Trail Daily Times, April 24, 2015
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Transcript of Trail Daily Times, April 24, 2015
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FRIDAYAPRIL 24, 2015
Vol. 120, Issue 64
$105 INCLUDING G.S.T.
Joy DeMelo
All Pro Realty Ltd.
1148 Bay Ave, Trail BC
cell 250.368.1960bus 250.368.5000 ex.29
at the award winning Columbia River Hotel Trail
liquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor storeliquor 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1895 - 2015
B Y S H E R I R E G N I E RTimes Staff
It's not a stretch to say that regardless of age, balancing mind and body for work and play is a practice anyone can benefit from.
That is what Yoga for Kids is all about – boosting balance, self esteem, coordination and flexibility, says yoga teacher Kim Rawkins.
Rawkins instructs children ages six to 12 in the Trail Memorial Centre fitness studio Monday afternoon in 45-minute sessions.
The lessons focus on breathing exercises and basic yoga poses as well as games and relaxation moves that are given a kid-friendly twist.
“I try to create an environment in class where no one is striving to be the best,” said Rawkins. “And everyone is striving to be brave and try new things.”
Sessions involve partner poses, “yogi says” challenges and stretches with fun names, like the tree pose, crow, warrior waves and fire hydrant. Yoga is becoming increasingly popular in schools and community settings as a physical, mental and spiritual discipline that is widely practiced for wellness and relaxation,
“Yoga can teach kids healthy coping mecha-nisms for dealing with their emotions, increase their concentration and empower them to feel in control of their bodies,” Rawkins explained.
Rawkins, a Registered Nurse, began yoga classes in Victoria eight years ago as a means to stretch out tense muscles from studying and pole vaulting.
“Yoga slowly taught me the importance in finding balance between strength and flex-ibility, physical activity and relaxation,” she explained.
Three years ago Rawkins became a yoga teacher in India, and has been instructing classes periodically ever since.
“After volunteering to teach a kids yoga class for the Girl Guides in Warfield last year, I realized how much fun teaching kids yoga was,” Rawkins said. “I realized how great it would be to have this non-competitive activ-ity for kids that helps boost their balance, self esteem, coordination and flexibility.”
So far, class turn out and community feed-back has been positive for Yoga with Kids, and plans are underway for fall sessions.
“The non-competitive nature of yoga is what really got me interested,” said Rawkins. “The goal is to make your body feel good, period.”
Classes in Trail run until June 1, for infor-mation contact the recreation department at 364.0888. Rawkins also teaches Kids Yoga at the Rossland Miners Hall, Wednesdays from 3-4 p.m. until May 20.
B Y S H E R I R E G N I E RTimes Staff
Trail Mayor Mike Martin prefers face-to-face talks over long distance calls or emails, so this week he travelled to B.C.’s Parliament Buildings and met with provincial officials.
This is Martin's first trip to Victoria since taking office last fall, for meetings slated with the Ministry of Community, Sport and Cultural Development regarding Trail's boundary expan-sion proposal; the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure (MOTI) to discuss the Old Bridge; and the Ministry of Health for updates about Kootenay Boundary Regional Hospital (KBRH) projects.
“The city recently held its Strategic Planning Session to set out the city's goal and objec-tives for the next four years,” said Martin in a Wednesday news release.
“Now that we've set our priorities, it's impor-tant to keep the momentum going so we can see these projects come to fruition. The meeting with ministry officials will provide clarity and direction so we can continue to move forward.”
The Trail boundary extension is currently in the hands of the province at the proposal review stage, which means the ministry has acknowledged receipt and is preparing feedback that could include referrals to other provincial ministries.
Martin and officials from Teck Trail Operations were scheduled to meet with the ministry and focus on the Supplementary Letters Patent (SLP) issues associated with local government authori-ties, according to the city's news release. If the SLP matters are resolved, mitigation talks can begin with the Regional District of Kootenay Boundary (RDKB) over impacted regional ser-vices.
“The province has committed to provide an individual to assist in the mitigation,” said Martin, who was accompanied by David Perehudoff, Trail's chief administrative officer. “If we can sort out the SLP issues and come to an agreement with all parties involved, it is hoped we will have ministry approval for the expansion sometime this year.”
Communications officer Alison Giles, said the ministry is still working with the City of Trail to confirm details and to fully understand the impli-cations of the proposal before determining if the boundary extension will be brought forward for electoral approval.
“If the boundary extension is brought forward and affirmed by the municipal electorate, an Order in Council (OIC) would then be drafted
See TRAIL, Page 3
Trail mayor in Victoria to talk
hospital, bridge and boundary
The positive impact of Yoga for Kids
GUY BERTRAND PHOTO
Instructor Kim Rawkins rounded out the Monday Yoga for Kids session with a stretching and breathing exercise called the boat pose. (Clockwise from top) Rawkins, Cassidy Smythe, Emily Miskell, Katelyn Verdon and Alyssa Dickson. The lessons incorporate partner poses, games using poses and breathing exercises for children ages six to 12 years.
A2 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, April 24, 2015 Trail Times
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Today’s WeaTher
Low: 4°C High: 11°C POP: 60% Wind: SE 5 km/h
saturday
Low: 6°C High: 20°C POP: 20% Wind: SW 5 km/h
Low: 8°C High: 24°C POP: 20%
Wind: NE 10 km/h
Low: 3°C High: 15°C POP: 30%
Wind: SW 5 km/h
sunday
monday tuesday
Low: 4°C • High: 15°CPOP: 30% • Wind: S 10 km/h
Chance of a shower Chance of a shower
Morning Afternoon
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ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION Outdoor Track & Field Meet Sat. May2, 2015 10:00-5:30
Haley Park-Trail Open to athletes born in
2006 and earlier Info: 250-368-5291
www.trailtrackclub.ca
COMING.... DINNER WITH THE DOCTOR!!
Topic: Hypertension/Stroke Details to follow Tuesday.
BEAVER VALLEY LIONS BINGO Wednesdays @6pm
Fruitvale Memorial HallCASINO HALL OPEN HOUSE
Come & See the Renovations Sunday, Apr.26th, 2-4pm
4180 Casino RoadTRAIL MINOR BASEBALL
OPENING DAY Saturday, April 25th
Little League Baseball is under way this weekend at Andy Bilesky Park in Trail. Games scheduled all day
starting at 10am. Opening ceremonies are from 12noon to 12:30pm.
Come out and enjoy a burger at the park and watch
the kids play ball!COLOMBO LODGE SUPPER MEETING
Wine Tasting Contest Sunday, May 3rd, 5:00pm
Bring A Friend Tickets $15.00
Star Grocery, City Bakery Call Tony Morelli
Wine drop off (Members Only) Games Room (Red wine only)
11:00am-2:00pm Sunday Menu: Colombo style pasta,
Meatballs, JoJos, Salad, Buns, Coffee
Please purchase tickets prior to Sunday
As tax year 2014 winds down, the federal budget recent-
ly announced some 2015 tax year goodies. Being tax time it only seems appropriate to bring some to your attention especially since you might want to take advantage of these during 2015.
The feds have introduced the Home Accessibility Tax Credit (HATC). For BC resi-dents this appears to be an expansion of the Seniors Home Renovation Tax Credit that has been around for a few years now.
True, but there are some differences.
This federal credit will not be restricted to seniors wanting to enable their abil-ity to remain in their home. This credit will be available to persons of any age who have an approved Disability Tax Credit Certificate (DTC).
The renovations must be of the nature to aid the person to access the home more easily or increase their safety within the home, although the list of home renovations hasn’t been fleshed out. Regardless, the big win is the fact that
qualifying renovations claimed under this fed-eral credit can also be claimed as a qualify-ing medical expense. That’s right, gov-ernment sanctioned double dipping.
For example, a ramp that is needed to access a home could be claimed under both the federal HATC and also as a medical expense tax credit. Now, imagine if the BC government would also allow a senior with a DTC to make a third claim under the cur-rent provincial credit.
Downside, the HATC will be a non-refundable tax credit. This means that only the amount needed to reduce tax payable to zero is used. Any amount over is not given to the taxpayer. This is unlike the BC Seniors Home Reno Credit – it’s a refund-able tax credit. That is, the balance not needed is paid to the taxpayer.
Question? Will the BC government now change their credit to a non-refundable cred-it? Especially in light of the federal gov-ernment’s allowable double dipping. Will
BC even continue its credit?
To change modes completely, the feds have introduced a revised – apparently simplified – version of form T1135. This is the schedule used to report foreign investment of $100,000 or greater. The discussion around this schedule is a col-umn in itself. Suffice it to say that this is welcome news to any-one who has strug-gled with the detail required on this form – speaking for tax pre-parers in Canada, this form can’t come soon enough.
To be accurate though, for those with foreign investment of $250,000 or greater, the T1135 reporting struggle will continue as per usual. The sim-plified reporting will be for those who have foreign investments greater than $100,000 but less than $250,000.
Also included in the budget was an increased capital gain exemption for farm-ers and fishers to one million dollars, as well as new rules around gifting of private cor-poration shares and real estate. And yes, there was the recycled announcement that the kids’ fitness credit will become a refund-able tax credit for 2015.
Ron Clarke has his MBA Email him at [email protected]. To read previous Tax Tips & Pits columns visit www.JBSbiz.net.
The budget and tax prep
Ron ClaRke
Tax Tips & Pits
Day of Mourning on april 28
Times file phoTo
The annual day to remember those who have died or were injured in the work-place will be held Tuesday at the Family Monument Park. Those wishing to join in the Walk of Remembrance should meet at the Local 480 Hall at 3:45 p.m.
LocaLTrail Times Friday, April 24, 2015 www.trailtimes.ca A3
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Snow pack in the West Kootenay is below the usual numbers this year, sitting at 72 per cent of normal, accord-ing to the B.C. River Forecast Centre.
In a report released earli-er this month the region was categorized as having a “mod-erately low snow pack,” as a result of warmer than seasonal temperatures and low levels of precipitation throughout the month of March. The precipita-tion that did fall on the West Kootenay region last month consisted mainly of rain rather than snow, contributing to the low 2015 numbers.
Field observations by the River Forecast Centre are most-ly done at higher elevations, so
the 72 per cent of normal “may not fully reflect the snow pack situation at low to mid-eleva-tion,” says the recording centre.
Other observations show that there is little or no snow pack at low to mid-elevation, or between 800 and 1,100 metres above sea level.
While the Kootenays are showing less snow than previ-ous years, the region is record-ing snow pack percentages that are sitting well above some other parts of the province, especially the south coast with only 13 per cent of their normal snow pack for this time of year.
The situation won't be improving at the seasonal cycle moves into spring and summer in B.C. Environment Canada is predicting the higher-than-average temperatures are going
to continue into June, melt-ing snow and preventing more from falling and staying on the ground.
With the usual amount of precipitation, combined with high temperatures, the forecast centre reports there has been a big boost in water levels in rivers around the province, but not in the West Kootenay.
The federal Water Office records accumulated precipita-tion and water levels in riv-ers across the country. As of April 14, the office recorded 356 mm of accumulated precipita-tion on the Columbia River at Birchbank Park, an increase of nearly 30 mm over the last month, however the primary water level has gone down from a 5.2 metre high on March 22, down to 3.6 metres on April 14.
Kootenay snow pack below average
FROM PAGE 1for the consideration of government,” she added.
With the pedestrian/pipe bridge construction nearing, Trail continues to seek provincial funds from the MOTI for demolition of the Old Trail Bridge.
Tear down costs for the 103-year old landmark are estimated to exceed $5 million.
“The city believes the ministry should be financially involved in this project as the province owned and maintained the Old Bridge for half its life use,” explained Martin. “It’s imperative the RDKB sewer interceptor line be moved off the bridge before developing a necessary demolition plan and finalizing a budget.”
With the city seeking funds to build a $2 million secondary road to KBRH, Martin seized the opportunity to discuss the project and other hospital plans with the Ministry of Health.
“We want to ensure the province is familiar with the IHA’s expansion plans and council’s commitment to the construction of a secondary access road,” said Martin. “We will also take this opportunity to request ministry endorsement for the city’s current gas tax application.”
Trail seeks funds for bridge demolition
Sheri regnier photo
Pounds of goose droppings scattered throughout Trail's Gyro Park is an ongoing problem for the city. Helping hands from the Gateway Christian Life Centre swooped in before the April 3 Easter Egg Hunt and picked up well over 30 pounds of the fowl waste in advance of the event. Bruce Taylor and friends again used the centre's “Honour Community” duty Thursday morning, sweeping the lawn and picnic areas clean of goose scat.
Gyro Clean up
B y S h e r i r e g n i e rTimes Staff
Joyce Cook says she isn't one for public speaking, but the Trail senior is one who sticks to her conviction.
With shaky hands and a queasy tummy, Cook stood before the Kootenay Savings Credit Union (KSCU) board and over 100 com-pany members Monday night to voice frustration about fees charged for mailing statements.
She and three others spoke directly to the 10-member board during the company's annual gen-eral meeting (AGM), reiterating discontent about the $2 fee for a mailed bank statement and their concern with conducting business online.
“The latest statement fee is the straw that broke the camel's back,” Cook stated to the panel.
“I'm sure you have heard our reasons many times,” she noted, referring to customers who do not use computers, printers and can-not access the Internet for state-ments.
“We thank those who have cho-sen to go paperless as we all want to cut costs where we can.”
Some users don't want to access online banking because of secu-rity issues, which Cook maintains should be their option.
“And they should be exempt along with those of use who don't have a choice,” she added.
The 60-year KSCU member pro-ceeded to hand the directors a petition with 825 names, all of whom signed in protest of the $2 fee.
“Gathered by 14 seniors whose average age is in the mid 80s,” Cook explained. “We had no prob-
lem, other than mobility, in get-ting those signatures in less than two months.”
The sheer number of signato-ries indicates the level of upset people have about the service charge, she said.
“Personally I feel KSCU has lost its original purpose,” Cook added. “I hope you're paying attention.”
She was somewhat relieved after addressing the board directly. But Wednesday afternoon, Cook was uncertain if her concerns were heard or when the matter would be addressed.
Nancy Crockett, KSCU's vice president of sales and member experience, confirmed a bi-annual product and service charge review will begin in the company's sec-ond quarter and is expected to extend until the end of the year.
“It is a very careful and thor-ough process,” she explained. “We examine market research, including rates, fees and emerging product trends from the Canadian marketplace, as well as leaders in other jurisdictions.”
She said the company will host focus groups to gather feedback about banking needs and packages designed to suit unique member segments.
“During the review, Kootenay Savings will look to develop unique product and service pack-ages where members with diverse needs can chose a package that best suits their needs.”
Crockett explained a very robust member survey was conducted in October, adding, “we will also be utilizing this rich member feed-back in our product and service review project to ensure we meet our members needs.”
Seniors voice concerns during Kootenay Savings AGM
T H E C A N A D I A N P R E S SVANCOUVER - The
federal government is telling the City of
Vancouver it does not have the authority to legitimize pot with its proposal to regulate
“illegal” medical mari-juana dispensaries.
Health Minister Rona Ambrose sent a letter to Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson on Thursday saying she was “deeply con-cerned” by the city’s plans to discuss regu-lation at an upcoming council meeting.
“Marijuana is not an approved drug or medicine, and Health Canada does not endorse its use,” reads the letter obtained by The Canadian Press.
“ L e g i t i m i z i n g and normalizing the use and sale of mari-juana can have only one effect: increasing marijuana use and addiction.”
City staff will present a report to council on Tuesday recommending regu-lating the booming medical pot indus-try. The rules would include a $30,000 licensing fee and require the shops to be at least 300 metres from schools, com-munity centres and other dispensaries.
In the letter, the health minister says there are serious health risks asso-
ciated with smok-ing marijuana. She argues “normalizing” pot could mean more than tripling its use by youth.
Ambrose writes that although Canadian courts have required the government to allow access to mari-juana when authorized by a doctor, the law says this must be done in a controlled way.
“These regulations are clear and do not provide municipalities with the authority to legitimize the com-mercial sale of mari-juana, which remains an illegal substance,” she says.
She says the gov-ernment implemented the Marijuana for Medical Purposes (MMPR) regulations in June 2013 with the aim of treating mari-juana like other nar-cotics used for medical purposes.
“Storefronts and dispensaries do not operate within a ‘grey zone,’ and the law is clear: they are illegal.”
City manager Penny Ballem told reporters on Wednesday that the federal approach had created “greyness and confusion,” forcing the
city to intervene.Councillor Kerry
Jang said the MMPR, which prevent people from growing their own marijuana, make it difficult for patients to access medicine and have created pub-lic health and safety issues.
“The federal approach is ideologic-al. The city’s approach is public health-based,” he said. “We don’t do this lightly. We’re simply respond-ing to what the public has asked us to do, and the industry has asked us to do.”
Jang said the fed-eral government has generally ignored the city’s requests to dis-cuss the problems.
Advocates are div-ided on the new rules - even some within the same household. “Prince of Pot” Marc Emery called regu-lation cynical and unnecessary, while his wife and fellow pot activist Jodie said it’s a positive step toward legalization.
“It tells the prov-incial and federal government, as well as other municipal-ities, that marijuana is here to stay. It’s worth money. There’s demand, if there’s this kind of supply,” said Jodie Emery.
“The city is just going for a money grab at the expense of medical mari-juana patients, some of whom hardly have enough money to pay for what they’re buy-ing now,” Marc Emery said.
A4 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, April 24, 2015 Trail Times
Provincial
FINANCIAL PLAN PUBLIC CONSULTATION
Public Process on the 2015-2019 Financial Plan and Budget
Monday, April 27, 2015 @ 6:00 p.m.
A public meeting is scheduled for Monday, April 27, 2015 starting at 6:00 p.m. at Rossland City Hall, 1899 Columbia Avenue to attend a presentation on the City’s proposed budget and 5 year financial plan.
This will be a public meeting regarding the budget and financial plan and attendees will have an opportunity to receive the presentation, ask questions and comment regarding the proposed plan.
Please come out and help Council draft a Financial Plan for your City. A Copy of the Plan is available on www.rossland.ca
IMPORTANT NOTICE:Change to Regular Council Meeting
ScheduleThe City of Rossland Regular Council Meeting scheduled for Monday, April 27, 2015 at 6:00 p.m. will now take place at 7:00 p.m. in order to accommodate the Financial Plan Public Consultation at 6:00 p.m. All future Regular Meetings of Council will occur at 6:00 p.m.
If you have any questions please call the City Hall at (250) 362–7396.
The Corporation of the City of Rossland
Lisa Kramer-HuntRegistered Acupuncturist
250-368-3325 www.trailacupuncture.com
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TEACHING ENGLISH TO SPEAKERS OF OTHER LANGUAGES (TESOL)The global demand for certified English language teachers with experience in multicultural environments continues to grow. Join this dynamic field with Selkirk College’s 4-month TESOL Advanced Diploma Program.
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Trail and DistrictHarmony Choir
under direction of Audrey Bisset
invites you to a Spring ConcertApril 25, 2015 at 7:00pm
Charles Bailey Theatre
Tickets $15 at the Charles Bailey Box Offi ce
Featuring:Harmony ChoirKootenay Women’s EnsembleTwi n Rivers
Community Choir
Rossland Glee ClubThe Green ChoirKootenay DanceWorksThe Kidz
Soloists: Dawson Zanet, Audrey Bisset and Brian Chan
WALMART CORRECTION NOTICEFlyer ending April 29th, 2015.
Toys (page 6) 12” Star Wars Hero Figures shown in our current flyer may not be available in all stores.
We apologize for any inconvenience
PUBLIC NOTICE: Temporary Parking Lot Closure – Trail Memorial Centre (TMC)
Tuesday, April 28th to Wednesday, April 29th (Noon)
This notice is to inform the public that the TMC parking lot will be closed temporarily to accommodate maintenance activities
from 7:00am Tuesday, April 28th until noon Wednesday, April 29th. During this time
period, there will be no vehicle or pedestrian access to the parking lot. We ask anyone approaching the area to please obey all
posted information signage and traffic control personnel.
The City of Trail apologizes for any inconvenience this may cause. If you have
any questions or concerns, please contact the City’s Engineering Department
at 250-364-0822.
Thank you, City of Trail Engineering Department
Feds disapprove of Vancouver’s pot shops plan B.C. will get infrastructure cash
despite vote outcome in Metro Vancouver,
says ministerT H E C A N A D I A N P R E S S
VANCOUVER - Industry Minister James Moore says British Columbia will get its fair share of federal infrastructure fund-ing regardless of the outcome of a Metro Vancouver transit tax vote.
Speaking to a gathering of business leaders, Moore said the federal government would provide the province with promised investment dollars whether or not voters approve the historic transit plebiscite.
A proposed $7.5-billion public transpor-tation overhaul over 10 years would include projects such as an upgraded rapid-transit system, a new bridge and additional buses.
“We know that our cities are getting more dense and more congested,” said Moore, who was in Vancouver for a meeting with members of the B.C. Business Council.
The technically non-binding plebiscite gives citizens the option of a 0.5-per-cent sales tax increase to raise money to finance the massive investment.
Ballots were mailed out in mid-March and must be submitted by May 29.
As the Yes and No sides jockey for pos-ition, residents are trying to balance traffic woes in a growing region with what some are calling a tax grab.
Proponents say the upgrades are crucial to accommodate an estimated influx of one million people to the Vancouver region over the next three decades.
Opponents have condemned TransLink, the region’s transit authority, as wasting taxpayers’ money.
Moore pointed to $53 billion of cross-Canada infrastructure funding that the federal government has promised over the next 10 years through the New Canada Building Plan.
He also highlighted a yearly $1-billion public transit fund targeted for big cities and announced in Tuesday’s budget.
Moore said provinces are not restricted to spending the new funding exclusively on public transit and that the money can be used for infrastructure including roads, bridges and tunnels.
Place your ad in the
Phone 250 368-8551 ext 0 email: [email protected]
Trail Times Friday, April 24, 2015 www.trailtimes.ca A5
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LocaL 480United Steel Workers of America
Help remember those who have died orwere injured while trying to earn a living
for themselves and their families.
Day of Mourning ceremony
Tuesday, april 284:00pm • Worker’s Memorial
If you wish to participate in the Walk of Remembrance,
meet at Local 480 Hall at 3:45pm
2059 Washington, Rossland, BC250-362-0037
Rossland Thrift ShopCollectible Sale
Friday May 8th Saturday May 9th
10am-4pm
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T H E C A N A D I A N P R E S SWINNIPEG - Canada
appears set to break a two-decades-long trad-ition of setting match-ing greenhouse gas reduction targets with the United States.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Thursday that new tar-gets will be released next month, and will likely deviate from those recently set by the U.S.
“It’s unlikely our targets will be exactly the same as the United States, but they will be targets of similar levels of ambition to other major industrialized countries,” he said.
The U.S. and Canada had match-ing emissions targets under both the Kyoto accord of 1997 and the Copenhagen accord of 2009, which saw a var-iety of targets set by different countries.
Canada and the U.S. committed under Copenhagen to a 17 per cent cut from 2005 levels, while Australia, for example, commit-ted to a five per cent reduction from its 2000 levels.
A new, post-2020 international emis-sions regime is to be negotiated at a United Nations conference later this year in Paris.
The United States
announced last month that it plans to cut emissions 26-28 per cent by 2025.
Harper did not say which countries Canada might be clos-est to and added that the new targets would involve some fur-ther regulation of the energy sector.
“There will have to be additional regula-tory measures going forward to achieve these targets. But we are committed to this in a way that does two things: First of all, that improves prospects for jobs - ways that do not kill jobs,” he said.
“The second thing of course we will not do is we will not stick taxpayers with the bill.
We are not going to bring in carbon taxes.”
NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair accused Harper of failing to take action.
“Harper does not believe that climate change is real. He does not believe there-fore in the necessity to reduce greenhouse gases,” Mulcair said in Ottawa.
The latest emis-sions inventory from Environment Canada shows the country’s overall greenhouse gas output climbed 1.5 per cent between 2012 and 2013, continuing a slow upward trend since the global reces-sion of 2009.
The report, pre-pared by Environment
Canada and submitted annually to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, shows 726 megatonnes of emis-sions in 2013.
That is three per cent below Canada’s output in 2005 - well shy of the 17 per cent target under Copenhagen.
Harper was in Winnipeg to tout tax cuts announced in this week’s budget.
He rejected oppos-ition criticism that tax breaks on items such as tax-free sav-
ings accounts and registered retirement income funds help the well-off and offer little to the middle class.
He said the tax changes benefit every-one, and accused the opposition parties of planning to reverse the cuts.
“That’s what the next election is going to be about. Do you want to keep the things this government has put in your pocket, or do you want to let Mr. Trudeau and Mr. Mulcair take them away?”
Harper says Canada’s emission targets unlikely to be ‘exactly the same’ as U.S.
T H E C A N A D I A N P R E S STORONTO - Ontario’s path back into the
black won’t include slashing and burning as the Liberal government believes it can elim-inate its $10.9-billion deficit with a scalpel rather than a hatchet - a penny a beer bottle the only new tax they’ll introduce.
The $131.9-billion budget introduced Thursday by Finance Minister Charles Sousa pledges to balance the books through a com-bination of targeted savings and a depend-ence on a steady economic growth.
It contains no major spending cuts and no new personal or corporate tax increases, which is what many experts had predicted.
Ontario’s economy is expected to grow by 2.7 per cent this year, boosted by the low Canadian dollar, the recovering U.S. econ-omy and lower oil prices, Sousa said. But he insisted the deficit elimination is not relying too heavily on external factors.
“It’s about controlling our spending and being very pragmatic in the things we do,” he said.
“We did not control spending by slashing and burning, as some would do. We did it by closely examining programs.”
But in the budget itself the government notes that unexpected changes in global eco-nomic conditions could lead to changes in its overall fiscal forecast.
The deficit will drop to $8.5 billion in 2015-16, falling further to $4.8 billion in 2016-17 before returning to balance the fol-lowing year, the budget forecasts.
The budget savings mostly come from a series of relatively minor measures, such as $100 million in cuts to business tax credits and $500 million in “program review sav-ings,” including changes to the Ontario Drug Benefit Program and consolidating schools.
NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said the budget does nothing to deal with the “increasing unaffordability” of everyday life.
Ontario won’t ‘slash and
burn’ its way back to balance
A6 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, April 24, 2015 Trail Times
OPINION
Seniors dinner and Family Fun coming up
Spring is here! It is so nice to see all the families out in the Village.
Montrose Recreation Commission has been hard at work planning the Senior Appreciation din-ner.
The dinner is sched-uled for Thursday April 30, 2015 doors open at 5:30pm.
This is a wonderful evening full of amazing stories from residents that have guided and shaped the Village of Montrose.
Montrose Rec. will also be hosting Montrose Family Fun Days June 6, 2015, a day full of fun for the whole family.
With any event there are many jobs to do, if you have an hour or two you can volunteer that day please call the Village office and leave your name and you will get a call back.
We hope to see many new residents and their families out mingling with long-time residents.
Council will be accepting nominations for Citizen of the Year soon. Take some time and nom-inate a deserving Citizen, (I know it’s hard there are so many deserving people in the Village)
it’s a great way to acknowledge our citizen for their dedication to our community. As always the Citizen of the year will be in the parade and we all love to see and hear the cheers for this very deserving person.
With the warm weather comes Bears!
They are up, moving around and hungry. Please keep your garbage and other attractants secured until the morning when the garbage is picked up.
Bears have an incred-ible sense of smell and
memory. Once they find a food
source they will keep coming back.
No one wants to see bears destroyed so a few extra minutes to secure garbage and other attract-ants will keep the prob-lems away.
A reminder to residents that we do have a leash by law, this protects both the animal and citizens. Please keep your pets on the leash and out of pub-
lic parks, where young people play.
We have bags at several locations to help you pick up after your pet.
The days light is with us longer and the kids are outside more, please watch for young people that when they are out having fun may forget to stop and look.
We have four cross walks in the village and people cross all day long, by slowing down and being aware of the cross-walks we will keep all who enjoy walking and riding in the village safe.
Council has been work-ing on Strategic Planning and we have finalized the document “Village of Montrose 2015-2018 Strategic Plan on a Page” this document will help guide decisions council makes over this term.
This document has a lot of information in it
and I encourage everyone to have a look.
This document shows where we were, where we are now and where we want to go.
Lastly I would like to encourage all residence when you are choos-ing your plants for your gardens, please consider drought tolerant plants; I think we may be in for a long hot summer!
Cindy Cook is a coun-cillor for the Village of Montrose.
Community Comment is an opportunity for elect-ed officials from our local municipalities to update citizens in the region on the events, plans and progress in their respect-ive communities. Every Friday, the Trail Times will present, on a rotating basis, a submission from councils, school trustees or regional district direc-tors.
Published by Black PressTuesday to Friday, except
statutory holidays
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All rights reserved. Contents copyright by the Trail Times. Any reproduction of material contained in this publication in whole or in part is forbidden without the
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CINDY COOKCommunity Comment
Trail Times Friday, April 24, 2015 www.trailtimes.ca A7
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CIG Signature Dividend ........... 15.31MMF Manulife Monthly High ... 14.888
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News • Sports • LeisureCount on us.
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120 years serving the Greater Trail community with stories, shared memories and reprints
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A look back at a turkey traditionPage 2
S I N C E 1 8 9 5S I N C E 1 8 9 5
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FRIDAYJANUARY 2, 2015
Vol. 120, Issue 1
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TIMES PHOTO
From the Trail Creek News in 1895 to the Trail Times in 2015, the venerable local newspaper and its staff (from the left; Liz Bevan, Shannon McIlmoyle,
Sheri Regnier, Jeanine Margoreeth, Kevin Macintyre, Dave Dykstra, Jim Bailey, Michelle Bedford, Lonnie Hart and Guy Bertrand) are celebrating its 120th
anniversary in 2015.
Newspaper grows from humble beginnings in 1895B Y S H E R I R E G N I E R
Times Staff
The source of prosperity of the
Trail Creek county is, of course, its
magnificent ore bodies, according
the first edition of the Trail Creek
News. “Our interests at present
lie centred in and about the noble
structure that is rising foot by foot
on the brow of the hill overhanging
the beautiful town of Trail and of
its growth and magnitude we now
write,” noted the paper's writer and
editor W.F. Thompson on the inau-
gural front page.
The day was Saturday, Oct. 19,
1895 when Volume No. 1 of The
Trail Creek News was hot off the
presses. Under the headline, “This Means
You! When You Patronize the News
You Help Trail Grow,” Thompson
writes that it is now in order for
every citizen of Trail to subscribe
for the home newspaper, The Trail
Creek News, and “the times are
right for such a movement, the
price is right and if the News of
today is not all right, we will make
it right in future issues.”
The price was said to be “cheap”
at $2 per year, and the News office
would be found open all day long
and far into the night, and future
readers were expected to hand in
their subscription at once, so they
would not miss one issue of the
Trail newspaper. “If you want the
news, you must read the News,”
Thompson proclaimed almost 12
decades ago.While there's no silver or gold
commemoration for more than a
century of news reporting, the Trail
Times staff decided an honorary pat
on the back is deserving to all the
people who have typed, pressed,
written, delivered, or simply read
their way into the 120-year history
of the Silver City's only surviving
newspaper.Over the course of the year, we
will actively seek stories from peo-
ple in the Greater Trail commu-
nity such as long time subscribers,
past paper carriers and retired office
workers, who have memories to
share about how the Trail Times has
impacted their lives.See EARLY, Page 3
Celebrating 120 years
Look for our next historical spread coming in May!
Thursday April 9, 2015 was a false summer day in Vancouver. It was a windless 14 degrees
Celsius down in English Bay, and people rode by on bikes or strode along the sea wall in T-shirts and shorts.
The only difference to the regular parade of such days was the smell. You could smell bunker fuel in the air that mor-ning. The reason for this was that starting the day before, at about 5 p.m., a local sailboat skipper had detected an oil slick on the water in English Bay.
Various media reports explained that it took a while for the skipper to reach a response number with the appropriate authorities, and that it was 8 p.m. Wednesday night before the Canadian Coast Guard recognized that the spill was serious. It then took about seven hours to put a boom around the grain car-rier MV Marathassa, which was determined to be the vessel spilling bunker fuel into the clean waters of English Bay, Vancouver city’s main down-town beach area.
Thirteen hours after the Coast Guard snapped into action, the appropriate offi-cials at the City of Vancouver were notified, a matter of some concern to Mayor Gregor Robertson, who bares the ultimate authority for fire and police response to civic dis-asters. The whole matter of response time had also been muddied by the fact that the federal government had in 2013 closed the busy Kitsilano Coast Guard Station adjacent to English Bay as a cost-cutting
measure.The first public relations
statements were educational: the Mayor said the response was “inadequate,” the Coast Guard said it was “exception-al,” and the federal Minister of Industry, James Moore, said it was “world class.” For the rec-ord, B.C. Premier Christy Clark
sided with Mayor Robertson.
Putting the whole “disas-ter” into context requires some basic math: between 2,700 and 3,100 litres of bunker fuel were spilled (from various Coast Guard estimates); there are 119.24 litres
in a fluid barrel (the standard industrial measure of oil trans-port); therefore between 22.64 and 26 barrels of bunker fuel were spilled. Very large crude carriers, called VLCCs today in the industry, can carry two mil-lion barrels of oil. The Northern Gateway Pipeline is proposing delivery of over 500,000 barrels per day from the oil sands to the coast.
A two million barrel spill would be 111,112 times the amount spilled on April 8 and 9 in English Bay.
Senior scientists at the Department of Fisheries and Oceans report over 100 spills on the B.C. coast and rivers between 1969 and 2001. None have been truly catastrophic, but the frequency indicates that accidents regularly hap-pen. One day, a big one will occur. When it does,
it is unlikely that it will occur in the benign condi-tions of Wednesday April 8, 2015. Mariners who travel the Northwest Coast have long written of its howling
Southeasters, wind-against-tide rips, enormous waves (a 140 footer was measured south of Haida Gwaii in the 1960s), monstrous fog banks and very low cloud ceilings. These forces of nature can occur one-at-a-time or in combinations. In no way do they resemble English Bay’s balmy weather conditions two weeks ago.
While the science and prac-tice of oil spill clean-up has improved with each passing disaster over the last few dec-ades, to think that the Canadian Coast Guard will achieve “world class” results deploying a boom around a foundering VLCC in a winter Southeaster in Hecate Strait or the Salish Sea is defy-ing logic.
The same applies to deploying slick lickers in 20 foot waves (or better), or flying over oil slicks in fog to spray aerial dispersants. In all likeli-hood, a gigantic bitumen spill occurring in full-on Northwest Coast winter weather would be left to self- disperse and settle as toxic globules on the ocean bed and coastal foreshore.
To those who point out that oil tankers have plied the B.C. coast since the early 1900s, and we have yet to experience a major marine oil spill, it would be good to remember the old Haida bedtime stories about the adventures of “Mr. Accident.” He comes out after dark, and he picks on the lazy, the careless and the unsuspect-ing. Sometimes the conse-quences can be terrifying. He’s out there still, and we forget him at our peril.
Mike Robinson has been CEO of three Canadian NGOs: the Arctic Institute of North America, the Glenbow Museum, and the Bill Reid Gallery. He currently writes for a broad range of Canadian media, and consults to the boards of start-up NGOs.
Putting the English Bay oil spill in context
Mike Robinson
troy Media
An editorial from the New Glasgow News
A lot of evidence coming out of the Mike Duffy trial has sug-gested just what the suspended senator’s defence has claimed: rules on expenses were vague.
That in itself is a sad state-ment about lack of public accountability in high office. But now we’re beginning to hear how the position of senator was abused – taken advantage of to benefit certain politicians, all at the public’s expense.
Documents released at Duffy’s trial show that at least 74 Conservatives wanted a piece of the former TV jour-nalist because of his celebrity brand. Apparently they felt his presence as a well-known per-sonality could help them on the campaign trail.
So much for the intended function of the Senate as a political body of sober second
thought, helping clarify or otherwise improve legisla-tion drafted in the House of Commons.
With Duffy facing charges of fraud – among other counts – it’s interesting to see that he’s accused of billing expenses to appear at such partisan events.
It’s hard for politicians on the hustings to buy that kind of show-biz style publicity – with-out of course the bottomless pocket of taxpayers’ money to make it possible.
From the beginning, as Prime Minister Stephen Harper was making his Senate appoint-ments, people questioned the choices. They also criticized the strings attached, in that those appointed weren’t free to exercise sober second thought, but rather were ordered to fol-low the bidding of the party and unquestioningly vote in favour of government legislation.
For what it’s worth, in a
show of distancing himself from such influence over sen-ators, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau announced last year that Liberal senators would no longer be part of the Liberal caucus.
Trudeau did make a point worth observing as so many Canadians express frustration with the Senate. If we are stuck with this political body, at least maintain the principle of hav-ing them engage in independ-ent, impartial discussion.
Senator’s star quality takes on tarnish
PEOPLEA8 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, April 24, 2015 Trail Times
www.MyAlternatives.ca1298 Pine Ave, Trail
Cars1990 HONDA ACCORD: Black, auto, looks great, runs great, asking $1500 firm. 250-365-2942.PLUSH 1990 OLDS 88: Will get you there in style! V6, FWD and good winter tires for a safe, smooth ride, runs well with little rust, summer tires included, $1200obo.
Cars1992 SUBARU LEGACY: 254,000kms, with roofrack, new clutch, timing belt, CVjoints, runs well, $2500obo.1995 CHEVROLET BERETTA SS: 2.2L, std, well-maintained, easy on gas, $2500 obo. 1997 CHEV LUMINA CAR: Ps/pb, air, good shape, good on gas, doesn’t burn oil, $1800. 1998 SUNFIRE GTX: 2 dr, auto, extra wheels, maintained, never broke down, 216,000kms, $1850obo. 1999 SUNFIRE: 212,000kms, white, 4 dr, 2 sets of tires w/rims, 5 spd, $2500obo. 2000 TOYOTA ECHO: 2dr, std, no rust, no accidents, runs great, $2650obo. Call Kara-Lee, 250-357-2135.2002 PONTIAC SUNFIRE: 124,000kms, excellent shape, $3400 obo. 250-921-9154, after 7pm.
2003 HYUNDAI TIBURON GT: 100,000kms, V6, 6spd, power everything, silver, never winter driven, incredible condition, $10,000. 2003 PONTIAC VIBE: No accidents, 5spd manual, air, great mileage, roof rack, safety package, anti-lock brakes, inverter in-dash, sum-mer/winter tires +chains, 166,500kms, $5900.2004 CHEV AVEO: 72,000kms, auto, air, power everything, sunroof, winters on rims, $7500.2004 SUBARU IMPREZA WRX: 4dr hatchback, 5spd Turbo, winter and all season tires, $13,900 obo.
Trucks1998 FORD RANGER XLT 4X4: 4.0L V6, AT, power everything, CD player, 31˝ M&S tires, 222,000kms, runs great, excellent condition, $5600obo. 1988 TOYOTA 4X4: 5spd, reliable daily driver, fuel efficient 4cyl, over $15,000 invested, 2-sets of good tires, $3000. 1993 TOYOTA 4X4: Runs/drives good, no rust, 360,000kms, regular cab, 5spd, $4000obo. 1995 DODGE 2500 DIESEL 4X4: Extended-cab, longbox, auto, $10,000 obo. Steel two place sled deck with ramp, $500. 1995 GMC 1500: Extended-cab, 5L, very well-maintained, 293,000 kms, $3500. 250-399-4213.
1997 TOYOTA T100 SR5 4X4: V6, extended-cab, manual, cruise, boxliner, hidden hitch, extras, $6500obo.1999 TOYOTA TACOMA SR5 4X4: Extra-cab, 124,000 miles, V6, 5-spd, new timing belt, water pump, starter, winters & clutch, absolutely no rust, winter stored, very reliable, 8000lb Warn winch, $12,000.2003 CHEVY DURAMAX: Diesel, longbox, 4WD; 1983 8’ Okanagan camper, $16,500/both obo. 2006 DODGE 4X4: Diesel, quad-cab, 3” lift, new tires, 192,000kms, $21,000;1979 F150 4X4: 1 parts, 1 runs good, new mud terrain tires, $1500/both.1992 FORD RANGER 4X4: Extended-cab, with canopy, 233,000kms, tow package, runs strong, some rust, $1500obo.1994 TOYOTA 4RUNNER: Runs or for parts, $1000 obo. 1995 DODGE 4X4 1500 SERIES: 318, std, 118,000miles, good winters studded, new summers, $4900obo. 1997 F250 4X4: 7.3L diesel, 215,000km, super-cab, air/tilt, exhaust brake, lots’a repairs done, warrantied engine at 50,000kms, tires OK, 5 spd, $7500obo. 250-368-6093.1999 FORD SUPERDUTY: Extended-cab, 7.3L diesel, loaded, too many extras to list, $9000.
250-368-5905.RARE 2002 FORD RANGER EDGE: Stepside club-cab, fiberglass box, no rust, 3L 5-spd, runs/looks/drives excellent, must see, $4200. 2004 GMC SIERRA 2500HD: Crew-cab, longbox, white, 146,000kms, runs great, must sell! $14,000. 2008 DODGE RAM 4X4 TRX4: 78,000kms, extended warranty, new tires, sound system, excellent condition, $23,900. 1999 TOYOTA COROLLA: Well-maintained, std, 205,000kms, summers and winters on rims, $3950
SnowmobilesBOONDOCKER NITREOUS KIT FOR SNOW-MOBILE, Complete 20 lbs shot, $400 obo. 1995 POLARIS INDY LITE GT: 340, 2 up, good condition, 7000kms, $1600, 1996 ARCTIC CAT BEARCAT 440: W/reverse, 16”x156” track, good condition, great utility sled, $2000obo. 2001 RMK 800: Reverse, Fox shocks, SLP pipes, Bar riser, mountain ready, $3200 obo. 2002 SKI-DOO SUMMIT: 144” track, heated grips, bar risers, excellent, $3200. 2005 ARCTIC CAT M6: 141.5 track, 3800 miles, G/C, new belt, $4500 obo. 250-509-0351.
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RVs/CampersWANTED: Travel trailer, 25’-longer, older model, fair condition, cheap for cash. TANDEM STEEL SLED DECK: Fits longbox truck, $500.2001 RMK 800 SNOW CHECK SPECIAL: 144, many extras, mountain ready, $3000. 1996 ARCTIC CAT 580 EXT POWDER SPECIAL: Reverse, 2” track, many extras, 1550 miles, $2000obo. 1998 POLARIS 900, $2000 obo. 2002 POLARIS 550, $2200; 1998 Polaris 340, $1200. Both long-track, 2-up seating, racks. 2002 SKIDOO SUMMIT 800: 144” track, $3500obo; 1998 Skidoo Summit 670, $1900. Both Stock and unmolested. 2007 POLARIS 700 DRAGON: Hotlz front end, SLP pipe, excellent condition, low kms, $6500. 250-365-0388.
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T H E C A N A D I A N P R E S STORONTO - Lois Lilienstein
loved children, loved music and loved to perform.
Credited with providing the special spark that helped make Sharon, Lois & Bram one of the biggest kids’ acts of the 1980s, Lilienstein was being remem-bered Thursday as a vivacious performer with a Broadway background and a knack for understanding how to entertain children.
Lilienstein died Wednesday of a rare form of cancer. She was 78.
“It’s a shock. We’ve been together for 37 years - it’s like a marriage,” longtime col-laborator Bram Morrison said Thursday, describing Lilienstein as “full of ideas and energy.”
“She came from a different musical place than Sharon and me. Sharon and I came out of the folk music world and she came out of the Broadway world. So it was a very interest-ing combination and I think that partly explains the success that we had.”
Fellow children’s performer Raffi Cavoukian, known sim-ply as Raffi, credited Lilienstein with giving him tips on what songs worked, and songs what didn’t.
She had a knack for reaching the youngest audiences, said Cavoukian, who met Lilienstein in the mid-70s through the Toronto folk scene.
“She understood that chil-dren love movement. She was always the one saying: ‘Don’t forget the actions!”’ Cavoukian recalled, also crediting her with introducing him to the song and movements of “The Hokey Pokey.”
David Lilienstein said his mother died Wednesday at home in Toronto surrounded by friends and family. After being diagnosed last October, her health took a sudden downturn
in recent weeks, he said.“She knew it was happening,
she was at peace with it, and she died very peacefully and not in pain,” Lilienstein said Thursday as he recalled a childhood filled with music.
Morrison and Sharon Hampson, the other member of the trio, said they noticed a dra-matic decline in their friend’s health in recent weeks.
They visited every day to hold her hand and listen to music.
“We fought like sisters but we loved each other like sisters, too,” said Hampson. “I just miss that relationship.”
Fighting back tears, she described the bubbly blond as “a woman of many ideas” who “would do anything” for her audience and was never concerned about being embar-rassed while performing.
Born in Chicago in July 1936, Lilienstein stood out with spirited dance moves in live performances of beloved tunes including “Skinnamarink,” “Peanut Butter” and “I Am Slowly Going Crazy.”
The trio formed in 1978 to record “One Elephant, Deux Elephants,” introducing the world to an exuberant mix of nonsense rhymes, folk tunes, pop melodies and singing games.
Sharon, Lois & Bram fur-ther entrenched themselves as preschool stars with their CBC television series “The Elephant Show,” which ran from 1984 to 1989. It also aired in the United States on Nickelodeon, where it was a consistent ratings draw.
Of the three group mem-bers, Lilienstein, especially, was “lively, smiling, and engaging,” said Cavoukian.
“This is a sad day. I just extend all my love,” Cavoukian said.
“The Elephant Show” aired for 65 episodes, each one end-
ing with the fan favourite “Skinnamarink.” In the late ‘90s the group returned to the screen with “Skinnamarink TV,” which ran for 52 episodes.
Fellow entertainer Eric Nagler, who also appeared on “The Elephant Show,” said he was struck by Lilienstein’s “heart and her happiness.”
“She was always a giving person. And a caring person,” Nagler said. “I haven’t seen her very often since our profession-al relationship ended but she has always carried a warm place in my heart.”
Fred Penner, another fellow children’s entertainer, mar-velled at the trio’s tight har-monies. He said he hadn’t seen Lilienstein in a long time, noting she lost her heart in performing when her husband died.
“But she always had this really, really warm smile and a lovely human spirit that would come out and you’d feel that joy and love coming from her, always - even off-stage,” said Penner.
Lilienstein retired in 1998 after the death of her husband, Ernest, while Hampson and Morrison continued touring.
Toronto city councillor Josh Matlow, who got to know the Lilienstein family when he worked to dedicate a Toronto playground in Sharon, Lois & Bram’s honour, says he grew up with the group’s music.
“She, along with Bram and Sharon, were part of the magic of our childhoods,” Matlow said. “Their music played a very special role in so many of our lives. Even today, those of us who are in our 30s and 40s can still sing verbatim the lyrics of ‘Skinnamarink.’
“Lois dedicated her career to making children the world over so happy by her music. And I think I know that we are all grateful.”
Submitted photo
Carol Vanelli-Worosz of Teck presents a cheque for $2,000 towards the fundraising by the Webster School PAC for the new playground at the school. Accepting the donation is Bridget Kivell, chair of the Playground Committee. The committee has raised $40,000, roughly one-third of its goal. Starting Monday, the Playground Committee will begin selling raffle tickets to help its fundraising efforts. First prize will be two tickets donated by West Jet, second prize will be $1,500 gift basket and the third prize is an autographed picture of Vancouver Canuck Dan Hamhuis and a Canucks’ jersey.
TEck hElps playground fundraising lois liliEnsTEin
Vivacious performer was part of beloved Sharon, Lois & Bram
Happy reunion for owner and dog lost for six monthsT H E C A N A D I A N P R E S S
WINNIPEG - He spent months travelling the Prairies from Alberta to Manitoba.
But the journey of Rocky the German shep-herd mix-breed finally came to end Wednesday when he was reunited with his Calgary owner.
Rocky was last seen on Oct. 15, 2014, at his home in Calgary.
He was found in good health near Stonewall, Man., on April 19 and sent to the Winnipeg Humane Society the next day.
Humane society staff checked for a micro-chip, since he didn’t have a tattoo.
Laina Hughes, communications co-ordin-ator for the humane society, said the micro-chip identified his owner as Shauna Doyle of Calgary.
Doyle made the 16-hour drive to Winnipeg to take Rocky home.
Hughes said the reunion was a gleeful one, with both owner and dog thrilled to be back together.
“She was wise enough to kneel down and be on the same level as him so he wouldn’t knock her over,” Hughes said.
“But I think he still managed to.”
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T H E A S S O C I A T E D P R E S SNEW YORK - Oh,
those puppy eyes.Just by gazing at
their owners, dogs can trigger a response in their masters’ brains that helps them bond, a study says.
And owners can do a similar trick in return, researchers found.
This two-way street evidently began when dogs were domesticat-ed long ago, because it helped the two species connect, the Japanese researchers say.
As canine psych-ology experts Evan MacLean and Brian Hare of Duke University wrote in a commentary on the work, “When your dog is staring at you, she may not just be after your sandwich.”
The new work is the first to present a biological mechanism for bonding across spe-cies, said researcher Larry Young of Emory University.
Neither he nor the Duke scientists were involved in the study, which is reported in a paper from Japan released Thursday by the journal Science.
The brain response is an increase in lev-els of a hormone called oxytocin (ahk-see-TOH’-sin). Studies in people and animals indicate this substance promotes social bond-
ing, such as between parent and infant or between two lovers.
One experiment in the new research involved 30 owners and their dogs. Oxytocin levels in the urine of both species were sam-pled before and after the owners and their dogs spent a half-hour together.
Analysis showed that owners whose dogs looked at them longer in the first five minutes had big-ger boosts in oxytocin levels. Similarly, dogs that gazed longer got a hormone boost, too. That’s evidently
in response to being touched by their owners during the ses-sion, one of the study authors, Takefumi Kikusui of Azabu University near Tokyo, said in an email.
No such result appeared when researchers tried the experiment with wolves. The animals were paired with people who had raised them, although not as pets. The difference suggests dogs started gazing at owners as a social strategy when they became domes-ticated, rather than inheriting it from
their wolf ancestors, researchers said.
Another experi-ment with dogs found they looked at their owners longer if they were given doses of oxytocin, and that the hormone’s levels then went up in their owners. But these results appeared only in female dogs; the reason isn’t clear.
An oxytocin researcher not con-nected to the study said previous work had provided bits of evidence that the hor-mone plays a role in bonding between spe-cies, but that the new work is more compre-hensive.
“It makes very good sense,” said C. Sue Carter, who directs the Kinsey Institute at Indiana University.
But Clive Wynne
of Arizona State University, a psych-ologist who studies interaction between dogs and people, said he thinks the link to domestication is “bark-ing up the wrong tree.” The study doesn’t pro-vide convincing evi-dence for that, he said.
Emory’s Young, who studies bonding behaviour, said the relationship between people and dogs is spe-cial.
Human love can lose its initial exhilara-tion over time, he said, but he hasn’t seen that with the dogs he has owned for 10 years.
“When I come home from work every day, they are just as excited to see me now as they were when I got them,” Young said.
Online:Science: http://
www.sciencemag.orgMalcolm Ritter can
be followed at http://
www.twitter.com/mal-colmritter
Trail Times Friday, April 24, 2015 www.trailtimes.ca A9
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1597 Bay Ave, Trail 24 Hour: 250-364-2114www.royaltheatretrail.com
What We Do in the ShadowsFri/Sat 7pm & 9pmSun 2pm & 7pm
APRIL 24 - 26
Do You Believe?Mon & Tue 7pm
APRIL 27 & 28
Walking the Camino:6 Ways to Santiago
Wed 7pm
APRIL 29
in concert!director, chuck Bisset
Sunday, April 263:00pm
trail United churchtrail, Bc
A delightful afternoon of choral jazz, folk
& classics plus solo performances!
Admission $12 at the door
1334 Cedar Avebeside JJ’s Fashions
250-368-3300
The team at Cedar Avenue Salon and Esthetiques
welcomes Louise and Lindsay to our team.
We welcome all of their past, present and
future clients to the salon.We look forward to seeing you soon!
Lindsay
Louise
NATIONAL DAY OF MOURNINGTuesday April 28, 2015
Katrine Conroy
MLA, Kootenay West
Tuesday April 28, 2015Tuesday April 28, 2015Remembering those who have
died or were injured while trying to earn a living for themselves
and their families.
1.888.755.0556 [email protected]
Power of PuPPy eyes
Dog gazes trigger bonding response in owner’s brains, study says
Trail Times file phoTo
That loving gaze from your dog helps you bond.
A10 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, April 24, 2015 Trail Times
EntErtainmEnt
1287 Cedar Avenue, Trail, BC V1R 4B9
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Luca Hair Studiois pleased to welcome
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When Walt says, “It’s a real bargain...”
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1166 Pine Ave., Trail 250-368-8112
Fishin’ upa storm
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a side of our creamy coleslaw, and coffee, tea or fountain pop.
Jesse Cook
One World Tour coming to Trail
S u b m i t t e dThe legendary
guitarist Jesse Cook will perform music from his upcoming album One World, which features influ-ences from the Middle East to South America, Spain, and beyond. Guest artists and instrumentation will be included in this tribute to Jesse’s diverse musical influ-ences.
“One World is my ultimate mashup,” says Cook. “A play-ground where differ-
ent musical traditions from around the globe are free to roam. I like to think of it as a 21st century Byzantium, where east meets west, tradition meets experi-mentation, ancient meets electronic.”
Jesse Cook is a Canadian guitarist, composer, and produ-cer. Widely considered one of the most influential figures in “nuevo flamenco” music, he incorporates elements of flamenco rumba, jazz and many forms of world music
into his work.He is a Juno Award
winner, Acoustic Guitar (magazine)’s Player’s Choice Award silver winner in the Flamenco Category, and a three-time win-ner of the Canadian Smooth Jazz award for Guitarist of the Year. He has recorded on the EMI, E1 Music and Narada labels and has sold over 1.5 million records worldwide.
In addition to head-lining concerts and
festivals, he has opened for such legends as B.B. King, Ray Charles and Diana Krall.
He has performed with Welsh soprano Charlotte Church on The Tonight Show and toured with legend-ary Irish band, The Chieftains and had two PBS TV specials featur-ing him and his music.
Trail tickets avail-able at the Charles Bailey box office or call 250-368-9669 All seats reserved.
award-winning guitarist to perform at Charles Bailey theatre on September 22
Submitted photo
Tickets for Jesse Cook’s performance are on sale at the Charles Bailey Theatre box office
1995 Columbia AveTrail
250.364.1208
1507 Columbia Ave,Castlegar
250.365.2955
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SportSTrail Times Friday, April 24, 2015 www.trailtimes.ca A11
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B y J i m B a i l e yTimes Sports Editor
The boys and girls of summer hit Andy Bilesky Park this weekend as Trail Little League baseball throws out its first pitch on Saturday to open the 2015 Minor and Major season.
Following three evaluation camps for local players last week, Trail Major coach and organizer D.J. Ashman was impressed with both the numbers and talent of the over 100 players that participated.
“We had 111 last year, and this year I think were at about 113-114 which is awesome.”
The age 11-12 Major division will see two Trail teams compete again this year in an eight team league that welcomes Okanagan Falls and Salmo into the fold, along with a Castlegar team, the defending champion Beaver Valley Yankees, and two Nelson squads.
“I think it’s going to be good,” said Ashman. “I think we have two pretty balanced Trail teams and I just think it’s going to be a fun year. For Mike (Boisvert) and I, we’re coaching like nine of 12 kids on our team that we haven’t coached before so it’s going to be awesome.”
In the age 8-10 Minor division three Trail teams, the Red Sox, Pirates, and Mariners will take to the field against three Castlegar teams, two Nelson squads, Beaver Valley, Salmo, Kaslo, and Grand Forks. In addition, four rookie teams of 7-8 year olds will play in a format that concentrates on development and will rotate between playing games and practising skills throughout the season.
“Compared to two years ago, we’re like up 30 per cent, so it’s really good and we’re trying to grow it as much as we can,” said Minor coach Jim Maniago. “We’ve got great coaches all the way through, great coaches in the rookie division. We’re pretty excited actually, it’s a great bunch.”
During the season, Ashman and Maniago will identify players for the
Major and Minor Allstar teams, and run tryouts in early June to select the teams and prepare for provincial playdowns.
“I’m always looking and I’ve already talked to Jason Startup in Fruitvale and he’s going to keep us posted, and talked to one of the Nelson coaches about Allstar because three or four of the kids played on that 9-10 team,” said Ashman.
The addition of Okanagan Falls and Salmo is a surprising if not a strong addition to the Trail Major league, and reportedly OK Falls will also field an All Star team that will play against Trail for the right to advance to the provincials.
“So it looks like for Little League we’re going to have a district cham-pionship this year for the first time in I can’t remember how long,” said Maniago. “ So they (the Major All Stars) will have to play off against Okanagan Falls and Cranbrook, and we’re hoping that the Minors will be the same, that we’ll have to play off against Cranbrook to get to the provincials.”
But first, Trail Little League will showcase its players on opening day with the first game going between the Minor league Mariners vs the Red Sox at 10 a.m. The Opening Ceremonies go at noon with a spe-cial nod to Brad Elliot who was invited to throw out the first pitch. Elliot retired this year after 49 years of umpiring.
“He (Brad) is a guy that’s been around for a long time and has contributed so much, and we just wanted to acknowledge all his years, and the contributions he’s made,” said Maniago.
At 12:30 p.m. the Major Dodgers play the Rangers, and at 2:30 p.m. the Minor Pirates face Castlegar, while all four rookie teams hit the small field after the opening cere-monies.
The concession will also be in full swing for residents to enjoy a hot-dog or hamburger and a little Little League action on Saturday.
HAMDEN, Conn. – Former Penticton Vees and Trail Smoke Eaters alum Travis St. Denis of Trail has been chosen as Quinnipiac University’s assistant captain for the 2015-16 season, as voted on by his teammates, coaches and sup-port staff.
Prior to joining the Bobcats for the 2011-12 season, St. Denis played for the Penticton Vees, as well as the Trail Smoke Eaters, of the British Columbia Hockey League. In 203 career BCHL games he scored 99
goals and assisted on 126 more for 225 career points.
In 2011-12, he scored 37 goals and assisted on 52 more for 89 points in 54 games. St. Denis also had 12 power-play goals and nine game-winning goals. Playing with current Bobcats teammate Michael Garteig with the Vees, St. Denis had four goals and nine assists to help Penticton to the RBC Cup Championship as well as the Doyle Cup and the BCHL Championship, the Fred Page Cup.
St. Denis had an incredible year for Quinnipiac, match-ing his career-high in goals (15) from 2013-14, while post-ing career-highs in assists (18) and points (33). He finished third on the Bobcats’ roster in assists and points, while his 15 goals were the second-most among all Quinnipiac players.
In 22 ECAC Hockey games, St. Denis scored 11 goals and assisted on 11 more, making him and Anas, as the Bobcats’ two players to average a point per game in league play.
B y J i m B a i l e yTimes Sports EditorIt’s only fitting that
Brad Elliot ends his umpiring career where it all started almost 50 years ago.
Trail Little League invited Elliot, a Trail native, to throw out the first pitch at their opening ceremonies on Saturday at Andy Bilesky Park, because after 49 years of calling balls and strikes, the man-in-blue is retiring from umpiring.
“The body is tell-ing me now it’s time,” said Elliot, who called it quits this year after spending the past five decades umpiring at almost every level of baseball, softball, and slo-pitch, and ringing up outs at regional, provincial, and nation-al championships.
Elliot, now 71, began his sojourn into the dark art of umpir-ing in the spring of 1965 when he called his first Trail Little League game.
“A relative of my mother’s, he was the Umpire and Chief (UIC) for Little League, and when I moved back to Trail, I ran into him one night he was stuck for an umpire up at Little League so I start-ed helping him out that year,” said Elliot.
“The following year I started getting all the papers, and I phoned the president and asked, ‘How come I’m getting all these papers for Little League?’ and he says, ‘Oh your uncle retired, and he said you’re taking over.’ - So that’s how I got into it,” he laughed.
The 71-year-old retired accountant has
seen some of Trail’s best ballplayers and coaches come through the Little League, Babe Ruth, and soft-ball ranks, including Andy Bilesky, Jason and Lauren Bay, and Chris Kissock, and is struck by the dedica-tion of both athletes and volunteers from
small towns like Trail.Fellow umpire Bill
MacMillan had the privilege of bestowing the BC Baseball Umpire Association’s George Connelly Builders Award hon-our on Elliot in 2013, awarded for outstand-ing long-term commit-ment to building and maintaining a strong umpire program in the area.
“Brad is one of those guys that is always there,” said MacMillan. “He ‘s the kind of guy
that gets out there every day and is always looking to improve. He’s not terribly hard nosed, he’s just a local guy doing local stuff.”
In the same year, Elliot also received the Sports Hero award in baseball from Sport BC for his dedication and contribution to Trail
baseball. The awards are
treasured moments for Elliot, and the recogni-tion is well-deserved, says Trail Little League coach and director, long-time player, and Trail AM Ford Orioles manager Jim Maniago, who has occasionally disagreed with Elliot’s perspective during games.
“The thing with Brad, he’s a good guy, he’s not arrogant, he’s not there to do any-thing other than do
his best for the kids and for the game,” said Maniago. “He’s very easy to deal with and never one to get too worked up very eas-ily, and like I said his focus is just to keep the game moving and keep it fair for everybody. He’s not one that gets overly officious, and he’s not one that goes looking for problems, he’s just there to have fun, same with every-body else. ”
And despite the per-ception of persecution that surrounds officials in most sports, Elliot insists the reason he continued to umpire year after year was due to the sheer enjoyment of the game and the umpiring fraternity.
“I enjoyed the years I did in Little League travelling to provin-cials and Canadians, I thoroughly enjoyed it, and once I moved up to Babe Ruth it gets a little more serious, but I enjoyed it all, and like I said, ‘If you don’t enjoy it, you shouldn’t be there.’”
While players and coaches will no longer run into him on the base paths, the amiable Elliot has no plans of going gentle into that good night.
“I’m still going to be doing allocating for the umpires and looking after them, and work with Scott (Calvin) in the concession stand or at tournaments, whatever, just to keep involved . . . and stay out of my wife’s hair.”
Elliot will be rec-ognized for his contri-bution to Trail Little League at the opening ceremonies at noon Saturday.
Umpire makes last call
Jim Bailey photo
Trail AM Ford Oriole coach David Colquhoun exchanges pleasantries with umpire Brad Elliot who retired from umpiring after 49 years.
Jim Bailey photo
Trail Little Leaguer Raiden Dobie, 8, takes a big cut at this pitch dur-ing evaluations last week at Andy Bilesky Park. Little League opens this Saturday starting at 10 a.m. followed by Opening Ceremonies at noon.
Little League opens season
St. Denis to wear ‘A’ for Quinnipiac
SPORTSA12 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, April 24, 2015 Trail Times
BC BASEBALL & BC SOFTBALL UMPIRES CLINIC
Saturday, April 25th 8:30am to 4:30pmMontrose Community Hall
Register for the baseball clinic at www.bcbua.caRegister for the softball clinic at
softball.bc.ca/umpires/528/umpires-clinics
For more info, contactSoftball: Dave Brewer • 250-512-2021 • [email protected]
Baseball: Brad Elliot • 250-368-6470 • [email protected]: Bill MacMillan • 250-368-9892 • [email protected]
Spring specials, year round advice
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OPEN HOUSEOutdoor “Build Yourself” Kitchens, Pizza Ovens & Fireplaces
Largest Stone Facing Showroom in the Kootenays
Paving Stones and Retaining Walls
Lava Rock, Bark Mulch, Lime Rock, Top Soil
Hardscaping & Stone Centre
OPEN HOUSEOPEN HOUSE
Hardscaping & Stone Centre
on locationUnited Way BBQ
Career Development Services PopcornDraws and Prizes
Saturday, April 25 8am - 2pm
April 23, 2015
For the benefit of Kootenay Lake area residents, the following lake levels are provided byFortisBC as a public service.
Queen’s Bay: Present level: 1741.42 ft.7 day forecast: Up 0 to 6 inches.2014 peak:1750.37 ft. / 2013 peak:1749.42 ft.
Nelson: Present level: 1740.37 ft.7 day forecast: Up 0 to 6 inches.
Levels can change unexpectedly due to weather or other conditions. For moreinformation or to sign-up for unusual lake levels notifications by phone or email, visitwww.fortisbc.com or call 1-866-436-7847.
The sports power in Canada has c h a n g e d
enormously in my lifetime, and recent junior hockey - not so much profession-al junior hockey, but even there - results are evidence.
Campbell River Storm just followed up on last year’s Western Canadian (Keystone Cup) win by the Beaver Valley Nitehawks with another title for a small-town British Columbia-based junior B squad, and the Penticton Vees are favoured to earn a national championship (Royal Bank Cup) play-off spot in the Western Canada Cup series in Fort MacMurray.
For contrast, when all junior hockey playoffs aimed at the Memorial Cup national championship finals, only once in the first 56 years of the com-petition did a B.C. based team - the 1944 Trail Junior Smoke Eaters - even reach the Memorial Cup final. It took 22 years more before a team from this province achieved that feat again and two more
after that before a B.C. team (Saskatchewan transplants New Westminster) actually won the thing.
Since then, B.C. teams have won nine more titles, and close neighbours Spokane have gained two.
When Trail was the dominant junior hockey region in B.C., Smoke Eater squads won the B.C. title 24 times in 35 years. Only one of those teams (those pesky 44s) was able to advance past the Alberta champions against whom the play-offs always continued. Evidence of how dras-tic the hockey power change has been.
The Junior A nation-al championship play-off began in 1971 and it took 12 years before a
B.C. team (Penticton) won that. Since then there have been 10 more Centennial Cup/Royal Bank Cup cham-pions from our prov-ince, and eight other times the B.C. repre-sentative made it to the national final.
Some of the change has to do with B.C. becoming almost uniformly (across the province) more wealthy, but most of it has to do with the fact that, first the Kootenays, (Trail in particular) embraced minor hockey for its kids, then B.C. became the place that sup-ported minor hockey better than anywhere else in the nation out-side of Metro Toronto and Montreal.
That built a broad supply of knowledge-able hockey folks able to carry on and enhance the tradition of hockey skills development in the province, and a large corps of relatively knowledgeable hockey fans who supported all their efforts. From a tradition of long odds also rans to perpetual favourites for national glory, all in my admit-tedly (moderately) lengthy life span.
That all has led up to this year, when there is a decent chance all three top tier junior titles available could fall into B.C. hands - or mostly B.C. hands, because all levels now recruit from all over - despite our supposed warm weather status.
And then, of course, there are the Canucks, to keep us grounded.
DAVE THOMPSON
Sports ‘n’ Things
B.C. junior teams poised for championship sweep
How to make your old furniture disappear:List it in the classifieds!
Call us today!250.368.8551 ex.204
religion
Trail & District Churches
Sponsored by the Churches of Trail and area and
Denotes Wheelchair Accessible
The opinions expressed in this advertising space are provided by Greater Trail Area Churches on a rotational basis.
3365 Laburnum DriveTrail, BC V1R 2S8Ph: (250) 368-9516
Sunday worship service
10:30am
Prayer � rstat 10:00am
At Gateway, we recently hosted a women’s conference called “Pure
Joy.” At � rst glance it might sound like a bit of a super� cial topic.
“That’s nice, but we don’t want to be led by our emotions; nor can we expect that life is always going to
be rosy.” That is very true. As each of the speakers spoke, they made it very clear that their joy did not, in fact come from pleasant circum-
stances. Far from it. Their joy was contrary to their circumstances.
Despair would have been the natu-ral outcome, but they were not de-pending on the natural. God’s joy is supernatural, rising above the
natural.
The joy of which they spoke, is only found through a relationship with
Jesus Christ. More than looking on the bright side, it is powerful; and the joy of the Lord becomes our strength. The Holy Spirit in our
hearts changes everything; bring-ing “peace that passeth all under-standing.” In other words crazy peace that doesn’t make sense.
Having peace and joy in the midst of a storm doesn’t make sense,
because it doesn’t come from our reasoning, it comes from God. The Bible says “In His presence is ful-
ness of joy.” So if you are with Him, His joy is within reach. Reach out to Him. Joy is only a part of all that
He brings.Susan Taylor
Assistant Pastor, Gateway Christian Life Centre
Supernatural Joy
THESALVATION
ARMY
Sunday Services10:30 am
2030-2nd Avenue,Trail 250-368-3515
E-mail: [email protected] Everyone Welcome
®
Trail Seventh DayAdventist Church
1471 Columbia AvenuePastor Leo Macaraig
250-687-1777
Saturday ServiceSabbath School9:30-10:45am
Church 11:00-12:00Vegetarian potluck
- Everyone Welcome -
CATHOLICCHURCH
Holy Trinity Parish Church2012 3rd Avenue, Trail250-368-6677
Mass TimesSaturday Evening7:00pmSunday Morning8:30am and 10:30am
Confessions:Thursdays 9:30 - 10:00amSaturdays 4:00 - 5:00pmPastor: Fr. Bart [email protected]
www.holytrinityparish.vpweb.ca
Peace Lutheran Church2001 Second Ave, Trail
Sunday Service9:00 am
8320 Highway 3BTrail, opposite Walmart
250-364-1201www.gatewayclc.com
Af� liated with the PAOCBus pickup is available.
10am Sunday Service
THE UNITEDCHURCH
OF CANADACommunities in Faith
Pastoral ChargeTrail United Church
1300 Pine Avenue, TrailWorship at 11am
St. Andrew’s United Church
2110 1st Ave, RosslandWorship at 9am
Beaver Valley United Church
1917 Columbia Gardens Rd, Fruitvale
Worship at 9am
Salmo United Church304 Main St, SalmoWorship at 11am
For Information Phone 250-368-3225or visit: www.cifpc.ca
St. Andrew’s Anglican Church1347 Pine Avenue, Trail 250-368-5581
Contact Canon Neil Elliot www.standrewstrail.ca
Sunday, April 26th 8 a.m. Traditional Eucharist 10 a.m. Family Eurcharist (with Children’s Program)
1139 Pine Avenue (250) 368-6066www.� rstpctrail.ca � [email protected]
Come & See Stay & Learn Go & Serve
Sunday, April 26th Sunday Worship and Sunday School 10AM
Trail Times Friday, April 24, 2015 www.trailtimes.ca A13
It’s time for more compromise when it comes to freedom of conscience and religion, as a nine-year legal battle over a prayer in Saguenay, Quebec demonstrates.
Briefly, Jean Tremblay, the Catholic mayor of Saguenay, and his council were in the habit of beginning their meetings with the traditional Catholic ‘sign of the cross’ followed by a prayer. This made Alain Simoneau, an atheist and citizen of Saguenay who attended council meetings, feel uncomfortable and excluded. He asked the mayor to discontinue the religious practice. Tremblay refused, and the game was on.
After meandering through various judi-cial bodies, the final match was played out before the Supreme Court of Canada, who awarded the win to Simoneau and co-appellant Mouvement laïque québécois, an organization dedicated to the secularization of Quebec.
Looking in from the outside at this case, it seems to me that both sides were more intent on proclaiming a creed than on reaching a workable solution. Both, you might say, had an agenda, and finding a reason-able compromise was not on the table.
A compromise, such as praying in private before the meeting or arriving after the prayer was concluded, could have resolved the dispute. But, a compromise requires at least one side to give way, to forgo ‘it’s the principle’ mentality: a mentality that has become a standard excuse for trying to prove that you’re right and the other person is wrong. When religion and secularism mix, it’s a poor strategy if you want to persuade someone that your worldview has something positive to offer to society.
I have no doubt that Tremblay was sincere in his belief that he was fighting, as he told the Human Rights Tribunal, a noble battle for Christ. And while I admire him for his nine-year commitment to his conviction, I don’t think this battle did anything much for Christ, nor am I sure that this is the kind of battle in which Christ asks his disciples to engage.
As a practicing Catholic with a deep attach-ment to the traditions of the Church, I believe we are called to find new ways to bring the gospel message to the world. We can cherish the outward forms of traditional prayer and worship, but form is not the end game; a particular way of praying should not become a battleground and overshadow the substance of the gospel.
Pope Francis, who is so immensely popular with Catholics and non-Catholics alike because of his authentic witness to the gospel, challenges Catholics to engage with the world, not through public displays of piety, such as became an issue in Saguenay, but through personal conversion and acts of social justice.
The match up between Tremblay and Simoneau pitted Catholicism against secularism. Ironically, both worldviews promote the dignity and equality of the human person and foster respect among people. When religion and the public sphere intersect, these points of common-ality often get lost when people begin clamoring for their rights. A polarized ‘all or nothing’ approach serves no one well, and does nothing to further a more just, equitable, tolerant and compassionate society.
Trail, BC resident Louise McEwan is a free-lance religion writer with degrees in English and Theology. Her blog is www.faithcoloured-glasses.blogspot.com. Contact her at [email protected] .
Proclaiming a creed is not always
the best choice
louise mcewan
everyday Theology
Leisure
Dear Annie: My husband died 11 years ago. Our son, “Marcus,” was 6 at the time. His dad was in intensive care for two months, and because of his young age, our son was not allowed to see his father.
Before he died, my hus-band asked his younger brother to keep his drum set until Marcus turned 18. Marcus’ uncles used to call him every year on his birth-day, which also is his father’s birthday. But since my hus-band died, neither has called to wish their nephew a happy birthday.
Marcus will be 18 soon. He is into music and wants the drums. I have asked his uncle on several occasions by sending a message on Facebook. I also asked my son’s half-brother (from my husband’s first marriage) to get the drums, and Marcus would pick them up from his house. Nothing has hap-pened.
I recently noticed a pic-ture on Facebook of a guy who used to play in a band with my late husband. In the photo, he is playing drums that look suspiciously like the ones that belong to my son.
Marcus has nothing of his
father’s. He was not included in any decisions on what to sell or what to keep, or even asked what he’d like to have. He was also given his dad’s El Camino, but my husband put the title in the name of Marcus’ half-brother, who sold it. He didn’t even give my son any of the money from the sale. That was bad enough, but Marcus only really cares about the drums.
The entire family knows that my late husband wanted Marcus to have the drums. What should I do? File a law-suit? How do I honor my late husband’s wishes and give my son this final gift from his dad? -- Distraught Mom of a Musician
Dear Mom: Is anything in writing? If not, you might need to file a lawsuit, but in order to prove your case, you
probably will need other cred-ible witnesses to testify that your husband’s wish was for Marcus to have the drum set. An attorney will let you know if you have a case.
But a lawsuit should be a last resort. Please stop ask-ing for personal things on Facebook. Pick up the phone. Call the uncle who suppos-edly has the drum set. Be nice. Tell him what a wonder-ful birthday present it would be for Marcus to finally have this memento from his father. Ask when would be conven-ient to pick it up and what you can do to facilitate the transfer.
Marcus also can call his uncle. These relationships work both ways, and Marcus is old enough now to estab-lish his own contact. And if he is close to his half-brother or another paternal relative, perhaps you or Marcus could get the relative to intercede on his behalf.
Dear Annie: “Holding My Breath” said she can’t kiss her husband because of his halitosis. I had bad breath for 10 years. I brushed, used mouthwash and saw the dentist regularly. I also had frequent problems with my
digestive tract. Finally, after having an endoscopy and a colonoscopy, my gallbladder was found to be functioning at 17 percent. It was removed, and my bad breath and con-stant low-level nausea went away immediately. -- Alabama Maggie
Dear Maggie: Thanks for writing. Readers, please
don’t assume these things are unimportant. They can indi-cate serious medical prob-lems.
Annie’s Mailbox is writ-ten by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to:
Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2015 CREATORS.COM
Today’s Crossword
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Solution for previouS SuDoKu
Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box con-tains the same number only once.
Today’s PUZZLEs
Annie’s MAilbox
Marcy sugar & Kathy Mitchell
Ask brother-in-law to return gift to his nephew
A14 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, April 24, 2015 Trail Times
Leisure
For Saturday, April 25, 2015 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) This is a good day for parents to get better orga-nized with their children, perhaps with their activities or cleaning their bedrooms. It will be a productive day for sports in terms of try-outs and practice. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) A discussion with an older family member could be productive today. Listen to advice even if you don’t choose to follow it. What have you got to lose? GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You will tackle men-tal work with a steady atti-tude today. You won’t mind doing something routine, as long as you can finish it. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) If shopping today, you will want to buy only long-lasting, practical items because you are in a frugal
mood. (And saying that you are in a frugal mood is really something!) LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You’re willing to work hard today to complete any task at hand. You don’t feel frivolous. Quite the oppo-site, you are serious about accomplishing your to-do list. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Research or work that is done behind the scenes will go well today. You are will-ing to accept your duties, because you want to do a good, reliable job. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Someone older or more experienced might have good advice for you today. Perhaps this person is a female. It never hurts to listen, does it? SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Discussions with author-ity figures, especially females, will be serious but
productive today. It will be easy to get everyone on the same page. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) This is a good day to fin-ish writing projects or plans related to medicine, the law, publishing and the media. You don’t feel frivolous. Instead, you want to work! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Tackle loose ends with red-tape matters like taxes, debt,
inheritances and insurance issues. You’ll find it easy to concentrate on routine mat-ters and finish the job. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Be prepared to go more than halfway when deal-ing with others today. Be patient and cooperative. It’s just that simple. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) This will be a produc-tive day at work for you,
because you will put the needs and wants of others before your own. In fact, it will please you to get things done. YOU BORN TODAY You are active, energetic and have a strong physical pres-ence. You say what you mean, because you are a doer who is on the go. You get things done! Others find you attractive, even heroic, and admire you from afar. This year is the beginning
of a fresh, new nine-year cycle for you. Start a new business activity. Open any door! Birthdate of: Renee Zellweger, actress; Al Pacino, actor; Daniel Sharman, actor. (c) 2015 King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Your horoscopeBy Francis Drake
Trail Times Friday, April 24, 2015 www.trailtimes.ca A15
trailtimes.ca/eeditions
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A16 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, April 24, 2015 Trail Times
Thank Youfor all the support!
Glen, Jenny & Mccoy~ the King family ~
Call Today! 250-364-1413 ext 206
FruitvaleRoute 362 20 papers 1st, 2nd, 3rd, Evergreen AveRoute 375 12 papers Green Rd & Lodden RdRoute 379 18 papers Cole St, Nelson AveRoute 380 23 papers Galloway Rd, Mill RdRoute 381 7 papers Coughlin RdRoute 382 7 papers Debruin Rd & Staats RdRoute 363 12 papers Casemore Rd, Tamarac Ave
GenelleRoute 303 15 papers 12th Ave, 2nd St, GrandviewRoute 304 13 papers 12th & 14th Ave
WarfieldRoute 197 20 papers Forrest Drive Route 190 17 papers Schofield Hwy, Shutek Dr, Sisel Lane
West TrailRoute 142 27 papers Railway Lane, Rossland Ave
MontroseRoute 342 11 papers 3rd St, 7th Ave, 8th AveRoute 341 24 papers 10th Ave, 8th Ave, 9th AveRoute 345 12 papers 10th Ave, 9th AveRoute 347 16 papers 10th Ave, 9th Ave, 9th StRoute 346 27 papers 8th, 9th & 10th AveRoute 348 19 papers 12th Ave, Christie Rd
PAPER CARRIERS WANTED
Excellent exercise, fun for all ages.
Rossland CARRIERS NEEDED FOR ROUTES IN ALL AREAS
It’s a Boy!
A Keepsake for a LifetimeReceive a 2x3 birth
announcement for only $3000 GST included
Deadline: 2 days priorto publication by 11am.
The Trail Times will continue to publish straight birth announcements free of charge - as always
Drop in to 1163 Cedar Ave or email your photo, information and Mastercard or Visa number to [email protected] 250-368-8551 ext 204
The Trail Times is a member of the British
Columbia Press Council. The Press Council serves as a forum for unsatisfied reader complaints against
member newspapers.
Complaints must be filed within a 45 day time limit.
For information please go to the Press Council website at www.bcpresscouncil.org,
write to PO Box 1356, Ladysmith, B.C. V9G 1A9
or telephone (toll free) 1-888-687-2213.
Information
Cards of Thanks
CANCEL YOUR Timeshare.No risk program stop mort-gage & maintenance pay-ments today. 100% money back guarantee. Free consul-tation. Call us now. We can help! 1-888-356-5248.
TimesharePersonalsALL MALE Hot Gay Hookups! Call FREE! 1-800-462-9090. only 18 and over.
LOST: walking cane, 1100 block of 2nd Avenue, East Trail. Phone 250-368-6877.
Lost & FoundCelebrations
Dorothy Mitchell
90 years young!
Please join us
May 3rd2-4pm
BV United Church
Best wishes only
Coming Events
Horse Show - 15th Annual H.A.C.K. Spring Show, May 23rd & 24th at the Nelson
Riding Grounds. Dressage, English, Western and In
hand. Call for program or info. 250.359.7097
Coming EventsTRAIL FOE Auxiliary #2838MeetingMonday, Apr.27th, 7:30pm
PersonalsALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
250-368-5651
FOR INFORMATION,education, accommodation
and supportfor battered womenand their children
call WINS Transition House 250-364-1543
Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted
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Newspaper ads get results.Contact Dave or Lonnie today!
250.368.8551Dave ext.203 Lonnie [email protected] [email protected]
Trail Times Friday, April 24, 2015 www.trailtimes.ca A17
Apply Online At GOLDENLIFE.CA
Mountain Side Village Is Fruitvale’s Newest Seniors Housing, Care, & Services
Community.
Competitive Wage & Benefits
• Attractive Compensation Package• Flexible Hours• Innovative Support Team to Ensure Your
Success• Opportunity for Growth within an
Expanding Company• Vibrant Professional Atmosphere
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES!
COOK / CHEFFOR WEEKENDS
Fruitvale, BCFruitvale, BC
Housekeeper
Apply Online At GOLDENLIFE.CA
Hiring Incentive
CAREER OPPORTUNITY!
Mountain Side Village is
Fruitvale’s Seniors Housing,
Care, & Services Community.
career opportunity
Reference Number 1504Reporting to the Vice President of Project Develop-ment, and under the general direction of the Direc-tor of Finance, the Senior Business Analyst, has overall responsibility in the commercial, financial and economic investment evaluation of power proj-ect development opportunities. This role involves planning, organizing and executing all financial and commercial strategies for the successful comple-tion of projects.
The ideal candidate will have an undergraduate or graduate degree in a relevant field such as finance economics or engineering and at least 8 years of experience in the energy or infrastructure sector, including a demonstrated ability to build sophisticated and user friendly economic/financial spreadsheet models. An MBA, CA, CFA or similar qualifications would be considered an asset.
Qualified applicants interested in joining a dynamic team are encouraged to visit the Careers section of columbiapower.org for the detailed job description. Closing date for this position is April 30, 2015.
Please refer to reference #1504 when submitting your application.
Senior Business Analyst
FINANCE SPECIALISTA employment opportunity exists for a Finance Specialist in our busy fi nance department located in Trail, B.C.. The successful candidate will be responsible for payroll, accounts payable as well as assisting in general accounting functions. A detailed job description can be viewed on our website at www.rdkb.com.
The ideal candidate will possess a diploma in Business Administration, completion of the Payroll Compliance Practitioner Certifi cation as well as fi ve years experience in a similar role.
The Regional District offers an excellent compensation and benefi t package.
Interested candidates should submit a detailed resume and cover letter via email by 4:00 pm, April 27, 2015 to:
Deep Sidhu, Financial Services ManagerRegional District of Kootenay [email protected] Rossland AvenueTrail, BC VlR 4S8
Only applicants under consideration will be contacted.
Having a
GARAGE SALE?
The Trail Times provides the most comprehensive GARAGE SALE PACKAGE
available, at the BEST PRICE!Package Includes: • 3 line classifi ed ad • 4 “Garage Sale” signs • 192 pricing lables • Successful tips for a
‘no hassle’ sale • Pre-sale checklist • Sales record form • ‘No Parking’ sign • ‘Pay Here’ sign • ‘Sorry, no restrooms’ sign
$1495Only
250.368.8551
GST includedNon refundable.
Want to start your own business but don’t know where to start?
Have a great idea that fi lls a need?The Skills Centre can help.
Work with us and our partners at Community Futures to get accurate information from professionals to develop a sound business plan and gain skills that will give you the
tools to succeed in your new business venture. Eligible individuals can receive: · Funding assistance to keep you going while you put
your ideas into action · Business coaching · Skills development workshops, and more!
Contact the Skills Centre at (250) 368-6360A WorkBC Employment Services Centre
www.communityskillscentre.com
The Employment Program of British Columbia is funded by the Government of Canada and the Province of British Columbia
Apply Online At GOLDENLIFE.CA
Mountain Side Village Is Fruitvale’s Newest Seniors Housing, Care, & Services
Community.
Competitive Wage & Benefits
• Attractive Compensation Package• Flexible Hours• Innovative Support Team to Ensure Your
Success• Opportunity for Growth within an
Expanding Company• Vibrant Professional Atmosphere
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES!
COOK / CHEFFOR WEEKENDS
Fruitvale, BCTrail, BC
Rehab Assistant
Apply Online At GOLDENLIFE.CA
CAREER OPPORTUNITY!
Rose Wood Village is Trail’s Seniors Housing,
Care, & Services Community.
Education/Trade Schools
Help Wanted
INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIP-MENT OPERATOR SCHOOL.
NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks.
Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options.
SignUp online! iheschool.com 1-866-399-3853
Help Wanted
Local Insurance Agency Seeking
Level I or Level II Agent
Autoplan is an assetPlease mail resume to
Whitlock Insurance 1403 Bay Ave
V1R 4A9 or email
bwhitlock@ whitlockinsurance.ca
Hiring KitchenManagers & Cooks
NEW! Fresh Fast FoodRestaurant, Fruitvale, BC
Apply in person:Best Western Plus
Columbia River Hotel, 1001 Rossland Ave. Trail
PT PREP COOKApply in person after 2pm
@Lil T’s Cafe2905 Highway Drive, Trail
Employment Agencies/Resumes
Employment Agencies/Resumes
Qualifi ed Mechanic neededat Redstone. The successful applicant will work on all golf course related machinery. Competitive salary. This is a seasonal position beginning in April and ending in Octo-ber. All candidates can send resumes to Redstone Resort Box 220 Rossland, BC V0G 1Y0. You can also email [email protected]
**WANTED**NEWSPAPER CARRIERS
TRAIL TIMESExcellent ExerciseFun for All Ages
Call Today -Start Earning Money
TomorrowCirculation Department250-364-1413 Ext. 206For more Information
Medical/DentalCastlegar Dental Offi ce
Dr. Chris Ciriello needs to fi ll a 4 day a week position.
CDA or dental receptionist experience will be given fi rst
consideration. Email resume to: [email protected]
include your email and telephone number
Help Wanted Help Wanted
Help Wanted Help Wanted Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales
• 24/7 • anonymous • confi dential • in your language
YOUTH AGAINST VIOLENCE LINE
[email protected] up. Be heard. Get help.
Classifieds
self
Put your best
forward.self
Contact Kevin at 250-368-8551 ext 209 or [email protected]
If you’re looking for business
cards, brochures,
posters or other
promotional materials
for your business, we can lend
a hand.
A18 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, April 24, 2015 Trail Times
1st Trail Real Estate1252 Bay Avenue, Trail 250.368.5222
WWW.COLDWELLBANKERTRAIL.COM
Trail $94,900Nathan Kotyk 250.231.9484
Trail $149,000Nathan Kotyk 250.231.9484
Fruitvale $285,000Rob Burrus 250-231-4420
Seller MotivatedHuge Shop
Trail $215,000Rob Burrus 250-231-4420
Townhouse
with Solarium
Fruitvale $239,000Rob Burrus 250-231-4420
4.7 Acres with
Greenhouse
Fruitvale $319,000Rob Burrus 250-231-4420
New Shop &
5 bedrooms
Trail $499,000Jack McConnachie 250.368.5222
Executive Living
Trail $189,900Nathan Kotyk 250.231.9484
Trail $169,000Nathan Kotyk 250.231.9484
$OLD
Ron 250.368.1162
Darlene 250.231.0527
WWW.HOMETEAM.CA
Let Our Experience Move You.
1215 Heather Place, TrailSpacious Living, Custom Finishings
$377,500
View
Property
1420 Lookout St, TrailView Property, Terraced Yard
$139,500
In Law
Suite
213 Currie St, Warfi eld2 Bed 2 Bath Home plus In Law Suite
$169,000
New Listing
1309 Henderson Ave, Salmo4 Bdrm, 4 Bath with Large Fenced Yard
$289,500
Modern
Build
1863 Th ird Ave, TrailBest deal in sunny East Trail!
$99,000
Cute and
Compact
1566 Pine Ave, TrailIncredible New Price, Heritage Style
$149,900
2 Houses
1139 Marianna Cres, Trail2 Bed Rancher, backs onto greenspace
$162,800
Sunningdale
7958 Birchwood Dr, TrailExecutive Carefree Living!
$439,000
Incredible
Views
Houses For Sale Houses For Sale
Services
Financial ServicesGET 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
TAX FREE MONEYis available, if you are a homeowner, today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mort-gage 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
Services
Home ImprovementsFULL SERVICE Plumbing from Parker Dean. Fast, re-liable, 24/7 service. Take $50 off your next job if you present this ad. Vancouver area. 1-800-573-2928.
Household ServicesA-1 FURNACE & Air Duct Cleaning. Complete Fur-nace/Air Duct Systems cleaned & sterilized. Locally owned & operated. 1-800-565-0355 (Free estimates)
Moving & StorageMoving , Junk Hauls,
Reasonable rates. Call 250.231.5709
Merchandise for Sale
Food Products
BC INSPECTEDGRADED AA OR BETTER
LOCALLY GROWNNATURAL BEEF
Hormone FreeGrass Fed/Grain Finished
Freezer Packages AvailableQuarters/Halves
$4.50/lb Hanging WeightExtra Lean Ground
Beef Available TARZWELL FARMS
250-428-4316 Creston
Garage SalesFRUITVALE, 1915 Humming-bird St., Saturday, Apr.25th, 8am-?
MIRAL HEIGHTS, 2264 Pat-rick Drive., Saturday, Apr.25th. 8am-1:30pm
Houses For SaleHouses For Sale Houses For Sale
Merchandise for Sale
Garage SalesFRUITVALE HALL, Sat., Apr.25th, 9am-12noon. BV Community Garage Sale: There will be over 14 tables of household items, tools, sport-ing equipment, electronics, clothes, toys, baby and chil-dren items, books, baking and furniture.
Large Multi-Family Garage SaleTHURSDAY, APRIL 30, 2:15-7:00pm. Glenmerry Ele-mentary School Gymnasium.
SUNNINGDALE, 536 Portia Cres., Saturday, Apr.25, 8am-12noon. 250-368-3309
TRAIL, J.Balfour & Sons (back alley) next to A&W. Trash to Treasure Day, Sat. Apr.25, 8am-2pm. Most items FREE.
WANETA, (behind Mall) 7988 Birchwood Drive. Saturday, Apr.25th, 9am-2pm.
W.TRAIL, 960 Milligan Ave. (take Glover Rd). Perennial plants for sale. Sat. Apr.25, 9am-3pm. Sun.& Mon. Apr.26 & 27, 1-4pm. All proceeds to MS Society.
Heavy Duty Machinery
A-CHEAP, LOWEST PRICES STEEL SHIPPING Dry Storage Containers Used 20’40’45’53’ and insulated con-tainers all sizes in stock. 40’ containers as low as $2,200. Also JD 544 & 644 wheel Loaders & 20,000 lb CAT fork-lift. Ph Toll free 24 hours 1-866-528-7108 1-778-298-3192 8am-5pm. Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com
Misc. for Sale4 SUMMERS on rims 65R15 (2012 Subaru) $200.00; 4 Subaru hubcaps $40.00 250-368-6881
Affordable Steel Shipping Containers for sale/rent
20’ & 40’ Kootenay Containers Castlegar 250-365-3014
Houses For Sale
Merchandise for Sale
Misc. WantedPrivate Collector Looking toBuy Coin Collections, Silver,Antique Native Art, Estates +Chad: 250-499-0251 in town.
Real Estate
Mobile Homes & Parks
RETIRE IN Beautiful Southern BC, Brand New Park. Af-fordable Housing. COPPER RIDGE. Manufactured Home Park, New Home Sales. Kere-meos, BC. Spec home on site to view. Please call 250-462-7055. www.copperridge.ca
Rentals
Apt/Condo for RentBella Vista, Shavers Bench Townhomes. N/S, N/P. 2-3 bdrms. Phone 250-364-1822Ermalinda Estates, Glenmer-ry, spacious 1-2bdrms. Adults only. Secure building w/eleva-tor. N/S, N/P. Ongoing im-provements. Ph.250-364-1922
E.TRAIL, 1&2bdrm. apts. F/S, W/D. Yard. 250-368-3239Francesco Estates, Glenmer-ry,spacious 1-3bdrms. Adults only (45+). Secure building w/elevator. N/S, N/P. Ongoing improvements. Ph. 250-368-6761
FRUITVALE, large 1bdrm. suite close to town, F/S, Laun-dry on site. Covered parking. $650./mo. + utilities. NS,NP. 250-367-7919Glenmerry 2bdrm. apt. F/S Heat included. N/S. $775./mo. 250-368-5908
ROSSLAND, bach. & 1bd. apt. Golden City Manor. Over 55. N/S. N/P. Subsidized. 250-362-5030, 250-231-9777TRAIL, 2bd. apt. Friendly, quiet secure bldg. Heat incl. N/P, N/S. 250-368-5287
W.TRAIL, 2Bdrm. in 4-plex., enclosed parking. $600./mo. 250-551-1106
Houses For Sale
Rentals
Apt/Condo for RentTRAIL, 2BD. apt. Furn. or un-furn.; with or without utilities, f/s/w. N/S, N/P. Close to downtown & bus stop. $650./mo. ++. Avail. May1st. 250-367-9939
TRAIL, spacious 1&2bdrm. apartment. Adult building, per-fect for seniors/ professionals. Cozy, clean, quiet, com-fortable. Must See. Best kept secret downtown Trail. 250-368-1312
W.TRAIL 2-bdrm. main fl oor. f/s,w/d,d/w, central a/c. $700./mo. + util. 250-368-1015
Commercial/Industrial
SHOP/ WAREHOUSE, 4300 sq.ft. Ample outside space. Good access. 250-368-1312
Homes for RentFRUITVALE Guest House, on 12 acres, very small one bed-room. $500./mo. utilities incl. 250-367-0277
GLENMERRY, close to hospi-tal, 3bdrm., 2bth., 2 car gar-age, all appliances. $1,285./mo. + util. Avail. May. 604-263-2600, 604-992-6659
Trail 2 BDRM, full Basement, nice view, off street parking,
F/S, W/D, N/S, N/P $850 month Call 250.365.5003
TRAIL: Shavers Bench sm. 1 Bdr. furn., util. & cable incl. for mature quiet single. n/s.n/p $575/mo. Available May 1. 250-368-9291 pls leave msg.
W.TRAIL, 3BDRM. (Garage) N/S, N/P, F/S, W/D. $800./mo. + utilities. 250-364-1838
TownhousesGLENMERRY, reno’d 3bd., 1.5bths., 5 appls. N/S, N/P. Avail.Jun.1st. 250-365-3401
TRAIL, GLENMERRY Twnhse 3Bd., newer fl oor, windows, paint. $900. 1-250-551-1106
Transportation
Auto FinancingYOU’RE APPROVED • YOU’RE APPROVED
YOU’RE APPROVED • YOU’RE APPROVED
• BANKRUPTCY • NO CREDIT •• BAD CREDIT • FIRST TIME BUYER •
• CREDIT CARD CONSOLIDATION •• QUICK APPROVALS •
• YOU WORK - YOU DRIVE! •
YOU’RE APPROVED
1-800-961-0202 for Pre-Approval
www.amford.com
• YOU
’RE
APPR
OVED
• YO
U’RE
APP
ROVE
D • Y
OU’R
E AP
PROV
ED • • YOU’RE APPROVED • YOU’RE APPROVED • YOU’RE APPROVED •
Cars - Domestic2002 Pontiac Sunfi re. 173,000K. Recent Safety. Looks good, runs great. $2400. Trail BC. 778.456.0011
Cars - Sports & Imports
2005 Acura TL, 137,000 KM.$10,900. One owner, garage-stored every winter, never win-ter driven. Serviced faithfully. Excellent condition, accident free, Many nice options.Phone 250-693-8813.
Boats
TRY A CLASSIFIED AD
Classifieds
Trail Times Friday, April 24, 2015 www.trailtimes.ca A19
None
43357 REV 0
DOCKET # FPE RET A43357
REGION BC
LIVE: None COLOURS: 4CPRODUCTION:Mario Pariselli
CREATIVE: None
ACCOUNT EXEC: Grant Nych
PROJECT MANAGER:None
STUDIO: Mathur, Anant
PREV. USER:Lalousis, John
DATE INITIAL
TRIM: 10.33" x 11.786" Cyan
Magenta
Yellow
Black
STUDIO
CLIENT: Ford
JOB DESC.: Feb Easy Tabloid Template - All Line
FILE NAME: DBC-TRK-A35828-2 REV5.indd
START DATE: 03/19/15
MOD. DATE: 3-27-2015 4:00 PM
MEDIA TYPE: Newspaper
INSERTION DATE: APRIL
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2015 Titanium model shown
$34,049*
2015 ESCAPE SE FWDSYNC® VOICE-ACTIVATED COMMUNICATIONS AND ENTERTAINMENT SYSTEM • REAR VIEW CAMERA
2015 FOCUS SE SEDAN OR HATCHADVANCETRAC® WITH ESC • AIR CONDITIONING • CRUISE CONTROL
2015 FOCUS SE SEDAN OR HATCH
WHEN YOU CAN LEASE A
NEW F-150EVERY
YEARS2
Vehicle
(s) ma
y be sho
wn wit
h option
al equi
pment
. Dealer
may se
ll or lea
se for l
ess. Lim
ited tim
e offers
. Offers
only va
lid at pa
rticipat
ing dea
lers. Re
tail off
ers ma
y be can
celled o
r chang
ed at an
y time w
ithout n
otice. S
ee your
Ford D
ealer fo
r comp
lete det
ails or c
all the F
ord Cus
tomer R
elation
ship Cen
tre at 1
-800-5
65-367
3. For fa
ctory or
ders, a
custom
er may e
ither ta
ke adva
ntage o
f eligibl
e rainch
eckable
Ford ret
ail custo
mer pro
motion
al incen
tives/of
fers ava
ilable a
t the tim
e of veh
icle fac
tory ord
er or tim
e of veh
icle del
ivery,
but not
both or
combin
ations t
hereof.
Retail o
ffers no
t comb
inable w
ith any
CPA/GP
C or Dai
ly Rent
al incen
tives, th
e Comm
ercial U
pfi t Pro
gram or t
he Com
mercial
Fleet In
centive
Program
(CFIP).
‡‡ Until
April 30
, 2015, r
eceive $
750/ $1
,000/ $
1,250/ $
1,500/ $
1,750/ $
2,000/ $
3,500/ $
4,500/ $
7,000/ $
9,500 in
Manuf
acturer R
ebate (
Deliver
y Allow
ances)
with th
e purcha
se or lea
se of a n
ew 201
5 Explo
rer/ 201
5 Tauru
s SE, Ex
peditio
n, Tran
sit Conn
ect/201
5 C-MAX
/ 2015 F
lex/ 201
5 Edge/
2015 Ta
urus (e
xcludin
g SE), E-
Series, T
ransit,
F-350
to F-550
Chassis
Cabs/ 2
015 F-15
0 Regul
ar Cab (
Excludi
ng XL 4x
2)/ 201
5 F-150
Super C
ab and S
uper Cre
w/ 201
5 F-250
to F-45
0 (exclu
ding Ch
assis Ca
bs) Gas
Engine/
2015 F-
250 to F
-450 (e
xcludin
g Chassi
s Cabs)
Diesel
Engine
-- all st
ripped c
hassis,
cutaway
body, F-
150 Rap
tor and
Mediu
m Truck
models
exclud
ed. Man
ufactur
er Reba
te is not
combin
able w
ith CPA
, GPC, CF
IP, Daily
Rental
Allowan
ce and A
/X/Z/D
/F-Plan
program
s. Deliv
ery allo
wances
are not
combin
able w
ith any
fl eet co
nsumer
incent
ives. † U
ntil Apr
il 30, 20
15, recei
ve 0%
APR pur
chase fi
nancin
g on new
2015 M
ustang (
excludi
ng 50th
Anniver
sary), Fl
ex, and E
scape m
odels fo
r up to 6
0 mont
hs, and
2015 Fo
cus, Fie
sta, Fus
ion, an
d Tauru
s mode
ls for up
to 72 m
onths t
o qualifi
ed reta
il custom
ers, on
approve
d credit
(OAC) f
rom For
d Credit
. Not al
l buyers
will qu
alify fo
r the lo
west in
terest ra
te. Exam
ple: $25
,000 pu
rchase fi
nance
d at 0%
APR for
36/60/
72 mont
hs, mo
nthly p
ayment
is $694
.44/$41
6.66/$3
47.22, co
st of bo
rrowing
is $0 or
APR of 0
% and t
otal to
be rep
aid is $
25,000.
Down pa
yment
on purch
ase fi n
ancing
offers m
ay be re
quired
based o
n appro
ved cre
dit from
Ford Cr
edit. **
Until Ap
ril 30, 2
015, lea
se a new
2015 Fo
cus SE 4
DR Aut
omatic
/2015 E
scape SE
FWD w
ith 2.5L
engine/
2015 F-
150 Sup
erCrew
XLT 4x4
3.5L w
ith 300
A Engine
and get
as low
as 0%/
0%/0%
lease a
nnual p
ercenta
ge rate
(APR) fi
nancin
g for up
to 48/4
8/24 m
onths o
n appro
ved cre
dit (OA
C) from
Ford Cr
edit. No
t all bu
yers wil
l qualif
y for th
e lowes
t APR pa
yment.
Lease a
vehicle
with a
value of
$22,114
/$27,93
9/$43,7
49 at 0%
/0%/0%
APR for
up t
o 48/48
/24 mo
nths wi
th $1,19
5/$1,19
5/$2,27
5 down
or equi
valent t
rade in
, month
ly paym
ent is $
215/$28
0/$349
(Comp
arison p
ayment
s are fo
r referen
ce purp
oses on
ly and a
re calcu
lated as
follow
s: the m
onthly
paymen
t is ann
ualized
(multi
plied by
12) and
then di
vided by
the com
parison
period
(26 we
eks for
bi-wee
kly). Fo
r exam
ple ($2
15 X 12)
/ 26 bi-
weekly
period
s = $99
.)/($28
0 X 12)
/ 26 bi-
weekly
period
s = $129
.)/($34
9 X 12)
/ 26 bi-
weekly
period
s = $16
1.) tota
l lease o
bligatio
n is $11
,515/$14
,635/$10
,651 and
option
al buy
out is $
9,067/$1
1,734/$
23,624.
Offer inc
ludes $
0/$0/$
4,500 in
manuf
acturer r
ebates,
$800/$
750/$1,
500 For
d Credit
Lease C
ash, an
d $1,665
/$1,790
/$1,800
freight
and air
tax but
exclud
e variab
le charg
es of lic
ense, fu
el fi ll ch
arge, in
surance
, dealer
PDI (if
applica
ble), reg
istration
, PPSA,
adminis
tration
fees an
d charg
es, any e
nvironm
ental c
harges
or fees,
and all
applica
ble taxe
s. Taxes
payabl
e on ful
l amoun
t of lea
se fi na
ncing pr
ice a¦ er
Ford Cr
edit Lea
se Cash
and ma
nufactu
rer reba
te dedu
cted . A
ddition
al paym
ents re
quired
for PPS
A, regist
ration,
security
deposit
, NSF fe
es (whe
re appl
icable),
excess
wear an
d tear, a
nd late
fees. So
me con
ditions
and mil
eage re
strictio
ns of 64
,000km
/64,00
0km/40
,000km
for 48/
48/24 m
onths a
pply. Ex
cess kilo
metrage
charges
are 12¢
per km
for Fie
sta, Foc
us, C-M
ax, Fus
ion and
Escape
; 16¢pe
r km for
E-Serie
s, Musta
ng, Tau
rus, Tau
rus-X, E
dge, Fle
x, Explo
rer, F-Se
ries, MK
S, MKX,
MKZ, MK
T and Tr
ansit Co
nnect; 2
0¢per k
m for E
xpediti
on and N
avigato
r, plus a
pplicab
le taxes.
Excess
kilomet
rage cha
rges sub
ject to c
hange,
see you
r local d
ealer fo
r detail
s. All pr
ices are
based o
n Manu
facture
r’s Sugg
ested Re
tail Pric
e.*Until
April 30
,2015, p
urchase
a new
2015 Fo
cus SE 4
DR Auto
matic/
2015 Es
cape SE
FWD w
ith 2.5L
engine
/2015 E
scape Ti
tanium
/2015 F
-150 Sup
erCrew
XLT 4x4
3.5L w
ith 300
A Engine
/2015 F
-150 Sup
erCrew
XLT 4x4
3.5L w
ith chro
me pac
kage fo
r $21,34
4/$27,1
39/$34
,049/$3
5,771/$4
1,699 a¦
er manu
facture
r rebates
of $0/$
0/$0/$
4,500/$
4,500 is
deducte
d. Taxes
payabl
e on ful
l amoun
t of pur
chase p
rice a¦
er tota
l manuf
acturer r
ebate h
as been
ded
ucted. O
ffers in
clude $1
,665/$1,
790/$1,
790/$1,
800/$1,
800 fre
ight and
air tax
but exc
lude va
riable ch
arges o
f licens
e, fuel fi
ll charg
e, insura
nce, de
aler PDI
(if app
licable)
, registra
tion, PP
SA, adm
inistrat
ion fee
s and ch
arges, a
ny envir
onment
al char
ges or f
ees, and
all app
licable
taxes. M
anufact
urer Re
bates a
re not c
ombin
able w
ith any
fl eet co
nsumer
incent
ives.^W
hen pro
perly e
quippe
d. Max.
towing
of 12,20
0 lbs wi
th 3.5L
EcoBoo
st V6 4x
2 Max.
payload
s of 3,30
0 lbs/3,
270 lbs
with 5.
0L Ti-VC
T V8/3.5
L V6 Eco
Boost 4
x2 engin
es. Clas
s is Full
-Size Pi
ckups u
nder 8,5
00 lbs G
VWR vs
. 2014 c
ompet
itors.‡F
-Series i
s the be
st-sellin
g picku
p truck
in Cana
da for 4
9 years
in a row
based o
n Canad
ian Veh
icle Ma
nufactu
rers’ As
sociatio
n statis
tical sa
les repo
rt up to
2014 ye
ar end.
^^Class
is Full-
Size Pic
kups un
der 8,5
00 lbs.
GVWR. �
Offer o
nly vali
d from
March
3, 2015 t
o April 3
0, 2015
(the “O
ffer Per
iod”) t
o reside
nt Cana
dians wi
th an el
igible C
ostco m
embersh
ip on or
before
Februa
ry 28, 2
015. Re
ceive $1
,000 to
wards t
he purch
ase or l
ease of
a new
2015 Fo
rd (excl
uding
Fiesta, F
ocus, C-
MAX, GT
350, GT
500, F-1
50 Rapt
or, 50th
Anniver
sary Edi
tion Mu
stang, a
nd Mediu
m Truck
) mode
l (each a
n “Eligib
le Vehic
le”). Eli
gible Ve
hicles o
f 2014 m
odel ye
ar may q
ualify f
or the o
ffer dep
ending
on avail
able in
ventory
– see de
aler for
details
. Limit o
ne (1) o
ffer per
each El
igible V
ehicle p
urchase
or leas
e, up to
a maxim
um of t
wo (2)
separat
e Eligib
le Vehic
le sales p
er Costc
o Memb
ership N
umber.
Offer is
transfe
rable to
person
s domic
iled wit
h an elig
ible Cos
tco mem
ber. App
licable
taxes ca
lculated
before
CAD$1,0
00 offe
r is ded
ucted. *
**Base
d on yea
r-end 20
10, 2011,
2012, 2
013, an
d 2014 t
otal sa
les fi gu
res for
light ve
hicles in
Canada
from D
esRosie
rs Auto
motive
Consult
ants In
c.®: Reg
istered
tradema
rk of Pr
ice Costc
o Intern
ational
, Inc. us
ed unde
r licens
e. ©201
5 Sirius
Canada
Inc. “S
iriusXM
”, the Si
riusXM
logo, ch
annel n
ames a
nd logo
s are tra
demark
s of Siri
usXM R
adio Inc
. and ar
e used u
nder lic
ence.©
2015 Fo
rd Moto
r Comp
any of C
anada,
Limited
. All righ
ts reserv
ed.
Available in most new Ford vehicles
with 6-month pre-paid subscription
FIRST-IN-CLASS HIGH-STRENGTH MILITARY GRADE ALUMINUM ALLOY BODYBEST-IN-CLASS TOWING (12,200LBS)ˆBEST-IN-CLASS PAYLOAD (3,300LBS)ˆ
‡‡
THE ALL-NEW 2015 F-150 XLT CREWCAB 4X4 300A 3.5L
2015 F-150 XLT Supercrew 4x4
3.5L with chrome package shown
$41,699*
LEASE FOR
$349 @ 0%APR
**
FOR 24 MONTHS WITH $2,275 DOWN PAYMENT
OFFER INCLUDES $1,500 RCL CASH WHEN LEASED THROUGH FORD CREDIT AND $4,500 IN MANUFACTURER REBATES‡‡ AND $1,800 FREIGHT AND AIR TAX.
THAT’S LIKE
$161BI-WEEKLY
OR PURCHASE FOR ONLY
$35,771*
OFFER INCLUDES $4,500 IN MANUFACTURER REBATES‡‡ AND $1,800 FREIGHT AND AIR TAX.
PLUS ELIGIBLE COSTCO MEMBERS RECEIVE AN ADDITIONAL
$1 ,000 �
ON SELECT NEW 2014 AND 2015 FORD VEHICLES
SEARCH OUR INVENTORY AT BCFORD.CA AND VISIT YOUR BC FORD STORE.
3.5L with chrome package shown
OR PURCHASE FOR ONLY
771*
2015 F-150 AWARDED CANADIAN TRUCK
OF THE YEAR
LEASE FOR
$215 @ 0%APR
**
FOR 48 MONTHS WITH $1,195 DOWN PAYMENT
OFFER INCLUDES $800 RCL CASH WHEN LEASED THROUGH FORD CREDIT AND $1,665 FREIGHT AND AIR TAX.
THAT’S LIKE
$99BI-WEEKLY
OR PURCHASE FOR ONLY
$21,397*
OFFER INCLUDES $1,665 FREIGHT AND AIR TAX
OR PURCHASE FOR ONLY
$27,139*
OFFER INCLUDES $1,790 FREIGHT AND AIR TAX.
LEASE FOR
$280 @ 0%APR
**
FOR 48 MONTHS WITH $1,195 DOWN PAYMENT
OFFER INCLUDES $750 RCL CASH WHEN LEASED THROUGH FORD CREDIT AND $1,790 FREIGHT AND AIR TAX.
THAT’S LIKE
$129BI-WEEKLY
2015 Titanium model shown
2015 ESCAPE SE FWD
***
SubmittedRossland Council for Arts &
Culture (RCAC) is pleased to announce that Rusty the horse is going to become a permanent resident of Columbia Avenue. A fundraising campaign launched this month raised the additional $3000 RCAC needed to finalize the purchase of the metal horse
sculpture- in under a week! “We were overwhelmed
with the response to our fund-raising initiative” explains Andy Stradling from RCAC. “Rosslanders clearly appreciate works of art and sculpture in our downtown core and want-ed to give Rusty a permanent home there alongside Olaus,
the Bears, and the Ravens.” RCAC is now in the process
of planning to relocate Rusty to a new location on the cor-ner of Queen St. and Columbia Avenue where he can continue to attract the attention of visitors and win the hearts of Rosslanders for many years to come.
LocaLRossland
Rustygets to
stay
A20 www.trailtimes.ca Friday, April 24, 2015 Trail Times
local
KOOTENAY HOMES INC.1358 Cedar Avenue, Trail • 250.368.8818
www.kootenayhomes.com www.century21.caThe Local Experts™
WE CAN SELL YOUR HOME.
NOBODY HAS THE RESOURCES WE DO!
Mark Wilson250-231-5591 [email protected]
Terry Alton250-231-1101 [email protected]
Tonnie Stewart250-365-9665 [email protected]
Mary Martin250-231-0264 [email protected]
Richard Daoust250-368-7897 [email protected]
Mary Amantea250-521-0525 [email protected]
Bill Craig250-231-2710 [email protected]
Deanne Lockhart250-231-0153 [email protected]
Art Forrest250-368-8818 [email protected]
Christine Albo250-512-7653 [email protected]
Dave Thoss250-231-4522 [email protected]
Dan Powell Christina Lake250-442-6413 [email protected]
Are you interested in learning about potential residential
development in Trail? We want your feedback!
Visit: www.surveymonkey.com/s/KTVGQC8 and take our 5 minute survey.
We want to hear from YOU!
801 Glen Drive, Trail $199,000
Solid Sunningdale 4 bdrm 2 bath home on large fenced
lot. Quiet family oriented neighbourhood. Good
value here!
Call Terry 250-231-1101
1450 - 5th Avenue, Trail$205,000
Just move in - everything has been done for you! Elegant, tasteful, open concept, and very energy effi cient 3 bdrm, 2 bath home. There is a lot going on in this
package!
Call Tonnie (250) 365-9665
NEW LISTING
1210 Primrose Street, Trail$178,000
Enjoy the carefree life in this low maintenance town home. Tastefully
decorated, well maintained, featuring 3 bdrms, 1.5 baths, with newer windows, air conditioning, fenced yard and carport. Excellent
value! Call now to view!
Call Deanne (250) 231-0153
1477 - 2nd Avenue, Trail$155,000
Top quality updates! This sweet little package is perfect! All the mechanical upgrades have been done to perfection. Newer heat
pump, furnace, wiring, plumbing, windows, roof, fl oors, counter tops, back splash, fence and landscaping.
All you have to do is move in and put any personal touches you’d like.
Call Deanne (250) 231-0153
NEW PRICE
1216 Columbia Ave, Trail$199,000
This home is in a great location. Enjoy the low maintenance yard
and large deck. This home has had extensive upgrades including new deluxe kitchen and bathroom and many mechanical upgrades too.
Call today!
Call Richard (250) 368-7897
1577 Pine Avenue, Trail$289,000
Brand new 3 bdrm home and the GST is included! Amazing views, 2 decks and nicely decorated.
Hardi plank siding, a triple carport and asphalt roof. Quick possession
available.
Call Christine (250) 512-7653
NEW LISTING
550 Schofi eld Highway, Warfi eld
$199,000Bright and sunny 3 bdrm family home with new hot water tank,
windows, furnace, carpeting, paint and siding. Call today!
Call Christine (250) 512-7653
NEW LISTING
745 Dickens St., Warfi eld$199,500
Beautifully upgraded. You will love the kitchen, lots of storage, stainless steel appliances, and wood fl ooring. The charming
dining room has french doors to large deck. Living room and dining
rooms also have wood fl ooring.
Call Mary M (250) 231-0264
572 Spokane Street, Trail
$45,000Good rental or starter home with
4 bdrms, country kitchen, rec. room, single carport, and view deck. Plumbing in basement for a
second bathroom. Located an easy fi ve minute walk to town.
Call Art (250) 368-8818
770 Tennyson Ave., Warfi eld$219,000
Warfi eld Charmer! This 3 bedroom home offers lots of space and
main fl oor laundry. Central air-conditioning and electric
fi replace add to comfort. Great parking with paved driveway and double carport. Low maintenance
exterior with vinyl siding, steel roof, low maintenance yard. Quick
possession possible.
Call Mary M (250) 231-0264
NEW PRICE
1450 Webster Road, Fruitvale $339,000
10 acres of incredible privacy and stunning views. This home is very
spacious, great as a large family home or use the self-contained main in-law
suite separately. Vaulted ceilings, wood stove and large deck. 4 bdrms on upper level and 2 bedrooms down. Call your REALTOR® for your personal viewing.
Call Mary M (250) 231-0264
NEW LISTING
OPEN HOUSESat, April 25 12-2pm 388 Austad Lane
$750/moWe have excellent tenants
waiting for rentals in Glenmerry, Sunningdale
and East Trail.
Call today if you need your property professionally
managed!
Terry Alton 250-231-1101
Tonnie Stewart (250) 365-9665
RENTALS
1912 Hummingbird
Drive, Fruitvale $349,900
Built in 2008 - this 4 bdrm /3 bath home still feels
brand new. Vaulted ceilings and lots of
sunlight throughout-open fl oor plan with
lovely hardwood fl oors. Double
garage and fenced yard. Move in and
enjoy.
Call Mark (250) 231-5591
SOLD
OPEN HOUSESat, April 25 11am-12:30pm
OPEN HOUSESat, April 25 1-2:30pm
Mirror iMage
Liz Bevan photo
Mike Ganzert teaches a Tae Kwon Do class at Trail Martial Arts on Wednesday afternoon. The class started with a review of positive life lessons, then warm-up poses and stretches.