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September 08, 2015 edition of the Parksville Qualicum Beach News
Citation preview
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
720 MEMORIAL AVE., QUALICUM BEACH • 250-752-3011720 MEMORIAL AVE., QUALICUM BEACH •
Locally Owned for over 30 Years, Proudly Canadian!
WE DELIVERMON-FRI 8-6, SAT 9-5:30, SUN 10-5
VICHY S K I N C A R E P R O D U C T S
FALL INTO GREAT SAVINGS WITHUntil September 30th Receive with a Vichy purchase of $40 or more.
Name:
Phone:Draw Date: September 30, 2015
ENTER TO WIN! A VICHY SKINCARE BASKET
VALUED AT OVER $75 .✁
10X the points
CUPE workers get raiserequested from the start
Union wins2% battle
NEW SPAFOR MOMSBusiness profile features
Rock-A-Bear Baby
A23
HUNDREDS FIND FUN AT FAIR
A full page of photos from the45th annual Lighthouse Country Fall Fair
A5
TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 8, 2015
See BACK-TO-BACK, page A4
www.pqbnews.comC O M M U N I T Y N E W S M E D I A
Black Press
BACK TO WORK IN QUALICUM
AUREN [email protected]
Qualicum Beach town employees were back at work Friday morning after a surprise resolu-tion to the � ve-week lockout.
As of last Tuesday talks had broken down, with the union taking management to a Labour Relations Board (LRB) bad faith hearing.
Town chief administrative o� cer Daniel Sail-land said that while preparing for the hearing Fri-day, around 4:30 p.m. � ursday, “we were con-tacted by our solicitor who stated that the union is interested in settling the matter outside of the hearing, including the collective agreement.”
“� e outcome of those negotiations was that we ended up receiving su� cient legal con� rma-tion on all of the outstanding issues, including the IT position,” Sailland told � e NEWS Friday.
“We have been working through the eve-ning,” CUPE Local 401 President Blaine Gurrie e-mailed � e NEWS at 9:30 p.m. � ursday with the day’s surprising conclusion. At 11:18 p.m. he e-mailed that “After a month of being locked out of their jobs, our Qualicum Beach workers are heading back to work Friday.”
“We are glad to be able to return to our focus of helping to make Qualicum Beach the great community it is,” he added in a statement.
“� e town approved the same recommen-dations handed down by a provincial mediator and rati� ed by CUPE Local 401 members last week,” he wrote. “� e new contract contains the modest two per cent per year wage increas-es we have insisted on since bargaining began.”
Sailland con� rmed the deal includes nine per cent total increases, including two per cent per year for each of the � rst four years (retroac-tive to 2014) and one per cent for the � nal half year. Members will not receive a signing bonus.
Positive start for school yearJOHN [email protected]
� e 4,000 students heading back to classes this week in District 69 will likely notice a di� erent, more positive feel and focus in their schools, ac-cording to the lead voices for teachers and administrators.
� ere is no provincial labour dis-pute — pending, happening or just ending. � e closure and recon� gura-tion of schools — with the pain, con-fusion and anger that caused — has had time to settle, time for grieving.
“� is year really feels like a fresh slate,” said School District 69 Super-intendent Rollie Koop. “I think every-body is looking for an opportunity to get back to the work of teaching an learning in ways that we are used to.”
� e president of the local teachers association agreed.
“I’m sure it’s going to be a very positive start in our schools,” said Mount Arrowsmith Teachers’ Associ-ation’s Roberta Heinrichs. “I’m look-ing forward to seeing my colleagues beginning their year without trepi-
dation, with excitement and with a good rest.”
� e district won’t know exactly how many students it will have in K-12 classes this year until later this month, but Koop said he’s heard anecdotally “there’s a real in� ux in the number of folks from Alberta.”
� e new school year in B.C. is the start of a three-year transition to a new curriculum that Education Min-ister Mike Bernier said last week will emphasize “hands-on” learning.
CCNABCYCNA
General Excellence
STUDENTS BACK IN CLASSES THIS WEEK
See VOLUME INCREASE, page A5
CANDACE WU PHOTO
HOT GLASS: A professional glass blower demonstrates the art of glass blowing Saturday afternoon at the Robert Held Art Glass studio. Until October 5, the studio is offering “introduction to a hot glass experience” where people can learn all about the craft of glass blowing t the studio along East Island Highway. For reservations call 250-586- 4353.
A2 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
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The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A3
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General: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Phone 250-248-4341; Fax 250-248-4655Publisher: Peter McCully . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . publisher@pqbnews .comEditor: John Harding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .250-905-0019 - editor@pqbnews .comAdvertising: Brenda Boyd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .250-905-0013 - bboyd@pqbnews .comProduction: Peggy Sidbeck . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .250-905-0016 - team@pqbnews .comCirculation: Laurie Fairbanks . . . . . . . .250-905-0017 - circulation@pqbnews .comClassified display: Pauline Stead . . . . . . . .250-905-0012 - office@pqbnews .comCommunity Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . events@pqbnews .com#4-154 Middleton Avenue, PO Box 1180, Parksville, BC V9P 2H2
InsIdEArts & Entertainment . . A24Classifieds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A27Arthur Black . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A12
Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A10Letters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A11Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A29-A30
Page ThreestArtInG Point
How to rEACH us:
Follow us on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ParksvilleNewsand Facebook: www.facebook.com/PQBNews
Parksville sticks with Level 4 restrictions
Add your COMMENTS at www.pqbnews.comONliNE www.pqbnews.com
wHAt’s onlInE?www.pqbnews.comGet the full story. Watch for these icons in our regular arti-cles, then go to www.pqbnews.com for extended content.
The PQB NeWS Team: John, Candace & Aurene-mail: [email protected]: 250-905-0019
The Regional District of Nanaimo is re-opening the Trans Canada Trail and Arrowsmith CPR Regional Trails. These trails are situated for the most part on private forest lands. Recent rains along south-east Vancouver Island have reduced wildfire risk and the private landowner is satisfied that recreational use is once again appropri-ate. The public is reminded that there is still no smoking permitted at this time in any RDN park or trail. — NEWS Staff/RDN news release
CandaCe Wu Photo
BELT CHECK, SCHOOL ZONE REMINDER: Central Vancouver Island traffic Services operations nCo Cpl. Mike elston keeps a watchful eye on drivers as he checks to see if they’re wearing seat-belts on Friday at the corner of alberni highway and highway 19a. two, two-person teams were set up Friday — one in Parksville and one in Qualicum Beach — as part of a province-wide crack down on road safety. elston said the majority of drivers were “excellent” and only 55 tickets were issued throughout the day, including 40 tickets for failing to wear a seatbelt, four for using an electronic device while driving, three for child car seat violations and eight for other driving-related offences. drivers are also reminded to pay attention to 30 km-h school-zone speed limits as students return to classes today.
RaVen CoaL MIne SaGa
Proponent’s COO resignsCandaCe [email protected]
The man leading a controversial coal mine project near Qualicum Beach has resigned.
Compliance Coal Corporation issued a statement Thursday saying “Stephen Ellis has resigned as an officer of the company to pursue another opportunity.”
The resignation comes on the heels of a heated letter Ellis sent to the Environmental Assessment Office late last month claiming the “built-in biases” of the EAO hindered plans for the Raven coal mine project proposal to more forward in Buckley Bay.
Compliance’s statement Thursday was brief, saying Ellis will stay on as an advisor and aid in the company’s transition until a successor is appointed.
John Snyder, president of CoalWatch, a group
historically against the Raven coal mine, said he’s not sure the resignation will affect the coal mine proposal. “Frankly, I just think they are rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic,” he told The NEWS. “Regardless of Mr. Ellis’ resignation, the Raven coal mine project will continue to face intense public scrutiny, concern and opposition and it simply can’t be reasonably justified.”
Snyder said over the past six years there have been several changes in Compliance’s corporate structure, but “the constant during this time is the Raven coal mine project has faced broad-based concern and opposition on a host of en-vironmental and socio-economic issues. The net result is a lack of social license for the project.”
According to Compliance’s website (www.theravenproject.ca), the Raven project propos-es to remove metallurgical or steel-making coal from a site west of Buckley Bay ferry terminal.
The campfire ban has been lifted, the rains continue to fall, but residents of the City of Parksville remain under the restrictions of drought Level 4.
A city spokesperson said late last week officials had spoken about changing the watering restrictions level, but decided against it.
City council meets Wednesday night and there may be some news about watering restrictions from that meeting.
Campfires have been permitted throughout the Parksville Fire Protection Area as of Aug. 28.
The Coastal Fire Centre rescinded its campfire prohibition due to forecasted cooler and wetter conditions, resulting in a decrease in wildfire risk in the region.
Campfires that are no larger than a half-metre high by a half-me-tre wide and open fires in an outdoor stove are now permitted.
— NEWS Staff
Regional district re-opens two trails
A4 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
Square Dancers Wanted
Sand DollarsSquare Dance Club
Bradley Centre, CoombsInfo & Details: 250-954-2132
OPEN HOUSE:Mon. Sept. 147pm–8:30pm
HAVE FUN, LAUGH & MAKE FRIENDSBeginners Classes Starting Sept. 20th
Couples, Singles & All Ages Welcome!
NOW OPEN!
Brand New Products – Wholesale Prices!
PINETREE CENTRE - Unit #6–1343 Alberni Hwy, Parksville
Everything from Generators, Bikes, Furniture, Toys and Games, Non Perishable Foods, Clothing to the Kitchen Sink!
STOCK ARRIVING REGULARLY
250–954–9976
HOURS • Mon–Thurs: 10am–5pm • Fri & Sat: 10am–6pm
893 Beaufort Squadron Air Cadets
You’re Invited! Registration and Welcome Back BBQ
Tuesday Sept. 15th • 6:30 – 9pm
OPEN HOUSE: Hangar A3 • Qualicum Beach AirportRegistration open to all youth ages 12–18
Please bring BC Care Card & Birth Certificate for new registrationsPlease visit www.893aircadets.ca for additional information
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tutoring program
Adult literacy funding$2.4 million in funds for 75 communities, including $40,000 locally
auren ruvinsky photo
From left, Bronwyn Brown of the tutoring program, VIU’s Jean Maltesen, MLA Michelle Stilwell and the Career Centre’s Cheryl Dill at an announcement Friday for adult literacy funding.
Auren [email protected]
People gathered at the Parksville Career Centre Friday as Social Development and So-cial Innovation Minister and local MLA Mi-chelle Stilwell announced funding for adult literacy across B.C.
“Strong reading, writing and math skills are the starting point for many adults looking to upgrade their education, enter skills training programs and secure a good job,” Stillwell said.
The province is contributing $2.4 million to
adult literacy programs in 75 communities.That includes $40,000 for the Parksville pro-
gram run by Vancouver Island University and the Career Centre, run by the Central Vancou-ver Island Job Opportunities Building Society.
Stilwell made the announcement on be-half of Advanced Education Minister Andrew Wilkinson.
“This program is critical, the need is sig-nificant in this community and it’s significant across B.C.,” said Jean Maltesen, dean of aca-demic and career preparation.
The Errington Therapeutic Riding Associa-tion’s 2015 pledge ride has been cancelled due to the dry weather earlier this summer.
Scheduled for September 20, organizers cancelled the backcountry event in the peak of the hot, dry summer weather due to the ex-treme fire hazard.
The non-profit association offers therapeu-tic horse riding to people with disabilities in
the community.The big annual fundraiser ride organized by
the group is “usually highly popular with the horse community,” said ETRA board president Regine Eder.
For more information visit their website at www.etra.ca
— Submitted by the Errington Therapeutic Riding Association
errington horse event
Therapeutic riding event cancelledWe Are All Green at Heart
CHOOSE GREEN
Invitation to JoinElizabeth May
Leader of the Green Party
and Glenn SollittCourtenay-Alberni Green Candidate
Friday September 11th, 7 - 9pmParksville Community Centre
Arbutus Room
Info: 250-240-9654 • www.glennsollittgpc.ca
for an Official Green Party of Canada Platform Release, Town Hall style Q & A and
FundraiserFREE EVENT
Authorized by the official agent for Glenn Sollitt
The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A5
Karen E. StewartB.A., LLB., LLM.
Barrister, Solicitor & Notary Public• Real Estate & Mortgages• Divorce & Separation Agreements• Wills & Estates• Corporate & Commercial Law• Civil Litigation
phone: 954-1445 fax: 954-1430 • [email protected]#101-191 Jensen Avenue East,
Parksville BC
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Contact me today.
Grant De [email protected]
tutoring program
Adult literacy funding$2.4 million in funds for 75 communities, including $40,000 locally
auren ruvinsky photo
From left, Bronwyn Brown of the tutoring program, VIU’s Jean Maltesen, MLA Michelle Stilwell and the Career Centre’s Cheryl Dill at an announcement Friday for adult literacy funding.
Auren [email protected]
People gathered at the Parksville Career Centre Friday as Social Development and So-cial Innovation Minister and local MLA Mi-chelle Stilwell announced funding for adult literacy across B.C.
“Strong reading, writing and math skills are the starting point for many adults looking to upgrade their education, enter skills training programs and secure a good job,” Stillwell said.
The province is contributing $2.4 million to
adult literacy programs in 75 communities.That includes $40,000 for the Parksville pro-
gram run by Vancouver Island University and the Career Centre, run by the Central Vancou-ver Island Job Opportunities Building Society.
Stilwell made the announcement on be-half of Advanced Education Minister Andrew Wilkinson.
“This program is critical, the need is sig-nificant in this community and it’s significant across B.C.,” said Jean Maltesen, dean of aca-demic and career preparation.
The Errington Therapeutic Riding Associa-tion’s 2015 pledge ride has been cancelled due to the dry weather earlier this summer.
Scheduled for September 20, organizers cancelled the backcountry event in the peak of the hot, dry summer weather due to the ex-treme fire hazard.
The non-profit association offers therapeu-tic horse riding to people with disabilities in
the community.The big annual fundraiser ride organized by
the group is “usually highly popular with the horse community,” said ETRA board president Regine Eder.
For more information visit their website at www.etra.ca
— Submitted by the Errington Therapeutic Riding Association
errington horse event
Therapeutic riding event cancelled
photo Feature
Marcus Sjoo patiently waits in line as his fried Vance Taylor receives a ribbon from Tracy Porteous.
Six-year-old Nathan Longworth gets his face painted at the Lighthouse Country Fall Fair.
Alexandra Weir gears up for one of many potato sack races Saturday afternoon.
Four-year-old Grace Johnson takes a pony ride on Ginger, led by Tiger Lily Farms volunteer Lauren Spink, Saturday afternoon at the Lighthouse Country Fall Fair which was brimming with excitement all day.
The 45th annual Lighthouse Country Fall Fair was bustling with excitement Saturday with blue-ribbon vegetables, potato sack races, live performances by local musicians and all-day cake walks.
Hundreds came out to the Lighthouse Community Centre celebrating the Labour Day long weekend in Qualicum Bay.
For hundreds of community event photos, visit: www.facebook.com/PQBNews
Doug Harrison sports a smile displaying his winning prize from the cake walk — a coconut cake.
CountryFair
Fall
CANDACE WU photos
A6 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
1360 Valley Rd., Parksville 250-248-7336
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 7am-5pm; Sat. 8am-10:30am
Alberni Hwy.
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Dress For LesPick up from April 14th
Central Construction Materials
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Blue Nose MotorsComing Via Email
Qualicum Beach School of Dance
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Seacroft AutoComing Via Email
Island Surf CompanyComing Via Email
Cha Cha JavaPick up from April 14th
Oceanside StylistsPick up from April 14th
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Dress For LesPick up from April 14th
Central Construction Materials
Pick up from April 14th
Blue Nose MotorsComing Via Email
Qualicum Beach School of Dance
Pick up from April 14th
Seacroft AutoComing Via Email
Island Surf CompanyComing Via Email
Cha Cha JavaPick up from April 14th
Oceanside StylistsPick up from April 14th
Out On a Limb Tree Service
Coming Via Email
Business of the Week
THE PEOPLE’S CHOICEFor the best in quality, service & products call or visit these fine businesses!
Let us manage all the details & physical aspects of the move.
• Efficient • Professional • Reliable • Honest
250-240-2816Serving the Mid-Island Area Since 2006
Licensed • Insured • Bondedwww.smartmoveservices.ca
June WoodEstate Liquidation & Senior Relocation Service
Call us: 250-586-1001Beach Acres Resort, Resort Drive, Parksvillewww.blackgooseinn.com
THE BLACK GOOSE INN
UK Pub Style Restaurant
19 UK & LOCAL DRAFT BEERS
Business of the Week
THE HEAT PUMP STORETRADE IN YOUR
BASEBOARD HEATERS FOR A DUCTLESS HEAT PUMP
250-954-1177 www.servicexcel.ca
We back our products and service with a 1 year 100%
moneyback guarantee you can’t lose!
Stay Cool. Stay Warm. Save Money
service cel
Ductless heat pump technology cuts energy costs up to 75%
Rebates eligible up to $1300 + benefits(Ends June 15/15)
THE HEAT PUMP STORETRADE IN YOUR BASEBOARD HEATERS
FOR A DUCTLESS HEAT PUMP
250-954-1177 • www.servicexcel.ca
We back our products and service with a 1 year 100%
moneyback guarantee you can’t lose!
Ductless heat pump technology cuts energy costs up to 75%
Stay Cool. Stay Warm. Save Money
service celRebates eligible up to $1300 + benefits
(Ends June 15/15)
CALL STEVE 4th generation licensed plumber at
250-586-6667All installs performed by licensed plumbers
MineralPRO Mfg. Ltd. | www.mineralpro.com
Water Filtration Systems• Softeners • Iron Removal • Ultra Violet Systems
• Drinking Water Systems • Dechlorination Systems • Dechlorination Shower Heads
mineralPROTM
P U R E WAT E R • S M A R T S O L U T I O N S
Oceanside TRAVEL Inc.130 West Second Ave., [email protected] 250-752-6992
@oceansidetravel
NEW 2016 PRE-SEASON OFFERSEurope, Holiday Season
& Russia Cruises Expires May 15, 2015
Ask us about EARLY or DOUBLE-EARLY Booking Savings
Dress For LesPick up from April 14th
Central Construction Materials
Pick up from April 14th
Blue Nose MotorsComing Via Email
Qualicum Beach School of Dance
Pick up from April 14th
Seacroft AutoComing Via Email
Island Surf CompanyComing Via Email
Cha Cha JavaPick up from April 14th
Oceanside StylistsPick up from April 14th
Out On a Limb Tree Service
Coming Via Email
Business of the Week
THE PEOPLE’S CHOICEFor the best in quality, service & products call or visit these fine businesses!
Let us manage all the details & physical aspects of the move.
• Efficient • Professional • Reliable • Honest
250-240-2816Serving the Mid-Island Area Since 2006
Licensed • Insured • Bondedwww.smartmoveservices.ca
June WoodEstate Liquidation & Senior Relocation Service
Call us: 250-586-1001Beach Acres Resort, Resort Drive, Parksvillewww.blackgooseinn.com
THE BLACK GOOSE INN
UK Pub Style Restaurant
19 UK & LOCAL DRAFT BEERS
Business of the Week
THE HEAT PUMP STORETRADE IN YOUR
BASEBOARD HEATERS FOR A DUCTLESS HEAT PUMP
250-954-1177 www.servicexcel.ca
We back our products and service with a 1 year 100%
moneyback guarantee you can’t lose!
Stay Cool. Stay Warm. Save Money
service cel
Ductless heat pump technology cuts energy costs up to 75%
Rebates eligible up to $1300 + benefits(Ends June 15/15)
THE HEAT PUMP STORETRADE IN YOUR BASEBOARD HEATERS
FOR A DUCTLESS HEAT PUMP
250-954-1177 • www.servicexcel.ca
We back our products and service with a 1 year 100%
moneyback guarantee you can’t lose!
Ductless heat pump technology cuts energy costs up to 75%
Stay Cool. Stay Warm. Save Money
service celRebates eligible up to $1300 + benefits
(Ends June 15/15)
CALL STEVE 4th generation licensed plumber at
250-586-6667All installs performed by licensed plumbers
MineralPRO Mfg. Ltd. | www.mineralpro.com
Water Filtration Systems• Softeners • Iron Removal • Ultra Violet Systems
• Drinking Water Systems • Dechlorination Systems • Dechlorination Shower Heads
mineralPROTM
P U R E WAT E R • S M A R T S O L U T I O N S
Oceanside TRAVEL Inc.130 West Second Ave., [email protected] 250-752-6992
@oceansidetravel
NEW 2016 PRE-SEASON OFFERSEurope, Holiday Season
& Russia Cruises Expires May 15, 2015
Ask us about EARLY or DOUBLE-EARLY Booking Savings
Coastal Point Construction
TURNING YOUR NEEDS AND DESIRES INTO
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE.
Call Craig 250-954-9789
KITCHEN & BATHROOM
REMODELLING,BUILD OUTS,
DECKSand more
Tell us what you want, and we do the rest.
744 Primrose, Qualicum Beach(Qualicum Beach Elementary School)
[email protected] • 250-752 0227
School of Dance
We are now accepting online registration for the 2015-2016 season through the following site:
qbschoolofdance.ca
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The new curriculum is being phased in this year for Kindergarten to Grade 9, with higher grades still in development. Bernier said this year it will be up to local school districts and teachers to begin implement-ing it before it becomes man-datory in the fall of 2016. Grade 10-12 curriculum is to be man-datory in 2017.
Local officials are speaking in positive terms about the new curriculum.
“Teachers will have more latitude to shape
the direction they will go with the curriculum,” said Koop.
“It allows for more of an openness while still learning the skills, still learning the ba-sics,” said Heinrichs. The MATA president did have some words of caution about the future of the new curriculum. “With any
new curriculum there’s a need for new resources and new resources take funds,” said Heinrichs. “That’s a key piece we can’t forget — there’s no money attached to this.”
continued from page a1Teachers get more latitude
Last-minute demand outcontinued from page a1
“In reaching the new collective agreement, the town accepted that a last-minute demand for an exempted position was not part of the contract negotiations,” Gurrie said of the issue that became the last sticking point and almost brought the negotiators to the LRB hearing Fri-day.
But Sailland disagreed with Gurrie’s assessment of the IT position result.
He said that while the town plans to pursue issues with the LRB around what the mediator included in his recommenda-tions, “Never-the-less those issues — including the IT position — have been resolved and we’re satisfied and have subsequently ratified it.”
He said they have an agreement to go back and sort out the IT position after the main agreement.
“Both sides have agreed that the issue will be dealt with through the labour board if the em-ployer decides to proceed,” Gurrie said.
Sailland said that while it is difficult to de-scribe the changes in the contract language,
“the key benefits include no changes, the ben-efits to the employees remain the same, there’s no increase to the benefits, so that is a cost sav-ings.”
He said management was also happy to get a cap on vacation days at 35 per year for new
employees and 40 for existing ones, which will lead to long term savings.
“The result of the language changes gives us much better ability to manage the opera-tions of the town, including the confirmed ability to have
weekend work, because that is one — paying time and half or double time on weekends — just doesn’t make sense.”
The full details will be released when council rises to report at one of their regularly sched-uled meetings on Sept. 14 or Oct. 5.
Sailland said that while they haven’t calcu-lated it, the town likely saved $340-$500,000 in wages during the 34 day lockout.
He said that while it was a tough process, “We will clear those waters over time.”
The result of the language changes gives us much
better ability to manage the operations of the town
dAniel sAillAnd
Teachers will have more latitude to shape the
direction they will go with the curriculum
Rollie KooP
A8 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
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RULES: Attach a recent receipt from one of the participating restaurants on this page to your entry form and deliver it to The News at #4-154 Middleton Avenue, Parksville, BC V9P 2H2 within 10 days of publication. We’ll draw one lucky winner of four $10 Gift Certificates every two weeks. Employees of The News are not eligible to win.
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The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A9
It’s Your City is published in the PQB News on the second Tuesday of the month with a copy on the City’s website.
We are committed to improving communications with our residents and you can help by providing your comments and
suggestions to 250 954-3073 or [email protected].
MAYORMarc Lefebvre .................................... 250 954-4661
COUNCILLORSMary Beil ............................................ 250 927-4097Al Greir .............................................. 250 248-1285Kirk Oates .......................................... 250 802-2059Teresa Patterson .................................. 250 954-9488Sue Powell .......................................... 250 954-3070Leanne Salter ...................................... 250 248-8097
[email protected] Hall, 100 Jensen Avenue East P O Box 1390, Parksville V9P 2H3
facebook.com/cityparksvilletwitter.com/city_parksvillepinterest.com/cityparksville
Bene� ts of Tree Watering Bags
City Dates
How To Reach Council
September 8, 2015 parksville.ca
The public is encouraged to attend Council meetings held on the � rst and third Mondays of the month and may observe advisory committee meetings. Refer to the website for agendas and meeting highlights and minutes.
September 9 Council MeetingSeptember 17 Advisory Planning CommissionSeptember 17 Coffee with CouncilSeptember 28 Property Tax Sale (if required)September 30 Second Property Tax PenaltyOctober 1 Coffee with CouncilOctober 4 Fire Prevention Week Open HouseOctober 5 Council MeetingOctober 8 Advisory Design PanelOctober 8 Coffee with CouncilOctober 12 Thanksgiving Day HolidayOctober 15 ShakeOut Day BCOctober 15 Advisory Planning CommissionOctober 15 Coffee with CouncilOctober 19 Council Meeting
Reminder of Level 4 Water RestrictionsDespite the rain we welcomed last week, Level 4 Water Conservation (comprehensive watering ban) continues. Outdoor water use is the primary stressor on supply so outdoor sprinkling is prohibited as well as any outside washing and � lling of swimming pools. Details may be found on the City’s website [Quicklinks/Water Conservation].
ShakeOut Day BC – October 15Reminder to register and mark your calendars for the 2015 Great BC Shakeout drill. Participating is a great way for families or for businesses to become better prepared to survive and recover quickly from major earthquakes. Participating creates a positive understanding of the importance of earthquake awareness and emergency preparedness. Info and resources at shakeoutbc.ca.
Property Tax SaleProperty tax accounts with delinquent taxes outstandingfrom 2013 are subject to tax sale on September 28 which,if required, will take place in the Forum (100 Jensen Avenue East) at 10 am on September 28.
Late Payment of Property TaxesAfter the � rst due date of July 2, 2015, a penalty of 5% was added to the outstanding taxes. Another 5% penalty will be charged to current taxes after the second penalty date of September 30. These penalties are a requirement of the Community Charter and the City has no authority to either waive or modify these penalty amounts. A payment which is one day late is subject to the full amount of the penalty.
Fire Prevention Week Open House The Parksville Fire Department will open its doors on Sunday, October 4 from 10 am to 2 pm to recognize Fire Prevention Week (October 4-10). Residents are welcome to drop by for a little fun and most importantly, to learn some possible lifesaving strategies for � re prevention. Tours of the � re hall will be conducted by � re� ghters and the RCMP will be on hand to check car seats. The � re hall is located at 160 Jensen Avenue West. This year’s Fire Prevention Week theme is “Hear the Beep Where You Sleep©” which underscores the importance of having a working smoke alarm in every bedroom, outside each separate sleeping area and on every level of your home, including the basement. The PVFD would like families to focus on prevention by planning ahead and integrating a few simple � re safety activities into everyday lives. nfpa.org
Prepare to Survive!In a large scale disaster your neighbour may be your � rst responder if roads are damaged and emergency services are without access. The Regional District of Nanaimo along with Parksville, Lantzville and Qualicum Beach will host a free event on October 3 and October 4 at the Coombs Fairgrounds. “Prepare to Survive” offers training for critical skills in an emergency and the opportunity to practice those skills in a disaster simulation setting. The event is open to Neighbourhood Emergency Preparedness teams, Emergency Social Services and Emergency Communications Team volunteers and those members of the public who may be interested in volunteering with NEPP, ESS or ECT. Detailed information at rdn.bc.ca. Although the event is free, registration is required [email protected] or 250 390-6526.
Over the summer, the parks department installed 170 tree watering bags throughout the City in an effort to lessen stress during the drought period and promote healthy tree growth in the City’s urban forest. The bags are hand-� lled with non-potable water and installed where the irrigation system is turned off. The bags have holes which slowly release the water into the soil over � ve to seven hours, supplying the tree with water for up to a week. There are many bene� ts to watering bags –
• Double as a way of mulching because bag ensures no direct exposure of the watered ground to the sun so there is minimal evaporation of water.
• More ef� cient watering by directly applying water to the roots to limit wasteful runoff.
• Amount of water used for irrigation is minimized since the rate of release is controlled.
• Provide support for new trees with weak stems.• Great time saver!• Works within Level 4 Water Conservation.
Tree watering bags, available from local hardware stores and garden centres, are easy to use. The bag goes around the tree; it is � lled with water and then zipped up. Bags are then re� lled so the process continues. The bags work best with immature trees and can be joined together for larger trees. An alternative is a � ve gallon bucket with a couple small holes drilled in the bottom and placed near the tree base. Fill it with water once or twice a week for slow deep watering. Larger trees could use more buckets placed further away from the trunk.
PARKSVILLE WATER Assent VotingAs mentioned on this page, the City will be asking residentsto approve a bylaw to authorize the borrowing of up to$5.6 million to construct a new water intake, water treatment plant and transmission lines. Voters must bring two pieces of identi� cation (one containing name and address and the other with name and signature) to the voting place and register on the day of voting, at either advance voting or on general voting day. If you do not have documentation showing residency, then two pieces of identi� cation (at least one with a signature) are still required and you will be required to make a solemn declaration as to residency. Website [Quicklinks/Vote]
Documents which may be accepted:• BC driver’s licence• BC identi� cation card issued by Motor Vehicles Branch• Owner’s certi� cate of insurance and vehicle licence issued
by ICBC• BC CareCard or BC Gold CareCard• Birth certi� cate• SIN card issued by Human Resources Development Canada• Canadian passport• Citizenship card issued by Citizenship and Immigration
Canada• Real property tax notice issued by City of Parksville• Credit or debit card issued by a savings institution• Utility bill for electricity, gas, water, phone or cable services
On November 21, the citizens of Parksville will be asked to participate in an “assent voting opportunity” (previously called a referendum). The City is asking residents to approve a bylaw which will authorize the borrowing of up to $5.6 million to construct a new water intake, water treatment plant and transmission lines. The process will be conducted in the same manner as an election – advance voting on November 12 and November 18 and voting day on November 21. The citizens of Parksville will be asked to vote on this question:
Do you agree to the adoption of City of Parksville Loan Authorization Bylaw, 2015, No. 1519 which will authorize the City of Parksville to borrow $5.6 million to construct a water intake and treatment facility in accordance with Island Health requirements.
In anticipation of a positive outcome, Englishman River Water Service has begun detailed design which includes:
• In-river water supply intake designed and located to consider the needs of river users and to protect aquatic habitat.
• Water treatment plant with a minimum of 16 million litres per day of � rm membrane � ltration capacity to comply with the new water regulatory treatment standards imposed by Island Health.
• Transmission supply mains to homes and businesses.
The project received $6 million in funding from the federal and provincial governments and Parksville’s portion of the project (shared with the Regional District of Nanaimo) will come from existing reserve funds, development cost charges and borrowing. The cost to the average residential homeowner will be about $10 per year.
The ERWS currently supplies water to 18,000 individuals in Parksville and the Nanoose Bay Peninsula, as well as a seasonal in� ux in tourist population of 10,500.Over the next few weeks, detailed information about the project willbe provided to residents.In the meantime, please refer towww.englishmanriverwaterservice.ca
Water Intake and Treatment Project
Drive safely ... Kids are back to school
TM
The GreatBritish Columbia
A10 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
Change for the sake of Change
Some people in Canada want change so badly that they want to kick this recession into overdrive — a recession that is world wide.
Thomas Mulcair, Justin Trudeau and Elizabeth May see the opportunity to slide into power on empty and shallow promises that they feel will appease and attract vot-ers who are disgruntled with the present government.
Voters should think carefully about which party will be the better choice to lead us through this unstable economic time.
Promises of jobs, economic recovery, doubling the amount of refugees from Syr-ia, the Middle East and Africa, where does the money come from to pay for this? And where are the very wealthy Arab countries that should step in and assist?
The very rich? The top business and cor-porations? Of course not, that money will move very quickly and it will be once again the dwindling middle class that will bear the brunt of these decisions.
Be careful what you wish for.Valerie axford
Parksville
QB needs a hedge Bylaw for safety
With all of the fires we have had this summer, I would like to mention that hedg-es also present a real fire hazard as they dry out on the inside. A good example is the fire that consumed a 100-foot hedge at a town-house complex in Parksville.
Hedges also provide cover for criminal activity. Two years ago we had our home broken into and I attribute it partially to a high hedge.
Hedges are very nice looking as long as they are maintained and kept to a reason-able height such as you see along Memorial Avenue from the roundabout to Qualicum Foods.
What a shame it would be if these hedg-es were 10-15 feet high. That beautiful en-trance to our town would not be the same.
Bylaws are adopted for various reasons
and one is to help protect the rights, safety and value of property owners.
I believe Qualicum Beach should have a bylaw that restricts front-yard hedges to around five or six feet like many other towns and cities have.
We need to give our town another tool to help settle disputes, add to safety and save our values. A proposal to town council to adopt a hedge bylaw is worth consider-ation.
Your opinion would be appreciated.dennis Hunt
Qualicum Beach
thanks for help at aCCident sCene
I wanted to take a moment to write a huge thank-you to the wonderful couple, the paramedics, firemen and everyone in-volved who helped me at the scene of my serious car accident on Aug. 12 on the Is-land Highway north of the Rosewall Creek bridge.
I drive daily from Qualicum Beach to Co-mox for work and on that evening I swerved to miss a deer on the highway and ended up flipping my car into the centre median.
I was so very lucky I wasn’t more seri-ously hurt. But everyone who stopped to help and take care of me, I thank-you.
Hugs to you all. I will be forever grateful.lisa Hewer
Qualicum Beach
sChool supplies: donate, not waste
It’s back to school shopping days and I just saw a TV commercial where the moth-er was buying two of everything for her for-getful son.
This is one example of how we live in such a wasteful society. I, for one, do not care to see commercials where a mother is encouraged to throw an extra backpack in her shopping cart knowing that her son is likely to lose one.
What are the repercussions of this? Chil-dren are growing up with a sense of enti-tlement. There will always be new things for them whenever they want it. They don’t
have to work for it. The discarded backpack will just end up in a landfill.
What about the poor child labourer who stitched up the backpack for minimal wag-es so that the average Canadian mother can chuck an extra one in her shopping cart?
Does this teach the child how to care and have empathy for the vast number of children around the world and even locally who don’t even have basic school supplies and can’t afford a simple pencil?
Perhaps the mother, rather than buy-ing a second backpack for her son, might encourage him to spend the same money on a donation for school supplies for some needy child.
simon BurnQualicum Beach
pastafarians and spaghetti Monsters
We couldn’t agree more with Michael Scott’s letter to editor (The NEWS, Aug. 27). He opines that it is wrong to allow letters to the editor to be used as a religious pulpit. But, since that seems to be the case in The NEWS, he states all religions ought to be able to claim equal space.
So, in that spirit, we think it would be only right to devote a few lines to a rela-tively new but internationally-recognized religion, that of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.
Established back in 2005 in Kansas, the congregants, known as Pastafarians, be-lieve the FSM to be the one true god who created the earth and all the universe ap-proximately 4,000 years ago while he was drunk. Although Pastafarianism is as le-gitimate as any other religion, in 2014, Obi Canuel, an ordained Pastafarian minister in Coquitlam, paid the supreme sacrifice for his beliefs when he stood up to the au-thorities (ICBC) and refused to remove his religious headgear, a stainless steel spa-ghetti strainer, for his driver’s licence pho-to. He now rides a bicycle.
As in most religions, true belief is not a requirement. Should anyone care to join the church, check out their website.
fern and laurence waymanQualicum Beach
Views in the NewsWe asked:What do you most look forward to in the fall?
Better weather — I like it cooler. Ken Brown
Parksville
I don’t. I prefer summer.
nancy noelVictoria
I really like the different colours,
and it’s a little cooler.Gary coX
French Creek
The colours, by far. KerI SmITh
Parksville
Letters QuotaBle: “This year really feels like a fresh slate,”
rollie Koop, see story page a1
alManaC
Rules to write byall letters to tHe editor must be signed and include your full name, hometown and a daytime phone number. those without these requirements will not be published. letters must be 300 words or less and are subject to editing. The News retains the right not to publish submissions.
Send them tomail: Box 1180, parksville, B.c. V9p 2H2fax: 250-248-4655e-mail: [email protected] online: www.pqbnews.com
LocalGovernment ContactsproVinCial:
scott fraser,mla,
alberni-pacific rim
1-866-870-4190 e-mail: [email protected]
micHelle stilwell,mla,parksvilleQualicum250-248-2625e-mail [email protected]
teunis westBroeKmayor,
town of Qualicum Beach
250-752-6921e-mail: [email protected]
James lunney,mp, nanaimo-alberni
1-866-390-7550e-mail: nanaimo@ jameslunneymp.ca
federal: QualiCuM:
marclefeBVre,mayor,
city of parksville
250-954-4661e-mail: [email protected]
Joe stanHopechairman,
regional district of nanaimo
250-390-4111e-mail: [email protected]
parksVille: rdn:
More than a few times a day we head to our Facebook page where we can see, and moderate to a degree, what’s been said about our stories through comments on our website.
To be honest, it’s done defensively, almost with fear.We are not afraid of any criticism of our stories — that
comes with the territory. What makes us tremble is the possibility there will be a comment that’s libellous, in the pure legal sense of the word or hedging toward such an outcome. Or in poor taste. Or a personal attack. Or a com-ment � lled with foul language. We have seen all of the above.
Often, we get ideas from the non-troubling comments, ways to advance or follow up on a story that we did not consider or did not have time to pursue. For that we are thankful.
But it’s the dark side we fear. � ere have been successful lawsuits against people who have posted libellous com-ments on Facebook and other social media sites, but that doesn’t seem to stop anyone.
� e problem is the lack of � lters. Both personally (indi-vidual people who comment) and with so-called moder-ators.
� ose who call themselves moderators usually lack any professional experience regarding libel. Or at least it looks that way. � ey tend to lean toward the free-speech, any-thing-goes model of public discussion.
� at’s all well and good in theory, but what about real life? A store that one complains about might knee-jerk re-act to an in� ammatory comment about its operations and put someone who supports a family out of a job. A person attacked may be struggling with mental health challenges and be pushed over the edge by mean-spirited comments.
Everything we publish goes through multiple sets of eyes before it hits the paper. Many of these eyeballs have decades of experience looking for the legal land mines of defamation. We also have an experienced media lawyer ready to take our call, and provide advice, at a moment’s notice. By no means is this absolutely foolproof or an exact science, but how many so-called moderators have those checks and balances?
Reports on the death of newspapers have been greatly exaggerated. We can’t speak about other markets, but the residents and businesses of Parksville Qualicum Beach continue to support this traditional form of media. We are humbled and grateful for that. As self-serving as this seems, we also believe that support keeps alive a more re-sponsible, professional forum for public discourse.
— Editorial by John Harding
commentarySerious discourse
The Parksville Qualicum Beach News is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper in-dustry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent to: B.C. Press Council, P.O. Box 1356, Ladysmith BC V9G 1A9.For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org.
THE PARKSVILLE QUALICUM BEACH NEWS (THE NEWS) is published every Tuesday and Thursday by Black Press. THE NEWS is distributed to more than 16,500 households in District 69. THE NEWS is 100 per cent B.C. owned and operated.THE PARKSVILLE QUALICUM BEACH NEWS
#4 - 154 Middleton Avenue, P.O. Box 1180Parksville, British Columbia, Canada, V9P 2H2Of� ce hours: Monday to Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Phone 250-248-4341; Fax 250-248-4655www.pqbnews.comCanadian Publications Mail Sales Product Agreement #0087106
THE NEWS is published every Tuesday and Thursday
by Black Press Ltd. #4 - 154 Middleton Ave. Parksville, B.C. V9P 2H2
250-248-4341
SALES: Brenda Boyd, Steve Weldon, Lori Hague, Grant De Gagne, Lorie NielsenEDITORIAL: Auren Ruvinsky, Candace Wu, Tyson Taylor
PRODUCTION: Brad Everest, Jeff Westnedge, Terri Reid, Tracy PatersonCLASSIFIEDS: Pauline Stead
OFFICEPauline Stead
CIRCULATIONLaurie Fairbanks
PRODUCTIONPeggy Sidbeck
EDITORJohn Harding
PUBLISHER Peter McCully
C O M M U N I T Y N E W S M E D I A
Black Press
Is privacy important to you on the Internet?
Vote at: www.pqbnews.com before MONDAYS at noon
QUESTION OF THE WEEK
LAST WEEK’S QUESTION
Have you decided who you will vote for in the Oct. 19 federal election?
YES 93 %
NO 7 %
The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A11
Change for the sake of Change
Some people in Canada want change so badly that they want to kick this recession into overdrive — a recession that is world wide.
Thomas Mulcair, Justin Trudeau and Elizabeth May see the opportunity to slide into power on empty and shallow promises that they feel will appease and attract vot-ers who are disgruntled with the present government.
Voters should think carefully about which party will be the better choice to lead us through this unstable economic time.
Promises of jobs, economic recovery, doubling the amount of refugees from Syr-ia, the Middle East and Africa, where does the money come from to pay for this? And where are the very wealthy Arab countries that should step in and assist?
The very rich? The top business and cor-porations? Of course not, that money will move very quickly and it will be once again the dwindling middle class that will bear the brunt of these decisions.
Be careful what you wish for.Valerie axford
Parksville
QB needs a hedge Bylaw for safety
With all of the fires we have had this summer, I would like to mention that hedg-es also present a real fire hazard as they dry out on the inside. A good example is the fire that consumed a 100-foot hedge at a town-house complex in Parksville.
Hedges also provide cover for criminal activity. Two years ago we had our home broken into and I attribute it partially to a high hedge.
Hedges are very nice looking as long as they are maintained and kept to a reason-able height such as you see along Memorial Avenue from the roundabout to Qualicum Foods.
What a shame it would be if these hedg-es were 10-15 feet high. That beautiful en-trance to our town would not be the same.
Bylaws are adopted for various reasons
and one is to help protect the rights, safety and value of property owners.
I believe Qualicum Beach should have a bylaw that restricts front-yard hedges to around five or six feet like many other towns and cities have.
We need to give our town another tool to help settle disputes, add to safety and save our values. A proposal to town council to adopt a hedge bylaw is worth consider-ation.
Your opinion would be appreciated.dennis Hunt
Qualicum Beach
thanks for help at aCCident sCene
I wanted to take a moment to write a huge thank-you to the wonderful couple, the paramedics, firemen and everyone in-volved who helped me at the scene of my serious car accident on Aug. 12 on the Is-land Highway north of the Rosewall Creek bridge.
I drive daily from Qualicum Beach to Co-mox for work and on that evening I swerved to miss a deer on the highway and ended up flipping my car into the centre median.
I was so very lucky I wasn’t more seri-ously hurt. But everyone who stopped to help and take care of me, I thank-you.
Hugs to you all. I will be forever grateful.lisa Hewer
Qualicum Beach
sChool supplies: donate, not waste
It’s back to school shopping days and I just saw a TV commercial where the moth-er was buying two of everything for her for-getful son.
This is one example of how we live in such a wasteful society. I, for one, do not care to see commercials where a mother is encouraged to throw an extra backpack in her shopping cart knowing that her son is likely to lose one.
What are the repercussions of this? Chil-dren are growing up with a sense of enti-tlement. There will always be new things for them whenever they want it. They don’t
have to work for it. The discarded backpack will just end up in a landfill.
What about the poor child labourer who stitched up the backpack for minimal wag-es so that the average Canadian mother can chuck an extra one in her shopping cart?
Does this teach the child how to care and have empathy for the vast number of children around the world and even locally who don’t even have basic school supplies and can’t afford a simple pencil?
Perhaps the mother, rather than buy-ing a second backpack for her son, might encourage him to spend the same money on a donation for school supplies for some needy child.
simon BurnQualicum Beach
pastafarians and spaghetti Monsters
We couldn’t agree more with Michael Scott’s letter to editor (The NEWS, Aug. 27). He opines that it is wrong to allow letters to the editor to be used as a religious pulpit. But, since that seems to be the case in The NEWS, he states all religions ought to be able to claim equal space.
So, in that spirit, we think it would be only right to devote a few lines to a rela-tively new but internationally-recognized religion, that of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.
Established back in 2005 in Kansas, the congregants, known as Pastafarians, be-lieve the FSM to be the one true god who created the earth and all the universe ap-proximately 4,000 years ago while he was drunk. Although Pastafarianism is as le-gitimate as any other religion, in 2014, Obi Canuel, an ordained Pastafarian minister in Coquitlam, paid the supreme sacrifice for his beliefs when he stood up to the au-thorities (ICBC) and refused to remove his religious headgear, a stainless steel spa-ghetti strainer, for his driver’s licence pho-to. He now rides a bicycle.
As in most religions, true belief is not a requirement. Should anyone care to join the church, check out their website.
fern and laurence waymanQualicum Beach
Views in the NewsWe asked:What do you most look forward to in the fall?
Better weather — I like it cooler. Ken Brown
Parksville
I don’t. I prefer summer.
nancy noelVictoria
I really like the different colours,
and it’s a little cooler.Gary coX
French Creek
The colours, by far. KerI SmITh
Parksville
Letters QuotaBle: “This year really feels like a fresh slate,”
rollie Koop, see story page a1
alManaC
Rules to write byall letters to tHe editor must be signed and include your full name, hometown and a daytime phone number. those without these requirements will not be published. letters must be 300 words or less and are subject to editing. The News retains the right not to publish submissions.
Send them tomail: Box 1180, parksville, B.c. V9p 2H2fax: 250-248-4655e-mail: [email protected] online: www.pqbnews.com
LocalGovernment ContactsproVinCial:
scott fraser,mla,
alberni-pacific rim
1-866-870-4190 e-mail: [email protected]
micHelle stilwell,mla,parksvilleQualicum250-248-2625e-mail [email protected]
teunis westBroeKmayor,
town of Qualicum Beach
250-752-6921e-mail: [email protected]
James lunney,mp, nanaimo-alberni
1-866-390-7550e-mail: nanaimo@ jameslunneymp.ca
federal: QualiCuM:
marclefeBVre,mayor,
city of parksville
250-954-4661e-mail: [email protected]
Joe stanHopechairman,
regional district of nanaimo
250-390-4111e-mail: [email protected]
parksVille: rdn:
A12 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
★ Bulk Propane Delivered ★ Propane Tank Rental and Sales
★ Furnace-Heat Pumps-Tankless Hot Water ★ Installation and Service
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NEW Gas Fitting Service
Call 250.752.6914 for reservations.
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Qualicum Beach Inn2690 Island Highway WestQualicum Beach, BC V9K 1G8
Turn Your Day Aro
un
d
Do
The 180 at The QBI
Home of the $5 Tapas Menu
Choose from any of these
featured Tapas5 Lemon and Thyme Marinated Artichokes
Pescado en EscabecheBuffalo Chicken Montaditos
Breaded Beer PicklesPrawn Chorizo Skewer
Do The 180 at The QBI 3pm – 6pm
Monday – Sunday
Plus an Autumn Apple Drink Special
Enjoy them together for only $8
COLUMN
A toilet by any other name . . .A few words about the toilet. Funny word,
that. It’s been around for about 500 years, but it hasn’t always referred to a porcelain throne.
In the Middle Ages it was a piece of cloth la-dies draped over their shoulders while receiv-ing visitors. Later, ‘toilette’ became a dressing room, then the act of grooming — ‘making one’s toilet’. When they said that Marie Antoinette had ‘fait sa toilette’ they meant she’d been getting gussied up — not down on her hands and knees with a lavato-ry plunger.
Do you tend to gag when you hear that a lady has sprinkled her-self with eau de toilette? Relax. It’s only cologne.
But back to the back-house. It travels under a slew of aliases — Aussies call it the dunny, Scots say ‘privvy’. It is also the head, the loo, the outhouse, the WC, the jakes, the jacks, the john – and for reasons known only to Cockneys — the khazi.
Oh yes, and the crapper. Mustn’t forget the crapper.
The invention of the toilet belongs right up there with fire and the wheel. Before them we had, well, holes in the ground, basically. Cess pits where un-treated human waste — of-ten tons of it — piled up and festered. Infrequently, some poor sods had to bucket out those pits – usually into the near-est stream. In 1821 an observer noted that the River Fleet in downtown London wasn’t very... fleet. In fact, he wrote, “it is almost motionless with solidifying (human) filth”.
Rodents, bacteria and ultimately infectious diseases flourished.
Flush toilets, which appeared commercially around the beginning of the 19th century were not an immediate success. They frequently ‘backfired’ with results better imagined than
described.Then a British plumber came up with a mira-
cle innovation — a flush toilet with an elevated water tank. The plumber called his invention The Marlborough Silent Water Waste Preventer.
His name — gloriously — was Thomas Crap-per. He should be living at this hour. Last summer, world scientists showcased the latest in lavatorial ingenuity at a Sanitation Exhibition in New Delhi.
These are not vanity items for the rich and pampered — they are in-novations designed to combat the global problem of poor sanitation. Two and a half billion humans have no access to anything like the bath-rooms you and I use. Every year, 700,000 children die from diarrheal
diseases. With decent sanitation most of them would be alive.
But toilets aren’t just about sanitation, they can actually pay for themselves. Some of the innovations on display in New Delhi: an Amer-
ican-designed power plant producing 150 megawatts of electricity — enough to power a small city. It runs on human waste. A British team showed off a miniature fuel cell that can charge a cellphone overnight. It runs on urine. Scientists from
Colorado brought a system that uses solar power to heat waste to 300C. The process not only kills all pathogens, it creates ‘biochar’, a charcoal-like product that can be burned as fuel.
The lesson? Human waste is not ‘waste’. It can revolutionize poor societies as an energy generator and a money maker.
Thomas Crapper would be flushed with pride.
— Arthur Black lives on Saltspring Island. His column appears weekly in The NEWS.
E-mail: [email protected]
BAsic BlackBy Arthur Black
FREE EVENT AT THE GARDENS IN QUALICUM BEACH ON SEPT. 14
Learning more about dementiaSpace is limited so call The Gardens to reserve a spot
The Gardens at Qualicum Beach will be hosting Dementia Education 101 for Families Monday, Sept. 14 from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
This is a free session for anyone touched by dementia, presented by Karen Tyrell, a demen-tia consultant and the author of Cracking the Dementia Code.
In a news release, The Gardens encourages
residents to come and learn how to uncover the meaning behind the behaviours through detec-tive work such as seeking the Ph. A.C.T.S. and learn through creative approaches and com-munication techniques.
In this session, The Gardens says people will learn new ways to communicate with loved ones and learn tools and methods to address changed behaviors.
This is an RSVP event and space is limited so phone The Gardens reception at 250-752-2818 ext 0 to reserve a spot.
The invention of the toilet belongs right up there with
fire and the wheel
ARTHUR BLACK
154 EAST ISLAND HIGHWAY PARKSVILLE
2 FOR 1 SingleCheeseburger*
*Not to be combined with any other offer. Expires: Sept. 30, 2015
BACK TO SCHOOL SEPTEMBER SPECIAL
Back to school withY
Sunrise FarmsBoneless Skinless Chicken Breasts11.02 per kg
$5$5 PerLB
C
H O I CE
B.C. GrownRoyal Gala Apples2.20 per kg
$1$1Per LB
NEW!
PlantersPeanut Butter1kg
$4$4
DanoneYogurt12-16x100
$5$5DairylandChocolate Milk4Lt
$5$5
school with
Look inside for a special opportunity to
It’s as easy as
WIN!See instore for details.
1 2 3
55555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555Dempster’sSignature Bread600gr
$2$2WOW!DOLLAR-ICIOUS
DEAL!
Grain Fed Free Run
Locally Raised BC Poultry
Copyright © 2015 Quality Foods and its licensors. All Rights Reserved. Photos for Presentation Purposes Only • All QF Stores Email: [email protected]
www.qualityfoods.com
Sunrise FarmsSunrise FarmsSunrise FarmsSunrise FarmsSunrise FarmsSunrise Farms
Triple Q-Points!Wednesday
September 9
A special BONUSschool withschool with
Prices in effect September 7-13, 2015
The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A13
Pepperidge FarmGoldfish Mac & Cheese156gr
$1
Canadian AAInside Round Oven Roast13.23 per kg
AustralianStrip Loin Grilling Steak3 Pack
Sunrise FarmsBone In Chicken Thighs
8.82 per kg
SaputoMozzarellissimaPizza Mozzarella, 340gr
CheemoPerogies815-907gr
Hunt’sTomato Sauce398ml
Hunt’sThick & Rich Pasta Sauce680ml$1
$12
Spiga Di PugliaPasta500gr
SaputoShredded Parmesan Cheese170gr
San RemoRipe Olives398ml
CanadianExtra Lean Ground Round Beef13.23 per kg
for
San RemoOlive Oil or Organic Balsamic VinegarSelected, 500ml-1lt
Canadian AATop Sirloin Grilling Steak15.43 per kg
3PACK Grain Fed
Free Run
Locally Raised BC Poultry
$4 $1 $4
$2TastieSpring Rolls175gr
$2
$4Per LB
$6PerLB
Canadian AAInside Round Marinating Steak13.23 per kg
$6PerLB
$6PerLB
$7PerLB
San RemoArtichokes340-398ml
$2Selected, 500ml-1ltSelected, 500ml-1ltSelected, 500ml-1lt
$5
Simply irresistable meal ideas!
upstairs inside select
Now available
© 2015 Starbucks and the Starbucks logo are registered trademarks of Starbucks Corporation. Approval code: SBUXC-0535
works out to
$200each
Purchase any 650-750gr
Astro Yogourtand receive a second one
FREEOffer in effect September 7-13, 2015
Meat
$1 forforforfor
$1
A14 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
Pork Shoulder Smoked PicnicHockless, 6.61 per kg
KraftShake ‘n Bake Coating Mix140-184gr
KnorrPasta or Rice Sidekicks112-167gr
KnorrSoup Mix40-83gr
KnorrClassic Sauce or Gravy Mix26-47gr
KnorrSimply Broth900ml
Hellmann’sMayonnaise890ml
LindtLindor Chocolates36gr
Green GiantFrozen Vegetables750gr
Uncle Ben’sFast & Fancy Rice Side Dish165gr
Miller SpringsMountain Spring Water1.5lt
MaynardsWine Gums44gr
BuddigSliced Meats55gr
Sunrise FarmsChicken Drumettes
1kg
OlymelBacon375gr
OlymelWieners450gr
Grain Fed Free Run
Locally Raised BC Poultry
Bone InPork Butt Steak
8.82 per kg
$1
$2
$3
$1 $2
$1 $4 $1
$12$4Per LB
$3PerLB
$5 $4 $1
$1
$1
Use your Q-Card when you purchase any participating Unilever product
& you’ll be instantly entered to WIN an Apple iPad Mini Wi-Fi 16G!
Draw date Sept. 21, 2015. Approx. value $329. No purchase necessary. See store for details.
$1PLUS
A
PPLICABLE FEES
$Watch for HUNDREDS of deals throughout the store
EVERY TUESDAY THIS SEPTEMBER!
* SOME RESTRICTIONS APPLY. Selection will vary by store. Product pictures are for presentation purposes only. Offer is in effect until September 13, 2015. Only available in Step Above locations.
Upstairs inside Quality Foods, just above Perk Avenue cafe, in:
Comox Courtenay Powell River Qualicum Foods 30%OFF*
A L L B A K E WA R E
Meat
The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A15
THE BUCK STOPS HERE! DEALS YOU’LL GO LOONIE OVER!DEALS YOU’LL GO LOONIE OVER!
ParkayMargarine1.28-1.36kg
Black DiamondShredded Cheese340gr
ChristiePremium Plus Crackers450-500gr
KnorrLipton Soup MixSelected, 4’s
Minute Maid or Five AliveBeverage10x200ml
PlantersNut BarSalted Caramel, 85gr
QuakerDipps or Chewy Granola BarsSelected, 150-196gr
Peek FreansBiscuits256-350gr
Robertson’sMarmalade or Lemon Curd250ml
WonderEnglish Muffins6’s
Black DiamondCheestrings336gr
PrimoReady To Serve Soup525-540ml
ArmstrongMelts SlicesProcessed Cheese Product, 1kg
Minute MaidSimply Orange Juice2.63lt
QuakerLife or Corn Bran Squares Cereal375-455gr
Paradise IslandCheddar or Mozzarella CheeseApprox. 800gr
QuakerHarvest Crunch Granola Cereal470-600gr
QuakerQuick Oats2.25kg
Dairyland2% White or 1% Chocolate Milk Beverage473ml
Maple LeafFlakes of Ham, Turkey or Chicken156gr
IdahoanPotatoes113-114gr
Green GiantCanned VegetablesSelected, 341-398ml
Dr. OetkerGuiseppe Pizzeria Thin Crust465-501gr
Old El PasoThick ‘n Chunky Salsa650ml
Michelina’sPasta Entree227-284gr
$5 $4
$1
Pepsi, 7-Up or Schweppes1lt
DareBreaktime Cookies250gr
Snack Pack Pudding Cups4x99gr
Old DutchPopcorn Twists, Cheese Pleesers or Potato Chips24x10-16gr Del Monte
FruitSelected, 398ml
Old El PasoCrunchy Shells or Tortilla BowlSelected, 125-189gr
$1
Aunt JemimaSyrup or Pancake & Waffle Mix 750ml or 905gr
$1Old El PasoStand ‘n Stuff Hard Taco Shells153gr
$1
$10 $10
Money’sPieces & Stems Mushrooms284ml
Hunt’sTomatoes398ml
$5
MelittaEstate Whole Bean Coffee
907gr
QuakerInstant Oatmeal228-336gr
PLUS
A
PPLICABLE FEES
Dr. OetkerGiuseppe Pizzeria Rising Crust830-900gr
NestleFavourites Assorted Candy Bars24’s
SunRype100% Pure Apple Juice1lt
Old El PasoSeasoning Mix28-35gr
Old El PasoRefried Beans398ml
$5
$5 $3
$2 $3$2 $2
$3 $1 $3
$5
$3 $4
$5 $3 $3 $5
$2$3
$1 $2 $3 $1$2$3
$1 $1 $1 $1$1$1PLUS
A
PPLICABLE FEES Old El PasoOld El PasoOld El Paso
$5
$1PL
US A
PPLICABLE FEES
PLUS
A
PPLICABLE FEES
Quality Foods an Island Original
Clif BarEnergy Bar68gr
GatoradePerform Thirst Quencher950ml
PLUS
A
PPLICABLE FEES
$1 $1
$ $Prices in effect September 7-13, 2015
BIG950mlSIZE
A16 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A17
THE BUCK STOPS HERE! DEALS YOU’LL GO LOONIE OVER!DEALS YOU’LL GO LOONIE OVER!
ParkayMargarine1.28-1.36kg
Black DiamondShredded Cheese340gr
ChristiePremium Plus Crackers450-500gr
KnorrLipton Soup MixSelected, 4’s
Minute Maid or Five AliveBeverage10x200ml
PlantersNut BarSalted Caramel, 85gr
QuakerDipps or Chewy Granola BarsSelected, 150-196gr
Peek FreansBiscuits256-350gr
Robertson’sMarmalade or Lemon Curd250ml
WonderEnglish Muffins6’s
Black DiamondCheestrings336gr
PrimoReady To Serve Soup525-540ml
ArmstrongMelts SlicesProcessed Cheese Product, 1kg
Minute MaidSimply Orange Juice2.63lt
QuakerLife or Corn Bran Squares Cereal375-455gr
Paradise IslandCheddar or Mozzarella CheeseApprox. 800gr
QuakerHarvest Crunch Granola Cereal470-600gr
QuakerQuick Oats2.25kg
Dairyland2% White or 1% Chocolate Milk Beverage473ml
Maple LeafFlakes of Ham, Turkey or Chicken156gr
IdahoanPotatoes113-114gr
Green GiantCanned VegetablesSelected, 341-398ml
Dr. OetkerGuiseppe Pizzeria Thin Crust465-501gr
Old El PasoThick ‘n Chunky Salsa650ml
Michelina’sPasta Entree227-284gr
$5 $4
$1
Pepsi, 7-Up or Schweppes1lt
DareBreaktime Cookies250gr
Snack Pack Pudding Cups4x99gr
Old DutchPopcorn Twists, Cheese Pleesers or Potato Chips24x10-16gr Del Monte
FruitSelected, 398ml
Old El PasoCrunchy Shells or Tortilla BowlSelected, 125-189gr
$1
Aunt JemimaSyrup or Pancake & Waffle Mix 750ml or 905gr
$1Old El PasoStand ‘n Stuff Hard Taco Shells153gr
$1
$10 $10
Money’sPieces & Stems Mushrooms284ml
Hunt’sTomatoes398ml
$5
MelittaEstate Whole Bean Coffee
907gr
QuakerInstant Oatmeal228-336gr
PLUS
A
PPLICABLE FEES
Dr. OetkerGiuseppe Pizzeria Rising Crust830-900gr
NestleFavourites Assorted Candy Bars24’s
SunRype100% Pure Apple Juice1lt
Old El PasoSeasoning Mix28-35gr
Old El PasoRefried Beans398ml
$5
$5 $3
$2 $3$2 $2
$3 $1 $3
$5
$3 $4
$5 $3 $3 $5
$2$3
$1 $2 $3 $1$2$3
$1 $1 $1 $1$1$1PLUS
A
PPLICABLE FEES Old El PasoOld El PasoOld El Paso
$5
$1PL
US A
PPLICABLE FEES
PLUS
A
PPLICABLE FEES
Quality Foods an Island Original
Clif BarEnergy Bar68gr
GatoradePerform Thirst Quencher950ml
PLUS
A
PPLICABLE FEES
$1 $1
$ $Prices in effect September 7-13, 2015
BIG950mlSIZE
A16 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A17
All Quality Fresh TubsExcludes Organic Price discounted at the checkout.off
%%2525off
FreshAhi Tuna
Natural PasturesBrie or Camembert CheeseMin. 180gr
Grimm’sClassic Oven Roast Ham
Little Cedar FallsWhole Steelhead
Frozen or Previously Frozen Cooked White Tiger Prawn Tails41/50 Size
9 Piece B.C. Rolls
8 Piece Happy California Rolls
MediumChow Mein
$1
$6FrozenSockeye Salmon Fillets
SaputoCheese Slices160-200gr
$10
Grimm’s4 Pack Pepperoni Sticks
150Per100 gr
Grimm’sFrench Herb or
Bavarian Meatloaf
SunriseRoast or Smoked Turkey Breast
$2 Per100 gr
$5
$6
$4$2
per 100gr
$5
$6
Per100 gr
Per100 gr
$2Per100 gr
$5
$2 Per100 gr
$7MediumVegetable Chop Suey
MediumSweet & Sour Chicken Balls
FRESHLYFROZEN
Woolwich DairyChevrai113gr
$4
Deli & Cheese
Seafood • Quality Foods
Sushi
Available at select stores only.Available at select stores only.
FRESHFRESHfrom
NANAIMO
A18 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
Want-WantSuperslim Brown Rice Crisps100gr
Udi’sGluten Free Pizza264-286gr
DanoneActivia Probiotic Yogurt650ml
KindHealthy Grains Granola Bars175gr
Mini Danish
Italian BunsWhite or 60% Whole
Wheat Bread
Coffee Cake Double Layer Cake
Casa Mendosa10” Tortilla8-10’s
OroweatBread680gr
MagicAluminum Foil
12x25ft
$1
4$5
Tropic IsleCoconut Milk400ml
$1GladContainersAssorted sizes
$1
GraceCoconut Water310-500ml
BagelsSelected
$26 pack
Manitoba HarvestHemp HeartsRaw Shelled Hemp Seeds, 227gr
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The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A19
C
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Back to School Bouquet
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Washington “Medium”Yellow Onions3lb
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for a fresh NEW APPY SPECIAL!Drop in between 4:00 & 6:00 PMDrop in
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A20 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A21
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Back to School Suppliesare here!
To submit your activities into our weekly(� ursday) Calendar of Events:
[email protected] fax:250-248-4655#4-154 Middleton Ave, Parksville
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JOHN HARDING PHOTO
ROCK VILLAGE: A young member of a family from Kelowna built this elaborate rock village last week at Parksville Beach.
TRANSIT
Smaller bus for ParksvilleCandaCe [email protected]
Transit is changing. RDN transit operations manager Daniel
Pearce explained as of this past Sunday, Parks-ville route 88 will operate with a smaller “com-munity” bus that has a 20-person capacity, compared to the former, conventional bus that had a 60 person capacity.
Pearce said it’s “still 100 per cent wheelchair accessible” but it’s a little cheaper and “less in-timidating” for riders.
He said there’s also a new stop at the transit shelter set up in front of Wembley Mall along Highway 19A and one in front of the new B.C. Liquor Store location.
Route 88 will also provide service to the Oceanside Health Centre, which it wasn’t able to do before as the large bus couldn’t get into the health centre’s parking lot.
Pearce said the changes came about from discussions with the community, the planning process and input from the regional district’s transit committee representative Parksville Mayor Marc Lefebvre.
“This is something I’ve been hearing for a long time,” said Lefebvre, referring to the orig-inal buses being too big. “The larger buses take up too much room on our roads… The real is-sue is that the bigger buses aren’t properly oc-cupied, their volume (of riders) didn’t warrant that kind of bus.”
Lefebvre said he’s hoping the transition to smaller buses will open up more room for growth in terms of transit routes.
“Eventually what I want to talk about at the transit committee is having smaller buses go into different locations within the city of Parks-ville, maybe they can go up to Maple Glen one day.” Lefebvre said he’s excited to see the transit changes in action and invited Pearce to give a presentation to Parksville city council tomor-row night on the changes.
Meanwhile, there will be new route 40 VIU Express frequent transit network which con-nects downtown Nanaimo, Vancouver Island University, Country Club, Nanaimo North Town Centre and Woodgrove. This route of-fers two-way service on major corridors during peak times.
A22 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
Forward HouseCommunity Society
September 15 • 6:00pm(doors open at 5:30pm)
The Quality Resort Bayside240 Dogwood Street, Parksville
$25 per person, advance purchase only.
Tickets available at Forward House, 136 E. Hirst Ave., Parksville. Contact: Sharon 250-954-0785
Please join us for a celebration of our clients, our community supporters, and Forward House.
The evening will include dinner, music, recognition, live auction, 50/50 draw,
and door prizes!
12th AnnualDRAGONFLY DINNER
ATTRACTIVE
OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE!
in a beautifully decorated clinic in Qualicum Beach!Ideal for a health professional, eg. Psychologist, Dietician, etc…
Please contact: 250-240-3784for more information!
PQB HISTORYFor a look back at life in ParksvilleQualicum Beach, tour the Qualicum Beach
Museum, 587 Beach Road, Qualicum Beach
qbmuseum.net
WENDY MAURERNEWS Contributor
A woman named Sandy bought a property on Bennett Road in Qualicum Beach in 2004. � ere was a very old house on the property. Hanging in that house was the portrait of a young wom-an, done in charcoal, wearing a period dress.
Also found in the house were doc-uments dated from 1907 to 1941. � e documents belonged to a family named Bennett. Could it be the same people the road is named after? How exciting.
In reviewing the documents I discov-er that the man of the house was Fred F. Bennett. He was an entrepreneur and appears to have sold real estate for a time in Port Alberni — “Drakes & Bennett, Real Estate Agents.” � ere is a map of the original Alberni District and a listing of some of the lots, along with selling prices and terms of sale. For ex-ample Lot # 112 was o� ered: two � ve-acre blocks, uncleared at $180/acre. One quarter of the price to be paid in cash, with the balance payable in six-12-18 months.
It is unclear from these documents when the Bennett’s arrived in Qualicum Beach, however a bill for a piano was mailed to F. F. Bennett at a Vancouver address in April, 1913 from Mason and Risch Ltd. � ere is also a large quantity of cancelled bank cheques from 1907 to 1913 which give a glimpse of Fred’s life.
In 1914, Fred received a letter from the B.C. Legislative Assembly acknowl-edging receipt of a petition signed by himself and others asking for $50,000 for road work for Qualicum Beach. No word on whether the request was grant-ed.
In April 1917, Fred received a let-ter from the B.C. Forest Branch Chief Forester M.A. Grainger stating where Fred could attend to write his examina-tion for the position of Assistant Forest Guard. Only British subjects were per-mitted to take the examination.
In November 1917, Fred received a bill from “� e Qualicum Merchant”, Mr. E. Bunting, purveyor of “wholesale and retail groceries, provisions, dry goods,
hardware, etc.”In 1924, M.K.Bennett received a let-
ter on Sept. 10 from Independent Radio Engineers giving exclusive territory rights for their products. Discounts on the Northern Electric sets are 30 per cent, Radiola 25 per cent, parts average 25 per cent with Northern Electric Pea-nut tubes 33.3 per cent — they will send their sta� magazine each month.
� e woman in the picture appears to be Mini Bell Bennett, who was mar-ried to Fred. Sadly for Mini, Fred died young, in 1927. � ere is a bill from the undertaker in Vancouver and letters of sympathy to Mini. In a letter from Mini’s Aunt Elizabeth Rent, it mentions Mini and Fred had sons. A condolence let-ter from Mini’s sister in New York City, mentions that Max and Dick will need her more than ever now. � ere is also a letter from this same sister “Babe” sent in 1917 from southern California,
where she mentions Qualicum Beach and elaborates on her current adven-tures, including going up in an aero-plane. Sadly she forgot her “Kodak” at home so had no photo to share.
� is treasure trove of documents was recently donated to the Qualicum Beach Museum by the owners of the home who discovered them. We are so grateful for this snapshot of local histo-ry. Having letterhead from a local busi-ness from 1917 and information about local people is a treasure. � ere are so many clues to follow up here to � nd out more information about the Bennetts and about Qualicum Beach.
� ese documents are now stored in the Qualicum Beach Museum Archives and form part of our local history col-lection. � e museum is open Tuesday to Saturday 10am-4pm through Sep-tember, then Tuesday and � ursday from 1-4pm over the winter.
A Qualicum Beach mystery, with cluesQUALICUM BEACH
PHOTO SUBMITTED BY QUALICUM BEACH MUSEUM
Mini Bell Bennett, wife of Fred F. Bennett, were early residents of Qualicum Beach.
PQBNEWS WEEKLY REAL ESTATE UPDATE� ursday, February 13, 2014 - full colour
PQBNEWS WEEKLY REAL ESTATE UPDATE� ursday, February 13, 2014 - full colour
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*minimum $20,000.00. Rate(s) as of Friday, September 4, 2015. Prices and rates subject to change and availability. This information is not investment advice and should be used only in conjunction with a discussion with your RBC Dominion Securities Inc. Investment Advisor. This will ensure that your own circumstances have been considered properly and that action is taken on the latest available information. RBC Dominion Securities Inc.* and Royal Bank of Canada are separate corporate entities which are affiliated. *Mem-ber-Canadian Investor Protection Fund. RBC Dominion Securities Inc. is a member company of RBC Wealth Management, a business segment of Royal Bank of Canada. ®Registered trademarks of Royal Bank of Canada. Used under licence. © 2015 RBC Dominion Securities Inc. All rights reserved.
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For more information, call Oliver Sayah & Associates Wealth Management Team of RBC Dominion Securities at 250-248-2104 or 1-800-675-7240.
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The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A23
Helping people achieve their goals is how I de� ne success!
Time for a refreshing approach. Business savvy, approachable, respectful and easy to talk to.
Chris MohrInvestment Advisor
174 Morison Avenue West, Parksville • (250) 248-2399 [email protected]
HollisWealth is a division of Scotia Capital Inc., a member of the Canadian Investor Protection Fundand the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada. ™Trademark of the Bank of Nova Scotia, used under license.
We deliver The NEWS!Ernie Sankey, CarrierBusiness
swag and spa
Rock-a-Bear Baby opens shop in ParksvilleCandaCe [email protected]
It all started with the name. Owner Krystal Vaudreuil explains her
new Parksville baby attire storefront and spa came about by way of a great name suggestion from none other than her own mother.
“I said to my husband, ‘we should open a baby store’ and that night I talked to my mom and she said, ‘you could call it Rock-a-Bear Baby,’” Vaudreuil told The NEWS. “I thought to myself, now I have to do it — that name is too perfect.”
And just like that Rock-a-Bear Baby Swag and Spa was born.
The cozy 800 square feet spa is nes-tled along Morison Avenue in Parksville with a little wooden sign out front saying: “positive vibes only.”
It’s relaxed, smells delightful and the shop is bursting with adorable bamboo onesies, fox-print sleepers and incredibly soft swaddles.
Basically, it’s parental paradise. Vaudreuil calls it “a mom-friendly
spa” noting new mothers are welcome to bring their babies in with them during a treatment. As Vaudreuil’s first-born is just six months old, she’s more than un-derstanding about motherhood.
The shop carries mostly made-in Can-ada products like Salt Spring Soap Works Body Gelato, Vancouver’s Emerson Ap-parel line and Cowichan Valley Rocks and Roots shoes.
Vaudreuil said before she opened the shop, she found it difficult to find local-ly-made baby attire in Parksville and she often found herself shopping online to buy products made in B.C.
Recognizing a need in the communi-ty, Vaudreuil paired her skills as an esthe-tician with her background in business and opened a store to serve a wide range of women. Rock-a-Bear Baby spa treat-ments include: manicures, pedicures, leg and foot massages, threading, waxing, tinting and YonKa specialized facials. The team includes Vaudreuil, Lindsay Millar and Mahriya Auchoin.
Unlike most new mothers who take maternity leave after having a baby, Vau-
dreuil launched into entrepreneurship. But she szhe said isn’t overwhelmed. In fact, she seems more relaxed than most people without a newborn or new busi-ness.
“This was all meant to be,” she said, holding her now six-month-old baby boy. “I knew this was a good idea from
the beginning. I just had a feeling.” Vaudreuil is originally from Saskatch-
ewan but was drawn to the West Coast two years ago. “I was coming out here way too much,” she said. “I just wanted to be here for the lifestyle, the beauty, the air, the environment.”
Rock-a-Bear Baby Swag and Spa is
located at 147 Morison Avenue in Parks-ville. The shop is open Tuesday, Wednes-day and Saturday from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Thursday and Friday from 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. For more infor-mation, or to book an appointment, stop by or call 250-586-2772 or e-mail [email protected].
The store sells baby attire from all over Canada, including Vancouver Island
CandaCe wu photo
The new crew at Rock-a-Bear Baby Swag and Spa hosted a grand opening barbecue last week where they raised $165 for Haven House. From left above are Gillian Rice, owner Krystal Vaudreuil (holding six-month-old Rocky’Bear), Lindsey Millar and Mahriya Auchoin. They welcomed more than 100 people to the new storefront along Morison Avenue in Parksville.
A24 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
Royal Canadian Sea Cadet Corps
Esquimalt
1ST REGISTRATIONSEPT 9, 2015 - 6:30PM
#116 - 425 STANFORD AVE,PARKSVILLE • 250-248-2677
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FREE SERVICES INCLUDE
• One-on-one tutoring
• Language Lab
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This organization is funded by the Government of Canada
® BMO “(M-bar roundel symbol)” is a registered trade-mark of Bank of Montreal, used under license. ® “Nesbitt Burns” is a registered trade-mark of BMO Nesbitt Burns Inc. BMO Nesbitt Burns Inc. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Bank of Montreal. If you are already a client of BMO Nesbitt Burns, please contact your Investment Advisor for more information.
Member-Canadian Investor Protection Fund and Member of the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada
For Trusted Financial Advice
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#1 – 220 West Island Highway Parksville, BC V9P 2P3
Tel: 250-248-2489 Toll-free: 1-800-330-1644
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Partner with an Investment Advisor who offers quality investment planning that is clear and relevant to you and your family.
ARTS LIFE Do you have local aRTS newS?email: [email protected]
Phone: 250-905-0028 &Nous Chantons seeks new membersmusic
French singing group was started in 2008 to celebrate french music and culture CandaCe [email protected]
French is one of the most romantic languages in the world — and a small group of women in Parksville Qual-icum Beach are celebrating it in song.
Nous Chantons is a choir made up of 12 women who share a common love of the french language. They meet once a week and sing french songs together for the pure pleasure of it.
“It (french music) goes to your core,” Nous Chantons co ordinator Suzanne Bernard told The NEWS. “It goes to your soul. It touches you deeply.”
Bernard started the group in 2008. “I was singing to my granddaughter one day and I real-
ized I was losing it,” said explained. So she put an advertisement in the newspaper and
rallied together likeminded people who now meet every Wednesday at a different member’s home to sing French songs and celebrate French culture.
Nous Chantons is always looking for new members. Bernard said you don’t have to be a professional sing-er or have any special training, however, it is important that prospective members have an understanding of the french language.
“We’re open to those who are bilingual, francophones and francophiles,” she said.
The group has a repertoire of 500 songs including fa-vourites such as: Chante-la ta chanson, La vie en rose and La Manic. Bernard stressed that the group is strictly “for pleasure” but said they do perform for schools and seniors homes.
Nous Chantons, which translates to We Are Singing, will meet next on Wednesday, Sept. 16 from 1:30-3:30 p.m. There is no membership fee. For more information or to become a member please contact Suzanne Bernard at 250-248-8714 or [email protected].
Photo submitted by suzanne bernard
Nous Chantons, above, a singing group based in Parksville Qualicum Beach that meets every Wednesday to practise french songs, is looking for new members.
Sound Connection helps singers find their voiceSound Connection in Coombs will be
starting off a new season this Thursday. Sound Connection Choir sings popular
and contemporary music and is seeking men and women who love music, singing and have a desire to perform.
“We have been directing Sound Con-nection in Coombs at the Soundgarden for over two years now and it has been a huge benefit to our community, as well as
helping people ‘find’ their voice,” choir co director Megan Keene told The NEWS in an e-mail.
“Many of our members have little to no experience and we are constantly finding that some have never been provided with a safe place to sing. Others have been told at some point in their lives that they can’t or shouldn’t sing, and it’s amazing to see these people singing, and finding friend-
ships within this supportive group, so we are seeking new members to join us in song.”
Sound Connection meets in Coombs Thursday evenings from 7-9 p.m. at The Soundgarden starting Sept. 10.
Vocalists will be instructed on vocal warm-up, exercises, improv and tech-nique. Singers will be provided with lyrics and recordings of the music.
There are no auditions and no experi-ence is necessary, but Keene said “an ea-gerness to learn is a must.”
It costs $70 for seven sessions with another seven weeks following. Pre-reg-istration is required as space is limited. For more information or to register visit www.esteemvocals.com or call Me-gan Keene at 250-228-2467.
— NEWS Staff
The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A25
Those interested must register for and attend a free information session
FREE INFO SESSIONThe Career Centre
Wed. Sept. 9, 2015 10am or 2pm250.248.3205 • www.careercentre.org
Gain life skills, job readiness training and certifications!
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Oceanside Community Church1420 Alberni Hwy, Parksville
Registration: Wednesday, September 9, 5:30 to 6:30pmRuns from September 16 – May 4, 5:30 to 7:15pm
More into: 250-248-5333 or email [email protected]
McMillan Arts Centre
133 McMillan Street, Parksvillewww.mcmillanartscentre.com
HAPPENINGS
MUSICAL LINEUP FOR AUG./SEPT.Friday, September 11th - FOLK Tim Eccles
Performance starts at 7:00pm (doors open at 6:30) Saturday, Sept. 20th - The Tidesmen Chorus
Performance starts at 2:00pm (doors open at 1:30) Friday, Sept. 25th - JAZZ Sinclair and Bennett
Performance starts at 8:00pm (doors open at 7:30)
TICKETS: $15 and $12 for OCAC Members andavailable for purchase at the MAC.
McMillan Arts Centre: Tues. – Sat. 10am - 4pmFor more information please call 250-248-8185
or email: [email protected]
OTHER ACTIVITIES
EXHIBITIONSSeptember 1–26
“MASTERFUL COLOUR AND STYLE” an exhibition of outstanding art by The Federation of Canadian Artists – Arrowsmith
Chapter, The Silk Worm Painting Group and Photographer, Debra Kuzbik.
Creative Writing Workshop with Rachael Preston10-week workshop-based creative writing course - $155
Starting September 17 • For more info contact [email protected]
Free Meditation Classes returning on Sept. 8, 5:30–7pm
Women’s Wealth Wednesdays on Sept. 16 • $10 at the door.“Wills and Legacy Planning” with Lisa Holmgren and Laurie Palmer.
Starts at 6:30pm. For more info email Glory [email protected]
Ukulele Classes with Anna Lyman starting Tuesday, Sept. 22 at 11:30am. For more info contact Anna [email protected]
Brenda [email protected]
We Have Happy Advertisers!
Contact me today.
Steve [email protected]
ARTS LIFE Do you have local aRTS newS?email: [email protected]
Phone: 250-905-0028 &Nous Chantons seeks new membersmusic
French singing group was started in 2008 to celebrate french music and culture CandaCe [email protected]
French is one of the most romantic languages in the world — and a small group of women in Parksville Qual-icum Beach are celebrating it in song.
Nous Chantons is a choir made up of 12 women who share a common love of the french language. They meet once a week and sing french songs together for the pure pleasure of it.
“It (french music) goes to your core,” Nous Chantons co ordinator Suzanne Bernard told The NEWS. “It goes to your soul. It touches you deeply.”
Bernard started the group in 2008. “I was singing to my granddaughter one day and I real-
ized I was losing it,” said explained. So she put an advertisement in the newspaper and
rallied together likeminded people who now meet every Wednesday at a different member’s home to sing French songs and celebrate French culture.
Nous Chantons is always looking for new members. Bernard said you don’t have to be a professional sing-er or have any special training, however, it is important that prospective members have an understanding of the french language.
“We’re open to those who are bilingual, francophones and francophiles,” she said.
The group has a repertoire of 500 songs including fa-vourites such as: Chante-la ta chanson, La vie en rose and La Manic. Bernard stressed that the group is strictly “for pleasure” but said they do perform for schools and seniors homes.
Nous Chantons, which translates to We Are Singing, will meet next on Wednesday, Sept. 16 from 1:30-3:30 p.m. There is no membership fee. For more information or to become a member please contact Suzanne Bernard at 250-248-8714 or [email protected].
Photo submitted by suzanne bernard
Nous Chantons, above, a singing group based in Parksville Qualicum Beach that meets every Wednesday to practise french songs, is looking for new members.
Sound Connection helps singers find their voiceSound Connection in Coombs will be
starting off a new season this Thursday. Sound Connection Choir sings popular
and contemporary music and is seeking men and women who love music, singing and have a desire to perform.
“We have been directing Sound Con-nection in Coombs at the Soundgarden for over two years now and it has been a huge benefit to our community, as well as
helping people ‘find’ their voice,” choir co director Megan Keene told The NEWS in an e-mail.
“Many of our members have little to no experience and we are constantly finding that some have never been provided with a safe place to sing. Others have been told at some point in their lives that they can’t or shouldn’t sing, and it’s amazing to see these people singing, and finding friend-
ships within this supportive group, so we are seeking new members to join us in song.”
Sound Connection meets in Coombs Thursday evenings from 7-9 p.m. at The Soundgarden starting Sept. 10.
Vocalists will be instructed on vocal warm-up, exercises, improv and tech-nique. Singers will be provided with lyrics and recordings of the music.
There are no auditions and no experi-ence is necessary, but Keene said “an ea-gerness to learn is a must.”
It costs $70 for seven sessions with another seven weeks following. Pre-reg-istration is required as space is limited. For more information or to register visit www.esteemvocals.com or call Me-gan Keene at 250-228-2467.
— NEWS Staff
Dragonfly Dinner will be hosted at the Quality Resort Bayside
The 12th annual Dragonfly Dinner will be hosted next week in support of mental health and the achievements of Forward House clients.
The dinner will be hosted Tuesday, Sept. 15 at the Quality Resort Bayside starting at 5:30 p.m.
According to a news release is-sued by Forward House, the evening will celebrate mental health, Forward House clients, community supporters and grant funders who help Forward House offer a wide variety of programs and supports.
The evening will include a buf-fet-style dinner followed by recogni-tion, community awards, music, a live auction and a 50/50 draw. Additional-ly, Forward House 16-month calendars will be available at the dinner featuring art work created by Forward House cli-ents.
Forward House has been serving clients in Parksville Qualicum Beach since 1982 with funding from Island Health. Forward House provides day programs for clients with mental health and/or addiction issues.
Tickets are $25 each. They are avail-able at Forward House located at 136 East Hirst Avenue in Parksville. Doors to the Dragonfly Dinner open at 5:30
p.m. and dinner will be served at 6 p.m. For more information visit www.for-
wardhouse.com or call 250-954-0785.—NEWS Staff
Forward House celebrates clientsnext week
newS FILe PHOtO
The 12th annual Dragonfly Dinner will be hosted next Tuesday in support of mental health. Pictured above, Forward House executive director Sharon Welch (right) gives special recognition to clients and volunteers at last year’s event.
It’s All About the Garden in QualicumWho in their right mind would have a garden sale in fall? The Qualicum Beach Garden Club (QBGC) is doing just
that.According to a news release issued by the club, “the best
time to divide and transplant is in the fall” and the club has decided to share their treasures with other gardeners.
The garden sale — deemed All About the Garden — will offer plants and gardening items galore.
The release said they will have winter vegetable starts and vegetables.
All profits from the garden sales go to an education fund and in the past the Qualicum Beach Garden Club has sup-ported Milner Gardens’ Shoots with Roots kids program.
All About the Garden starts Sept. 12 at the Qualicum Beach Museum from 8 a.m. to noon. The Qualicum Beach Museum is located at 587 Beach Road.
For more information contact QBGC president Sue Beat-ty at 250-954-5211.
— NEWS Staff/Submitted By The Qualicum Beach Garden Club
‘The Hungry Cat Tour’ hits the MAC Jazz is back at the McMil-
lan Arts Centre. Award-winning harp
player and renowned gui-tarist David Sinclair and Keith Bennett will perform
blues, gypsy jazz and pop in Parksville.
According to a news re-lease issued by The MAC, the duo is bringing their ‘Hungry Cat Tour’ to
Parksville Sept. 25. Doors open at 7:30 p.m. and perfor-mances start at 8 p.m. Tick-ets are $15/$12 for OCAC members. Recent releases by Sinclair and Bennett in-
clude Alchemy, an acoustic guitar and harmonica CD/DVD with instrumental and vocals by Kent Fiddy and Sinclair.
— NEWS Staff
A26 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
Featu
red
Pro
pert
ies
topto
pre
altors
top
top re
sults
250-947-5355
Lisa M.(Moulatsiotis)
Senior Real Estate Specialist
Certi� ed Residential Relocation Specialist
“Opening Doors For You and Yours”
TracyELL IOTT
Opening DoorsFor You
ANCHOR REALTY
Each of� ce independently owned & operated
of� ce: 250.752.2466 toll free: 1.800.668.3622
email: [email protected]
TeamRudi & TrishWiddershoven
www.TeamW.ca
250.248.1071
Independently Owned and Operated
TeamRudi & TrishWiddershoven
www.TeamW.ca
250.248.1071
Independently Owned and Operated
250-228-0995
REAL ESTATE IN MotionWHITECAP
P a r k s v i l l e O c e a n s i d e
Jolene AarboREALTOR®/Ownerw w w . p a r k s v i l l e - r e a l e s t a t e . c a
135 Alberni Highway, Parksville
Give me a call and allow me to demonstrate my Marketing Strategies.
CAPCAPa r k s v i l l e O c e a n s i d e
Jolene AarboREALTOR®/OwnerJolene AarboREALTOR®/OwnerJolene AarboJolene Aarbo
www.toddstarkey.com
[email protected] 250-248-4321
Parksville-Qualicum Beach Realty
...� nding a home to mirror your lifeTodd StarkeyTodd Starkey
Brenda
NicollsPersonal Real Estate Corporation
Committed... Competent... Connected...
250-248-8371
KNUTSON.
THE STRENGTH OF A TEAM
THE COMFORT OF FAMILY
250.937.1100 Cell250.752.6926 Office
Parksville - Qualicum Beach RealtyEach office is independently owned and operated.Unlicensed
Realtor®Parksville - Qualicum Beach Realty
each office is independantly owned and operated
The Comfort of Family
The Strength of a Team
unlicensed
Realtor
Kari&Steve
R
Parksville Qualicum Beach RealtyIndependently Owned & Operated
What is your property worth intoday’s market? Contact Kari for an
accurate, current evaluation.
250-954-8222
ALYCE CARNEY
[email protected] Craig St. Parksville
Central Vancouver Island Specialist
KEVIN CARLKEVIN [email protected]
EnthusiasticResponsiveSupportive
Independently Owned and Operated
Cell 250-248-7777 Of� ce 250-752-2466Toll Free 1-800-668-3622
richardgoldney.com
PERSONAL REAL ESTATE CORPORATION
Richard
Team“Good Service is Not Expensive, it’s Priceless”
Cell
PARKSVILLE FAMILY HOME & ACREAGE
425 Fourneau Way, Parksville $611,300• 2.84 fenced acres in the heart of Parksville• Many quality upgrades - 6 yr roof• 3 bedrooms with ensuites• Hardwood � oors, heat pump
250-954-9033
MATT [email protected]
MATT BREEDLOVEbreedloverealestate.ca
For Every Move You Make Since 1993
★ ★★ ★ ★ Independently Owned and Operated
250.248.1071
1.888.243.1071www.mehanrealty.com
250-752-24661-800-668-3622
Successfully serving our Oceanside communities for over 22 years.Successfully serving our Oceanside
Cindy RieraPersonal Real Estate Corporation
22 years.
Anchor RealtyQualicum Beachwww.pq-realestate.com
668 Memorial Avenue, Qualicum Beach
250-951-6617 [email protected]
www.vancouverislandhousesforsale.com
Personal Real Estate Corporation Personal Real Estate Corporation
BEAUTIFUL DASHWOOD ACREAGE
4060 Island Hwy W. QB $379,000• 3.81 park-like acres, partially treed, close to town• 3 bedroom rancher on crawlspace• Subdivision potential, great holding property
JMJohn [email protected]
www.johnmilroy.com
Marketing designed to exceed your expectations.
STONE’S THROW CONDO
#20-220 McVickers St., Parksville $425,000• Beautifully appointed 1835 sqft condo at Stone’s Throw• Elegant modern architecture, immaculate condition• 2 yrs young with many upgrades, patio & balcony• Master bedroom on main with guest bed and loft up
The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A27The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A27
In Loving Memory of
Roy H. Richardson1931 – 2006
The rolling stream of life rolls onBut still the vacant chair,Recalls the love, the voice and smile,Of the one who once sat there.
Deeply loved and missed by wife Eva,all the families and friends in ON, UK and BC
Certified Automotive Service Technicians
Canadian Tire - a great place to work!
Candidates must possess their provincially recognized Automotive service technician certificate with a minimum of 2 years experience and a valid BC drivers license.
Has Openings For
CANADIAN TIRE PARKSVILLE
Industry leading state of the art equipmentProfessional and safety conscious environmentExcellent financial opportunities + so much more
APPLY WITH COVER LETTER AND RESUME [email protected]
JOIN CANADA’S GARAGE TODAY!!!
Automotive Parts Counter PersonsAutomotive Service AdvisorsCanadian Tire - A Great Place To Work!
Has Openings For
CANADIAN TIRE PARKSVILLE
REQUIREMENTS INCLUDE:Keyboarding and computer proficiency
Ability to work days, evenings and weekends(Sales and parts or advisor experience is an asset)
APPLY WITH COVER LETTER AND RESUME [email protected]
JOIN CANADA’S GARAGE TODAY!!!
Operator II (Wastewater)Competition No. 2015-69
The Regional District of Nanaimo has an employment opportunity for an Operator II position at the Greater
Nanaimo Pollution Control Centre.
Visit ‘Employment Opportunities’ on our website at www.rdn.bc.ca for a complete job posting
and job description.
OFFICE ADMINISTRATOR
The Museum is seeking a self-starter to provide administrative/financial support to the Manager and Board of Directors. The ideal candidate must be able to work with a variety of volunteers and adapt to changing priorities. This position requires experience in office and basic accounting practices (payments, cash receipts, payroll), proficiency in standard computer programs such as MS office, spreadsheets, email, social media and accounting information systems, preferably Simply Accounting. Hours of work are flexible but will require some Saturdays June through September.
Please apply with resume and cover letter by email to [email protected] by Friday, September 11th.
Permanent part time. 15-20 Hours per week$14.50 - $15.00 Per hour
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
CARDS OF THANKS
THE family of Michael Hanlon would like to thank the Emer-gency Services, BC Ambu-lance attendants, Errington Volunteer Firefi ghters, the RCMP, and the Coroner who attended Mike on August 10th. Your professionalism, com-passion and care was so ap-preciated. You are our angels here on earth. We would also like to thank Dr. Fridricksen, Dr. Ballie, Dr. Park, Medigas, MedPro technicians, lab and x-ray technicians who looked after him so well. To our neighbours, friends and church family, Fr. Karam, the Knights of Columbus and CWL ladies- huge hugs and God Bless. To all businesses who we dealt with over the past month, thank you for your care and compassion.
COMING EVENTS
YOU are cordially invited to the Coronation Street Social Club of Oceanside monthly meeting. A friendly social group, frivolity welcome, smiles required. QB Legion Thur 10 Sept 2pm. Call Gloria 250 752 6357
INFORMATION
Advertise in the 2016 - 2018BC Hunting
Regulations Synopsis✱Largest Sportsman’s
publication in BC.
Please call Annemarie 1.800.661.6335 or email:
CANADA BENEFIT Group - Do you or someone you know suffer from a disability? Get up to $40,000 from the Canadian Government. Toll-free 1-888-511-2250, www.canadabenefi t .ca/free-assessment
Have you or a lovedone had a stroke?
We can Help! Join The Heart and StrokeFoundation’s FREE Living
with Stroke Program.
Starts Monday,September 14, 2015
7 sessions, Oceanside Area
Please call to register 1.888.473.4636
IF YOU WANT TO DRINK, that’s your business. Want to STOP, we can help. Alcoholics Anonymous. 1-800-883-3968
NEW to the area? Call for your FREE package of info, gifts & greetings.
Pat: 250-248-7119 PVBev: 250-248-4720 PV
Kamla: 250-752-7458 QB
The most Famous Baskets in the World!
www.welcomewagon.ca
WE’RE ON THE WEBwww.bcclassifi ed.com
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
LOST AND FOUND
LOST CAT- Reward $100. Moved from Coquitlam BC on Aug 17 to Wembley Rd near Ocean Side school, she is a dark brown/grey tabby with ra-coon like tail, answers to “Kit-ty” maybe in search of her master, recently moved to Stanford Place Lodge, Parks-ville, BC. Call 250-248-3515.
LOST: SAMSUNG cell phone, in a lime green/grey case be-tween Horne Lake Caves & Qualicum. Reward even if broken. (250)618-2595
TRAVEL
GETAWAYS
INDIO, CA (Palm Springs) Furnished 2 bdrm, 2 bath va-cation home in gated commu-nity. Avail Oct or Nov. Month-ly/Weekly. Call 250-951-1827.
TIMESHARE
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.
TRAVEL
FOUNTAIN OF Youth Spa RV Resort is your winter destina-tion for healing mineral waters, fi ve-star facilities, activities, entertainment, fi tness, friends, and youthful fun! $9.95/day for new customers. Reservations: 1-888-800-0772, foyspa.com
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
GOT 10HRS a Wk to make productive? Operate a Mini-Offi ce from home.Free trainingwww.freedom-unlimited.info
HIP OR knee replacement? Arthritic Conditions/COPD? Restrictions in Walking/Dress-ing? Disability Tax Credit $2,000 Tax Credit $20,000 Refund. Apply Today For As-sistance: 1-844-453-5372.
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION!In-demand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit: Care-erStep.ca/MT or 1-855-768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career today!
PROFESSIONAL OPPORTU-NITIES: Troyer Ventures Ltd. is a privately owned energy services company servicing Western Canada. All job op-portunities include competitive wages, comprehensive bene-fi ts package and room for ad-vancement. We are accepting applications at multiple branches for: Professional Drivers (Class 1, 3), and Me-chanics. Successful candi-dates will be self-motivated and eager to learn. Experi-ence is preferred, but training is available. Valid safety tick-ets, clean drug test, and a drivers abstract are required. For more information and to apply, please visit our website at: Troyer.ca.
DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING
CLASS 3TRUCK DRIVER
(must be willing to do some labor)
are required at Locar In-dustries. Minimum 5 years experience. Competitive wages+ benefi ts. Nanaimo and area.
Fax or email resume to250-751-3314.
EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS
START A new career in Graphic Arts, Healthcare, Business, Education or Infor-mation Tech. If you have a GED, call: 855-670-9765
HAIRCAREPROFESSIONALS
LICENSED STYLIST Needed Natural Evolution is under new ownership. Apply within - Mon-Thurs French Creek Landing #303-885 Island Hwy West, Parksville, B.C. 250-954-0096
HELP WANTED
LOOKING FOR an occasional dog sitter for a Teacup Chi-huahua in the Parksville area. Please call 1-250-891-8080.
MEDICAL/DENTAL
MEDICAL Transcriptionists are in huge demand! Train with Canada’s top Medical Transcription school. Learn from home and work from home. Call today! 1-800-466-1535 www.canscribe.com or [email protected].
PICKERS
ROBBINS WREATHS Looking for Pickers... Large Volumes We Buy Greens 27 Inches Long Cedar and Douglas Fir 32/lb White Pine,Noble Fir Sil-ver Fir and Mountain Hemlock 37 /lb. Call 1 250 757 9661 Qualicum email : [email protected]
TRADES, TECHNICAL
PIPE LAYERS & LABOURERS
are required at Locar In-dustries. Minimum 5 years experience. Competitive wages+ benefi ts. Nanaimo and area.
Fax or email resume to250-751-3314.
PERSONAL SERVICES
ALTERNATIVE HEALTH
**QUALICUM Beach Well-ness** new clinic at 2nd & Primrose Registered Massage Therapy and Nutrition Consult-ing. RMT treatments introduc-tory offer: 75 mins for the price of an hour! To book call (250) 752-8711qualicumbeachwellness.com
FINANCIAL SERVICES
AUTO FINANCING-Same Day Approval. Dream Catcher Auto Financing 1-800-910-6402 or www.PreApproval.cc
PERSONAL SERVICES
FINANCIAL SERVICES
GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB.
1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com
NEED A loan? Own property? Have bad credit? We can help! Call toll free 1-866-405-1228 fi rstandsecondmortgages.ca
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
ADMINISTRATION
IN MEMORIAM
PERSONAL SERVICES
HAIRSTYLISTS
WILL CRUISE for Hair Do’s. Call Pauline (250)607-7435. 17 yrs exp. We come to you!
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
COMPUTER SERVICES
BUYDENS COMPUTERS PC Repair & Personal Tutoring.Call Kevin @ 250-240-7372.
DRYWALL
Taping/ Texturing/ Painting.Reno & Repair Specialist. 30 years of fast friendly service. Wayne 250-752-4658 QB
GARDENING
HEDGE, TREE trimming and shaping. Special rates. Call (250)240-1116.
ADMINISTRATION
IN MEMORIAM
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
fax 250.248.4655 email [email protected]
Your community. Your classifieds.
310.3535TOLL FREE 1-855-310-3535
$30GET IT RENTED!BUY ONE WEEK, GET SECOND WEEK FREE!*
SELL IT IN 3 OR IT RUNS FOR FREE!*
*Private party only, cannot be combined with other discounts.
Place your private party automotive ad with us in your community paper for the next 3 weeks for only $30. If your vehicle does not sell, call us and we'll run it again at NO CHARGE!
CONNECTING JOB SEEKERSAND EMPLOYERS
www.localworkbc.com
A28 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach NewsA28 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015, The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
W.E.WILSONENTERPRISES
THE TREE PEOPLETREE SERVICE
Free Estimates.Insured.
752-6154Serving our area since 1972.
•Top•Fall•Trim•Chip•Remove
Tree Services
752-8403 Toll Free: 1-800-841-3766
FREE ESTIMATES
Construction - Remodeling
ContractorsTree Services
250-752-46551-800-818-0840
ISA Certifi ed ArboristsTree TrimmingTree Removal
Clean-upArborists Reports
FREE ESTIMATES
TREE SERVICEHi-Rigger
Handyman
FAIR& HONEST HANDYMAN
250-667-7494
GerryDesmarais at your service•No job too small•No project too bigCall for FREE ESTIMATE.
QUALICUM/PARKSVILLE
Painting
NEED PAINTING?CALL MEREK OR ANITA
• INTERIOR• EXTERIOR • FREE ESTIMATES• QUALITY WORK
Since 2001
Tree RemovalFalling - ToppingPruning - Shrubs
Hedges – Fruit Trees Brush ChippingStump Grinding
Firewood For Sale
Tree Service
1-250-714-8454
AGTree
Service
www.agtreeservice.ca
FULL INSURANCE
SERVICE DIRECTORY Call The News250-905-0012 TODAY!
Handypersons
DONERIGHT
250-240-2450
HOMEIMPROVEMENTSERVICES
TilePaintPowerwashingCarpentryDrywall repairRoof demossingGutter & window
cleaningJunk & yard
waste removalDecks • FencingHouse & yard carePergolasWaterscapes& more!
If you need it, we can do it.
Fencing
BLAIR’SFENCING
Cedar panels,farm fencing &
chain link.Repairs-Installation
ResidentialCommercial
20 yrs. experience.Free estimates.
250-240-4615blairsfencing.comFAST, FRIENDLY, RELIABLE
QUALITY WORK AT A FAIR PRICE.
Dream Catcher AUTO Financing
1-800-910-6402www.PreApproval.cc
#7557
Quick. Easy.
SAME DAY AUTO FINANCING
ESTATE SALE:6153 Parkwood Dr,
NanaimoThur., Sept. 10, 10-3pmFri., Sept. 11, 10-3pmSat., Sept. 12, 10-1pm
Check out our website for pictures of items for saleSmartMoveServices.ca
POTTERY SALE. Sat 5th Sun 6th. 10am - 4pm..997 Wright rd.Parksville.(across from Oceanside Elementary School) Awesome Deals.
HOUSE CLEANING sale, priced to sell. September 12, 8am-12pm 201 Cedar Street, Parksville, Orley side load, hearth wood stove, new fl ush mount ceiling, vanity and pot lights, dirt devil upright vacu-um, pre lit arch, electric plug in heater, 10x10 shelter, books and lots more.
Tops Chapter #985 Huge An-nual Fundraiser Garage & Bake Sale. 111 Finholm St. N. Sept 12 (8-1) Lots of treas-ures, books etc. Come & see!
GARDENING
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
AUTO FINANCING
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
GARDENING
HANDYPERSONS
FOR GREAT Rates call Buds Handyman Service. Gutter and yard cleaning, yard main-tenance, exterior painting, junk removal. No job too small! Call Rob for your free quote today, (250)739-2223.
AUTO FINANCING
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
HANDYPERSONS
THE RAIN IS COMING! Get those last-minute little jobs done around the house before summer’s over. Electrical fi x-tures, new taps, new roof on the shed or even setting up that new computer, I can help. Call VITO: 250-240-9613.
HAULING AND SALVAGE
ALL TYPES of Hauling; gar-den waste & garden junk. Same day service. Call (250)240-1116.
ALL TYPES of hauling. Small loads, garden waste, construc-tion debris & junk. Call Ron 250-757-2094, 250-947-0572.
WAYNE’S HAUL-AWAY. Willhaul away unwanted whatev-er. Also, small engine repair. Bondable. 250-752-1639.
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
FULL 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.
PAINTING
A STROKE ABOVE PaintingLTD- Spring is Here! Give your home a fresh new look & go from drab to fab! Book early to avoid disappointment. Com-mercial & Residential. Interi-or/Exterior. WCB. Insured. Call Dave, 250-240-2310.
“LITTLE AZTEC” Painting- Professional. Good rates. Free quote. Jose’ (250)594-6611.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
PAINTING
M OXFORD Home/Commer-cial Reno’s & Painting. Decks, Sheds, Hardwood & Trim. 25 yrs exp. Quality Guaranteed. Fully insured. (250)228-5204.
POIRIER PAINTING: PHONE FOR FALL SPECIALS. Resi-dential / Commercial. Fully in-sured, Guaranteed Workman-ship, WCB, Call Dan at #250-240-3528.
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
APPLIANCES
BELLEVUE RECONDITIONED
APPLIANCES Sales & Service. FULL WARRANTY. Large Showroom
1040 BELLEVUE ROADParksville 250-248-8251
HOBBIES & CRAFTS
GRINSHEEP FIBRE Produc-tions. Felting, spinning, knitting & weaving supplies. Tues - Sat., 1 - 5 or by appt. 250-248-6306. [email protected]
GARAGE SALES
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
RECLAIMED FIR planks, ap-prox. 300 sq. ft. of beautiful fi r plank fl ooring 1 3/4” thick x 7.5” wide, various lengths, re-moved from a sunroom, exc. cond. $400 obo. Must haul away. Call 250-752-3277.
REAL ESTATE
COMMERCIAL /INDUSTRIAL
2,200FT2 Cabinet shop available for long term rent. Fully equiped with tools and equipment. Situated in the Parksville Industrial Park. $2,400 per month plus GST and Hydro. Call Vincent for more info at 250 667 2804, and Gary to view, at 250 248 2428 or cell 250 228 2428.
FOR SALE BY OWNER
5TH WHEEL- Free pad, hydro and water for light respon-sibilities. Call for more info. $25,000. Call (250)758-0121.
HOUSES FOR SALE
DON’T OVERPAY! rtmi-homes.com “Your smart hous-ing solution” Canada’s largest provider of manufactured housing. Text or call (844-334-2960). In stock 16’/20’/22’ Homes on sale now!
RENTALS
APARTMENT/CONDO
RATHTREVOR Beachfront luxury furnished 3 bdrm 2 bath condo. Monthly & avail Sept 8. $1500. Call 1-604-787-9771.
RENTALS
MOILLIET MANORClean, Quiet, Secure
Senior OrientedElevator
Community RoomWait List Available
Call 250-248-9322
COTTAGES
2 bdrm, furnished, beachfront cottage, downtown Parksville. Avail from Oct 1/15 to May 31/16.. Suit quiet, responsible people. $800/mo. Elec, heat & cable. No pets, no smokers. References req’d. 250-248-3171.
HOMES FOR RENT
BOWSER- OCEAN front 2 bdrm, 1 bath, carport, F/P, covered porch, D/W, quiet, clean, walk the beach. [email protected] Call 1-970-240-9250.
Coombs - 3 bdrm house for rent. Avail Oct 1. 3 acres, well/septic system. $1050/mo. References plz. 250-228-1615
QUALICUM BEACH- Avail Oct 15, 3 bdrms, 1.5 bath, 1600sqft, 2 guest F/P, garage, RV parking in Qualicum Woods. NS/NP. $1350+ utils. Call (250)927-7470.
OFFICE/RETAIL
Retail / Professional Location for Lease in Qualicum Beach.
865 sq.ft. good exposure on Beach Road.
Phone 250 248 6504
STORAGE
MORE SPACE FOR LESSStorage Containers Currently available:
8’ x 20’ $105. + taxes. Open storage for RVs,
cars, boats, trailers: $40. + taxes for fi rst 20’ $2 each additional foot.
250-248-7100.
SUITES, LOWER
PARKSVILLE New 2 bdrm, 5 appl’s, n/s, n/p. Ref’s $1200 p/m. Avail 09/15 250-954-3387
TOWNHOUSES
LUXURIOUS 2 bdrm, 2 bath, furnished 1400sq ft townhome. St. Andrew’s at Morning Star Golf Course. 55+. 6 mo rental. October 1 to March 30 inclu-sive. NS/NP. $2600/mo. Call (250)468-4200.
TRANSPORTATION
AUTO SERVICES
Seat Repairs, Vinyl Tops, Convertibles, Carpets,
Headliners, Motorbike Seats
250-586-2015
CARS
1998 CHEV Malibu LS. Good condition. 224,850 km. Ser-viced regularly. Asking $2,500. OBO. (250)248-5999.
1998 CHRYSTLER Concord (gold colour), auto, low mile-age, exc. cond. Fully loaded. Luxury 4dr sedan with leather seats. $2,300. (250)752-5226
MOTORCYCLES
‘02 HARLEY custom built. Engine has 35,000 km. Lots of chrome, very fancy. Health reasons $7500 or may consid-er trade cash & small RV Class E. Call 250-468-0309.
RECREATIONAL VEHICLESFOR SALE
23’, 2007 Surveyor travel trail-er, fully equipped, linens, housewares, etc. Full propane. 3,600 km. Island driven. $12,000. Call (250)738-0348.
5TH WHEEL- Free pad, hydro and water for light respon-sibilities. Call for more info. $25,000. Call (250)758-0121.
‘92 SLUMBER QUEEN 10’ camper. W: 1000 kg. excellent condition, everything works. $4500. obo. 250-954-3530
250-248-3243Make a donation to the NIWRA
587 Alberni Hwy.Parksville
NORTH ISLAND WILDLIFE RECOVERY CENTRE
The North Island Wildlife Recovery Centre
Join us September 19th for a Bear Facts presentation all about Vancouver Island black bear rehabilitation by Assistant Wildlife Manager, Julie Mackey12 noon
1240 Lef� er Rd, Errington • 250-248-8534 • niwra.org
FALL BULBSNOW IN STOCK
[email protected] 250-758-4723www.heatherhughesinteriors.ca
CUSTOM BLINDS & DRAPERIES
Heather HughesI N T E R I O R S
Re� esh the look� any room.FREE IN HOME CONSULTATIONS.
Opti-Balance Naturopathic Medicine#4-161 Fern Road West, QB • 752-2711
www.opti-balance.com
SOLUTIONS FOR LIFE
Ask us about cancer patient
support.
Dr. Tara Macart, NDNaturopathic Physician
15 years healing
Oceanside.
School of Dance
Sept. 9th: Silhouette Dance Shop will be there selling shoes and all dance supplies.
Sept. 11th: Registration for the 2015-2016 season will be available both dates or Online at:
qbschoolofdance.ca
OPEN HOUSE & REGISTRATION
DATES4–7PM
TWO
744 Primrose, Qualicum Beach(Dance Studio at Qualicum Commons)
[email protected] • 250-752 0227
The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A29
250-758-7893 or 1-800-465-7245 | [email protected] Your Land and Cruise Experts Today! Cruise Holidays Nanaimo
2834 NORWELL DRIVE NANAIMOwww.yourcruiseexperts.com
“SERVING VANCOUVER ISLAND SINCE 1991” BC Reg# 2573
September 23, 2015THE GRAND HOTEL
NANAIMO
6:30-8:30 PMSpace is Limitedso RSVP TODAY
Cruise Holidays invites you for anExclusive River & Ocean Cruise Evening
featuring river cruise leader AmaWaterways and all-inclusive ocean lineRegent Seven Seas Cruises.An AmaWaterways River Cruise is about more than the destination – it’s the journey. We invite you to take one of many European, Asian or African river cruises and see the world in luxury and comfort. Highlighting France and Myanmar. What awaits you on a Regent Seven Seas Cruise. The most exclusive luxury experience worldwide destinations.Includes: air - all tours - gratuities - alcohol, wines and specialty dining!Exclusive offers: shipboard credits and discounts up to $500.00 p.p.
SEVEN SEAS CRUISES
DO YOU HAVE LOCAL SPORTS NEWS? Contact:Tyson Taylor, Sports ReporterEmail: [email protected]: 250-951-3809&Sports Rec
KWALIKUM SOCCER
KSS centre gets new soccer coachwww.pqbnews.com
Centre for Soccer Excellence in Qualicum Beach gains experienced player and coach
Panters’ September Hockey Classic is coming
T YSON [email protected]
Kwalikum Secondary School’s Centre for Soccer Excellence will be welcoming a new face to their program, starting this upcoming school year.
Chris Merriman, of the Merriman soc-cer family out of Nanaimo, will join the ranks as a coach at the KSS Centre for Soc-cer Excellence starting this month.
Merriman, a former Simon Fraser Uni-versity Clansmen, has spent time playing the beautiful game in Europe with EIF Ekenas Football Club (Finland), as well as playing for the Mid Isle Highlanders here on Vancouver Island.
“We’re very pleased to have Chris com-ing on board with us,” KSS Athletic Di-rector Butch Gayton said. “Chris brings a wealth of knowledge in the game of soccer to our program and I think he’s going to be a great fit here.”
“He’s had a ton of experience, both as a player and a coach, so it’s going to be a great learning experience for our stu-dents.”
Merriman, who’s father Bill coaches the VIU Mariners men’s soccer team, re-cently spent time as an assistant in 2014 with the Mariners, which saw that team finish second at the national champion-ships.
He’s also been one of the head coaches, along with his brothers James and Tyler, at the Merriman Soccer Academy.
“It’s nice because the kids know who
Chris is,” Gayton said. “He’s coming into this program after playing locally and hav-ing success both nationally and interna-
tionally too.”“Lots of our athletes know Chris from
his days as a member of the Highlanders
club so it’s cool to have the kids respect him from that point of view, not only as a teacher and coach but for what he’s done on the field as a player too.”
The Centre for Soccer Excellence is in its third year and the numbers in the pro-gram are still growing. It gives students a chance to learn the ins and outs of the game on an entirely different level, from managing the strength and conditioning side of things off the field to the product on the field.
“We’ve been having good success each year,” Gayton said. “We’ve got internation-al students that are coming here interest-ed in the program, a good mixture of boys and girls of all different ages and skill levels that are excited to learn things here in the Centre for Soccer Excellence. We’re just re-ally happy that it’s been such a hit with the students here and continues to grow each year.”
With former coach and teacher Shel Brodsgaard leaving to pursue another career, the opening came and Merriman was the right candidate for the position.
“It just makes sense,” Gayton said. “His ties to VIU, his ties to the Mid Isle High-landers, we’ve had players come through KSS that have gone on to play at VIU and have played for the Highlanders as well. Shel was great for us and we loved having him here, sadly for us he had another ca-reer opportunity that was too good to pass up so that left a vacancy for us to fill and luckily for us, we found Chris.”
T YSON [email protected]
The Parksville Panters Sep-tember Hockey Classic will be taking place September 15-17 and will feature 26 teams from across North America at Oceans-ide Place.
Competing through four age categories (60, 65, 70, 75+), this will be the 15th time the classic
takes place. Starting way back in 1993, with Peter Kucey and Ed Taylor holding a tournament on behalf of the Parksville Gold-en Oldies Sports Associaition (PGOSA), the tournament was successful in it’s early years.
After a hiatus, the classic was re-introduced in 2004 with the opening of Oceanside Place in
Parksville. At that time, along with the September Classic, the January Junket was also intro-duced by the Panter organiza-tion. Senior hockey was on the rise, with both tournaments still running to this day.
“We sent out invites all over the world,” Al Grier, tournament organizer from 2004 to 2008, said.
“There weren’t too many organi-zations that had senior hockey teams with players over 60, so it was mostly North American teams that came out. These tour-naments have been a boost to the local economy over the years, bringing in close to a million dol-lars during their time here.”
The September Classic kicks
off on Tuesday, September 15, and will run through to Thurs-day, September 17.
There will be a beer garden, lots of prizes and a massive group dinner at Cuckoos restaurant in Coombs. Admission is free throughout the tournament, so come down to Oceanside Place to check out some of the action.
TYSON TAYLOR PHOTO
Tony Trozzo (with ball) is one of the KSS Centre for Soccer Excellence students that will have a new coach in Chris Merriman for the upcoming school year.
A30 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
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B.C. Cash BowlsT yson [email protected]
Playing through every imagin-able weather condition last week-end, except snow, bowlers at the Parksville Lawn Bowling Club faced lots of challenges in the B.C. Cash Bowls Tournament.
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Photo submitted by Carol buCyk
The overall winners of the B.C. Cash Bowls Triples Tournament (from left) Jim McDonald, Joyce Findlay and Bob Findlay, with Lynn Chwartacki, representative of Bowls B.C.
The Parksville Qualicum Beach News Tuesday, September 8, 2015 www.pqbnews.com A31
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A32 www.pqbnews.com Tuesday, September 8, 2015 The Parksville Qualicum Beach News
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