Date post: | 22-Jul-2016 |
Category: |
Documents |
Upload: | black-press |
View: | 238 times |
Download: | 12 times |
ESQUIMALT SENIORSWe are pleased to offer the following Non-Medical services for Esquimalt Seniors (65+)
• Housekeeping • Transportation • Light Yard Work • Light Repairs & Maintenance • Grocery ShoppingCall 250-385-2635 ext. 201 for more information
Wednesday, May 13, 2015 Proudly serving Esquimalt & Victoria www.vicnews.com
VICTORIANEWS
Chinese heritageA University of Victoria database will make Chinese Canadian artifacts accessible to everyone
Page A3
WING’SRESTAURANT
90 Gorge Rd. W
250-385-5564
Chinese Cuisine
Take Out,Eat In, and
Delivery
Open from
11 am - 10 pm
Daily
Kendra WongVictoria News
The Victoria Cannabis Buyers Club is throwing its support behind the City of Victoria’s efforts to regulate the increasing amount of marijuana shops in town.
“We’re very supportive of the direction the city is taking. This is something that the oldest of dispensaries have been asking for, for more than 20 years, some form of regulation,” said Dieter Macpherson, advisor to the Canadian Association of Medical Cannabis Dispensaries and executive director of the Victoria Cannabis Buyers Club.
During a meeting last week, city council voted in favour of moving towards a regulatory approach to marijuana-related dispensaries.
Council has directed city staff to draft new business and zoning bylaws that would regulate businesses that sell mari-juana. Amendments could include imposing annual $30,000 business licence fees specific to the type of business, regula-tions regarding signs and merchandise in storefront windows, record keeping, limits on hours of operation and regulation to minors on the premises.
The proposed regulations shouldn’t have an effect on club patients, Macpherson said.
“We have to see how the regulations end up looking. We expect that we will participate in any public discussion of forum, so that we can ensure we’re still able to serve the peo-ple that we do,” he said, adding the proposed $30,000 business licensing fees are issues he thinks council can be moved on.
PLEASE SEE: Unlicensed medical pot, Page A4
Nate Clark photo
Victoria photographer covers world’s biggest storyFormer Victoria News reporter/photographer Nate Clark has been covering the Nepal earthquake disaster since it occurred on April 25. One of the incredible picture he’s taken in Nepal is of Lalsing Gharti Magar who proudly holds his brand new son, born at the Paropakar Maternity hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal. Doctors have been delivering up to 70 babies a day since the quake – many of them in tents set up in the parking lot. For more on Clark’s work and the babies of Nepal, please turn to page A10.
Pot buyers club backs regulation
2015Submit a story about a teacher who has made a difference!Submit a story about a teacher who Submit a story about a teacher who has made a difference
NomiNate a Great teaCHerproudly sponsored by vicnews.com/contests Deadline may 31, 2015
VICTORIAVICTORIAVICTORIAVICTORIA
Chinese heritageA University of Victoria database will make Chinese Canadian artifacts accessible to everyone
Greenes Farm
Local Organic
Tomatoes1 gallon pot, Reg. $9.99
Assorted varieties
ONLY $699
More savings to come this weekend from
WildwoodOutdoor Living
Centre4660 Elk Lake Drive
next to Saanich
Commonwealth Place
250-658-5415
www.wildwoodoutdoorliving.com
A2 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, May 13, 2015 - VICTORIA NEWS
Bank of Canada Remains On Hold With Hopes of Economic Rebound
Responding to recent news reports about the IMF warning of an overheated Canadian housing market, the Chief Economist for Dominion Lending Centres, Sherry Cooper, says the prospect of a soft landing is good news for homeowners, “there is no doubt that letting some steam out of the boiling markets is a good thing because were prices to rise rapidly for too long, a nasty correction would be likely.”
Cooper, one of North America’s most respected economic experts, points out that existing home sales were down 2 percent year-over-year in January, but were still up moderately outside of Alberta. Later data suggests that in February, sales rose month-over-month as gains in Toronto and Vancouver offset faltering markets in other parts of the country. More recently, Sales of existing homes in Canada rose in March from February, led by gains in the big Toronto and Vancouver markets. Sales were even up in Calgary where sales had slowed in recent months in the wake of the oil price decline.
“With home ownership at a record high of 70 percent of households and interest rates at record lows, national sales growth will stabilize at a modest pace,” says Cooper. “However, steady demand from immigrants and non-resident purchasers in Toronto and Vancouver should continue to support housing markets. In addition, Millennials are in their fi rst-time home-buying years. While many might be priced out of the single-family home market, many will take the plunge into condos.”
On the supply side, housing starts and completions are down and are now trending slightly above household formation rates. Taking replacement demand into consideration, the current pace of overall home construction is at appropriate levels to meet long-run demand. We have also seen evidence of a recent increase in dedicated rental housing construction as institutional investors are providing increased funding in this long-overlooked area of the housing market. Condos have effectively replaced traditional apartment units and are an affordable alternative for those who are priced out of Toronto’s detached housing market. Rental vacancy rates remain at extreme lows in Vancouver and Toronto.
Cooper says the bottom line is that there is little evidence of an upcoming U.S.-style housing crash anywhere in Canada, even in the hardest hit energy-centered markets.
Dominion Lending Centres Chief Economist Says US Style Housing Crash Unlikely in Canada
As was widely expected, on Wednesday April 15, 2015 Th e Bank of Canada announced that it is maintaining its target for the overnight rate at 3/4 per cent. Th e Bank Rate is correspondingly 1 per cent and the deposit rate is 1/2 per cent. Core infl ation, at 2 percent, is a refl ection of the dampening eff ects of a slowing economy off set by the pass through eff ects of the lower dollar.
Th e Bank is hopeful that global growth will strengthen in coming months to 3-1/2 percent—consistent with their forecast in January’s Monetary Policy Report (MPR)—as a direct result of central bank rate cuts and quantitative easing in Europe. Lower commodity prices will boost growth in some countries. Th e Bank also believes that strong growth will resume in the United States after a weak fi rst quarter, which, of course, has yet to be confi rmed.
First quarter growth in Canada has been revised downward to 0.0 percent in the April MPR (from 1.5 percent growth
in the January MPR); however, the second quarter is expected to see a rebound to 1.8 percent growth, revised up from earlier expectation. Th e Bank continues to assert that, “Underneath the eff ects of the oil price shock, the natural sequence of stronger non-energy exports, increasing investment, and improving labour markets is progressing.” Th is will be aided by an improvement in the U.S. economy and the easing in fi nancial conditions.
Th ere remains a good deal of uncertainty in this sequence: While March employment in Canada improved substantially, business investment remains disappointing, manufacturing is weak—especially in the auto sector—and the improvement in trade has been less than expected.
Real GDP growth is projected to rebound in the second quarter and subsequently strengthen to average about 2 1/2 per cent on a quarterly basis until the middle of 2016. Th e Bank expects real GDP
growth of 1.9 per cent in 2015, 2.5 per cent in 2016, and 2.0 per cent in 2017.
Th e Bank also believes the risks to the outlook are balanced, an upgrade since the last policy meeting in March. As a result of this view, they judge that the current degree of monetary stimulus is appropriate and have left rates unchanged.
I am cautiously optimistic that the Bank has got it right, but I continue to believe that the risks are on the downside for the economy and infl ation. My forecast for Canadian growth this year is 1.5 percent--below the Bank’s 1.9 percent forecast. Much hinges on the U.S. economy. Th e April MPR revised down its U.S. growth forecast for this year from 3.2 percent to 2.7 percent.
1-888-806-8080 www.dominionlending.ca
QUARTERLY REPORT
Dr. Sherry CooperChief Economist for
Dominion Lending Centres
VICTORIA NEWS -Wednesday, May 13, 2015 www.vicnews.com • A3
CALL TODAY:To arrange your complimentary in-home consultation
250-480-4972 April 6 - May 31
50%OffHUNTER
DOUGLAS BLINDS & SHADES
Designer screen shades andRenditions faux wood blinds.
Affordable Living for Independent Seniors
606 Douglas St. | www.theglenshiel.bc.ca
Call250 -383 - 4164to arrange a tour.
Operated by the Non-Profit Glenshiel Housing Society
You don’t have to paya lot to get a lot!
Even on a GIS budget you get...✓ great rooms✓ great food✓ great friends
✓ lots of activitiesstarting at $1,135/mth.
All that is missing is you!
WITH THIS COUPONWITH THIS COUPON
upto
%off40
776 Spruce Avenue, Victoria, BC(off Douglas across from Canadian Tire)
250-721-FOAM (3626)www.foamshop.com
Valid until June 1st, 2015
Christine van ReeuwykBlack Press
A database is expected to launch this winter as the Chinese Canadian Artifacts Project officially finished the first phase with an announce-ment at the University of Victoria last Thursday.
Historical documents and arte-facts “hidden away” for more than a century will become information in the public realm.
“That was a terrible shame, because over the years Chinese Canadians have made a tremen-dous contribution to the economic and social development of our province,” said Teresa Wat, minis-ter of international trade and minis-ter responsible for the Asia Pacific strategy and multiculturalism. She made the announcement of phase one’s completion last week at UVic.
It is a milestone in the creation of the first computerized inven-tory of Chinese historical records and artifacts in B.C. Step one of a pilot project involving the Cumber-land Museum and Archives and the Nanaimo Museum is complete, and will inform the work to establish an online database of artifacts.
Cumberland Museum and Archives and Nanaimo Museum were chosen for the pilot project because of their regions’ histori-cally large Chinese populations. There will be 10 or more museums involved in inventories moving for-ward with a total of $75,000 allo-cated for the project.
“This will culminate in a digi-tal database that will include the inventories of Chinese Canadian artifacts from all the museums that participated in this project. The database will be available to the public and researchers alike so that everyone can access this rich cul-tural history,” said Wat. “By bring-ing attention to the artifacts held in museums across B.C., the untold stories of the Chinese Canadian experience will come to light. Many for the first time in communities throughout British Columbia.”
With the first phase complete, UVic has embarked on a new endeavour, in association with
the BC Museums Association and in partnership with the Nanaimo Museum and the Cumberland Museum and Archives, to compile a publicly accessible database of Chinese Canadian artifacts held by local museums in B.C. for use by libraries and museums.
The inventory contains cultur-ally significant artifacts includ-ing Chinese coins, scrolls, pho-tographs and historic texts. One of the most interesting finds is a 90-drawer apothecary chest used by a drugstore owner in Nanaimo’s Chinatown to store ingredients for herbal and mineral treatments in traditional Chinese medicine.
“The artifacts inventory data-base will become an invariable resource for all British Columbians. It will become part of a legacy – a legacy that will honour and reflect in a very tangible way the contri-bution made by British Columbi-ans, Chinese Canadians,” Wat said. “We can all be proud of the role we will play in helping to honour those Chinese Canadians who where dis-criminated against in the past and who helped shape B.C.’s future.”
Dr. John Price and Dr. Zhongping
Chen of the Department of History at UVic will lead CCAP, in associa-tion with Dr. Tusa Shea of the Cul-tural Resource Management Pro-gram.
“We consider this project to be a sacred trust that will allow us with our partners to highlight the resil-ience and contributions of Chinese Canadian communities and their allies in the past 160 years,” said Price. “We will build on the efforts of local museums by making acces-sible to all British Columbians the inventories of Chinese Canadian artifacts held in museums through-out the province as well as an index of historical buildings. It will also help museums and archives better identify some of the artifacts that they hold, further organize their CC collections and provide to muse-ums and libraries free of charge a publicly accessible database of the artifacts with photos, essen-tial background details and clear instructions on how to find related information on each and every one of the artifacts.”
Participating museums start with training workshops next month that focus on Chinese Cana-
dian/Asian Canadian history as well as technical dimensions of the database creation. Through-out the duration of this 10-month research project that started in February, team members will con-tinue to liaise with museums, pro-vide museum training support and supervise student involvement from the CRMP.
They expect to launch the data-base by winter.
“This project will highlight the many historical treasures that Chi-nese Canadians brought to and con-tributed to the province over the past 150 years,” said Chen, Depart-ment of History research director. “Scattered in dozens of smaller towns and cities, they will now be accessible to all British Columbi-ans and become our province’s common heritage. Hopefully more people will donate their precious heirlooms to local museums.”
The project is soliciting expres-sions of interest from local and regional museums and archives with Chinese Canadian holdings. For further information email [email protected].
UVic to resurrect Chinese Canadian artifactsDatabase will make history accessible to all residents, researchers
In May 2014, a formal apology was delivered on behalf of all members of the B.C. legislative assembly to Chinese Canadians for his-torical wrongs committed by past provincial governments.
A consultation report was released at the same time that outlined eight legacy projects, which included a recommendation to iden-tify historical and culturally important artifacts and loca-tions.
Zhongping Chen, right, professor of history at UVic, explains two scrolls, Minister Dai hongci’s calligraphy from 1910, to Richmond-Centre MLA Teresa Wat, minister of international trade and minister responsible for the Asia Pacific strategy and multiculturalism as well as Burnaby North MLA Richard Lee.
Christine van Reeuwyk
Government issues apology to Chinese Canadians
What do you think?Give us your comments by email: [email protected]. or on our Facebook page at Facebook.com/victorianews.
A4 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, May 13, 2015 - VICTORIA NEWS
NominateNominateNominateNominateNominate
OFFICIAL RULES: No purchase necessary. One valid entry per contestant. Odds of winning are dependant on the number of participants. The contest is open to all residents of British Columbia of the age of majority. One ballot per person. Valid ID may be required. Winners may be required to answer a skill testing question. Prizes must be accepted as awarded. Full contest details are available at the front desk of Black Press Victoria, open Monday through Friday 8:30am to 5:00pm and online at vicnews.com/contests. CONTEST CLOSES SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015.
Celebrate local teachers!Submit a story about one who has made a difference.
No purchase necessary. One valid entry per contestant. Odds of winning are dependant on the number
No purchase necessary. One valid entry per contestant. Odds of winning are dependant on the number
No purchase necessary. One valid entry per
of participants. The contest is open to all residents of British contestant. Odds of winning are dependant on the number of participants. The contest is open to all residents of British contestant. Odds of winning are dependant on the number
Columbia of the age of majority. One ballot per person. Valid ID may be required. Winners may be required to answer a skill Columbia of the age of majority. One ballot per person. Valid ID may be required. Winners may be required to answer a skill Columbia of the age of majority. One ballot per person. Valid
testing question. Prizes must be accepted as awarded. Full ID may be required. Winners may be required to answer a skill testing question. Prizes must be accepted as awarded. Full ID may be required. Winners may be required to answer a skill
contest details are available at the front desk of Black Press testing question. Prizes must be accepted as awarded. Full contest details are available at the front desk of Black Press testing question. Prizes must be accepted as awarded. Full
Submit a story about one who has made a difference.Submit a story about one who has made a difference.Submit a story about one who has made a difference.Submit a story about one who has made a difference.
Tell Your Great Teacher Story &You will be Entered to Win One of Five
$50 Thrifty Foods Gift Cards.
Thrifty’s Gift Card
WIN $50
vicnews.com/contests
enter at• Elementary
• Middle School
• High School
proudly sponsored by
We will recognize a teacher from each of the following grade levels:
2015
Continued from Page A1
“There’s no reason that dispen-saries shouldn’t be treated like any other business, especially when it comes to community impact,” said
Macpherson.The motion comes
in response to a staff report brought to council stating the number of unli-censed medical mar-ihuana dispensaries has increased sig-nificantly in the past year. According to
the report, there are 18 medical mar-ijuana-related shops, of which only seven are operating with a license.
The businesses have also gen-erated a number of complaints from nearby businesses, regarding increased foot traffic, odour and exposure of youth to the sale of marijuana.
Coun. Ben Isitt, who put forward the motion at council, said he hopes the regulations will not have an effect on long-standing establish-ments such as the Victoria Canna-
bis Buyers Club, but will provide a framework for regulation of the substance.
“I expect, what a regulatory sys-tem will do is provide a pathway to compliance, rather than treating these establishments as outlawed establishments,” said Isitt.
“I hope it has a minimal affect on long-standing establishments like the Cannabis Buyers Club. I think they have a proven track record of operating responsibly in the com-munity and providing a source of medicine to people experiencing pain.”
Isitt said the report by staff will be “substantial” in size and that it is a city council priority.
Mayor Lisa Helps said a town hall meeting is expected to be scheduled with community stakeholders as well.
What do you think?Give us your comments by email: [email protected]. or on our Facebook page at Facebook.com/victorianews.
Unlicensed medical pot dispensaries flourishing
Ben Isitt
P.G. TIP
ORANGE PEKOETEA BAGS
198
PRICES EFFECTIVE ONE FULL WEEKWED. MAY 13 to TUES. MAY 19, 2015
STORE HOURS: M-F 9-8:15, SAT. 9-5:15SUN & HOLIDAYS 10-5:15
We reserve the right to limit quantities
COOK ST. VILLAGE
VISIT OURWEBSITE
OXFORDFOODS.NET
271 COOK ST.
ISLAND FARMS
SOURCREAM
14979¢
199199
249
169 189149
U.S. GROWN
FRESHKALEBUNCH .................................. 98¢
U.S. GROWN NO. 1
RUSSETPOTATOES10 LB BAG .................................268
375 ML JAR
200 G PKG.
500 G TUB REG. OR LITE
398 ML TIN
100 G PKG ALL VARIETIES1 L BTL
398 ML TIN
375 G PKG
300 G PKG
175 G PKG
500 G PKG
142 G BAG ALL VARIETIES
IMPORTED
ROMATOMATOES1.94 KG ................................ 88¢
IMPORTED NO. 1
FRESHBANANAS1.26 KG ................................ 58¢U.S. GROWN
BRAEBURNAPPLES1.26 KG ................................ 58¢U.S. GROWN LARGE
NAVELORANGES1.50 KG .................................68¢
LB LB
LB
LB
LB
UNICO STUFFED
MANZANILLAOLIVES
MILANO SFOGLIATINE
PUFFPASTRIES
ROYAL CITY
FRUITCOCKTAIL
SAPORO ICHIBAN
INSTANTNOODLES
CORTINA
GRAPESEEDOIL
ROYAL CITY
BEANS inTOMATO SAUCE
MITCHELL'S
SLICEDBACONSCHNEIDER'S
NATURALSSAUSAGES
SCHNEIDER'S SLICED
CHICKENBREASTBURN'S
SLICEDBOLOGNA
DEEP RIVER
POTATOCHIPS
ALL VARIETY
SNACK PACKPUDDINGS
98¢
OCEAN'S
WILD PINKSALMON
138MINUTE MAID
ORANGEJUICE
138
BASSILI
QUICKIESENTREÉS98¢SILVER HILLS
SQUIRRELLYBREAD298
600 GLOAF
180 GTIN
FROZ250 G
4 PACK396 G
FROZCONC
295 MLTIN
FRESH
CHICKENDRUMSTICKS
199
CANADA GRADE "AA" BEEF
SHORTRIBS
489NEW ZEALAND
RIB EYESTEAK
719
CANADA GRADE "AA" BEEF
RUMP or BOTTOMROUND ROAST
419 CANADA GRADE "AA" BEEF
BOTTOMROUND STEAK
429
SKINLESS & BONELESS
CHICKENTHIGHS
399
LB
LB
LB
72'SBOX
VISIT OURWEBSITE
OXFORDFOODS
BLACK DIAMOND
CHEESESLICES
298 500 GPKG
1.36 KG3 LBTUB
924 KG
946 KG
439 KG 1078 KG
1585 KG880 KGBONELESS
169
FRESH BONELESS
PORK LOINCHOPS
orROASTS
Buy One andGet One FreeOF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE
79¢599
IMPERIAL
SOFTMARGARINE
298
LB
ALLVARIETIES
ALLVARIETIES
79¢
LB
ALLVARIETIES
VICTORIA NEWS -Wednesday, May 13, 2015 www.vicnews.com • A5
LDFotoCon
For details go to www.londondrugs.com/ldfotoconRegister for FREE today. Limited seating.
Join the conversation on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram #LDFotoCon
Visit ldfotocon by scanning this QR code with your phone or tablet.
Dates and times are subject to change. Listed vendors may not be at all event locations.
Expositions and presentations from London Drugs and
Harris Green Village911 Yates Street Victoria, British Columbia
Saturday, May 23, 201510:00am - 5:00pm
Vancouver Island’s Consumer Photography Show
londondrugs.com
CORPORATIONOF THE TOWNSHIP
OF ESQUIMALT1229 Esquimalt Road
Esquimalt, B.C. V9A 3P1250-414-7100
NOTICE OF MEETINGS
For further information, please call 250-414-7135
or our website @ www.esquimalt.ca/council
Wednesday, May 13th APC Design Review
Committee3:00 p.m.,Council Chambers
Tuesday, May 19th Advisory Planning
Commission7:00 p.m., Council Chambers
More Newson line
@vicnews.
com
An 11-year-old Victoria boy has been recog-nized as one of Canada’s top environmentalists under 25 by The Starfish Canada.
Rupert Yakelashek’s largest environmental contributions are connected with the Blue Dot Movement, a program coordinated through the David Suzuki Foundation that focuses on the importance of healthy food, water and air for Canadians.
Since discovering that Canada is not included in the list of 110 countries that have recognized environmental rights, Yakelashek organized a rally called “Rupert’s Rally for a Healthy Envi-ronment” in front of City Hall with the hope of convincing city councillors to vote in favour of a declaration recognizing the right to a healthy environment.
“Rupert is an influential change-maker on Vancouver Island,” said Kyle Empringham, co-founder of The Starfish Canada. “He’s connected with a cause that matters to him and has culti-vated a community that’s behind him.”
His mother Skye Ladell said the family is incredibly proud of his environmental advocacy and civic engagement.
Yakelashek will be recognized at The Starfish Canada’s Youth in Action event on May 19 in Vancouver.
Young environmentalist earns national honour
Daniel PalmerBlack Press
More than 600 motorcycle riders are expected to grumble through the Capital Region on June 7 for the Vancouver Island Ride to Live.
The annual ride raises prostate cancer prevention awareness and raises money for prostate research on Vancouver Island.
This year’s ride takes place on June 7 begin-ning at 7:30 a.m. in the parking lot of Fountain Tire in Langford (2924 Jacklin Rd.)
“The folks out at Fountain Tire are spon-
soring a breakfast for what we expect to be 500 or 600 guys,” said Kevin Worth, chair of the Ride to Live, at a launch event last Fri-day at Uptown Centre.
The Ride to Live will begin at 9 a.m. with five stops across the Capi-tal Region and will end at Mary Winspear Cen-tre in Sidney in time for a closing ceremony at 1 p.m.
“We’ve got lunch included for riders, too,” Worth said.
The goal of the ride is to reach men over 40 who might not be getting screened on an annual basis for pros-tate cancer using the
Prostate-Specific Anti-gen (PSA) test.
“There are guys who are at risk for prostate cancer who we want to reach. If you’re over 40, get checked once a year. That means a PSA test and a digital rectal exam. If you’re embarrassed, get over it. There’s too many people counting on you to let that stand in the way of your health,” Worth said.
Dr. Julian Lum, a researcher with the B.C. Cancer Agency, works closely with The Prostate Centre in Vic-toria. Lum has been participating with Ride to Live for the past
Prostate cancer ride set for June 7
four years and he said he’s noticed an uptick in awareness amongst men about cancer in general.
“This event lets peo-ple know that a PSA test isn’t something they should be hiding. They should be work-ing to catch the dis-ease early and should be pursuing an active
lifestyle generally,” Lum said.
Lum and his col-leagues at The B.C. Cancer Agency are cur-rently developing an immunotherapy pro-gram, which looks at finding ways to boost the natural immune system to fight cancer.
“This is a game-changer,” Lum said.
“More and more, we’re learning that if we can find a way to turn on your immune system better, we can make a major impact on sur-vival of patients with prostate cancer. We’re moving into a new era where we’re treat-ing patients very dif-ferently than we have been in the past.”
Ride to Live’s pre-mier sponsor this year is Scotiabank, who are providing eight of the 20 volunteers needed to run the event.
For more informa-tion or to register for the Vancouver Island Ride to Live, please go online to vi-ridetolive.ca.
Owen Krigolsen, left, 7, pulls up in a motorcycle sidecar at the Vancouver Island Ride to Live launch on May 1 at Uptown Centre. Kevin Worth, chair of the Vancouver Island Ride to Live, was also at the event. This year’s ride takes place June 7.
Daniel Palmer/News staff
A6 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, May 13, 2015 - VICTORIA NEWS
VICTORIANEWS
JaniceMARSHALL
GarryCROSSLEY
KellySOMERVILLE
DonDENTON
PennySAKAMOTO
Contact US
OliverSOMMER
KevinLAIRD
KendraWONG
ProductionManager
Advertising consultant
Advertising consultant
Photo Supervisor
Publisher
AssociatePublisher
Editor Reporter
The Victoria News is published every Wednesday and Friday by Black Press Ltd., 818 Broughton St., Victoria, B.C. V8W 1E4.
vicnews.comMain phone: 250-381-3484Editorial: 250-480-3265
Advertising: 250-480-3274
Classifieds: 250-388-3535
Circulation: 250-480-3285
Seems like a lot of motorists just don’t get it.
They continue to use their phone while driving.
Police in Victoria and Esquimalt continue to catch those using their phones while driving in great numbers.
There is no reason for this. The technology exists so calls can be made or taken, hands free.
And yet, the problem continues.
Distracted driving is now the second leading cause of car crashes in the province, police say, and contributes to 88 deaths annually. That’s roughly 28 per cent of all car crash fatalities in B.C.
Efforts to curb the carnage have resulted in stiffer fines, and aggressive policing campaign.
If you are caught using a hand-held device while driving (or even at a red light or stuck in traffic) you’ll pay $167, and earn three penalty points against your licence.
New drivers, or those with a learner’s licence, are prohibited from using any electronic device – even hands free.
But the rules run even deeper than that. Workers who are injured in an accident caused by their distracted driving may not be entitled to compensation. And employers who encourage, or turn a blind eye to distracted driving may be found at fault by WorkSafe BC.
The rules are clear, but it will take more than stiff penalties and rigorous enforcement to change behaviour.
We need an attitude adjustment. This is an issue about safety – ours and those around us. Smart phones are amazing devices, capable of amazing things. But too many people are discovering they also have the potential to cause great harm.
Albertans have always laughed about their long-standing reputation as a reckless, immature society.
The classic bumper sticker, now available as a T-shirt or coffee cup in several variations, states: “Please God, give us one more oil boom, we promise not to p--- it away this time.”
Now they’ve thrown out the government that finally tried to stop blowing money like a roughneck fresh out of the bush. Jim Prentice had the gall to propose raising income taxes for high wage earners, doing away with former Alberta treasurer Stockwell Day’s signature flat tax.
In response, voters have abruptly replaced the 44-year Progressive Conservative dynasty with an upstart NDP that wants to tax the rich and corporations even more. Facing an oil slump, layoffs and a huge structural deficit in Alberta’s lavish public service,
NDP premier-elect Rachel Notley is committed to a 50-per-cent increase in the minimum wage and another “review” of resource
royalties.One headline in
a national paper summed it up: “Go home, Alberta. You’re drunk.”
In the sober days after the election, a few truths emerge. Alberta hasn’t been a fiscally conservative, small-government place for a long time. Among other things, it has ratcheted up teacher and nurse
wages across the country.Alberta is broke, again, and
even the NDP is afraid to resort to a sales tax.
The minimum wage hike is a pet policy of Canada’s labour federations, which somehow remain convinced that poverty can be eliminated by state order.
On the positive side, Notley has promised to end corporate and union donations to political parties, as has already been
done federally. B.C. should be next, but the gravy train of business donations is too tempting for our nominally Liberal government.
Here at the B.C. legislature, an NDP staffer passed out cans of Orange Crush to celebrate. NDP leader John Horgan pronounced himself “ecstatic,” and hastened to assure reporters that Notley is “as competent as she sounds.”
Notley now has to sort through a caucus that includes typical NDP place-holders, college students and union staff running in faint-hope constituencies. Soon after the result, the party pulled down its website platform and candidate biographies, as Notley began phoning energy companies to reassure them Alberta will be “A-OK” on her watch.
Horgan likes to describe the “capital flight” from new NDP governments as if it’s just a show put on by big business. Plummeting stock prices and relocation of corporate offices are all staged, according to the party line, nothing to do with actual investment conditions
created by NDP policies. This fiction is all Horgan dares to say publicly, because it’s what his party base devoutly believes.
Besides, they’re only branch offices of multinational oil companies like Shell, Horgan said. He used his favourite Tommy Douglas quote, about the bad news of a big oil company leaving. “The good news is, the oil is staying here.”
B.C.’s natural gas might be staying here too. Horgan insists he supports a natural gas export industry, but his party seems more concerned with an ascending Green Party, and an urban base that believes you can run a resource economy on windmills and solar panels.
Notley supports twinning the TransMountain pipeline, while Horgan continues to insist he has no opinion on the project Adrian Dix so memorably opposed.
The Alberta NDP has a steep learning curve ahead. The B.C. NDP has a couple of years to see if the appearance of a like-minded Alberta government is a boost for them, or a cautionary tale for voters.
OUR VIEW
VIEWPOINTThe Victoria News is published every Wednesday and Friday by Black Press Ltd., 818 Broughton St., Victoria, B.C. V8W 1E4. Phone: 250-381-3484. Fax: 250-386-2624. Web: www.vicnews.com
Driven to distraction
What do you think?
The News welcomes your comments.
Letters to the editor should discuss issues and stories that have been covered in the pages of the News.
To put readers on equal footing, and to be sure that all opinions are heard, please keep letters to fewer than 300 words.
The News reserves the right to edit letters for style, legality, length and taste. The News will not print anonymous letters.
Please enclose your phone number for verification of your letter.
Send your letters to:■ Mail: Victoria News,
818 Broughton St., Victoria, B.C., V8W 1E4■ Email:
Is the Orange Tsunami headed west?
Tom FletcherB.C. Views
By Tess van StraatenContributed
Growing up in an apartment with a hard-working single mom, all I ever wanted was for us to have a house.
Not just a place to live, but a place that was ours — a home where we could paint the walls and not have to live with gold shag carpeting and noisy neigh-bours.
But my mom, who runs her own graphic design business and is incredibly responsi-ble with money, was told she couldn’t get a mortgage unless she had a husband or father to co-sign.
That experience is the rea-son I volunteer on the board of directors for Habitat for Humanity. Victoria has the second-most expensive hous-ing market in the country and home ownership is out of reach for far too many hard-working families.
Take Amanda, a single mom of two young boys. Even though Amanda has a stable job in healthcare, she’s had to uproot her family 10 times in the last 10 years because of unfit liv-ing conditions and increasingly unaffordable rents — at times spending up to 70 per cent of her income on housing. All
those moves make it hard to build lasting friendships and feel connected to the commu-nity.
Habitat Victoria is hoping to change that by building a four-plex for Amanda and three other deserving families in Saanich. They’ll all receive interest-free loans from Habitat and mortgage payments will be based on income so they’re manageable.
“I never thought I’d be in a position to own my own home and provide this level of security for my family,” says Amanda. “My oldest son’s gone to four different schools already so being able to put down roots and have stability is a dream come true.”
Construction’s now under-way on the four-plex and instead of a down payment, Amanda is putting in 500 volunteer hours of ‘sweat equity’. Donated sup-plies help reduce construction costs, but $100,000 is needed to build Amanda’s home so Habi-
tat launched the ‘100k in 100 days’ campaign.
The campaign, which comes to an end this month, is challenging 100 women to donate $1,000 each to help give Amanda a hand up, not a hand out. So far, more than 65 women have joined — includ-ing Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps, who is passionate about build-ing affordable housing.
“What I love about Habitat is its ‘pay-it-forward’ model,” says Helps. “Mortgage payments go into a fund to help build the next Habitat home so more families can benefit.”
After growing up dreaming of having my own home, and for-tunate to now have one to raise my children in, I’m also trying to pay-it-forward to help other families build a better future. Will you join me?
Find out more at: www.habi-tatvictoria.com/100
Tess Van Straaten is a TV journalist and feature writer.
Helping build a better future 100 K in 100 days challenge
Habitat for Humanity Victoria is asking women to join its challenge to raise $100,000 in cash required to fund a home for a local single mom named Amanda and her two boys aged three and 12. So far, they’ve raised more than $64,000. The challenge wraps up at the end of May. For more informa-tion, call Nancy Taylor at 250-480-7688 ext. 105.
VICTORIA NEWS -Wednesday, May 13, 2015 www.vicnews.com • A7
HUGE DISCOUNTS ON ALL NEW & USED VEHICLESUp to $8,000 in Discounts Finance from 0% on select modelsFinance from 0% on select models
JPToyotaVictoria.com | 3050 Douglas Street, Victoria, BC | (250) 386-3516
HUGE DISCOUNTS ON ALL NEW & USED VEHICLESUp to $8,000
2015 Corolla Sport
LEASE FROM
$234 monthly + tax
LEASE RATE
0.99%/60 months 20,000kms/year
$0Downpayment
WAS $22,055 NOW PURCHASE FOR CASH $19,805SAVINGS $2,250 (net of all rebates)
LEV $8,646 plus tax Stock #150564 Model #BURSEC AM
2015 Tundra CrewMax Platinum 4X4
LEASE FROM
$595monthly + tax
LEASE RATE
1.99%/60 months 20,000kms/year
$4,000Downpayment + tax
WAS $57,215 NOW PURCHASE FOR CASH $49,215 SAVINGS $8,000 (net of all rebates)
LEV $20498 plus taxes Stock#150911 Model#AY5F1T AM
Dealer number 8353. Offers are limited to month of May, and may change without notice. Taxes, licensing and fees are extra including documentation fee of $395. Vehicles may not be exactly as shown. See Jim Pattison Toyota Victoria for complete details.
2015 Prius C
LEASE FROM
$273monthly + tax
LEASE RATE
2.99%/60 months 20,000kms/year
$0Downpayment
WAS $23,095 NOW PURCHASE FOR CASH $22,095SAVINGS $1,000
LEV $8,632 plus tax Stock#150779 Model#KDTA3P AM
8,0008,000
2015 Prius C
Workshop 101: Exclusively for Women
Understanding FinancesIn Today’s Market
“At some point in their lives, 90% of women will
be solely responsible for their � nances”.1
1 Bureau of Census
Join Investment Advisor and Certi� ed Retirement Specialist, Pam Katunar
BERWICK ROYAL OAKThursday, May 21st - 9:00 am - 12:00 pm
RSVP: 250-419-4012Limited Seating for this Workshop
A8 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, May 13, 2015 - VICTORIA NEWS
2 2 n d A n n u a l
Dobber Golf ClassicJune 5th – Cedar Hill Golf Course
$110 Entry Fee includes
• Golf• Roast Beef Dinner • Prize for every Golfer Public Welcome! Register at www.gvshof.ca/news
The “Dobber” is held in memory of Ken Dobson, beloved sportscaster with CFAX 1070 and one of the tournament’s founders raising funds to support the work of the Greater Victoria Sports Hall of Fame. Register early as this event typically sells out!
James BayCommunity Marketjamesbaymarket.com547 Michigan StreetSaturdays: May 2 - Oct 10 9am - 3pmHomemade, Handmade, Homegrown.Fresh local produce, specialty foods, award winning artisans, great live music & lots of parking! Come support your Local farmers, food producers and artisans and share in the fun!
Pondswww.pondsvictoria.com250.544.0806Contact Dave to book yourPond Consultation todayFull maintenance contracts available. Let us change your backyard into your favourite vacation spot. Specializing in Pond Supplies, Pond Installation andPond Maintenance. You Dream it, We will Build it!
4
Shoppers HomeHealthCare1561 Hillside Ave. 250-370-2984 Hours: Mon-Fri 9:00am-6:00pmSat 9:30am-5:30pmClosed Sun and Stats MASTECTOMY: Three certi� ed � tters on staffFull line of bras and prosthetics.COMPRESSION STOCKINGS: Four certi� ed � tters on staff. Outside � ttings available in your home or facility. Please phone to make an appointment.
3
Diamond Optical Eyecarediamondeyecare.ca1964 Fort Street 250-590-2932 Hours: Mon-Fri 9:30 - 5:30 Sat 10- 5We take great pride in our expert staff of Optometrists, Onsite Lab and Eye Ware Technicians, we also take pride in our expert staff, when it comes to frame and lens construction. We understand that eye wear is more than fashion. It’s also function. Take a look at our diverse selection of fashionable eye glasses and contact lenses.Our Oak Bay location boasts the best price for an eye exam in the area. Book an appointment today.
Aero Furnace, Duct &Chimney Cleaningaeroservices.ca 250-479-0090Hours: By Appointment Please Improve the Air Quality in YOUR Home and Breathe Easier! $30.00 off Furnace & Air Ducts Cleaning today! Cannont be combined with any other offer. Expiry June 30, 2015• Chimney Sweeping & Chimney Repair• HRVs Cleaning (Heat Recovery Ventilation) • Dryer Vent Cleaning • WETT Inspections
5
6Capiliavictoria.capilia.ca2553 Quadra St. • 250.590.5772Hours: Tues-Fri 9:30-4, Sat 10-2Evenings by appointment “LOSING YOUR HAIR”We can help!! • Dry or oily dandruff • Itchiness • Dry, brittle or dull hair • Psoriasis or eczema; • Male pattern baldness
1
Saltspring Soapworkssaltspringsoapworksvictoria.com575 Johnson Street 250.386.7627 Hours: Mon-Sat. 10am-6pmThurs. 10am -7:30 Sun 10am -5pmExperience our complete line of handmade natural soaps, skin & body care, hair products, baby care and more! Rich in organic ingredients and natural botanicals. All Canadian - A true Saltspring Island experience!
7
8
8Reasons to SHOP inVICTORIA!
The Flag Shopflagshop.com822 Fort St. Victoria 250 383-3524 Hours: Mon-Fri 10 am - 5 pmShare your pride! We carry a wide range of flags and banners as well as custom flags, custom banners, flag poles, tents/canopies, banner stands, promotional products and so much more.
2
Kevin LairdVictoria News
The federal govern-ment’s glacial financial
support for thalido-mide survivors has left Victoria MP Murray Rankin fuming.
Recently Rankin
voiced his concern during question period in Parliament and then went on CBC’s Power and Politics and hotly
debated Conservative MP and parliamentary secretary to the prime minister, Paul Calandra.
“Thalidomide vic-
tims came to me yes-terday (April 28) and they were in tears say-ing things were not going well and the gov-
MP seeks clarity on thalidomide survivors pay
COMMUNITYNEWSIN BRIEF
Victoria man wins national entrepreneur award
A Victoria man is the recipient of national entre-preneur award for his leading-edge work to help understand the world’s oceans.
Clayton Hiles launched Cascadia Coast Research Ltd. in 2012, a company that focuses on providing physical ocean environment research services such as assessing marine renewable energy technologies, providing design criteria for coastal structures and projecting the potential for extreme events.
Hiles will be presented the Mitacs Entrepreneur Award in Calgary on May 12.
Johnson Street Bridge delayed The completion date for the Johnson Street Bridge has been pushed another 15 months to June 2017, according to the project director.
During the second quarterly update last week, Jonathan Hugget told council that they are care-fully inspecting the type of steel being used to construction the bridge.
This comes after a host of concerns were raised about the type of steel being used late last year. According to the first quarterly progress report, the lifting lugs weren’t being built to design.
ernment was not giv-ing straight answers,” Rankin said.
“I took the minister [Rona Ambrose] at her word that things were going well.”
Federal MPs from the ruling Conservatives and opposition parties voted unanimously on Dec. 1 to extend “full support” to Canada’s victims on an NDP motion put forward by Rankin and Vancouver MP Libby Davies
The federal govern-ment sent lump-sum cheques to thalidomide survivors last month for $125,000 – half of what the Thalidomide Victims Association had asked for – but has provided few answers about what the group considers the far more crucial long-term sup-port.
The Harper govern-ment has pledged “up to $168 million” in medi-cal assistance paid out as annual compensa-tion.
The group wants the money invested in a trust, based on a British model, then paid out in annual sums of $75,000 to $150,000 depending on the victims’ degree of disability.
“They will get what’s promised to them,” Calandra said.
“By the new year we want to be in a position to offer very specialized benefits to each indi-
vidual. You can’t really do one system fits all on this particular topic because each victim has different medical needs.”
But the matter is pressing for the asso-ciation and Rankin: five months ago there were 97 thalidomide survi-vors living in Canada, today just 94 remain.
Victims of thalido-mide are struggling with growing physical pain as their disabled bod-ies age, forcing many of them to abandon jobs and fight to maintain their independence.
The victims, whose mothers were pre-scribed the federally approved drug for insomnia and morning sickness, were born with partial or missing limbs, blindness, deaf-ness and internal organ damage.
“I’m trying to do my very best for these peo-ple because I find their situation so poignant, so heart-wrenching,” Rankin said.
Rankin fears the Harper government won’t move forward on compensation until after this fall’s federal election, and he doesn’t consider that an option. He wants a solution before Parliament takes summer leave.
“I’m not going to rest. They need action now,” he said.
VICTORIA NEWS -Wednesday, May 13, 2015 www.vicnews.com • A9
1-800-438-2142
Get Peace of Mind and Independence with Medical Alert Monitoring!
Round-the-clock monitoring with a Medical Alert system not only provides you with peace of mind, it also assures you and your loved ones that you’ll never be alone. With the Medical Alert system, a simple button device can be worn anywhere —even in the shower. If emergency help is needed (medical, fire or police), push the button and a certified operator responds immediately.
Call Now Toll FREE!
Equipment Included(At no extra cost!)
No Contracts No Activation Fee
FREE Equipment Easy to Set Up and Use
This Button Saves Lives!(And for About $1 a Day!)
Advertisement
VisionMatters Healthy Eyes. Doctor Delivered.
Dr. Stephen Taylor
250-361-4444
250-361-4478
Dr. Rachel Rushforth*
Dr. Neil PatersonDr. Suzanne Sutter
Optometrists
250-595-8500
100-2067Cadboro Bay Rd.
250-995-0449106-1505 Admirals Rd. (near Thrifty Foods)
www.admiralsvision.ca
*Denotes Optometric Corporation250-744-2992
www.saanichoptometry.ca
Dr. Victor J. Chin*Dr. Charles Simons* & Dr. Daisy Tao*
119-3995 Quadra @ McKenzie (in Saanich Centre)
*Denotes Optometric Corporation
Dr. Paul NeumannOptometrist
250-544-2210#1 - 7865 Patterson Rd. Saanichton
CentralSaanich
OPTOMETRY CLINIC www.cseyecare.com
www.oakbayoptometry.com
www.mayfairoptometric.com
DR. TREVOR PEDDLE *DR. CHARLES SIMONS *
250-361-4478
Dr. Erick Vesterback, O.D., BSc
Tips for pet eyecareLike humans, our pets are also prone to
common eye problems such as glaucoma, cata-racts, and corneal ulcers or lacerations (most of-ten resulting from scratches). For instance, most dogs suffer from farsightedness or astigmatism, but since they normally just fetch, and do not read newspapers, we rarely hear them complain. Prop-er eye health care is just as important for animals as it is for humans.
Here are some tips for keeping your pet’s eyes in top form: keep your pet from sticking its head outside car windows; flying debris and dust par-ticles can cause eye injury or irritation. Regularly check for persistent eye discharge or inflam-mation. If your pet displays these symptoms, or demonstrates peculiar behavior such as trying to rub its eyes, or bumping into objects, you should have your pet’s eyes checked by a veterinarian. Two legged pets that talk still need to see the Op-tometrist!
Kevin LairdVictoria News
The federal govern-ment’s glacial financial
support for thalido-mide survivors has left Victoria MP Murray Rankin fuming.
Recently Rankin
voiced his concern during question period in Parliament and then went on CBC’s Power and Politics and hotly
debated Conservative MP and parliamentary secretary to the prime minister, Paul Calandra.
“Thalidomide vic-
tims came to me yes-terday (April 28) and they were in tears say-ing things were not going well and the gov-
MP seeks clarity on thalidomide survivors pay
COMMUNITYNEWSIN BRIEF
Victoria man wins national entrepreneur award
A Victoria man is the recipient of national entre-preneur award for his leading-edge work to help understand the world’s oceans.
Clayton Hiles launched Cascadia Coast Research Ltd. in 2012, a company that focuses on providing physical ocean environment research services such as assessing marine renewable energy technologies, providing design criteria for coastal structures and projecting the potential for extreme events.
Hiles will be presented the Mitacs Entrepreneur Award in Calgary on May 12.
Johnson Street Bridge delayed The completion date for the Johnson Street Bridge has been pushed another 15 months to June 2017, according to the project director.
During the second quarterly update last week, Jonathan Hugget told council that they are care-fully inspecting the type of steel being used to construction the bridge.
This comes after a host of concerns were raised about the type of steel being used late last year. According to the first quarterly progress report, the lifting lugs weren’t being built to design.
ernment was not giv-ing straight answers,” Rankin said.
“I took the minister [Rona Ambrose] at her word that things were going well.”
Federal MPs from the ruling Conservatives and opposition parties voted unanimously on Dec. 1 to extend “full support” to Canada’s victims on an NDP motion put forward by Rankin and Vancouver MP Libby Davies
The federal govern-ment sent lump-sum cheques to thalidomide survivors last month for $125,000 – half of what the Thalidomide Victims Association had asked for – but has provided few answers about what the group considers the far more crucial long-term sup-port.
The Harper govern-ment has pledged “up to $168 million” in medi-cal assistance paid out as annual compensa-tion.
The group wants the money invested in a trust, based on a British model, then paid out in annual sums of $75,000 to $150,000 depending on the victims’ degree of disability.
“They will get what’s promised to them,” Calandra said.
“By the new year we want to be in a position to offer very specialized benefits to each indi-
vidual. You can’t really do one system fits all on this particular topic because each victim has different medical needs.”
But the matter is pressing for the asso-ciation and Rankin: five months ago there were 97 thalidomide survi-vors living in Canada, today just 94 remain.
Victims of thalido-mide are struggling with growing physical pain as their disabled bod-ies age, forcing many of them to abandon jobs and fight to maintain their independence.
The victims, whose mothers were pre-scribed the federally approved drug for insomnia and morning sickness, were born with partial or missing limbs, blindness, deaf-ness and internal organ damage.
“I’m trying to do my very best for these peo-ple because I find their situation so poignant, so heart-wrenching,” Rankin said.
Rankin fears the Harper government won’t move forward on compensation until after this fall’s federal election, and he doesn’t consider that an option. He wants a solution before Parliament takes summer leave.
“I’m not going to rest. They need action now,” he said.
‘Next year is going to be a tough year, says school board chairKendra WongVictoria News
The Greater Victoria School District was able to balance this year’s budget, but may have to make more cuts next year, says the board chair.
“Next year is going to be a tough year, it’s going to be a much more different year,” said board chair Edith Loring-Kuhanga.
“We’re already looking that it’s going to be a tough year because there aren’t any savings unless of course we get some one-time savings.”
The board predicted a roughly $8.4-million shortfall and were able to apply a carry forward of roughly $8.3 million to apply against the 2015/2016 deficit, which included
additional revenues and savings from the previous budget.
For example, the winter was not as cold, so the utilities budget had less pressure.
“For us, we had a carry forward that was used in part to balance [the budget],” said Debra Laser, secretary-treasurer for the district.
In order to make up for the remaining $66,000 deficit, trustees voted to eliminate an English Language Learning assistant, saving the district just over $52,000, and reduced its administrative supplies budget by $13,000 at a special board meeting in late April.
“Over the last few years we’ve been directed properly and had some real good input and we were looking at forecasting for the last couple of years, looking at fiscal management and being really prudent with our resources
and we were able to move [the carry] forward in that way,” said Loring-Kuhanga.
Unlike many Lower Mainland school districts that are being forced to cut things such as school buses from the budget, the board did not have to make any drastic changes this year.
But unless they can find extra savings, the $8.5-million shortfall is
something they could face again next year.
“It’s going to be a tough year unless we get more resources from the government,” said Loring-Kuhanga.
It is too early to speculate what could be cut from next year’s budget.
Each year, school districts are required to balance the budget by June 30.
School budget balanced but future not so rosy
We can’t guarantee someone won’t spill the beans...
but we can guarantee we have the lowest price on
these beans.
Heinz Baked Beans 398 mL
3 days only
GIF
T C
AR
D $10
FREE $10
GIFT CARD
POINTSPOINTSREWARDS
effective Wednesday, Thursday & Friday, May 13, 14 & 15, 2015.
3000valid inVictoria & Sidneyonly
Fort & Foul Bay: 1950 Foul Bay Road • Tillicum: 3170 Tillicum Rd • Saanich: 3510 Blanshard St University Heights: 3958 Shelbourne St • Westside Village: 172 Wilson St • Sidney: 2345 Beacon Ave
Our new Always Lowest Guarantee ensures our stores always have the best prices*.
• we price check Every week, we check the competition’s prices on 850+ items you buy the most to make sure we’re lowest—guaranteed, or it’s FREE.**
• we price match If you see a lower advertised price for your favourite item, bring in the ad and we’ll match it*.
➜.99ea
Spend only $100† & receive Spend only $75† & earn
Always Lowest Guaranteed and sale off ers require the use of More Rewards card.* If a major competitor within our geographical trade area off ers a lower advertised price on any identical grocery item (brand, size, etc.) we will match the competitor’s price only during the eff ective date of the competitor’s advertisement. ‘Major competitors’ and ‘geographical trade areas’
are determined solely by us and are based on a number of factors which can change from time to time. Excludes ‘multi-buys’ (eg: 2 for $4), ‘spend x get x’, ‘Free’, percentage discounts and discounts obtained through loyalty programs. You must bring in the competitor’s advertisement to our customer service desk prior to the expiry of the advertisement in order for us to provide you with the price match. We reserve the right to limit quantities.
** Off er entitles customer to one (1) item per product family free of charge. Additional items will be at competitor’s advertised price. Off er not available to team members of the Overwaitea Food Group or their immediate family members or persons living in same household. A list of the 850+ items covered by the guarantee is available at saveonfoods.com or at customer service in participating stores.
† Limit one Spend/Receive off er per single grocery purchase. Excluding Lotto, tobacco, gift cards, prescriptions, clinics, diabetes care, tickets, charities, bus passes, postage stamps, deposit & recycle fees, rewards and taxes, where applicable.
A10 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, May 13, 2015 - VICTORIA NEWS
Life goes on at the tiny Paropakar Maternity Hospital in Kathmandu, where doctors have been delivering up to 70 babies a day since the April 25 quake killed
thousands. “The babies are going to come whether
we like it or not,” said Dr. Jageshwer Gautam, hospital director.
“At the moment of the first tremor we were performing caesarean sections. We brought the patients outside and successfully completed the surgeries. These doctors and nurses never left the patients.”
Because of the danger of building collapse, improvised operating rooms have been erected in the parking lot in front of the hospital. About 20 women sit on thin mats with their husbands and families gathered around them, attempting to provide comfort. Only women experiencing complications go inside the hospital, which is actually preferable to most.
“Both the staff and the patients do not want to stay in the ward. They want to be outside in the open because of fear of another earthquake,” said Dr. Gautam.
Inside the emergency room it’s chaos; the smell of sweat and urine is overpowering. Nurses run around frantically trying to monitor dozens of patients at once. Cries of women in great pain – sometimes shrieks – reverberate through the hospital hallways.
Days of waiting in the tents have begun to take a toll on the families outside and many feel they are being ignored.
Shiva Sedai, a farmer, and his pregnant wife travelled from a small village 80 kilometres from Kathmandu on April 23. They still haven’t seen a doctor.
“We spend hours filling out forms and nobody talks to us,” said Sedai. “They give us no information. I have been here four days. We’re just sitting here.”
Sedai learned through phone calls with family that his entire village was destroyed.
“One hundred houses fell down and my brother was injured. All my animals are dead. Life will be hard now.”
It’s a small hospital, and Dr. Gautam says most of the care must be focused on women who are about to deliver. He also notes with
some pride that his staff are disregarding their own families in order to bring the babies into the world. Some have even lost family members or have had their homes destroyed.
“We’ve managed with great difficulty. There has been huge destruction. It’s a national problem, and a local one. Houses are destroyed, even (the hospital staff) are living in tents; it’s a very difficult situation that is applicable to all of us.”
It should be noted that not all the scenes at the hospital are tragic. Outside, half a dozen proud fathers embrace their new sons and daughters with tears in their eyes. Grandmothers, aunts and cousins hold out their arms and plead for a turn with the newborn, desperate to have another look at their little fat faces, but the dads just won’t let them go.
Nate Clark is a Thailand-based photojournalist and former student at Victoria’s Western Academy of Photography.
Since the school closed a year ago, Nate worked for a short time at Black Press – contributing to Monday Magazine, Victoria News and Saanich News – before moving to Thailand a week after the Thai Army launched its coup d’état.
Nate’s dream has always been to tell a world story. His heroes are the great storytellers like James Nachtwey and Victoria’s Farah Nosh. Like them, he wants change the world with an astonishing still image, but before he could book a flight to Iraq he would need a lot more experience.
Nate bought a 110cc Kawasaki motorcycle and travelled alone through Thailand, Laos and Cambodia, clocking over 14,000 kilometres in nine months. He photographed everything, but focused on the local people living in the rural areas – often impoverished and living under corrupt governments. His portfolio began to grow.
Nate bought his ticket to Nepal on April 19. He planned to buy a cheap motorcycle, ride through the Himalayas and shoot village life. Halfway there, in Kuala Lumpur, his phone buzzed and he found himself en route to the biggest news story in the world.
Victoria photogin the midst of Nepal Eartquake
Nate Clark
Doctors at Paropakar Maternity Hospital in Kathmandu have been delivering up to 70 babies a day since the quake – many of them in tents set up in the parking lot. “There is no space in the delivery room and the babies are going to come whether we like it or not,” said Dr. Jageshwer Gautam, hospital director.
Delivery in a disaster zoneStory and photos by Nate Clark
Durbar Square, Kathmandu. Self-portrait by journalist Nate Clark.
The 2015 Nepal earthquake, which killed more than 8,000 people and injured more than 16,000, occurred on April 25, with a magnitude of 7.8.
VICTORIA NEWS -Wednesday, May 13, 2015 www.vicnews.com • A11
Amazing is bornAmazing is bornN O W O P E N
JPLexusVictoria.com | 623 Finlayson Street, Victoria, BC | (250) 386-3700
In our 25th year as an original Lexus retailer, we’ve crafted a higher level of luxury. Our new name is the perfect occasion to unveil a stunning new Platinum Standard Lexus facility. Visit our beautiful
showroom for the latest in amazing design and Japanese craftsmanship. Then take the elevator to our L-finesse Mezzanine Lounge to enjoy premium beverages, business
services or music from our grand piano. Come see why Jim Pattison Lexus is a testament to elegance and refinement. Amazing.
LEASE PAYMENT$515*DOWN PAYMENT $4,200PAYMENT INCLUDES $3,500 F SPORT CREDIT.*PLUS TAX, FEES, INS, LEV OF $29,700 PLUS TAXES
LEASE APR
1.9%39 MONTHS
F SPORT CREDIT$3,500
2015 RX 350 F SPORT
Offers end May 31st.
DL#40155
MODEL BK1BAVBMSTK #L15131
Kendra WongVictoria News
For Victoria’s Harmony Lichty, the phrase practice makes perfect is one she lives by.
Over the past decade, Lichty has trav-elled to South Asia a dozen times to study ashtanga yoga from Sri K Pattabhi Jois, who started the original practice in Mysore, India in 1948.
Ashtanga yoga is a specific discipline that encompasses a series of complex postures, internal self-practices such as cleanliness, telling the truth and living a moderate life-style, concentration, meditation and breath-ing control.
Certification is only awarded to students who have studied under Jois or his grand-son for more than 10 years and have mas-tered the highest series.
After 11 years of studying yoga and mak-ing fundamental lifestyle changes, Lichty has become the first woman in Victoria (there are only 17 women and 30 men in the world) to earn her certification in ashtanga yoga.
It has become a way of life for Lichty and her husband Jeff, who practice six days of the week.
“It helps me to feel good in my day. It helps me mentally to feel more balanced and I feel more happy on the days that I’m practicing compared to the days that I don’t,” she said. “It’s very healthy. My body
feels good — it’s strong and flexible.”Lichty’s journey to become a certified
ashtanga yoga instructor began in 2004 with her first trip to India to study under Jois.
Students practice at 3:45 a.m. for several hours, learning new postures and in the afternoon move on to classes such as cook-ing, art, sitar playing or learning sanskrit.
“It’s a pretty big commitment to go to India and spend a good amount of time there. Your whole life has to revolve around saving up for that and the priority to go there and do that,” said Lichty.
It is a three- to four-month-long trip she has become familiar with, having travelled to India for 12 years with the exception of 2001 when her son was born.
“She’s able to put her mind to a task and goal and complete it no matter what,” said Jeff of Harmony’s certification. “That’s a good skill to be able to understand a goal, put your mind to it and complete the goal.”
According to Lichty, it is not just the abil-ity to complete complex postures, but it is a self-realization and dedication that has been the key to her success in the practice.
“That’s when yoga starts to change peo-ple’s lives because they’re committed to themselves and to a daily discipline and a teacher,” she said.
Lichty and her husband now run an ashtanga yoga studio (203-560 Johnson St.), the first of its kind in Victoria. For more info, visit ashtanga-yoga-victoria.com.
Perfection in yogaHarmony Lichty earns international distinction in ashtanga yoga
Harmony Lichty in the vrschikasana “scorpion pose” at the Ashtanga Yoga Studio in Victoria.
Victoria Volunteers
Want to volunteer? Opportunities are available through these positions at Volunteer Victoria: 250-386-2269 or VolunteerVictoria.bc.ca.
•••The Swan Lake Nature Sanctuary is celebrating 40 years
this year and is need of enthusiastic volunteers willing to be outdoors for a Family Fun Day May 23. Volunteers are needed to help with logistics, parking to help guests find parking spots, kids’ activities, photo booth and much more.
Victoria Symphony Splash on Aug. 2 requiresmore than 300 volunteers for numerous tasks before and during event day. P
MS Society requires volunteers for special events in Victoria, including May’s Carnation Campaign (contact [email protected]) and the Cowichan Valley Grape Escape Bike & Wine Tour July 4 and 5 (contact Lily at [email protected]).
The Salvation Army ARC needs a social activity volunteer to lead and participate in evening and afternoon programs to create a social outlet and positive living experience for residents and clients, including game nights, movie nights, music nights, conversation and book clubs, etc.
The Royal B.C. Museum seeks volunteers for the duration (May 13 to Oct. 31) of the new feature exhibition, Gold Rush! Eldorado in B.C. Exhibit docents and exit survey volunteers needed.
Oak Bay Volunteer Services seeks volunteers to spend time assisting individuals of all ages, mostly seniors, on a one-to-one basis, including drives for medical appointments, shopping, etc., visits and walks weekly. To make a positive difference in the lives of others, call Kelsey at 250-595-1034.
A12 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, May 13, 2015 - VICTORIA NEWS
You have three great options to get your latest recycling schedule, which runs from May 1, 2015, through April 2017:
• Download a schedule from the CRD website and print it at home.
• Request to have a schedule mailed to you. • Download our free smartphone app to receive your schedule or subscribe for collection reminders via text message, email, voicemail or Twitter.
The choice is yours. For details visit www.crd.bc.ca/bluebox or call the CRD Hotline at 250.360.3030.
www.crd.bc.ca
Three ways to go blue
DIAMOND EYECARE 1964 Fort St., Oak Bay: 250.590.2932
DIAMOND OPTICAL VICTORIA1320 Douglas St., Victoria: 250.380-6919
Welcomes Dr. John Poonfor EYE EXAMS
Please call for an appointment
250-590-7499
Foul Bay Professional Building, 1964 Fort Street
DIAMOND EYECARE
DIAMONDOPTICAL EYECARE
DIAMONDOPTICAL EYECARE
DIAMONDOPTICAL EYECARE
DIAMONDOPTICAL EYECARE
DIAMONDOPTICAL EYECARE
DIAMONDOPTICAL EYECARE
50%off ALL FRAMES
WHY WAIT? WE CAN HELP NOW!Home & Hospital Visits
COME ON IN FORYOUR FREE CONSULTATION!
Walk-In Denture ClinicHome & Hospital VisitsHappiness is
a beautiful smile! Conrad De Palma Denturist
(250) 595-16653581 Shelbourne Street
www.walk-indentureclinic.ca
Your guide to Victoria home resources
6680 Mirah Rd. Saanichton 250-652-4612
MORE THAN JUST SCREENS!
PNR Screens Ltd.
We Sell & Install Vinyl Windows,
Solarium Screens& Replace Broken
Sealed UnitsFREE ESTIMATES
OUR TEAM TAKESCARE OF ALL YOUR RENOVATION NEEDSNEEDSNEEDS
250.812.3942 watersedgerenovations.com
• Oil Tanks • Soil Remediation• Licensed to Transport
Hazardous (Tank) Waste• Removal and Installation of
Above Ground Tanks• Underground Tank
Abandoning & Removing• WCB Con� ned Space
Certi� cation
• Double Walled Tanks Available• ROTH, TIDY & GRANBY Tanks
Available• Free Estimates / Underground
Tank Locating • Fully Insured for Pollution &
Liability • Environmental Consultant
Available Upon Request
www.victoriatankservice.caWCB
REGISTERED
Certi� cation Available Upon Request
“Tanks A Lot Victoria!”
Oil Tanks • Soil Remediation Double Walled Tanks Available
Insurance Liability
OIL TANKS
www.victoriatankservice.cawww.victoriatankservice.ca REGISTERED
250-385-8221
Baroque play music gemsPerforming gems of Baroque chamber music, the
Victoria Baroque Players will end their fourth sea-son May 23 in Victoria.
Four core members of Victoria Baroque Players – flautist Soile Stratkauskas, violinist Christi Meyers, cellist Martin Bonham and harpsichordist Michael Jarvis – will give audiences a rare chance to hear Bach’s and Telemann’s chamber music played on 18th-century instruments.
The program includes Johann Sebastian Bach’s sonata for flute and obligato harpsichord BWV 1030, sonata for violin and obligato harpsichord BWV 1015, and Georg Philipp Telemann’s Paris quartets in D major TWV 43:D3 and E minor TWV:e:4.
“Bach wrote magnificent grand-scale works, but in his chamber music a wonderful intimacy and transparency shines through,” Stratkauskas said.
“His sonata in B minor for flute and obligato harpsichord demonstrates ingenious architectural contrapuntal writing and is one of the greatest and most monumental works in the flute repertoire.”
The other work by Bach in the program is Sonata in A major, will feature VBP’s violinist and Victoria Symphony’s assistant concertmaster Christi Mey-ers.
The Victora concert begins at 7:30 p.m. at Church of St. John the Divine, 1161 Quadra St.
For ticket information: 250-652-0116 or victoria-baroque.com.
Contributed
Flautist Soile Stratkauskas will perform with the Victoria Baroque Players on May 23.
Ensemble heads to Scotlandcome and play.
“A lot of these kids haven’t left the country, ever, or maybe even the province. It’ll be a life-changing experience to go halfway across the world to perform and meet other people and to go to the “mecca” of fiddle playing.”
Hernandez, who now has an international career and tours with her band “Fretlass,” is a great role model for Coastline. She holds a music business and per-formance degree with a focus on string arrange-ment, is currently on tour in Cuba, and she still finds time in her
busy schedule to coach the group and work on its arrangements. Her goal is to help these young musicians become professional performers, which, she says, quite a few of them aspire to.
“They are all such great kids, very smart and motivated and they want to be pushed. It’s a very elite group,” she added.
Coastline will be holding a fundraising concert in May for their trip to Aberdeen. More information on that can be found on their web-site, coastlinefiddle.com.
A Victoria-based string ensemble are off to test the musical ambiance in Aberdeen, Scotland.
Coastline, a string ensemble of 15 young musicians ranging from ages 13-18, have been selected to represent Canada in the 2015 Aberdeen International Youth Festival.
“It’s a huge honour, and very exciting to be preparing for,” said their coach and mentor, Ivonne Hernandez.
Hernandez taught some of these kids in Victoria before she headed off to Boston to complete her musical studies on a full schol-arship to the University
of Berklee. When they heard she was coming back to Victoria, they asked her to work with them.
“It was at the request of a few kids who wanted a challenge, and to work on tunes that were more complex,” Hernandez explained, “and they were instru-mental in getting other people involved.”
For this group of young musicians, going to Scotland to perform is a highlight on the horizon.
The group sent vid-eos of their playing to the festival’s selection committee, and the Scottish festival’s reac-tion was an offer to
VICTORIA NEWS -Wednesday, May 13, 2015 www.vicnews.com • A13
NSP-BOGO-VICNHLBC-CLRTYThis limited-time offer applies to private sales of select hearing aids and is subject to change without notice. For ADP sales, the 50% discount is
after the grant is applied. Reward mile value is non-transferable. Please allow up to 45 days for the miles to appear in your collector account. This offer cannot be combined with other promotions or discounts for hearing aids. Hearing tests are provided free of charge for adults ages 18 and
older. Some conditions may apply. Please see clinic for details.
®†™†Trademarks of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under license by LoyaltyOne, Co. and Canada Hearing Ltd.
Buy 1 Hearing Aid & Get the 2nd for Half-Price!
PLUS
AIR MILES® reward miles!AIR MILES® reward miles!
Earn up to:
1,000
Lowest Price Guarantee
3 Year Warranty, Batteries and Follow-up Services
90 Day Satisfaction Guarantee
Featured hearing aids include:
for Half-Price!
Featured hearing aids include:
Mother’s Day HEARING AID SALE
• Langford | Forbes Pharmacy | 755 Goldstream Avenue | 1-877-392-0660
• Nanaimo | 99A, 6631 Island Highway North | 1-877-289-5951
• Saanich | Saanich Plaza | 3560 Blanshard Street | 1-877-280-3706
• Sidney | 201, 2537 Beacon Avenue | 1-877-392-0660
• Victoria |Hillside Centre | 1644 Hillside Avenue | 1-877-283-5261
Referred by Physicians over 50,000 Times.
Hurry – This limited-time offer ends May 29, 2015! Call us today to book your FREE, no obligation hearing assessment!
We’re pleased to announce that Teresa Conway, Greg McDade and Jan O’Brien have been re-elected, each for a three-year term. These directors will represent our members by bringing their expertise and values to help guide the direction of the credit union, ensuring great things keep happening at Vancity and in our communities.
Make Good Money (TM) is a trademark of Vancouver City Savings Credit Union.Credit Union
TTTTTTeeeeeeerrrrrreeeeeessssaaaaaa CCCCCoooooonnnnnnwwwwwwaaaaaayyyyMeMeMeMeMeMM mbmbmbmbmbbererererer sssinininincecececec 1111999999999000000
GGGGGGGrrrrreeeeeeegggggg MMMMMMMMcccccDDDDaaaadddddeeeeeMeMeMeMeMeM mbmbmbmbmbmberererer ssssinininnncecececeee 11111999999999 1111
JJJJJJaaannnnn OOOOOO’’’’BBBBBrrrriiiiiieeeeeennnnMeMeMeMeM mbmbmbmbmbberererererr ssssininininncecececcece 1119797979977777
Baroque play music gemsPerforming gems of Baroque chamber music, the
Victoria Baroque Players will end their fourth sea-son May 23 in Victoria.
Four core members of Victoria Baroque Players – flautist Soile Stratkauskas, violinist Christi Meyers, cellist Martin Bonham and harpsichordist Michael Jarvis – will give audiences a rare chance to hear Bach’s and Telemann’s chamber music played on 18th-century instruments.
The program includes Johann Sebastian Bach’s sonata for flute and obligato harpsichord BWV 1030, sonata for violin and obligato harpsichord BWV 1015, and Georg Philipp Telemann’s Paris quartets in D major TWV 43:D3 and E minor TWV:e:4.
“Bach wrote magnificent grand-scale works, but in his chamber music a wonderful intimacy and transparency shines through,” Stratkauskas said.
“His sonata in B minor for flute and obligato harpsichord demonstrates ingenious architectural contrapuntal writing and is one of the greatest and most monumental works in the flute repertoire.”
The other work by Bach in the program is Sonata in A major, will feature VBP’s violinist and Victoria Symphony’s assistant concertmaster Christi Mey-ers.
The Victora concert begins at 7:30 p.m. at Church of St. John the Divine, 1161 Quadra St.
For ticket information: 250-652-0116 or victoria-baroque.com.
Contributed
Flautist Soile Stratkauskas will perform with the Victoria Baroque Players on May 23.
Ensemble heads to Scotlandcome and play.
“A lot of these kids haven’t left the country, ever, or maybe even the province. It’ll be a life-changing experience to go halfway across the world to perform and meet other people and to go to the “mecca” of fiddle playing.”
Hernandez, who now has an international career and tours with her band “Fretlass,” is a great role model for Coastline. She holds a music business and per-formance degree with a focus on string arrange-ment, is currently on tour in Cuba, and she still finds time in her
busy schedule to coach the group and work on its arrangements. Her goal is to help these young musicians become professional performers, which, she says, quite a few of them aspire to.
“They are all such great kids, very smart and motivated and they want to be pushed. It’s a very elite group,” she added.
Coastline will be holding a fundraising concert in May for their trip to Aberdeen. More information on that can be found on their web-site, coastlinefiddle.com.
A Victoria-based string ensemble are off to test the musical ambiance in Aberdeen, Scotland.
Coastline, a string ensemble of 15 young musicians ranging from ages 13-18, have been selected to represent Canada in the 2015 Aberdeen International Youth Festival.
“It’s a huge honour, and very exciting to be preparing for,” said their coach and mentor, Ivonne Hernandez.
Hernandez taught some of these kids in Victoria before she headed off to Boston to complete her musical studies on a full schol-arship to the University
of Berklee. When they heard she was coming back to Victoria, they asked her to work with them.
“It was at the request of a few kids who wanted a challenge, and to work on tunes that were more complex,” Hernandez explained, “and they were instru-mental in getting other people involved.”
For this group of young musicians, going to Scotland to perform is a highlight on the horizon.
The group sent vid-eos of their playing to the festival’s selection committee, and the Scottish festival’s reac-tion was an offer to
Music has a powerful way of marking life’s big moments, whether in joyous celebration or as solace in times of loss.
This idea inspires the Victoria Philharmonic Choir’s performance of the Verdi Requiem on May 24.
Giuseppe Verdi composed his magnificently operatic Requiem in 1874 in memory of a fellow musi-cian.
VPC’s performance is also a cel-ebration of life, musical collabora-tion, and the choir’s 10th anniver-sary season, and offers an oppor-tunity for the public to have an “In Memoriam” dedication listed in the Requiem program in exchange for a $100 donation to the choir.
Conducted by Peter Butterfield, the concert features soloists Ingrid
Attrot, Sarah Fryer, Richard Mar-gison and Andrew Greenwood, a 125-member chorus of VPC mem-bers and guest choristers, along with a mass instrumental ensemble of the Victoria Chamber Orchestra and Civic Orchestra of Victoria.
In Memoriam listings and dona-tions must be received by May 17 to be included in the Requiem pro-gram. Please go online to vpchoir.ca and click on the Canada Helps logo to go to the donation page.
Tickets to the performance are $35 and $45.50, and available from the UVic box office, uvic.ca/audito-rium or phone 250-721-8480.
Verdi Requiem is performed on Sunday, May 24 at the University of Victoria’s Farquhar Auditorium, beginning at 2:30 p.m.
Choir to perform RequiemVox Humana Chamber Choir will feature works
from Canadian and international composers in Sound Waves, its last concert of the season.
It will feature a premiere performance of Requiescat, by award-winning Canadian com-poser Rodney Sharman.
The concert takes place May 22 at St. Andrew’s Catholic Cathedral, 740 View St., at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $20, $15 for seniors and people 25 and under are free.
For more information, visit voxhumanachoir.ca.
Vox celebrates last concert
A14 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, May 13, 2015 - VICTORIA NEWS
This month marks the centenary of one of the most emotionally charged events of the First World War: the sinking of RMS Lusitania.
In my Grade 12 History class I was taught the sinking of
the Lusitania was a turning point in the war as it helped to sway American public opinion against the Germans as a result of the approximately 120 American lives lost when she was torpedoed by a U-boat,
eventually bringing the U.S. into the conflict in 1917.
The degree of this influence is still debated by scholars today.
I was not taught anything about the impact that the loss of this ship off the distant coast of Ireland had upon my own hometown. In May 1915, Victoria was featured in news stories across the world because of the terrible riots that ensued in the streets once news of the loss of the Lusitania reached the Island.
Lusitania was built for the Cunard Line in 1907 and at the time was a marvel of modern engineering: she was the fastest liner on the ocean, known as the “Greyhound of the Seas,” and with an average speed of more than 25 knots proudly claimed the Blue Riband for the fastest Atlantic crossing.
She had a regular
route between Liverpool and New York, carrying visitors and immigrants in bright, luxurious surroundings. The crossing took on average around five days, with the fastest time being four days, 19 hours and 53 minutes.
There was a darker side to the Lusitania story, however. When she was constructed, the British government had subsidized the cost providing she could be converted to an armed merchant cruiser (AMC) in the
event of war.With war on the
horizon, in 1913 she was refitted, and eventually repainted in “dazzle camouflage.” She featured a secret compartment for carrying munitions, and gun mounts on her decks which were concealed beneath the teak overlay- ready for the addition of heavy guns if necessary.
She retained AMC status on paper but continued carrying civilian passengers through the early days of the war. Her bright Cunard paint job was restored, so she stood out against the grey Atlantic waters.
America remained neutral, but Lusitania was a British ship and as such highly vulnerable in the waters around the British Isles, which were declared a war zone by Germany in February 1915. They announced that any enemy ships in those waters would be sunk without warning by submarines.
There were rumors that Lusitania was carrying concealed munitions cargo along with her civilian passengers, as America, though officially neutral, was aiding the Allies by supplying arms.
On April 22 the German Embassy in the U.S. placed a warning in 50 American newspapers notifying travellers that “in accordance with formal notice given by the Imperial German Government, vessels flying the flag of Great Britain … are liable to destruction in those waters (around the British Isles).”
Regardless of this clear warning, tickets for the 202nd voyage of the Lusitania were offered at discount and when she set sail on May 1, 1915, there were 1,266 passengers and
696 crew onboard. Because of the
great speed of the ship, it was widely said that she could outrun submarines. In hindsight this was tragic overconfidence.
On May 7, Lusitania was in British waters off the coast of Ireland, only hours from docking in Liverpool. U-20, a submarine which played a key role in the blockade of Britain, saw her approaching and recognized her as a registered British AMC and therefore a valid target.
Kapitanleutnant Walther Schwieger was in command of the submarine and gave the order to fire a single torpedo. It hit the starboard side below the bridge, and shortly thereafter a second explosion followed from inside Lusitania.
The source of this explosion has been widely debated. Some believe it to be the result of munitions components hidden in the secret compartment, but today most academics say it was the result of a boiler explosion.
Lusitania sank in 18 minutes. Schwieger wrote in his diary 15 minutes after he fired the torpedo, “It looks as if the ship will stay afloat only for a very short time ... I couldn’t have fired another torpedo into this mass of humans desperately trying to save themselves.”
Of that mass, 1,191 people perished. Amongst their number were 44 people from B.C., including a young, popular Victorian called Jim Dunsmuir, the scion of the wealthiest family in British Columbia.
When news of this tragedy reached Victoria, the city erupted in violence. This story will be told
Kate HumbleLocal History
Lusitania sinking was heard around the world
Photo contributed
The image is of a Cunard Liner in First World War “Dazzle Camouflage.”
Claremont Secondary 4980 Wesley Rd. Tickets $15/$12.50 for students/seniors
250-658-6672 for Reservations
May 13-16 and May 19-23 at 7pmMatinee on May 23 at 2pm
GREASEThe Ridge Playhouse Presents
Claremont Secondary 4980 Wesley Rd. Tickets $15/$12.50 for students/seniors
250-658-6672 for Reservations
May 13-16 and May 19-23 at 7pmMatinee on May 23 at 2pm
GREASEThe Ridge Playhouse PresentsClaremont Musical Theatre Presents
PROGRAMS START MONTHLYPRFIND YOUR PASSION. FIND YOUR PURPOSE.
> HEALTH CARE ASSISTANT - 7 Months ONLINE BLENDED LEARNING MAY BE AVAILABLE
> PRACTICAL NURSE - 19 Months
> MEDICAL OFFICE ADMINISTRATOR HEALTH UNIT CLERK - 12 Months
> NUTRITIONAL CONSULTANT - 12 Months
VICTORIA: 250.384.8121 OR VISIT SPROTTSHAW.COM
VICTORIA NEWS -Wednesday, May 13, 2015 www.vicnews.com • A15Victoria News Wed, May 13, 2015 www.vicnews.com A15
www.blackpress.ca
Are you a seasoned Community Newspaper Publisher looking to relocate to the Okanagan? We are looking for a Group Publisher to manage our South Okanagan markets.
As a seasoned Publisher, you will achieve financial growth by developing and implementing strategic marketing and sales plans to generate new business and achieve the company’s business objectives.
You will have at least five years’ experience in a sales or business development role, and knowledge or experience in a community newspaper publishing environment. Your success in developing and implementing sales strategies is a result of your entrepreneurial spirit, well developed customer service and communication skills, knowledge of the publishing industry, and extensive business connections.
As the largest independent newspaper group with more than 170 titles in print and online, Black Press has operations in British Columbia, Alberta, Washington, Hawaii and Ohio.
This is a full-time position with a competitive compensation and benefits package. Qualified applicants should send a resume and covering letter before Friday, May 29th to:
Bruce McAuliffe, President
Black Press BC South c/o Kelowna Capital News 2495 Enterprise Way, Kelowna, B.C. V1X 7K2 Email: [email protected]
Group Publisher
PRODUCTION WORKERSCanada’s Largest Independently owned news-paper group is currently looking for Part Time Production Workers for its Victoria location.This is an entry level general labour position that involves physical handling of news-papers and advertising supplements.REQUIREMENTS:• Prior bindery and/or
machine operator experience would be an asset
• Motivated self-starter willing to work in a fast paced environment performing repetitive tasks
• Must be able to lift up to 25 lbs and stand for long periods of time
• Ability to work cooperatively in a diverse, team based environment
• Must be reliable, dependable, have excellent communication skills and good attention to detail
• Must have own transportation
✱Afternoon and evening shifts 16-20 hours per week. $11.25 an hour
Interested parties may drop off their resumes between 9am and 5pm at:
GOLDSTREAM PRESS#220-770 Enterprise Avenue, Victoria, BC
V8X 6R4
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION-ISTS are in huge demand! Train with the leading Medical Transcription school. Learn from home and work from home. Call today. 1-800-466-1535, www.canscribe.com or [email protected].
LEEMAR Excavator Compo-nents is looking for a commis-sioned Technical Sales Repre-sentative to join our expanding team. A successful applicant will be required to service ex-isting parts and service cus-tomers as well expand our customer base. Experience with heavy duty equipment parts and service is an asset. Applicants should have a mini-mum of 2 years experience in a related fi eld. You must be self-motivated, able to work in-dependently and as part of a team. A valid BC driver’s li-cense and own transportation is required. We offer a com-petitive benefi ts package de-pendent on experience and performance. Please send re-sumes to [email protected], by fax to 250-248-4404, or mail to 1390 Springhill Rd Parksville BC V9P 2T2. Only short listed applicants will be contacted. www.leemar.ca
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
INFORMATION
APPLY NOW: A $2,500 Pen-ny Wise scholarship is available for a woman entering the Journalism Certifi cate Pro-gram at Langara College in Vancouver. Application dead-line May 31, 2015. Email appli-cations: [email protected]. More information:www.bccommunitynews.com/ our-programs/scholarship.
DO YOU have a disability? Physical or mental. We can help you get up to $40,000 back from the Canadian Gov-ernment. For details online: disabilitygroupcanada.com or call us today Toll-Free 1-888-875-4787.
Have you had a stroke?or Do you know someone who has!Join our recovery group, we meet Fri. 10:30 am-1:30 pm Come for exercise, speech therapy, music, games and companionship.
Call: 250.383.2620Victoria Stroke Recovery
PERSONALS
ALL MALE Hot Gay Hookups! Call FREE! 1-800-462-9090. only 18 and over.
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
PERSONALS
CONNECT INSTANTLY with sexy local singles free trial! 250-220-1300 or 1-800-210-1010 www.livelinks.com 18+
DISCREET CHAT for curious guys. Try FREE! Call 250-419-4634 or 800-550-0618.
THE 292 Seniors Travel and Social Group is looking for a retired truck driver to drive our 5 speed manual shift bus on monthly tours. Call (250)383-7153 if you are interested.
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND: SILVER colour sword shaped broach by Bow-ker Creek. Call (250)519-2202
LOST: CAT, mid sized, long hair (black and white), male, 12-14 yrs old. In Central Saa-nich area. Call (250)880-1990
TRAVEL
GETAWAYS
LONG BEACH - Ucluelet - Deluxe waterfront cabin,
sleeps 6, BBQ. Spring Special. 2 nights $239 or 3 nights $299Pets Okay. Rick 604-306-0891
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
TRAVEL
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.
HELP WANTED
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
MAKE A FORTUNE with $6000, we know how! Free info pack. Call (250)384-9242.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
GET FREE vending machines. High cash producers. $1.00 vend = .70 profi t. Can earn $100,000.00 + per year. Be fi rst in your area. No competi-tion. Protected territories. For full details call now 1-866-668-6629 www.tcvend.com.
HIP OR knee replacement? COPD or Arthritic Conditions? The disability tax credit. $1,500 yearly tax credit. $15,000 lump sum refund (on avg) Apply today! 1-844-453-5372.
CHILDCARE
NANNY REQ’D. F/T. Flexible days/nights, 5 days/wk, $11.50 /hr. call Antonio 778-903-6033.www.usedvictoria.com/classi-fi ed-ad/Nanny_24651373
MEDICAL/DENTAL
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!
OFFICE SUPPORT CLERK
***FULL time Marketing/Reception-ist/Admin needed, Ucluelet BC. Send resumes to: [email protected]
***FULL time Marketing/Reception-ist/Admin needed Ucluelet BC. Send resumes to:[email protected]
PERSONAL SERVICES
MIND BODY & SPIRIT
KRIPALU MASSAGE, Reiki, Acupressure, Chair Massage. I have relaxed clients that have been with me for 5-12 years. See testimonials on website. Women only. Call 250-514-6223 or visit online at: www.andreakober.com
HOLISTIC HEALTH
Trager® Bodywork Gentle, effective & deeply relaxing. Move more freely with less pain and tension.
Hot Stone MassagePenetrating heat from
smooth basalt rocks softens tight muscles, melts tension
Hot Stone Massage with Raindrop Therapy
CranioSacral therapyRae Bilash
Certifi ed PractitionerWomen only, men by referral
250-380-8733www.raebilash.ca
FINANCIAL SERVICES
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
LARGE FUNDBorrowers Wanted
Start saving hundreds of dollars today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income.
Call Anytime1-800-639-2274 or
604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
FREE ITEMS
FREE. BLACK /Grey futon mattress w/ black metal frame, good cond. (250)634-1362.
FRIENDLY FRANK
BI-FOLD MIRRORED Closet door. exc. cond. 14.6” x 78”,$95. Call (250)472-2474.
Dr. Ho’s decompression back belt, $35. Dr. Scholl’s foot massager, $30. 250-479-7918.
KITTY LITTER box, burlap sacking, Mexican blanket, $15/each. 778-265-1615.
NEW COPCO stovetop kettle, wooden handle & lid knob, chocolate $25. 250-383-5390.
SHAW PVR $50. DVD Player $18. Rice cooker $5. Humidifi -er $15. Call (250)592-0947.
FUEL/FIREWOOD
ARBUTUS, CYPRESS, fi r, hardwoods. Seasoned. Call 250-661-7391.
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
NEWSPRINT ROLLENDS- $2-$10. Fridays only, 8:30am to 4:30pm. #200-770 Enter-prise Cres, Victoria. Gold-stream Press Division.
SAWMILLS FROM only $4,397 - Make money & save money with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. Free info & DVD: www.NorwoodSaw mills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT.
MISCELLANEOUS WANTED
ANTIQUES, BOOKS, col-lectibles, furniture, china, jew-elry. Estates/private libraries purchased. Galleon Books & Antiques, 250-655-0700.
REAL ESTATE
HOUSES FOR SALE
SOOKE
◾ Private master bedroom on 2nd fl oor◾ Open concept design of 1375 sq. ft. over two levels◾ Granite countertops◾ Cozy fi replace◾ BBQ & patio furniture◾ 2 Parking spots◾ Locked owner’s storage locker◾ High speed wireless internet◾ Unlimited local and long distance calling◾ And more!
Sooke Harbour Resort & Marina is the perfect year-round Oceanside getaway, nestled in the quaint village of Sooke amidst the diverse natural beauty of
Vancouver Island.Offered for sale is a ¼ interest in the townhome. This is a fractional
ownership deeded and titled to each owner – this is not a timeshare.
Own for $60,000 & monthly maintenance fees of $321.71
Contact Tim for more details or to arrange your personal showing at
250.341.5423
with 3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms and fully furnished!
at Sooke Harbour Resort & Marina
Your dream ocean view townhome
PLUS:
with a classifi ed ad
SELL IT FAST
250.388.3535
AND MAKE SOME CASH
Your Community,
Your Classifi eds.
250-388-3535www.bcclassified.com
A16 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, May 13, 2015 - VICTORIA NEWSA16 www.vicnews.com Wed, May 13, 2015, Victoria News
RENTALS
APARTMENT/CONDO
GRANT MANOR 6921 Grant Rd.
Sooke, BC
Renovated1 bdrm suites
From $675 per mo
To view call 250-642-1900
HOMES FOR RENT
VIC WEST- June 1st. Bright, sunny, 3 bdrm, near ocean. Sunroom, newly reno’d bath, W/D. 5 appls, NS/NP. Refs $1650.+ utils. 250-383-8800.
RENTALS
SUITES, LOWER
COLWOOD 2 lvl, furnished 1 bdrm, 5 appls. $900 incl., near bus. NS/NP. 250-380-0700.
TOWNHOUSES
LAVENDER CO-OP is accept-ing applications for a quiet, bright 3 bdrm townhouse, W/D hookup, inside/outside stor-age, backyard. $1019/mo. Share purchase $2500. Gross income $45,000 +. Applica-tions available in the glass case outside the Community Hall at 10A-620 Judah St.
TRANSPORTATION
AUTO SERVICES
FREE REMOVAL of all vehi-cles, cash paid for some. Any condition. Call (250)889-5383
CARS
We Buy Cars!Scrap Junk
Running or Not!Cars Trucks Vans$50 to $1000FREE TOW AWAY
250-686-3933
SELL IT FAST WITH CLASSIFIEDS!
250.388.3535
TRANSPORTATION
CARS
1993 BMW: 3.4 L engine, au-tomatic, Kashmir (beige/gold), 4-disc brakes. Brakes, tire tread still in good shape, re-cent O2 sensor and throttle switch replaced, rear wheel drive, power windows/locks/ sunroof, 2-12” subs and Ken-more amp. 200,000 km, all re-ceipts for work done. Very fun car to drive. $3500 obo. Call 250-812-6008 or email [email protected]
SPORT UTILITY VEHICLES
1984 FORD Bronco XLT, only 100,000 km on 351W on pro-pane, 10-1 compression, Keith Black pistons, Comp cam. C6 auto completely rebuilt. Have receipts and specs. Body rusty but drivetrain better than new. Good 31” tires. $3500. Call Monty, 250-216-3408.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
CARPENTRY
ALL HOME Renovation & Restoration: Kitchens, bath-rooms, decks, additions, re-modeling. We build custom homes. Comm/Res. 35 yrs exp. Call 250-213-7176.
BENOIT CONSTRUCTION. Reno’s & Additions. Windows, Doors, Decks. 250-479-0748.
JEREMIAH’S CARPENTRY- Small repairs, interior fi nishing, weather proofi ng, decks, fenc-ing. Reasonable rates. In-sured. Call 250-857-1269 or www.jeremiahscarpentry.com
JOURNEYMAN CARPENTER Reduced rates - Sun Decks, Fences and Siding. Call Ward (250)881-0296.
CLEANING SERVICES
AFFORDABLE! SUPPLIES & vacuum incld’d. All lower Is-land areas. 250-385-5869.
Spik N’ Span Cleaning. Excel-lent rates. Serving Esqui-malt/Victoria. (778)432-3588.
CONCRETE & PLACING
RBC CONCRETE Finishing. All types of concrete work. No job too small. Seniors dis-count. Call 250-386-7007.
DRYWALL
BEAT MY Price! Best work-manship. 38 years experience. Call Mike, 250-475-0542.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
ELECTRICAL
250-361-6193 Quality Electric Reno’s, res & comm. No job too small. Lic# 22779.
KENDRA’S ELECTRICAL Company. Res/Com. Lic #86952. Call 250-415-7991.
NORTHERN SUN Electric Comm/Res. $40/hr. Work Guaranteed. Any size job. (250)888-6160. Lic#13981.
FENCING
ALL TYPES of fencing, re-pairs. Reliable, on-time. Free estimates. Call 250-888-8637.
GARDENING
(250)208-8535 WOODCHUCK Lawn care. Comm/Res. Aer-ating, power raking, land-scape design, all planting, riv-er rock & patio stones, Ivy, blackberry & yard clean-up.
(250) 858-0588- Lawn & garden maint.
- Landscaping- Fences & Decks
- Hedge & Tree Services- Pressure Washing
Free estimates * WCBwww.mowtime.ca
DPM SERVICES- lawn & gar-den, seasonal pruning, clean ups, landscape, power wash, etc. 15yrs exp. (250)883-8141.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
GARDENING
GARDEN OVERGROWN? Cleanups, lawn cuts, pruning, blackberry clearing. Call John 250-478-7314, 250-812-8236.
NEIL’S LAWNCUTTING Ser-vice. Competitive rates. Free Estimates Call (250)385-3878.
WILL DO GARDENING etc. $15/hr. Your tools. Reliable. Call (250)383-3995.
GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS
250-507-6543. AL’S V.I.P. Gutter Cleaning, guards, pow-er washing, de-moss, Insured.
(250)889-5794. DIAMOND Dave- window, gutter cleaning, roof-de-moss, gutter guards, power washing. Free estimate
GRAND XTERIOR Cleaning & Repairs- Gutters, roofs win-dows, PW. 250-380-7778.
CHECK CLASSIFIEDS! 250.388.3535 or bcclassifi ed.com✔
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS
ABBA Exteriors Inc.“Spring Clean-Up Specials”Gutter & Window CleaningConcrete Power Washing
Vinyl Siding CleaningRoof Sweep & De-MossingCarpentry * Yard Cleanup
Handyman RepairsFree Estimates WCB Insured
*Seniors Discounts*(778)433-9275
www.abbaexteriors.ca
HANDYPERSONS
BIG BEAR Handyman. Decks, Painting, Repairs. Free estimate. Barry 250-896-6071.
HOUSE & Yard repairs. no job too small. OAP Discounts, free est. Andy, (250)886-3383.
HAULING AND SALVAGE
$20 & Up Garbage & Garden waste removal. Senior Disc. Free estimates. 250-812-2279.
CLEAN-UP SPECIAL. You load bins, size 12 yard $100 plus dump fee or we do it all. Call 250-361-6164.
GARY’S HAULING. One call does it all. Small demos & yard clean-up. Vehicle & metal recycling. Call (778)966-1413.
HAUL A WAY Junk & garbage removal. Clean & green. Free quotes. Sr disc. 778-350-5050
JUNK BOX- Junk Removal Company. Local guys. Low rates. Call (250)658-3944.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
HAULING AND SALVAGE
HAUL-ITYou’ve got the Junk, We’ve got the Trunk! Rob, 250-885-1740.
JUNK REMOVAL 7 days / wk.Fast Service, Best Prices!! Free quotes. (250)857-JUNK.
PARRY’S HAULING We haul it all - FREE estimates. Call Wes 250-812-7774.
PETE’S HAUL A DAY- Junk removal. Airforce guy. Call 250-888-1221.
SAVE-A-LOT HAULING Furniture, appliance, garden waste, we take it all! Always lowest rate, senior discount. Brad 250-217-9578.
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.
MASONRY & BRICKWORK
CBS MASONRY BBB. WCB. Chimneys, fi replaces,fl agstone rock, concrete, natural & ve-neered stone. Replace, re-build, restore, renew! Free competitive est. www.cbsma-sonry.com; Call (250)589-9942, (250)294-9942.
& MOVING STORAGE
(250)889-5794. DIAMOND Dave Moving- Free estimates!
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
& MOVING STORAGE
(250)858-6747. WRIGHT Bros Moving&Hauling.Free estimate $80=(2men&3tontruck)Sr Disc.
ALLSTAR MOVING Delivery Service. From $59. Free local travel. Call (250)818-2699.
PAINTING
ALFRED, ALFRED Quality Painting. Wholesale, Dis-counts! 50 years experience. 250-382-3694.
A PROFESSIONAL Woman painter. Karen Bales Painting & Wall coverings. Over 25yrs exp. Free est. 250-514-5220.
✫ DON’S PAINTING ✫(250)479-8748. 30 years exp. Free Est. Quality Interiors.
OLD TIMER. Quality old fash-ioned service. Great rates. Ex-cellent references. Call Al at 250-474-6924, 250-888-7187.
PLUMBING
FREE ESTIMATES. Rea-sonable. Reliable. No job too small. Call 250-388-5544.
PLASTERING
PATCHES,Drywall, skimming, match the textures, coves, fi re-places. Bob, 250-516-5178.
PRESSURE WASHING
DRIVEWAYS, WALKWAYS, Decks, etc. Reasonable rates. 250-744-8588, Norm.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
STUCCO/SIDING
PATCHES, ADDITIONS, re-stucco, renos, chimney, water-proofi ng. Bob, 250-516-5178.
THE STUCCOMAN- All typesof Stucco/Painting. Repairs,additions, renovations. Freeest. Dan, 250-391-9851.
TREE SERVICES
BUDDY’S TREE SERVICES-Trimming, pruning, chipping,removals, hedges. Insured.Call Keith, (250)474-3697.
WINDOW CLEANING
ABBA EXTERIORSProfessional gutter cleaning &repairs. Window cleaning. Roof de-mossing. Pkg dis-counts. WCB. (778)433-9275.
BOB’S WINDOW Cleaning.Roof demoss, Gutters. Licensed and affordable. 250-884-7066.
COME CLEAN WINDOWS.“Shining for You”. Fully in-sured. Free est. 250-881-6385 www.ComeCleanWindows.com
DAVE’S WINDOW Cleaning.Windows, Gutters, Sweeping,Roofs, Roof Demossing, Pres-sure Washing. 250-361-6190.
GRAND XTERIOR Cleaning & Repairs- Gutters, roofs win-dows, PW. 250-380-7778.
CLASSIFIED ADS MEAN MORE BUSINESS
250.388.3535
SERVICE DIRECTORYwww.bcclassified.com 250.388.3535
fi l here please
DAVID BLACKDinner with
A premier banquet with one of Canada’s most successful entrepreneurs, David Black, and a performance by renowned tenor Ken Lavigne.
Tickets:$125 per seat$875 for a table of eight20% off until May 8!
May 19th 2015 at 6 pm
Brought to you by:
A fund raiser in support
of the WestShore
Chamber of Commerce
(250) 478-1130 [email protected]
5 TWEETABLE
TRUTHSABOUT
NEWSPAPERSFacts that showcase newspaper vitality➔ 9 in 10 Canadians read
newspapers each week in print, on websites, tablets and phones.1
➔ Key times for reading the newspaper on each device: print in the morning, phone midday and online and tablet in the evening.1
➔ 7 in 10 continue to read a print newspaper each week as readership matches three years ago - some also use digital access as well.1
➔ Media engagement (i.e. how captivating the content and ads are) is highest for print newspapers.1
➔ 90% of Canadians read flyers and out of them, 7 in 10 preferred print flyers.2
Sources:1. Newspapers Canada 20152. BrandSpark 2014
For further industry information, go to
newspaperscanada.ca
Local news.Local shopping.Your local paper.
Read the Victoria News
VICTORIA NEWS -Wednesday, May 13, 2015 www.vicnews.com • A17
Ebb Tide takes on visiting Japanese team for a friendlyDan EbenalBlack Press
A group of Greater Victoria rugby players are showing the love of the game knows no boundar-ies.
Age and geography were no barriers to the Ebb Tide Rugby Club as they hosted a visiting team from Japan at Windsor Park last week, with the players aged right into their 80s.
“It’s very much slow-motion rugby,” said the Ebb Tide’s Dave Knox with a laugh. “And we take very good care of our 80 year olds, so they won’t be flattened.”
The Ebb Tide is made up of players over the age of 40 from throughout Greater Victoria, competing in the Pacific Northwest Over 40’s Rugby Union with teams from the Lower Mainland, Nanaimo, Kelowna and Seattle.
The Ebb Tide squared off last week against the Osaka Gentleman, an over-40 team from Japan featuring a pair of 80 year olds (although they were both nursing injuries and unable to suit up for the match). While the Ebb Tide’s regular roster features players from their 40s into their 70s, they brought out an 83 year old for the game at Wind-sor Park.
“He doesn’t play any more, but he only quit three or four years ago,” said Knox. “He [came] out for this one particular game because there’s a couple of 80 year olds on the touring team.”
Knox said the players wear different coloured shorts based on the decade they were born in.
“That way you can tell the age of the person on the field if you’re about to tackle him,” said Knox, 63. “So if you’re going to tackle somebody the
same age as you, it’s fair game, but if he’s 30 years older than you then you go a bit easier.”
Knox said the Ebb Tide has been going for more than 40 years, making seven or eight trips to Japan during that time and playing host to close to a dozen Japanese teams.
“So it’s been a long-standing tradition,” he said.The Ebb Tide regularly play their games in
James Bay, but as those fields have been con-verted for baseball, the game was moved to Oak Bay. Knox estimates about a dozen of the team’s 55 regular players are from Oak Bay.
“From now until September we practice every Thursday at Windsor Park, and I use the term practise lightly,” he said.
For more information on the Ebb Tide, visit www.ebbtiderugby.com.
Rugby with no boundaries
Dan Ebenal/Black Press
Age and geography were no barriers to the Ebb Tide Rugby Club as they hosted a visiting team from Japan at Windsor Park last week
Eric Florchuk was the Victoria Royals first selection, 13th overall, in the 2015 Western Hockey League Bantam Draft.
The Fort Saskatche-wan, Alta. native spent the 2014-15 season with the Fort Saskatchewan Rangers of the Alberta Major Bantam Hockey League where he col-lected 46 points (24g-22a) in 33 games. In 14 contests in the 2015 AMBHL playoffs, Flor-chuk notched 11 goals and nine assists for 20 points as the Rangers fell in the finals. Flor-chuk was also named an all-star in this year’s Alberta Cup where he registered five points (4g-1a).
“Eric is a dynamic player who is gifted offensively and one of the best players our scouts have seen in recent years,” said Roy-als general manager Cameron Hope.
The WHL Bantam Draft is an annual event in which the clubs select players who have graduated from bantam.
Florchuk Royals’ top pick
321-3980 Shelbourne St.Victoria
250.477.7234
Cindy Hoffman and mom Patty Doering
Thank You!
All proceeds have been donated to fundraising for liver transplant
patient Cindy Hoffman.All funds matched
by Black Press Victoria News
Country Grocer
You’ll Feel Like Family. Esquimalt Plaza
All proceeds have been donated All proceeds have been donated to fundraising for liver transplantto fundraising for liver transplant
patient Cindy Hoffman. patient Cindy Hoffman.All funds matchedAll funds matched
Details on becoming an organ donor can be found at
http://www.transplant.bc.ca/be-donor
Esquimalt Parks & Rec & all the volunteers
that made our May 9th BBQ
such a success!
WE GRATEFULLY ACKNOWLEDGE THE SUPPORT OF OUR MANY SPONSORS AND SUPPORTERS: Anonymous | BC Booksellers’ Association | BC BookWorld | BC Teachers’ Federation | Bear Country Inn | Black Press | Canada Council for the Arts | Central Mountain Air | Coast Inn of the North | Columbia Basin Trust | Creative BC | Fireweed Motor Hotel | First Choice Books | Friesens | Friends of Sheila Egoff | Government House Foundation | Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund | Hawkair | International Web exPress | Kate Walker | Marquis | National Car Rental | Pomeroy Hotel Chetwynd | Pomeroy Hotel Dawson Creek | Pomeroy Hotel Fort St John | Prestige Hotels and Resorts | Province of British Columbia | Rio Tinto Alcan | Spectra Energy | Sutton Place Revelstoke | Vancouver Kidsbooks | Victoria Bindery | Webcom
CONGRATULATIONS!to the WINNERS of the
31st annual BC Book Prizes
Betty Kellerrecipient of the 2015LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR’S AWARD FOR LITERARY EXCELLENCEEstablished in 2003 by the Honourable Iona Campagnolo to recognize British Columbia writers who have contributed to the development of literary excellence in the province.
BC B
OOK PRIZES
Win Th e Winners ContestEnter to win a collection of all seven winning titles. See participating stores and contest details online at www.bcbookprizes.ca. Contest runs from May 10 – June 7, 2015.
FIRST CHOICE BOOKS
BILL DUTHIE BOOKSELLERS’ CHOICE AWARDAaron ChapmanLive at the Commodore Arsenal Pulp Press
ETHEL WILSON FICTION PRIZE
Aislinn Hunter Th e World Before Us Doubleday Canada
RODERICK HAIG-BROWN REGIONAL PRIZE
Richard Beamish & Gordon McFarlaneTh e Sea Among Us Harbour Publishing
HUBERT EVANS NON-FICTION PRIZE
Eve Joseph In the Slender Margin HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
DOROTHY LIVESAY POETRY PRIZE
Cecily Nicholson From the Poplars Talonbooks
SHEILA A. EGOFF CHILDREN’S LITERATURE PRIZEMaggie de VriesRabbit Ears HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
CHRISTIE HARRIS ILLUSTRATED CHILDREN’S LITERATURE PRIZE
Roy Miki, Slavia Miki & Julie Flett Dolphin SOS Tradewind Books
SEE FINALIST BOOKS, TOUR PHOTOS AND MORE AT WWW.BCBOOKPRIZES.CA
A18 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, May 13, 2015 - VICTORIA NEWS
Deli Managers
Produce Managers
Seafood Managers
Meat Managers
Bakery Managers
and more...
Let’s Talk
Career OpportunitiesEXCITINGWe’re growing... come grow with us!
START NOW!& hit the ground running when opportunities arise.
Send your resume [email protected]
or drop off at your local store
Are you looking to earn:$40,000$50,000$60,000
and more?
Natural gas. Good for smaller bills.
Switch to natural gas and saveHeating your home is one of your biggest energy costs. But with high-efficiency natural gas heating, you’ll see standout savings and stay cosy and warm. Discover how at fortisbc.com/startsaving.
*Savings based on comparing annual heating costs for a 2,300 square foot home on Vancouver Island at current rates. Savings may vary. For full details, visit fortisbc.com/startsaving. FortisBC uses the FortisBC name and logo under license from Fortis Inc. (15-019.20 04/2015)
2,000
1,500
1,000
500
$0
Electricity Heating oilNatural gas
$640
$1,670 $1,625
Annual space heating costs—Vancouver Island and Sunshine Coast*
Bubble time
Three-year-old Greyson has some fun with a bubble machine during the 13th annual Quadra Village Day celebration Saturday. Hundreds of people came out for the event on Kings Road, which included games, live music and community booths.
Kendra Wong Victoria News
Embark on an emotionally fulfilling
career starting with the Early Childhood Education program.
Graduates from the program can
work in daycares, preschools,
family service centres, and more!
Call to make an appointment at our Victoria campus today.
1.800.890.9197victoria.cdicollege.ca
Ask about ourevening classes!
CDI College also offers programs in:
• Construction Electrician Foundation
• Dental Assisting
• Health Care Assistant
• Social Services Worker Foundations
• And More!
Financial assistance may be available to qualified applicants.
BECOME AN EARLY CHILDHOODEDUCATOR IN LESS THAN A YEAR
There’s more on line - vicnews.com
VICTORIA NEWS -Wednesday, May 13, 2015 www.vicnews.com • A19
Community CalendarWednesday, May 13
April Wine. Royal Theatre, 805 Broughton St. Tickets available at the Royal and McPherson Box Office.
Victoria Target Theatre Society presents I’m Still Here? James Bay New Horizons, 234 Menzies St., 11:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m., 3 p.m. and 4 p.m.
Saturday, May 16Angela Hewitt Solo Benefit Piano Recital at
Christ Church Cathedral, Victoria, 7:30 p.m. Info: christchurchcathedral.bc.ca.
Summer Star Parties. Dominion Astrophysical Observatory, 5071 West Saanich Rd., 7:30 to 11 p.m. Tours of the historic Plaskett telescope, astronomy lectures and presentations. Info: victoria.rasc.ca.
Sunday, May 17 Volkssport – 6/11 km walk. Meet at Elk Lake
parking lot, Brookleigh R. Registration 9:30 a.m.; walk 10 a.m. Contact Francine at 250-361-4583.
Monday, May 18Victoria Day Parade. Downtown Victoria
(Douglas Street), 9 to 11 a.m.
Tuesday, May 19Canadian Club of Victoria luncheon. Guest
speaker Tourism Victora CEO Paul Nursey. Harbour Towers Hotel, 345 Quebec St., at 11:45 a.m. Ticket info: 250-370-1837 by May 15 or go online to eventbrite.ca.
Thursday, May 21Esquimalt Farmers Market. Esquimalt Town
Square, 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. Info: esquimaltmarket.com.
Saturday, May 23Volkssport – 5/10 km walk. Meet at Copley Park,
Parkridge at Vanalman, Saanich. Registration 9:30 a.m.; walk 10 a.m. Contact Karen at 778-426-0379.
Scrap metal fundraiser. Macaulay Elementary School, 1010 Wychbury Ave., 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Info: macaulay.sd61.bc.ca.
Summer Baroque with the Victoria Baroque Players. Church of St John the Divine, 1161 Quadra St., 7:30 p.m. Info: 250-652-0116 or victoria-baroque.com.
Summer Star Parties. Dominion Astrophysical Observatory, 5071 West Saanich Rd., 7:30 to 11 p.m. Tours of the historic Plaskett telescope, astronomy lectures and presentations. Info: victoria.rasc.ca.
Sunday, May 24Esquimalt Cycling Festival. Archie Browning
Sports Centre, 1151 Esquimalt Rd. Info: [email protected].
Thursday, May 28Esquimalt Farmers Market. Esquimalt Town
Square, 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. Info: esquimaltmarket.com.
Friday. May 29Victoria International Kite Festival. The Bay
Centre and Clover Point. Opening ceremony at Bay Centre with special indoor kite fly by Connor Doran, noon. Kites with Lights – LED lit kites light up the night sky at Clover Point, 9:30 p.m.
Saturday, May 30Victoria International Kite Festival. Clover Point,
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.Volkssport – 5/10 km walk. Meet at Henderson
Recreation Centre, 2291 Cedar Hill X Rd. Registration 9:30 a.m.; walk 10 a.m. Contact Evelyn at 250-370-0153.
COMMUNITY NEWSIN BRIEF
Tourism boss treated to lunch
Paul Nursey, CEO of Tourism Victoria, is the guest speaker at the Canadian Club of Victoria luncheon on May 19.
At luncheon, Nursey will provide an
overview of the significant role tourism plays in the region’s economy.
Tourism Victoria is the official not-for-profit destination marketing organization that works in partnership with over 750 business members and municipalities in the Greater Victoria area and
surrounding communities. The luncheon begins at Harbour
Towers Hotel, 345 Quebec St., at 11:45 a.m.
For ticket information, please telephone 250-370-1837 or go online to eventbrite.ca by May 15.
DELIVERED TO 23,768 HOMES ONLINE ALL THE TIME vicnews.com ONLINE ALL THE TIME vicnews.com
Victoria & EsquimaltAt Your Service in
Rosemary Sheehan 250.405.7234
Rosemary Sheehan Stephen Mercon250.405.7235
Stephen Mercon
Some dreams requireextra square footage
Take your next step with amortgage from HSBC Bank
869 Douglas StreetVictoria BC V8W 2B9
www.hsbc.ca
Over 30 years combined professional banking experience call us TODAY for our best rates.
Some dreams require
Approved ProviderApproved Provider
All arrangements made in the comfort of your own home. All pre-arrangements are fully transferable at no cost to you. Specializing inlow cost cremation and green burial.
778.440.8500www.earthsoption.com
Earth’s OptionCremation and Burial Services
5 – 831 Devonshire Rd., Victoria V9A 4T5
SERVICE SINCE 1947
Open Mon-Sat. 250.386.3194 2003 Government St, Victoria
• Oil Change• Replace Spark Plug• Check Filters• Check Ignition
System• Check Fuel System• Check & Adjust
Cables
• Check general Condition
• Filters Extra if required
• Sharpen Blade
$5995$5995
Serving all makes of lawn & garden & powered equipment
Spring Small Equipment ServicesLawnmower Service Special
✃Primary use on white
Primary use on background colour
Incorrect use on background colour
Red sides can be expanded evenly to �t area.
Logo prepared on February 16, 2015 for JC Pharmacy & Chandra Erant by Original Fire Creative Studio
Font = Century Gothic
RedC 0M 100Y 100K 10
RedR 215G 25B 32
Redweb colour#d71920
211 - 3214 Douglas St. • T: 250-590-9080 F: 250-590-8033Hours: Mon-Fri 8am-8pm • Sat 9am-5pm • Sun 10am-5pm
Hi, my name is Chandra Erant.I’m pleased to be your pharmacist and owner of the JC Pharmacy.JC Pharmacy, formerly located at the Target store in Tillicum, has relocated. To provide continuity and care and smooth transition of pharmacy services, all your patient records and prescriptions are at our new location.We have the same great sta� and o� er the same great service! Free Ample Parking.
JC PHARMACY: friendly advice and personalized solutions for your peace of mind.
The Camelot
The CamelotIndependent Retirement Living with Supportive Services
455 Kingston Street, Victoria, BC 250-384-3336
Call today for a personal tour (250) 384-3336
• Bright & spacious • 1 & 2 bed suites (800 -1115 sq ft)• 2 blocks from the Inner Harbour in James Bay• Great service package & more
455 Kingston StreetAffordable • Quiet
Neighbourhood • Security • Companionship
Independent Retirement Living with Supportive ServicesVisit all of our home atwww.novapacific.ca
Call today for a personal tour 250-384-3336
Licensed Strata Property Manager
PREMIUMSUITES
AVAILABLE!
Earth’s
610 Herald StreetVictoria
250-382-6184
Air Miles® Reward Program
Earn reward miles on your tires, custom wheels, and mechanical service purchases!
Commercial truck tires, farm tires, and retread purchases are also eligible for reward miles.
Ian Lam, Denturist300 - 1964 Fort Street
FREE CONSULTATIONS 250.592.8338
TEETH WHITENING
rjdc.ca
NEW
BY A REGISTERED HYGIENIST
For all your tire and automotive needs, see
the experts at:
250-386-6367616 Gorge Road East
www.sidneytire.com
* Selon les résultats d’essais internes de freinage sur chaussée mouillée réalisés à des vitesses de 60 et de 80 km/h avec le pneu PremierMC A/S de MICHELINMD de dimension 215/60R16 (V) d’une profondeur de sculpture résiduelle de 5/32e de pouce, comparativement au pneu AssuranceMD TripleTredMC A/S de GoodyearMD de dimension P215/60R16 (V) et au pneu TuranzaMC Serenity Plus de BridgestoneMD de dimension 215/60R16 (V). Tous les résultats de freinage correspondent à la moyenne des résultats des essais réalisés à des jours spécifiques. Les résultats réels sur route peuvent varier.
‡ Pour les conditions, voir le manuel du propriétaire des pneus MICHELINMD ou visiter le fr.michelin.ca. © 2014 Michelin Amérique du Nord (Canada) inc. Tous droits réservés. Le « Bonhomme Michelin » est une marque déposée autorisée par Michelin North America, Inc.
$70CHOOSE TIRES THAT
ARE SAFE1
NOWAND DOWN THE ROADWITH THE MICHELIN ® PREMIERTM FAMILY OF TIRES
SAFE1 WHEN NEW SAFE WHEN NEW SAFE WHEN NEW SAFE1 WHEN NEW SAFE1 WHEN WORNSAFE WHEN WORNSAFE WHEN WORNSAFE1 WHEN WORN
1 Safe refers to wet braking, wet handling and hydroplaning resistance when tires are new and worn to 5/32”.
‡ For terms and conditions, see the MICHELIN® Tires Owner’s Manual or visit michelin.ca.
© 2015 Michelin North America (Canada) Inc. All rights reserved. The “Michelin Man” is a registered trademark licensed by Michelin North America, Inc.
MAIL-IN REBATE WHEN YOU BUY 4 MICHELIN® TIRESPASSENGER OR LIGHT TRUCK TIRES ONLY
March 30 to May 23, 2015See claim form for details.
®
)illA( )yendiS( dtL eriT yendiS rD nevahtseR 7189 4455-656 )052(
slanoisseforP eriT-ecnaillA
moc.elpmaxe.www
noitarepO fo sruoH mp00:4 - ma00:8 irF-noM
6651
18 5
3261
* Selon les résultats d’essais internes de freinage sur chaussée mouillée réalisés à des vitesses de 60 et de 80 km/h avec le pneu PremierMC A/S de MICHELINMD de dimension 215/60R16 (V) d’une profondeur de sculpture résiduelle de 5/32e de pouce, comparativement au pneu AssuranceMD TripleTredMC A/S de GoodyearMD de dimension P215/60R16 (V) et au pneu TuranzaMC Serenity Plus de BridgestoneMD de dimension 215/60R16 (V). Tous les résultats de freinage correspondent à la moyenne des résultats des essais réalisés à des jours spécifiques. Les résultats réels sur route peuvent varier.
‡ Pour les conditions, voir le manuel du propriétaire des pneus MICHELINMD ou visiter le fr.michelin.ca. © 2014 Michelin Amérique du Nord (Canada) inc. Tous droits réservés. Le « Bonhomme Michelin » est une marque déposée autorisée par Michelin North America, Inc.
$70CHOOSE TIRES THAT
ARE SAFE1
NOWAND DOWN THE ROADWITH THE MICHELIN ® PREMIERTM FAMILY OF TIRES
SAFE1 WHEN NEW SAFE1 WHEN WORN
1 Safe refers to wet braking, wet handling and hydroplaning resistance when tires are new and worn to 5/32”.
‡ For terms and conditions, see the MICHELIN® Tires Owner’s Manual or visit michelin.ca.
© 2015 Michelin North America (Canada) Inc. All rights reserved. The “Michelin Man” is a registered trademark licensed by Michelin North America, Inc.
MAIL-IN REBATE WHEN YOU BUY 4 MICHELIN® TIRESPASSENGER OR LIGHT TRUCK TIRES ONLY
March 30 to May 23, 2015See claim form for details.
®
)illA( )yendiS( dtL eriT yendiS rD nevahtseR 7189 4455-656 )052(
slanoisseforP eriT-ecnaillA
moc.elpmaxe.www
noitarepO fo sruoH mp00:4 - ma00:8 irF-noM
6651
18 5
3261
* Selon les résultats d’essais internes de freinage sur chaussée mouillée réalisés à des vitesses de 60 et de 80 km/h avec le pneu PremierMC A/S de MICHELINMD de dimension 215/60R16 (V) d’une profondeur de sculpture résiduelle de 5/32e de pouce, comparativement au pneu AssuranceMD TripleTredMC A/S de GoodyearMD de dimension P215/60R16 (V) et au pneu TuranzaMC Serenity Plus de BridgestoneMD de dimension 215/60R16 (V). Tous les résultats de freinage correspondent à la moyenne des résultats des essais réalisés à des jours spécifiques. Les résultats réels sur route peuvent varier.
‡ Pour les conditions, voir le manuel du propriétaire des pneus MICHELINMD ou visiter le fr.michelin.ca. © 2014 Michelin Amérique du Nord (Canada) inc. Tous droits réservés. Le « Bonhomme Michelin » est une marque déposée autorisée par Michelin North America, Inc.
$70CHOOSE TIRES THAT
ARE SAFE1
NOWAND DOWN THE ROADWITH THE MICHELIN ® PREMIERTM FAMILY OF TIRES
SAFE1 WHEN NEW SAFE1 WHEN WORN
1 Safe refers to wet braking, wet handling and hydroplaning resistance when tires are new and worn to 5/32”.
‡ For terms and conditions, see the MICHELIN® Tires Owner’s Manual or visit michelin.ca.
© 2015 Michelin North America (Canada) Inc. All rights reserved. The “Michelin Man” is a registered trademark licensed by Michelin North America, Inc.
MAIL-IN REBATE WHEN YOU BUY 4 MICHELIN® TIRESPASSENGER OR LIGHT TRUCK TIRES ONLY
March 30 to May 23, 2015See claim form for details.
®
)illA( )yendiS( dtL eriT yendiS rD nevahtseR 7189 4455-656 )052(
slanoisseforP eriT-ecnaillA
moc.elpmaxe.www
noitarepO fo sruoH mp00:4 - ma00:8 irF-noM
6651
18 5
3261
1 Safe refers to wet braking, wet handling and hydroplaning resistance when tires are new and worn to 5/32”.‡ For terms and conditions, see the MICHELIN® Tires Owner’s Manual or visit michelin.ca.© 2015 Michelin North America (Canada) Inc. All rights reserved. The“Michelin Man” is a registered trademark licensed by Michelin North America, Inc.
Reward Program
300 - 1964 Fort Street
automotive needs, see
• Sat 9am-5pm
JC PHARMACY: friendly advice and TEETH
(250) 381 7447170 - 911 Yates St., Victoria
www.cruiseshipcenters.com/Victoria
Call, click or come in to let us plan your dream vacation today.
ST#37214
DREAMING OF A VACATION?
Spring Small
EFFORT = CONCRETE RESULTSLocally Owned and Operated
EFFORT = CONCRETE RESULTSEFFORT CONCRETE RESULTS
OPEN MON.-SAT. 765 Industrial Way250-478-0555 • www.iconcrete.ca
READY-MIXED CONCRETECONCRETE ACCESSORIES
VICTORIA’S ONLY LIQUID COLOURING SYSTEMGRAVITY WALL BLOCKS • GRAVEL MART
Esquimalt
A20 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, May 13, 2015 - VICTORIA NEWS
Grown in California
Peaches & CreamCorn on the Cob
You’ll Feel Like Family.
Proud to be serving Victoria since 1986
Midweek SpecialsWed. thru Sat.
May 13 - 16, 2015
Offers valid at Royal Oak and Esquimalt Country Grocer locations only4420 West Saanich Rd, Royal Oak • 1153 Esquimalt Rd. Victoria
Open Daily 8 am - 10 pm
WatCh for our
FLYEREVERY FRIDAY
in select Saanich NewsVictoria News,
Goldstream News Gazette & Peninsula News review
297EaCh
.97EaCh
797EaCh
497EaCh
500FOR2
Que Pasa
Chips
Newman’s own
BBQ Sauces350 ml
Breyer’s Classic
Dessert1.66 L
Grown in Mexico
Whole Seedless Watermelons
Fresh Baked In-Store…
French BreadWhite or 60% Whole Wheat
454 g
EaCh397
425 golymel
Applewood Smoked Ham
750 g
LIMIt 10 total
LIMIt 2
LIMIt 4 total
WHILE
StOCkS
LASt!
200FOR3
armstrong
MeltsProcessed Cheese
1 Kg
500FOR2
HALF Price Value