has applied to Vic-toria to change its status form a town to a city.

• October: Qualicum Foods had acquired Parksville’s Robertson’s Food Master grocery store. The new store will be renamed Quality Foods.

• November: Allen Hustwick returns as mayor of Parksville in the election.

TOP STORIES

The more things change ... like the price of gas.

Sandcastles were playing a prominent role in the social life of Parksvillians more than two decades ago.

Ltd.

DELIVERING THE BEST IN CUSTOMER SERVICE SINCE 1984

Ltd.

250-248-2062 www.joecunninghamford.com

410 EAST ISLAND HWY., PARKSVILLEMON.- THURS. 8:30am-7pm, FRI. & SAT. 8:30am-6pm; SUN. Closed “The Difference is Worth the Drive”

Dealership 1989

B6 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, July 17, 2012 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News30th Anniversary Series

Community in Review ~ 1986

Congratulations to

on their 30th Anniversary.We look forward to continuing our partnership, in printing their paper, and contributing to their success, as we move forward into

the future.

Sharing Success Ladysmith

• January, 1986: The man who tried to bring you the Oceanside Aquatic Centre and his wife were named Parksvilles citizens of the year. Clay and Lorraine Thompson were the recipients of the honour, bestowed by the chamber of commerce.

• March: A bypass of Qualicum Beach and Parksville is back on the table, thanks to NDP MLAs and leader Bob Skelly, who announced they are committed to an inland route from Parksville to Menzies Bay, with a connection to Nanaimo. Unfortunately, the Social Credit Party is still the government in B.C.

• April: The sign at the Rod and Gun pub in Parksville, which swam against local bylaws, was allowed to stay after a city council vote. The Famed fi sh sign has been atop the Rod and Gun since 1963.

• May 6, 1986: Parksville began celebrating its centennial with a big party in the Commu-nity Park.

• June: Expo ‘86 is packing them into Van-couver, but the thousands of tourists Parks-ville-Qualicum motel, resort and campsite operators expected as a spinoff of the world’s fair don’t seem to be materializing. This, ac-cording to area resort and motel owners.

• July/August, 1986: Two Parksville city al-derman resign this summer, less than a year after taking offi ce. Abe de Bruyn was the fi rst to go, followed by John Hossack.

• August: Developer Mladen Zorkin is pro-posing a new golf course along the banks of Morningstar Creek and was seeking the endorsement of the Regional District of Nanaimo.

• September: Stan Hagen wins the nomi-nation for the Social Credit party in the Co-mox Riding.

• September: The City of Parksville won an election award for voter turnout, record-ing 83.9 per cent turnout in the ‘85 municipal election.

• October: Qualicum Beach needs a com-munity hospital, according to a report by the District 69 Health Care Task Force.

TOP STORIES

David Foster and Wayne Gretzky cruise into the area and were captured by an intrepid photographer.

Parksville and the Rod and Gun Hotel got into a heated battle over this sign, which didn’t fit new bylaws.

Work is afoot to turn to the old school board office on Fern Road into an arts centre in Qualicum Beach.

The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, July 17, 2012 www.pqbnews.com B730th Anniversary Series

Community in Review ~ 1987

Beautiful Gardens start at KEN-DOR

Open Mon.-Sun. 9-5 • 845 Qualicum Rd, Qualicum Beach • 250-594-1117

Proud to be part of the community for over 26 years.Locally owned Locally owned & operated& operated

GARDEN CENTREGARDEN CENTRE

• January, 1987: Provincial court judge Ed-ward O’Donnell acquitted the ‘Motherpeace Eight’ of trespassing on Department of Na-tional Defence property. O’Donnell ruled the eight peace supporters had not reached land above the visible high water mark during their peace fl otilla to North Winchelsea Island the previous August.

• February: Qualicum Beach has recorded a 19 per cent population growth during the last fi ve years — the latest census poll stated. Parksville, meanwhile, showed a population growth of 10.8 per cent during the same time period.

• May: Homeowners in Parksville were in-formed that they would be facing an increase of 10.7 per cent on their 1987 tax bill. The lion’s share of the increase was attributed to school and hospital needs.

• June: The Nanoose Conversion Campaign erected a teepee outside the Canadian Forces Maritime and Experimental Test Range at Nanoose Bay in protest. The local group was upset with the arrival of three American mili-tary vessels with nuclear capabilities.

• July: MLA Stan Hagan announced he would resign his position under a cloud of controversy and confusion. Hagan old The News he wanted to step aside until confl ict of interest allegations concerning Hagan’s Co-mox cement company had been cleared up.

• August: Work continued on the Qualicum Airport expansion thanks to a $300,000 grant from the Provincial Air Transport Assistance Program.

• September: Parksville council expressed concerns that sand in the Parksville Bay area is eroding.

• October: Qualicum Beach jammed the Qualicum Airport to get a glimpse of visiting Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip. Security was tight, however, and most fans did not get the chance to get close.

• November: The Nov. 21 election saw Paul Reitsma snag the Parksville mayor’s chair away from incumbent Allen Hustwick. Mayor Art Skipsey returned by acclamation in Quali-cum Beach.

TOP STORIES

Anti-nuclear protests continue at the Canadian Forces Experimental and Test Range in Nanoose Bay. Several arrests and court cases have been heard over the years.

Making headlines in 1987 was the murder case of Bruce John James, found guilty of killing Wendy Frances Worobee of Qualicum Beach.

B8 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, July 17, 2012 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News30th Anniversary Series

saveonfoods.com Wembley Mall, Parksville

[email protected]

TO ADVERTISE ON THIS FEATURE PAGE, CONTACT

ONE OF OUR SALES REPRESENTATIVES

BarbGiles250-905-0020direct line

BrittanyPearce250-905-0015direct line

[email protected]

Personal Real EstateCorporation

Parksville-Qualicum BeachIndependently Owned &

Operated

I’m here to help you I’m here to help you with the buying or with the buying or

selling of your home — selling of your home — with courteous service with courteous service

and respect forand respect foryour needs.your needs.

250.248.43211.800.224.5838 • [email protected]

Your toOceanside Living!Living!

pilates... strength of motion

Hands down, one of the best workout

you will ever fi nd.Group andIndividual Classes Available250-821-8828

[email protected]

248-8801248-8801

“The Pet Lover’s Realtor”

Serving the Whole Family

Please spay/neuter your petswww.spca.bc.ca/parksville

For moreinformationSPCA250- 248-3811

Brenda JenkinsBrenda JenkinsSponsored By:

135 Alberni Hwy. Parksville www.bjenkins.ca

Thinking of buying or selling? Please give me a call.

WHITECAPREALTY LTD.

A11

KIA NEEDS A HOMEKia is a one year old

beautiful tabby - a very friendly “lap cat”.

Probably best the only pet.

Colton from last time is still waiting for a home he is quite talkative & friendly!

PAWS FOR A CAUSE is just around the corner - Sept. 9 - pick up your pledge sheets on line or at

the shelter.

PAWCAUSE is the cornepick up y

1-631 E. Island Hwy, Parksville www.westcoastfoam.com

(250) 248-3666

WEST COASTWEST COASTFOAM, LATEX & MORE

Deluxe High Density Queen Size Mattress Size Mattress ToppersToppers

wy, Parksville tfoam.com

$$79790000Starting atStarting at

Community profile

LISSA [email protected]

We have arguably some of the most beautiful land-scapes in the world and Randy Hall can prove it. Hall moved to the area

about fi ve years ago from Burnaby and while he took up a new job in the engineering department at the City of Parksville, he also took up an old hobby, photography.Being a computer savvy guy, Hall was attracted to the new digital cameras and the ability to play with the pictures us-ing computer software. He fell in love with the great out-doors while camping growing up and also working in the forest industry. He specializes in nature photography, mainly landscapes, and his pictures show great contrasting colours, incredible lighting and often changing weather patterns. He explained why the weather captivates him:“There’s something about weather with the clouds, I guess the different feelings you get from the weather. You can get situations where there’s really calm water or stormy skies, the

contrasts you can get there both in form and in colour.”Hall is a member and past president of the Oceanside Photographers Club which he said has really helped him

push forward with his photography. It is there he met photographer Craig Carmi-

chael, owner of Island Exposures Gallery, who he said has helped him and mentored him for the past

couple years.Hall hopes his photography helps people appreciate this beautiful area and not take it for granted. And he’ll continue his endeavors to share the beauty. “I’m still looking for that perfect shot,” he said.You can fi nd Hall’s photography at Island Exposures Gallery in Parksville, at their new location at 5-183 West Island Hwy, in front of The Beach Club. He also teaches workshops there once a month for beginner to intermediate level photogra-phers.To view Randy’s photography visit https://sites.google.com/site/photographybyrandyhall.

LISSA ALEXANDER PHOTORandy Hall works for the City of Parksville and is also a professional photographer.

Always looking for that perfect photo

ParksvilleParksville

PARKSVILLE