Offer Expires April 30, 2013 SL7 Wednesday, April 17, 2013 SAANICH NEWS All for one Amalgamation could mean merged services. Page A3 NEWS: Runners recount chaos in Boston /A19 ARTS: Ukulele finds respect in Victoria /A16 SPORTS: St. Mikes boots Barbarians /A23 Edward Hill News staff The leafy neighbourhoods of Oak Bay-Gordon Head are poised to be a key provincial election battleground for Greater Victoria, featuring a potential three-way race between NDP-Liberal rivals from 2009 and a high-profile B.C. Green Party newcomer. In a region dominated by the B.C. NDP, veteran B.C. Liberal cab- inet minister Ida Chong held on to her seat by 561 votes, slightly more than two per cent, in the last election against NDP hopeful Jessica Van der Veen. The four-term MLA faces Van der Veen again, and Green candi- date Andrew Weaver, a headline- making climate scientist from the University of Victoria. Neighbourhood voting polls from 2005 and 2009 indicate the Liberals and Chong retained support in areas like Ten Mile Point, Uplands, Cadboro Bay and McNeill Bay. NDP support remained strong in Gordon Head and Mount Tolmie, and made inroads into neighbourhoods of Oak Bay. The Greens remained minor players. The question this election is whether Weaver and the Greens become a factor in this riding, and if they do, where will they draw votes from? UVic political science professor Jamie Lawson said that dynamic is a hard puzzle in an electoral area that is largely white col- lar, with some of the wealthiest postal codes in the city and has large population of seniors. Weaver could play the spoiler for the NDP and split the vote to re-elect Chong for a fifth term – the race could be a “war between the non-Liberal parties and the centre-left,” Lawson said. On the other hand, Chong could fall victim to the flagging fortunes of a party beset with scandals, and which has seen many of its senior cabinet minis- ters abandon ship. “Ida Chong may face a melt- down by the Liberals. If that’s true, those voters may sit on their hands, or will chose between NDP and Greens,” Lawson said. “Voting Green isn’t as scary for a pro-mar- ket voter who might usually vote Liberal, but who believes climate change (is a problem).” It seems less likely for B.C. NDP supporters to migrate to Green, as the NDP vowed to shut down the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline, what Lawson calls the “litmus test” for provincial envi- ronmental platforms. “For what reason would a NDP voter vote Green?” he asked. “They might because they know who Andrew Weaver is, or they like what (Elizabeth) May does federally, but otherwise they’ll get a (NDP) candidate in government to make sure the Enbridge deal doesn’t go through. “(Van der Veen’s) party is against Enbridge, is going to spread the carbon tax and is a party that is going out of its way to reassure businesses. You could see votes going to the NDP.” As voters tease out how their own interests mesh with political party promises, Oak Bay-Gordon Head candidates – including B.C. Conservative Party new- comer Greg Kazakoff – officially launched their 21-day campaigns and door-knocking yesterday. Weaver is banking on recent federal Green Party support spilling over into the provincial election – voters in Gordon Head largely backed the federal Greens in 2011, as did large portions of Oak Bay in last winter’s federal by-election. Sharon Tiffin/News staff Shut out since 1996, the NDP is looking to finally retake the provincial riding of Oak Bay-Gordon Head from the Liberals, as seen here from Mount Douglas looking south. But a Green Party candidate with name recognition could throw a wrench into the election for both provicial parties that have dominated the riding. Election battleground: Oak Bay-Gordon Head A B.C. Liberal riding for 16 years, the NDP and Green parties seek to seize the white collar neighbourhoods of Saanich and Oak Bay “Voting Green isn’t as scary for a pro-market voter who might usually vote Liberal, but who believes climate change (is a problem).” – Jamie Lawson UVic political scientist PLEASE SEE: Incumbent MLA, Page A2 Check us out on Twitter and Facebook and watch for breaking news at WWW.VICNEWS.COM RE-ELECT LANA POPHAM for SAANICH SOUTH I’m asking for your support to bring positive change to BC Come by our office and find out more: 4087A Quadra St. (at Nicholson) 250.881.8809 lanapopham.bcndp.ca | [email protected]Authorized by Forrest L. Nelson, Financial Agent, 250-479-1100 | CUPE 3787
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Offer Expires April 30, 2013
SL7
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
SAANICHNEWS
All for oneAmalgamation could mean merged services.
Page A3
NEWS: Runners recount chaos in Boston /A19ARTS: Ukulele finds respect in Victoria /A16SPORTS: St. Mikes boots Barbarians /A23
Edward HillNews staff
The leafy neighbourhoods of Oak Bay-Gordon Head are poised to be a key provincial election battleground for Greater Victoria, featuring a potential three-way race between NDP-Liberal rivals from 2009 and a high-profile B.C. Green Party newcomer.
In a region dominated by the B.C. NDP, veteran B.C. Liberal cab-inet minister Ida Chong held on to her seat by 561 votes, slightly more than two per cent, in the last election against NDP hopeful Jessica Van der Veen.
The four-term MLA faces Van der Veen again, and Green candi-date Andrew Weaver, a headline-making climate scientist from the University of Victoria.
Neighbourhood voting polls
from 2005 and 2009 indicate the Liberals and Chong retained support in areas like Ten Mile Point, Uplands, Cadboro Bay and McNeill Bay. NDP support remained strong in Gordon Head and Mount Tolmie, and made inroads into neighbourhoods of Oak Bay. The Greens remained minor players.
The question this election is whether Weaver and the Greens become a factor in this riding, and if they do, where will they draw votes from?
UVic political science professor Jamie Lawson said that dynamic is a hard puzzle in an electoral area that is largely white col-lar, with some of the wealthiest postal codes in the city and has large population of seniors.
Weaver could play the spoiler for the NDP and split the vote to
re-elect Chong for a fifth term – the race could be a “war between the non-Liberal parties and the centre-left,” Lawson said.
On the other hand, Chong could fall victim to the flagging fortunes of a party beset with scandals, and which has seen many of its senior cabinet minis-ters abandon ship.
“Ida Chong may face a melt-down by the Liberals. If that’s true, those voters may sit on their hands, or will chose between NDP and Greens,” Lawson said. “Voting Green isn’t as scary for a pro-mar-ket voter who might usually vote Liberal, but who believes climate change (is a problem).”
It seems less likely for B.C. NDP supporters to migrate to Green, as the NDP vowed to shut down the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline, what Lawson calls the
“litmus test” for provincial envi-ronmental platforms.
“For what reason would a NDP voter vote Green?” he asked. “They might because they know who Andrew Weaver is, or they like what (Elizabeth) May does federally, but otherwise they’ll get a (NDP) candidate in government to make sure the Enbridge deal doesn’t go through.
“(Van der Veen’s) party is
against Enbridge, is going to spread the carbon tax and is a party that is going out of its way to reassure businesses. You could see votes going to the NDP.”
As voters tease out how their own interests mesh with political party promises, Oak Bay-Gordon Head candidates – including B.C. Conservative Party new-comer Greg Kazakoff – officially launched their 21-day campaigns and door-knocking yesterday.
Weaver is banking on recent federal Green Party support spilling over into the provincial election – voters in Gordon Head largely backed the federal Greens in 2011, as did large portions of Oak Bay in last winter’s federal by-election.
Sharon Tiffin/News staff
Shut out since 1996, the NDP is looking to finally retake the provincial riding of Oak Bay-Gordon Head from the Liberals, as seen here from Mount Douglas looking south. But a Green Party candidate with name recognition could throw a wrench into the election for both provicial parties that have dominated the riding.
Election battleground: Oak Bay-Gordon Head A B.C. Liberal riding for 16 years, the NDP and Green parties seek to seize the white collar neighbourhoods of Saanich and Oak Bay
“Voting Green isn’t as scary for a pro-market voter who might usually vote Liberal, but who believes climate change (is a problem).”
– Jamie LawsonUVic political scientist
PLEASE SEE: Incumbent MLA, Page A2
Check us out on Twitter and Facebook and watch for breaking news at WWW.VICNEWS.Com
RE-ELECT
LANA POPHAMfor SAANICH SOUTH
I’m asking for your support to bring positive change to BCCome by our office and find out more:4087A Quadra St. (at Nicholson)250.881.8809 lanapopham.bcndp.ca | [email protected]
Authorized by Forrest L. Nelson, Financial Agent, 250-479-1100 | CUPE 3787
A2 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, April 17, 2013- SAANICH NEWS
“The (2009 provincial) polling is not indicative of reality today,” Weaver said. “We know from our evidence that the race is between the NDP and the Greens. We can’t find people who’d admit they’d vote Liberal.”
Weaver took aim at the NDP’s fiscal plat-form which he, along with the B.C. Liber-als, said would drive the province further into debt. He also called Liberal plans to develop liquid natural gas exports in B.C.’s north a “pipe dream,” which is at least a decade away, if ever, and faces serious competition from places like Russia.
“I think there is a real chance for a Green breakthrough, to build on the momentum of (Donald Galloway) and Elizabeth May,” Weaver said.
NDP candidate Van der Veen doubts the Greens will find footing in Oak Bay-Gordon Head – she said it will be a “squeaker” between her and Chong.
“Ida has a very strong base. She’s been here for 16 years,” Van der Veen said. “I represent the renewal of government. That is where my focus is.
“What I’m hearing is that people are ready for change – they volunteer that word ‘change,’” she said. “They are very concerned about the lack of performance from this government and want a new kind of government.”
Van der Veen said her focus in the rid-ing would touch on health care for seniors, such as improving home care services so seniors can live at home longer.
She said the provincial NDP is a “renewed” party distinctly different from
the 1990s, and that it has financial policies that make sense, including minor tax hikes for the wealthiest and an expansion of the carbon tax to the oil and gas sector.
Chong, most recently the Minister of Aboriginal Relations and Reconcilia-tion, characterized this election a choice between NDP-driven debt and higher taxes, and a B.C. Liberal vision of balanced bud-gets and economic stability.
“Today’s B.C. Liberals are not the same from even when I first ran. The premier (Christy Clark) has a vision to get the economy back on track and put us in the position to pay off the provincial debt,” Chong said.
“The NDP wants to spend more with no plan on where to increase revenues. They said they wouldn’t balance the budget for four years or pay down debt. It’s a chilling
message to investors in B.C.”Chong agreed that Liberal scandals of
the past months and years could hurt her at the polls. She said she’s been effective in government – reading the writing on the wall – and as an opposition MLA.
“I think this is a three-way race. Yes it was hundreds (of votes) between me and the NDP. It might be hundreds between the three of us,” she said.
“This riding is always a swing riding, a close riding. That’s why I don’t take the job for granted and people know they have a representative who is hard working and puts 100 per cent into the job.”
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Regionalized services provide first step
As discussion around amalgamation grows, regionalized services are increasingly seen as a good place to
begin implementing the idea.Across the Capital
Region, there are four police departments, three RCMP detachments, 13 fire departments and a transit commission dominated by urban representatives.
During the half-hour drive from North Saanich to downtown Victoria, three separate 911 call centres are responsible for emergency dispatch.
“We could, in theory, dispatch for the whole peninsula by adding one more console to our (communication) centre, but there seems to be a fear to push the discussion,” said Victoria police Chief Const. Jamie Graham, a vocal proponent for a single regional police force.
Several integrated police units operate in the Capital Region, including the Greater Victoria Emergency Response Team, a homicide investigation unit and a domestic violence unit, the latter formed in the wake of a 2007 murder-suicide case in Oak Bay.
But the units rely on a shared funding model, which presents an inherent problem each year as budget evaluations begin and cities look for cost savings.
“As has been shown recently (when VicPD pulled one of two officers from the domestic violence unit), if I don’t think it’s working well for me, I’ll pull out and that leaves the other agencies in a lurch, which isn’t fair,” Graham said.
Esquimalt Mayor Barb Desjardins, an opponent of municipal amalgamation, has shepherded a year of frustrating negotiations around regionalized police services, both with the B.C. Justice Ministry and the Victoria Police Board. (In June 2012, Esquimalt was forced to stick with VicPD services, despite its desire to save money by contracting the township’s policing to the RCMP.)
But as Victoria and Esquimalt near completion of a framework policing agreement, Desjardins is singing a decidedly more optimistic tune, in hopes other municipalities will buy in.
“If we are able to reach an agreement, then there’s a huge opportunity to go forward and be a model for further regionalization,” she said.
The fear is that every municipality
outside Victoria and Esquimalt would lose service and pay more under a regional police force. But Graham said the framework agreement may be able to woo other municipalities with an easy cost-sharing template that would prevent ballooning property tax bills.
“There is also this never-ending fear, I think most unfairly, that if we become a regional force, other officers will be sucked into the downtown core to deal with problems, but that’s simply not true,” he said.
While Victoria struggles with its disproportionate expenses brought on by core-city syndrome, the region’s fire departments use mutual-aid agreements to balance and co-ordinate coverage across the region.
“If there’s an issue, we call each other up and have that discussion,” said Lt.-Insp. Brad Sifert of the Victoria Fire Department.
Sifert and other fire prevention officers hold monthly meetings to discuss recent fires and public safety issues, an example of playing well together, he said.
In 2011, Colwood and View Royal inked a progressive automatic aid agreement, where resources are shared without having to go through formal request channels. The model could prove viable for other adjacent municipalities in the future, Sifert said.
Victoria-Beacon Hill MLA Carole James said the community-led discussions around regionalized services and amalgamation is long overdue.
Last week, she threw her support behind Amalgamation Yes, a grassroots
group lobbying for a non-binding vote on amalgamation to gauge public support on the issue.
“It’s long overdue to give the public a voice in all of this,” James said. “There have been discussions about the cost savings … but nothing based on best practices or facts.”
Liberal MLA Ida Chong and Green Party leader Jane Sterk have also said they support a discussion on amalgamation, as long as the majority of the population is in favour of it.
Desjardins, who counts herself among the naysayers for the time being, said municipalities will likely fiercely oppose taking on debt from other communities, but anything that saves money is going to be an easier sell.
“If there’s ever been an opportune time to have this discussion, it’s likely to be in the next little while,” she said.
While emergency service providers dance around regionalized services, the jury is still out on the best way to make the Victoria Regional Transit Commission more accountable to taxpayers and the outlying municipalities.
Right now, the commission is made up of seven municipal politicians who are appointed by the B.C. transportation minister. Both Saanich and Victoria have two elected officials each on the commission, while the remaining three positions are filled by mayors and councillors from other Capital Region
communities on a rotating basis.Last August, an independent review
panel recommended changes to the urban-weighted commission, including opening the door to Capital Regional District control of transit or expanding to nine appointed members.
“As we move forward to big investments like rapid transit and so on, we need very broad community support before we engage in that kind of expenditure,” said Saanich Coun. Susan Brice, commission chair.
Regardless of the governance model, she said, the commission must be able to rely on steady funding beyond property tax revenue to create a functional regional transit system. “Just having another representative on the commission will not increase the dollars. You can put any level of service out there but you have to find ways to fund it.”
Brice will hold talks with transportation ministry staff next week to discuss options for the commission. Meanwhile, B.C. Transit is expected to make public its short-term recommendations to improve rapid transit by the end of April.
Victoria police Chief Const. Jamie Graham stands in his office at headquarters on Caledonia Avenue. Graham supports the idea of an amalgamated police service for Greater Victoria.
A REGION UNITED
PART 5OF 5
Steps to amalgamation1. Preliminary: At least two municipalities approach provincial government with intention to study amalgamation.2. Committee: Local governments form a committee to oversee preparation of a restructure study and manage public consultation.3. Study: Province hires consultant for formal restructure study. Report would offer objective information on financial impacts, implications for local services and political representation, etc.4. Decision: Local government committee chooses whether or not to hold a referendum on amalgamation. A simple majority vote to approve amalgamation, in each affected municipality, would be needed to move discussion forward.5. Implementation: Province pays for transition board to restructure local government and adopt best practices. Local governments would remain intact during this period, which could take several years.
– Province of British Columbia
Integrated police units, mutual aid between fire departments show co-operation works
SAANICH NEWS - Wednesday, April 17, 2013 www.vicnews.com • A3
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Regional Crime Unit nabs break-in suspect
Members of the Regional Crime Unit on Friday arrested a man believed to be responsible for an attempted break-in caught on tape.
Saanich police earlier this month credited a pair of homeowners for installing a remote trail camera at their house after a run-in with a stranger on their property, in the 3900-block of Cadboro Bay Rd.
A couple weeks after installing the camera it captured stills of a man attempting to break in to their home.
The RCU arrested 43-year-old Richard Glen Jones around 8:45 a.m. on Friday (April 12). He was charged with one count of attempted break and enter.
Officers executed a search war-rant on his home and located cloth-ing that matched those the suspect in the photos was wearing. Jones
was released on bail and is sched-uled to appear in court April 25.
Pearkes hockey program gets $20,000 boost
Young hockey players in Saan-ich got a $20,000 boost last week thanks to a community contribu-tion from the newly opened RBC branch at Uptown.
Pearkes recreation centre’s non-competitive hockey skills develop-ment program will benefit from the donation.
“This money will enable us to expand (the program) and build on it. That’s pretty neat,” said Coun. Nichola Wade, chair of Saanich’s parks, trails and recreation com-mittee.
The Pearkes-based hockey pro-grams are geared towards kids aged six to 12, with a focus on acquiring the skills to skate and play hockey.
The candidates vying to be elected Oak Bay-Gordon Head MLA on May 14 begin the official first week of campaigning with all-candi-dates meetings.
Mount Douglas secondary stu-dents will host the first one, Thurs-day morning, at the Saanich high school.
“It won’t be too long until (these students are) bona fide voters and this will be an opportunity to have their voice heard and to get answers to questions on issues and items that are important to them,” said Caleigh Bachop, a member of the Mount Doug challenge program, which is organizing the forum. Stu-dents will then vote in a mock elec-tion after the debate.
On Thursday night (7 p.m., April 18), a public forum will be held at Oak Bay United Church, 1355 Mitch-ell St.
The format of that meeting will include opening and closing state-ments from candidates, and 90 min-utes of questions from attendees.
This riding is the one to watch on the south Island, as Liberal Ida Chong fights for her seat against the NDP’s Jessica Van der Veen. Chong won the 2009 election over Van der Veen by a 561-vote margin.
Many are calling this riding the Green party’s best shot at winning a seat, too, as high profile University of Victoria climate scientist Andrew Weaver is their candidate for Oak Bay-Gordon Head.
Greg Kazakoff is the B.C. Conser-vative candidate.
Mount Doug hosts first debate for Oak Bay-Gordon Head riding
Election forumsn Oak Bay-Gordon Head all-candidate forum, Thursday, April 18, 7 p.m., Oak Bay United Church, 1355 Mitchell St.
n Open all-candidate forum on energy and climate, Friday, April 19, 7p.m., Fernwood Community Centre, 1240 Gladstone Ave.
n Oak Bay-Gordon Head all-candidate forum on poverty and homelessness, Saturday, April 20, 3 p.m. University of Victoria, Fraser Building, Room 159
n Open all-candidate forum as a part of Creatively United for the Planet’s festival, Sunday, April 21, noon to 1:30 p.m., St. Ann’s Academy, 835 Humboldt St.
COMMUNITYNEWSIN BRIEF
SAANICH NEWS - Wednesday, April 17, 2013 www.vicnews.com • A5
Kyle SlavinNews staff
“It is terrifying to go to bed with a job and wake up without one.”
Morgana Braveraven and 24 of her co-workers woke up Fri-day morning to find an arson-ist had torched their workplace, the ABC Country Restaurant on Maple Street, attached to the Accent Inns hotel.
“It is absolutely devastating and mortifying. These are people with families, people with finan-cial obligations, people who live paycheque to paycheque,” said Braveraven, a supervisor and former hiring manager at the two-year-old restaurant.
And then, out of the ashes, support for the displaced ABC staff started to pour in.
Braveraven posted an ad on Craigslist Saturday morning, appealing to fellow managers in Greater Victoria who are looking to hire “stellar team members who are punctual, reliable, fun to work with, and who thrive in a very fast paced environment.”
Half a dozen employers – from restaurants and cafes to adven-ture tourism operators – replied
to the ad by Monday.“It warms my heart to no end
the outpouring of support from the local community,” she said.
The ABC Country Restaurant at the corner of Burnside Road and Douglas Street is rejigging its schedule to offer shifts to as many employees as possible.
Saanich police said on Mon-day they are still trying to link five arsons in a span of 12 hours in the municipality.
Saanich fire crews found wooden pallets and two dump-sters with garbage on fire in an alley near Dupplin Avenue and Douglas Street at about 9:45 p.m. on Thursday.
Fire crews responded to a dumpster fire a the ABC restau-rant at 10:50 p.m., but it quickly spread to the structure. The hotel was evacuated and none of the staff or guests were injured.
Then at 2 a.m., Saanich fire responded to a wooden back-yard shed engulfed in flames in the 100-block of Burnside Road East, at the corner of Irma Street.
Fifteen minutes later, Saanich and Victoria crews, 22 firefight-ers in all, responded to a struc-ture fire in the 3300-block of Whittier Avenue.
Around 8:30 a.m. Friday, a fifth fire was found in the 3200-block of Eldon St., which is one block from the wooden shed fire.
Police arrested a 25-year-old man early Friday morning, but he has since been released with-out charges.
Sgt. Steve Eassie says he remains “a person of interest.” Because the Whittier Avenue fire began after police had arrested this person of interest, Eassie said investigators “believe there is a probability of another per-son involved.”
Accent Inns spokesperson John Espley said hotel staff evacuated guests from 68 rooms at the 118-room hotel. Besides minor smoke damage, fire didn’t spread to the hotel due to the firewall between the restaurant and the main building.
“(The evacuation) went smoothly. We have to commend our staff. They did a great job and got people out and into other accommodations,” Espley said. “Police and fire did a phe-nomenal job. It’s a shame (the fire) appears deliberate.”
He expects the restaurant will be rebuilt, although “it will take a long time.”
Help pours in for workers of gutted restaurantFor the ABC staff, many now job-
less, the future is looking slightly brighter, thanks to the goodwill of Victorians, Braveraven said.
“We’d like to thank the Victoria community, the business commu-
nity, on behalf of all the staff, man-agement team and owners, for their tremendous support in this challeng-ing time for us,” she said. “Our hope and our goal is to rebuild.”
– with files from Edward Hill
The ABC Country
Restaurant, next to the Accent Inns hotel on the corner of
Cloverdale Avenue and
Blanshard Street, was
destroyed in a suspected arson
fire that gutted the building.
Don Denton/News staff
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They’re the pride and possibly the fear of any parent – teenagers who are exceedingly smart and can argue just about anybody under the table.
Two Grade 12 girls from Pacific Chris-tian School fit that bill, and are the only students from Vancouver Island compet-ing in this year’s senior national debate championships in Calgary.
The team of Virginia Shram, 18, and Heather Cape, 17, under the guidance of teacher and coach Ruth McGhee, plowed through strong competition in February to lock the top spot on the Island. Then out of 38 debate teams at provincials in March in Trail, the girls earned fourth, and a chance to compete at nationals.
The top five teams go to the champi-onships. The Glenlyon Norfolk school team and 2012 provincial champions David Denhoff and Christian Taylor came in second overall.
“We just wanted to do our best for our last year in high school,” Shram said. “It was a fun trip. But until the final round, we had no idea how we did.”
Indeed, the Saanich-based Pacific Christian team sat through the final debate, a banquet dinner and speeches before judges announced the rankings
– it was a long few hours not knowing if they were third or 33rd.
“I didn’t think we had a chance, and then Virginia came in first place for the
speaker (award),” Cape remarked, refer-ring to Shram’s No. 1 individual ranking out of 76 competitors. “It took a while to sink in we were going to nationals.”
“We were in shock. It made the ride back more at ease than the ride there,” Shram added.
The girls may be modest, but beyond their regular workload, which includes college-level advanced placement classes, they regularly meet with McGhee to talk about current events and learn debate strategies to pick apart opposing teams' arguments.
They also regularly brush up on current events through reading publications like the Economist magazine and The Globe and Mail, watching TED talks and having documentary movie nights. Like the provincials, the national debate has a prede-termined topic – in this case, the issue of allowing doctors to prescribe placebos – and four rounds of impromptu debates, which can be any topic, but tend to touch on current events.
“I like impromptu better, it’s more like an adren-aline rush,” Shram said. “You concoct you argu-ment, bolster your position and then tear apart the other team.”
Shram, a veteran debater, started in the PCS debate class in Grade 8 and went to junior nationals in 2009. “I remember I liked debating in elementary school, and I enjoyed going to that (debate) class in Grade 8, and I’ve taken it ever since,” she said.
Cape joined the team last year after demon-strating natural leadership and debating talent in the model UN club.
“It was clear from the model UN she had the debate chops,” McGhee said. “Heather comple-ments Virginia very well. And Virginia always wanted to get to senior nationals before the end of high school.”
For the past few weeks, the girls have brushed up on their medical law and ethics, and legal precedents from other countries surrounding doctors prescribing placebos. They’ll need to construct arguments for and against, and are hon-ing their skills on spotting the many rhetorical fal-lacies that crop up in opponents’ speeches.
“We research a lot of precedents and legal cases in Canada,” Shram said. “And find statis-tics. Any topic is more interesting after you start researching … when you get into the different implications.”
Both girls say they have as good a chance as any of the 80 teams at the senior nationals, and that it’s actually less pressure than heading into regionals or provincials. At the same time, both find it sad that this will be their last debate before graduating high school.
Cape is entering engineering at the University of Victoria and Shram is accepted at McGill Uni-versity and UVic, but hasn’t selected a major.
“The stress is in regionals and provincials on wanting to qualify for nationals. Now there’s noth-ing to qualify for. We just have to do the best we can,” Cape said. “This is our last year and our last debate tournament.”
For their last competition, they do plan to cre-ate stylish team uniforms, Shram said – “some-thing involving tearaway track pants and rhine-stones.”
The senior debate nationals are in Calgary from April 25 to 29.
Pacific Christian School secondary teacher Ruth McGhee, centre, helped coach Heather Cape and Virginia Shram through to the senior national debate championships in Calgary, starting April 25. Shram and Cape, both in Grade 12, were among the top five debate teams in the province.
Teen debaters ready to argue at nationals
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SAANICH NEWS - Wednesday, April 17, 2013 www.vicnews.com • A7
Kyle SlavinNews staff
If you’ve driven, walked or cycled past McKenzie Avenue and the Trans-Canada Highway lately, you may have noticed work crews clearing the large plot of land at the north-west edge of the intersection.
It’s not the beginnings of a wider high-way or an interchange to ease traffic. The work is part of a $6-million expansion of St. Joseph’s elementary school, located at the corner of McKenzie and Burnside Road.
“We’re very excited. The Catholic Schools plan has been in the works for four or five years,” said Joe Colistro, superintendent of Island Catholic schools. “We’re excited to be showing, visually, signs of moving for-ward and building for the future.”
The existing St. Joseph’s was built in 1963 and accommodates some 200 students, kin-dergarden through Grade 7. But with the impending closure of St. Andrew’s elemen-tary school (at Pandora Avenue and Van-couver Street), those students need to be moved to much-needed space.
The upgrades at St. Joseph’s include building eight new classrooms, a new library and computer lab, and upgrades to the staff room. The school playground will be relocated and a new grass playing field will be installed – that’s what’s being dug up
at the corner of TCH and McKenzie.Once construction of the new wing is
complete, the existing building will be seis-mically upgraded. The expansion project is expected to be complete in September 2014, on a $6-million budget.
“That’s a tight budget for all the things we’re trying to achieve,” said Leah MacKen-zie, chief financial officer with the Diocese of Victoria. “None of the capital funding is provided by the province, so any capital dollars we have to raise directly from par-ents or parishioners in our churches.”
Money raised from the sale of St. Andrew’s downtown will help ease the financial bur-den of upgrading.
St. Joseph’s is just the start. St. Patrick’s elementary and St. Andrew’s Catholic High School, both in Saanich, as well, will be expanded and upgraded in the future.
“Those are on hold until more funding comes available, and we get through one successful project,” MacKenzie said. “We do have ideas, we do have plans – we’re excited about those (two projects), yet we realize we can only do one thing at a time.”
In all, Island Catholic Schools anticipates the school upgrades will cost an estimated $20 million.
Roughly 1,100 students attend the Catho-lic schools in Greater Victoria.
St. Joseph’s elementary school is building a new field on its property near McKenzie Avenue and the Trans-Canada Highway as part of a $6-million expansion.
Kyle SlavinNews staff
Garlic mustard sounds delicious. And blessed milk thistle sounds sweet and innocent.
But don’t let their names fool you. They’re both invasive plant species, and they’re wreaking havoc on Saan-ich’s natural environment.
“I think everybody realizes the importance of trying to make sure the native species can either rebound or stay dominant in the ecosystem,” said Doug Henderson, Saanich’s director of parks and recreation.
Saanich council on Monday was expected to discuss a newly created Invasive Species Management Strat-egy that aims to target and tackle invasive flora in the municipality.
“It’s a document that looks at mak-ing suggestions around starting to identify, inventory and map invasive species, and to look at how we sup-port dealing with invasives on public and private land,” Henderson said.
It also looks at how to restore areas that have been overtaken by invasive species, and how to prop-erly dispose of the plants that are removed.
If approved by council, Henderson anticipates the first step will be a
map to give parks crews “a better sense of what they’re out there deal-ing with and where it is.”
Henderson said one of the munici-pality’s biggest assets in fighting invasive species is volunteer pro-grams and organizations that main-tain parks and public spaces.
“We wouldn’t be able to get out there and have the reach that we have through the volunteer pro-grams as part of the regular staff work. We’re greatly appreciative, as is council, of the work the volunteers do,” he said. “There’s a strong sense of ownership that folks are display-ing when they go into a neighbour-hood park or municipally designated park and try to reclaim it.”
Among the top invasive plant spe-cies in Saanich are giant hogweed, purple loostrife, knotweed and lesser celandine.
There are animals in Saanich that are considered invasive – American bullfrog, eastern grey squirrel, Euro-pean starlings – but the management plan solely looks at plants.
“The fauna side is a bit more of a broader piece. They tend to move around a lot faster than we can con-tain within a single municipality,” Henderson said.
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Be sure to ask your optometrist or optician about the lens options that are available, including the following:
Anti-reflective coating: This feature helps eliminate annoying reflections and the “ghost” images some people see. AR coated lenses actually transmit more light for clearer vision. These lenses can help people who drive at night by reducing glare from oncoming headlights.
Photosensitive lenses: These special lens materials “darken” when you are exposed to different intensities of outdoor light. The brighter it is outside, the darker the lens becomes. This lens works best when you are outdoors and therefore is not the best sunglass for driving.
UV coating: A protective coating that blocks harmful ultraviolet rays. The latest UV coatings can help protect the eyes without changing the look or color of the lenses.
Color tinting: Any color tint can be added to your lenses in gradients ranging from 10-90%. This can be used for style, to give your glasses a unique look, or for certain health reasons (eg. cataracts). Color tints can be combined with UV coating for added protection in the sun.
Scratch protection: A clear coating that helps protect plastic lenses from scratches and other superficial damage. This option is pretty much mandatory for just about anyone wearing plastic or high index lenses. There are different scratch resistant coatings available depending on the level of protection a person needs.
All of these options, combined with advances in lens design (for example aspheric, progressive and high index lenses), mean that today’s spectacle wearer is guaranteed greater comfort. While at your Optometrist’s office ask what your best lens options are for your prescription.
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A8 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, April 17, 2013 - SAANICH NEWS
OUR VIEW
As the B.C. NDP launched its election campaign last week with a package of
income tax hikes, higher than those in the B.C. Liberals’ election budget of February, a third party leader confirmed his own plan to increase personal and business income tax rates.
It’s not readily apparent from his recently released “fiscal framework” document, but B.C. Conservative leader John Cummins told me his plan to phase out B.C.’s carbon tax does indeed include raising income tax rates that were lowered to make the carbon tax “revenue neutral.”
I reached Cummins in Prince George, where he was continuing his aggressive courtship of northern B.C. with an announcement that federal gas tax revenues would be redirected to a new fund for locally determined road improvements. Earlier he vowed to study the deplorable state of northern ambulance service.
Cummins has more good news for the north: that’s where a regionally phased elimination of the carbon tax would begin.
It’s also the area of thinnest population, meaning the impact on the B.C. treasury would be less. This is, after all, a tax budgeted to bring in $1.2 billion in the current year.
The B.C. Conservatives
continually remind people that the carbon tax falls disproportionately on rural, remote and particularly
northern folks who face long distances, long winters, and public transit options ranging from slim to none.
This has ceased to be much of an issue for the urban B.C. majority, who are focused on bridge tolls, ferry fares and the like.
The B.C. Conservatives decry the population decline of rural B.C., with international immigration
almost exclusively going to big cities, while temporary foreign workers increasingly fill agricultural and industrial jobs in the Interior.
The party’s still-evolving platform echoes the NDP’s call for more skills training and increased completion rates for trade apprentices.
Cummins is in favour of the proposed Northern Gateway oil pipeline and the massive buildup of infrastructure needed to add liquefied natural gas to B.C.’s energy export mix. He sees that enormous industrial expansion as the path to shift population growth beyond the south of the province.
Cummins is surprisingly cool to one industrial project, the proposed Site C dam on the Peace River, calling himself undecided. He also sounds skeptical about the B.C. Liberal plan to extend B.C.’s electricity grid and use that to develop further independent power.
This sounds to me like political positioning rather than economic analysis. Anti-Site C independent candidate Arthur Hadland has significant support in Peace River North, creating a three-way struggle for a key B.C. Conservative target.
The B.C. Conservative platform also totals up the billions in long-term electricity contracts with private power producers and suggests the price for this clean energy has been set too high. This is another echo of the NDP’s vague position.
So if the B.C. Conservatives are gung-ho on oil and gas and think the carbon tax is a mistake, do they think there should be any effort to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions?
Cummins sidestepped that question, preferring to talk about conventional air pollution, whether it’s in the Fraser Valley or as a byproduct of a northern industrial boom.
As a longtime former Reform and Conservative MP, Cummins is acutely aware that the urban media will leap with extra vigour on any perceived gaffe of the right wing. Should a Conservative let slip that he’s skeptical about global warming, or worse, express a rustic view on social issues, all hell would break loose.
The B.C. Conservatives have started with the most detailed, costed platform of any party. Don’t count them out.
Tom Fletcher is legislative reporter and columnist for Black Press.
‘Cummins sees pipeline, LNG buildup as key to shift of B.C. population growth.’
Time for a voteon amalgamationAmalgamation shouldn’t be a scary word.
No one is taking an eraser to the Capital Region map and removing the
borders that separate your municipality from those of your neighbours.
Often the discussion around amalgamation tends to drift towards the hypothetical best-case scenario (or worst-case scenario, depending on who you ask) of creating one municipality that spans from Sooke to North Saanich.
Talk of such a drastic change usually derails any objective discussion.
That’s why the concept needs to be reframed. We need to get away from arguing about hypothetical borders and specific solutions and focus on studying amalgamation as a positive step for our region.
Amalgamation Yes is taking the right approach by focusing on getting a referendum question onto the 2014 municipal election ballot. Put the question to the residents of the 13 municipalities and see if there’s an appetite to explore the option of amalgamation.
Municipalities have nothing to lose by asking the question.
The overarching goal of amalgamation is to save money by finding efficiencies in service delivery and by removing redundancies.
What ithe end result would look like in Greater Victoria is still unknown.
Proponents and opponents can point to Halifax or Abbotsford or Toronto and pick and choose their facts to back up their positions. But until we have a case study that properly examines the ins and outs of amalgamation as it relates to Victoria, no interest group, organization or politician can offer a definitive solution.
Until something concrete happens, the conversation isn’t going to move forward in a meaningful way.
Instead, people will continue to speculate about the potential successes and hazards of amalgamation, without a sound understanding of its local impact.
Change can be scary. But looking at amalgamation as a potential option to save us time and money shouldn’t be feared.
Tom FletcherB.C. Views
EDITORIAL Penny Sakamoto Group PublisherKevin Laird Editorial DirectorEdward Hill Editor Oliver Sommer Advertising Director
The SAANICH NEWS is published by Black Press Ltd. | 818 Broughton St., Victoria, B.C. V8W 1E4 | Phone: 250-381-3484 • Fax: 250-386-2624 • Web: www.vicnews.com
The SAANICH NEWS is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council.
Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org.
What do you think? Give us your comments by e-mail: [email protected] or fax 250-386-2624. All letters must have a name and a telephone number for verification.
2009 WINNER
SAANICH NEWS - Wednesday, April 17, 2013 www.vicnews.com • A9
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OUR VIEW
As the B.C. NDP launched its election campaign last week with a package of
income tax hikes, higher than those in the B.C. Liberals’ election budget of February, a third party leader confirmed his own plan to increase personal and business income tax rates.
It’s not readily apparent from his recently released “fiscal framework” document, but B.C. Conservative leader John Cummins told me his plan to phase out B.C.’s carbon tax does indeed include raising income tax rates that were lowered to make the carbon tax “revenue neutral.”
I reached Cummins in Prince George, where he was continuing his aggressive courtship of northern B.C. with an announcement that federal gas tax revenues would be redirected to a new fund for locally determined road improvements. Earlier he vowed to study the deplorable state of northern ambulance service.
Cummins has more good news for the north: that’s where a regionally phased elimination of the carbon tax would begin.
It’s also the area of thinnest population, meaning the impact on the B.C. treasury would be less. This is, after all, a tax budgeted to bring in $1.2 billion in the current year.
The B.C. Conservatives
continually remind people that the carbon tax falls disproportionately on rural, remote and particularly
northern folks who face long distances, long winters, and public transit options ranging from slim to none.
This has ceased to be much of an issue for the urban B.C. majority, who are focused on bridge tolls, ferry fares and the like.
The B.C. Conservatives decry the population decline of rural B.C., with international immigration
almost exclusively going to big cities, while temporary foreign workers increasingly fill agricultural and industrial jobs in the Interior.
The party’s still-evolving platform echoes the NDP’s call for more skills training and increased completion rates for trade apprentices.
Cummins is in favour of the proposed Northern Gateway oil pipeline and the massive buildup of infrastructure needed to add liquefied natural gas to B.C.’s energy export mix. He sees that enormous industrial expansion as the path to shift population growth beyond the south of the province.
Cummins is surprisingly cool to one industrial project, the proposed Site C dam on the Peace River, calling himself undecided. He also sounds skeptical about the B.C. Liberal plan to extend B.C.’s electricity grid and use that to develop further independent power.
This sounds to me like political positioning rather than economic analysis. Anti-Site C independent candidate Arthur Hadland has significant support in Peace River North, creating a three-way struggle for a key B.C. Conservative target.
The B.C. Conservative platform also totals up the billions in long-term electricity contracts with private power producers and suggests the price for this clean energy has been set too high. This is another echo of the NDP’s vague position.
So if the B.C. Conservatives are gung-ho on oil and gas and think the carbon tax is a mistake, do they think there should be any effort to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions?
Cummins sidestepped that question, preferring to talk about conventional air pollution, whether it’s in the Fraser Valley or as a byproduct of a northern industrial boom.
As a longtime former Reform and Conservative MP, Cummins is acutely aware that the urban media will leap with extra vigour on any perceived gaffe of the right wing. Should a Conservative let slip that he’s skeptical about global warming, or worse, express a rustic view on social issues, all hell would break loose.
The B.C. Conservatives have started with the most detailed, costed platform of any party. Don’t count them out.
Tom Fletcher is legislative reporter and columnist for Black Press.
‘Cummins sees pipeline, LNG buildup as key to shift of B.C. population growth.’
Time for a voteon amalgamationAmalgamation shouldn’t be a scary word.
No one is taking an eraser to the Capital Region map and removing the
borders that separate your municipality from those of your neighbours.
Often the discussion around amalgamation tends to drift towards the hypothetical best-case scenario (or worst-case scenario, depending on who you ask) of creating one municipality that spans from Sooke to North Saanich.
Talk of such a drastic change usually derails any objective discussion.
That’s why the concept needs to be reframed. We need to get away from arguing about hypothetical borders and specific solutions and focus on studying amalgamation as a positive step for our region.
Amalgamation Yes is taking the right approach by focusing on getting a referendum question onto the 2014 municipal election ballot. Put the question to the residents of the 13 municipalities and see if there’s an appetite to explore the option of amalgamation.
Municipalities have nothing to lose by asking the question.
The overarching goal of amalgamation is to save money by finding efficiencies in service delivery and by removing redundancies.
What ithe end result would look like in Greater Victoria is still unknown.
Proponents and opponents can point to Halifax or Abbotsford or Toronto and pick and choose their facts to back up their positions. But until we have a case study that properly examines the ins and outs of amalgamation as it relates to Victoria, no interest group, organization or politician can offer a definitive solution.
Until something concrete happens, the conversation isn’t going to move forward in a meaningful way.
Instead, people will continue to speculate about the potential successes and hazards of amalgamation, without a sound understanding of its local impact.
Change can be scary. But looking at amalgamation as a potential option to save us time and money shouldn’t be feared.
Tom FletcherB.C. Views
EDITORIAL Penny Sakamoto Group PublisherKevin Laird Editorial DirectorEdward Hill Editor Oliver Sommer Advertising Director
The SAANICH NEWS is published by Black Press Ltd. | 818 Broughton St., Victoria, B.C. V8W 1E4 | Phone: 250-381-3484 • Fax: 250-386-2624 • Web: www.vicnews.com
The SAANICH NEWS is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council.
Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org.
What do you think? Give us your comments by e-mail: [email protected] or fax 250-386-2624. All letters must have a name and a telephone number for verification.
2009 WINNER
LETTERS
Building a better tick-tack-
toe machineTen-year-old Peter Ochs, left, his mom Leila Thaiss and Zephy Tsang listen as 14-year-old Duncan Silverside explains his project, the Master of Tick-Tack-Toe robot at the regional science fair at the University of Victoria on Sunday. The robot designed by Silverside and built with help from teammates was entered in the FIRST Tech Challenge where robots competed in a game of double-sided tick-tack-toe. Silverside and his team will be competing in the FTC (First Tech Challenge) Championships in St. Louis against teams from around the world next week.
Sharon Tiffin/News staff
Driving rules unfairly tough for seniors
Re: Driving under the influence of age (News, April 12)
It’s one thing to voluntarily give up driving and another to be forced by the bureaucracy.
A tougher test for seniors is now an ICBC policy. After a spell in hospital in September a doctor, not my physician, told me, as I was being checked out, not to drive.
Several months later I received a letter from ICBC informing me that due to a med-ical report I had to have a check-up and a driving test.
I learned that doctors can now, without warning, ask the medical association for a patient to be tested. It went into effect in November. There was nothing about my illness that affected my senses or my abil-ity to drive. I was OK’d to drive by my own doctor and was subsequently called in for a driving test.
I was checked out by a driving school then tested with some failures and told to come back. I went to another driv-ing school for a check out, was declared a good driver and took my test.
My test was full of “minor” incidents. I feel that’s discrimination due to age and therefore have voluntarily turned in my licence as a lost cause.
I’ve been a driver for over 70 years with only a couple of minor accidents. I live with a handicapped wife and have been doing the shopping and other errands.
Les SaulSaanich
Victoria should vote on amalgamation
Re: Regional amalgamationI think we should have a referendum on
regional amalgamation as all the mayors have fiefdoms they do not want to give up.
They have a vested interest and should not be included in the decision much less make it.
Elaine MoserSaanich
Misinformation mars carbon credit program
Re: Greenhouse gas leaks from Pacific Carbon Trust (B.C. Views, April 3)
Tom Fletcher’s column perpetuates factual errors that fail to inform any debate regarding a carbon neutral government.
When The Nature Conservancy of Canada purchased Darkwoods in 2008, our expensive, long-term commitment to the conservation lands began.
From the outset, revenue from carbon
sales was seen as critical to supporting this stewardship effort. Without the possibility of carbon sales, NCC could not have undertaken a project of this size and scope. Yet, those facts are conveniently overlooked by Mr. Fletcher.
Independent evaluations were not based on the possibility of NCC clear-cutting the property, but rather on what would have happened had NCC not acquired Darkwoods.
The alternative was acquisition by a market-based buyer and being intensively logged and subdivided. The difference forms the basis for carbon valuation.
Mr. Fletcher asks, rhetorically, if NCC would have logged Darkwoods. “Legally, it could not,” he writes.
On the contrary, NCC does log the site. We operate a small, sustainable harvest based on conservation values.
In fact, overall our ownership of Darkwoods has resulted in a $13-million economic benefit to the community, to date. The Nature Conservancy of Canada spent three years developing the project while working with various industry experts.
The project is certified under the Verified Carbon Standard; a standard that ensures a carbon project follows internationally recognized protocols and has tangible environmental benefits.
Without revenue from forest carbon, the long-term protection of this 55,000-hectare
property would be in jeopardy. The proceeds from the carbon sales
went back into the long-term stewardship of Darkwoods – for the sake of nature and the people of British Columbia.
Tom SwannNature Conservancy
of Canada
Federal gas tax to pay for bridge
Re: Craigflower should be a toll bridge (Letters, April 10)
In response to toll bridges or any toll on any road way for that matter should not happen. That’s why there’s a gas tax. That was introduced to pay for infrastructure.
That being said, there needs to be a restructure on how it’s redistributed from Ottawa.
Quit squandering our taxes and use it for what it was introduced for.
Trevor PatrickSaanich
The News welcomes your opinions and comments.■ Mail: Letters to the Editor, Saanich News, 818 Broughton St., Victoria, B.C., V8W 1E4 ■ E-mail: [email protected]
A10 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, April 17, 2013 - SAANICH NEWS
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SAANICH NEWS - Wednesday, April 17, 2013 www.vicnews.com • A11
Drunk man punches apart car on Shelbourne
One man faces mischief and attempted assault charges after punching in the windows of a car dur-ing an alcohol-fuelled argument late Saturday night.
Saanich police were called to Ken-more Road and Shelbourne Street at 11:30 p.m. after four intoxicated pedestrians got into an argument with
a passing motorist.Sgt. Scott Treble says one of the
pedestrians “became enraged and he punched out and broke the driver’s window and the passenger side win-dow. He tried to punch the passenger but was unsuccessful.”
A canine unit was brought it and the dog quickly tracked three of the four men to Majestic Park. Police arrested a 22-year-old man, matching the description of the suspect.
Man pulls replica handgun during fight near Tillicum
A man pulled out a replica handgun during an argument between two men near Tillicum Centre early Saturday,
leading to potential assault and weap-ons-related charges against a 25-year-old man.
Just before 7 a.m. a heated verbal argument between two drunk 25-year-olds and a 57-year-old stranger began.
One of the 25-year-olds and the older man got into a physical alterca-tion, and the younger man pulled out a replica handgun and pointed it at the 57-year-old.
Both men sustained injuries during the fight.
Saanich police located the 25-year-old suspect at Victoria General Hos-pital.
An air-powered pellet gun was recovered from a home in the 200-block of Burnside Rd. W.
Daniel PalmerNews staff
Employees at CFB Esquimalt are anticipating even more parking headaches next week, as the only marine shuttle service between the West Shore and the base terminates its service.
The Baseline Ferry makes its last trip between Colwood and CFB Esquimalt on Friday afternoon (April 19). The daily privately run service began last year to replace the base’s Blue Boat service.
Barry Hobbis, vice-president of operations at Victoria Harbour Ferry Co., was unavailable for comment, but the company website blames declining ridership numbers for its inability to con-tinue the service.
“The real gong show will be begin on Friday,” said Mark Miller, vice president of the B.C Union of National Defence Employees. “We had a labour management meeting yesterday, and they told us 200 people a day use this ferry. So that means another 200 vehicles are going to be added to the Colwood crawl.”
The recent closure of the Craigflower bridge has added another layer of congestion to a bottleneck commute each day.
To help relieve traffic, the base may create dedi-cated carpool parking, he said, adding public tran-sit options from the West Shore to the base need to be improved.
At its peak, the Blue Boat attracted 800 passen-gers daily, but budgetary restrictions and aging ferries spelled the end for the service last April.
Baseline ferry has been operating since June 2012 and cost $5 for a return trip.
Commuter ferry from West Shore to CFB Esquimalt cancelled
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Blanshard & Saanich store Uptown Centre 3541 Blanshard Street Victoria 250-220-8424 Open Saturdays.
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A12 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, April 17, 2013 - SAANICH NEWS
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
Offers valid at Royal Oak and Esquimalt Country Grocer locations only4420 West Saanich Rd, Royal Oak • 1153 Esquimalt Rd. Victoria4420 West Saanich Rd, Royal Oak • 1153 Esquimalt Rd. VictoriaWATCH FOR OUR
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Power To Be provides adventure-based programs designed for Victoria youth and families in need of support. Through a collaborative approach and caring staff, Power To Be inspires connections with nature and the discovery of limitless ability.
How you can help:Purchase a $2 Power To Be card at the checkout (all proceeds
benefi t the Foundation) Or visit www.powertobe.ca and donate by signing up for monthly giving, honour a loved one, legacy gift or corporate engagement. Thank you for your support!
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SAANICH NEWS - Wednesday, April 17, 2013 www.vicnews.com • A13
Buy one get one FREE*
With over 240 Dulux Paints locations, visit dulux.ca for a store near you.
*Cannot be combined with any other offer or promotion. Buy any gallon (3.0L-3.78L) of Dulux or Glidden paint at a regular retail price and get the second gallon (of equal or lesser value) free. All products may not be available at all locations. See instore for offer details. At participating locations only.
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VICTORIA3303A Tennyson Ave. Victoria, BC V8Z 3P5
Phone 250-382-3114
LANGFORD109 - 2924 Jacklin Rd. Langford, BC V9B 3Y5
Phone 250-915-1016
Weekend plant sale at Swan Lake
Hundreds of species and more than 6,000 plants are
up for grabs at Swan Lake’s annual spring native plant sale.
The sale runs Saturday and Sunday at the Nature House at 841 Ralph St. in Saanich.
Check swanlake.bc.ca for parking information.
Parent and toddler basics at library
The Bruce Hutchison branch
of the Greater Victoria Public Library hosts Parenting: Baby and Toddler basics on Thurs-day, April 18, 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., 4636 Elk Lake Dr.
Parents and babies are invited to a visit from a Pen-insula Health Unit nurse. The nurse will answer questions, and discuss topics such as immunization, growth and suc-cessful nursing.
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A16 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, April 17, 2013 - SAANICH NEWS
Daniel PalmerNews staff
With its mild climate, lush parks, the Pacific Ocean hugging its shorelines and even the occa-sional palm tree, Victoria is Canada’s closest com-parison to a tropical paradise.
Perhaps that’s why a familiar Hawaiian instru-ment, the ukulele, has seen a resurgence in popu-larity as of late.
“There’s been a growing ukulele community in Victoria,” said Paul Laverick, a manager at Larsen Music and organizer of the fourth annual Victoria Ukulele Week.
“There’s a lot of young people playing it now. I think it’s the social aspect of playing and singing together.”
Running April 18 to 28, Ukulele Week has been so successful partly because the ukulele is so easy to learn and play, Laverick said.
Hawaiians created the ukulele in the 19th cen-tury, modelled on the Portuguese cavaquino, a small four-string guitar.
The instrument generally appeals to people who like to “make their own entertainment,” Laverick said.
“It is sort of a goofy instrument, and the people who play are usually up for a bit of silliness.”
Self-proclaimed “uke guru” Laverick has been teaching ukulele classes at Larsen Music since 2008, and he has several workshops planned in Esquimalt and Victoria throughout the week.
There are also several concerts taking place at venues like Black Hat Bistro and Hermann’s Jazz Club, while professional ukulele performer Ralph Shaw will strut his skills at Norway House, 1110 Hillside Ave., on April 26.
Shaw will also be running his own workshop on April 27, which concert goers can attend for free.
A decent ukulele costs about $40, but the top-of-the-line instruments can cost $1,800, Laverick said.
“It’s a nice thing to carry around with you,” he said. “I got stopped the other day on the way to work, someone saw my ukulele and asked me to play Happy Birthday for their friend. … I definitely know people who have ukuleles stashed in every nook and cranny, so there’s always one to have around.”
The week culminates in the annual Uke Mass Love-In finale concert, where last year about 250 people filled Market Square with the sweet sounds of the ukuleles in unison.
The free event takes place April 28 between 1 and 3 p.m. at 560 Johnson St., and Laverick hopes to break last year’s attendance record.
“We’re also doing a beginner workshop where you can show up at the music store with noth-ing and we can provide you with an instrument there to have a feel and try a few chords,” he said. “Otherwise, I would suggest keeping one on your person at all times during the week.”
For a full listing of events, visit larsenmusic.ca or call 250-389-1988.
Paul Laverick, among a wall full of ukuleles at Larsen Music on Cook Street.
Sweet week for ukulele fansThe Victoria Symphony presents its popular series designed to engage children in the wonderful world of music with orchestral adventures and fun stories that will entertain and amaze children of all ages. Judy and David’s Symphonic Adven-ture is at the Royal Theatre, April 21, at 2:30 p.m. Tickets available at rmts.bc.ca.
Symphonic fun with Judy and David
Go beyond the parking lot and pick up your copy of “A Guide to User-Friendly Trails” featuring easy-to-use walking, hiking and wheeling trails in Greater Victoria, BC.
Features:• Trails suitable to individuals of diverse ages, levels of mobility and
endurance.• Trail profiles and maps to enable users to determine which parks
and amenities to visit.
Pick up your copy at Capital Regional District Offices, West Shore Parks & Recreation and municipal halls in the Westshore area. Download it at www.westshorerecreation.ca/userfriendlytrails
Developed in partnership with:
A Guide to User-Friendly Trails
Supported by:
Parks 250.475.5522 | Cedar Hill Golf 250.475.7150 | Cedar Hill 250.475.7121 | Gordon Head 250.475.7100 | GR Pearkes 250.475.5400 | Commonwealth Place 250.475.7600
Join us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterSaanich Parks & Recreation www.recreation.saanich.ca
Saanich Cycling FestivalSunday, April 21 11:00am - 1:30pmUNIVERSITY OF VICTORIA – LOT #10Celebrate Earth Day and choose the route that best suits your family.Cycle the Shelbourne Corridor as part of the 5 km Family Bike Ride escorted by Saanich Police or the 2 km UVic Kids Ride. Enjoy stage entertainment, bike demonstrations, interactive games, information displays, bouncy castles, the bike rodeo, concessions and a wide range of free family fun. Visit www.saanichcyclingfestival.ca for more details. Free Youth Week Events
Come out and support your local youth.
Thursday, May 2MOBILE SKATE JAM - 6:00-9:00pm, Pearkes Recreation Centre
Friday, May 3YOUTH NOW AWARDS - 6:30-8:30pm, Cedar Hill Recreation Centre
OUTDOOR MOVIE - Esquimalt Recreation (Movie TBA) 7-10pmFree Shuttle provided at The Flipside for return trip to movie.
Saturday, May 4LIMELIGHT YOUTH ART EXPERIENCE - 1:00-9:00pm, Cedar Hill Recreation CentreA celebration of local youth artists ages 12-25yrs. Come out and support the amazing youth in your community!For more information or for young artists wanting to take part go tohttp://www.saanich.ca/parkrec/community/youth/special-events.html
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SAANICH NEWS - Wednesday, April 17, 2013 www.vicnews.com • A17
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Alt-folk band Fish & Bird is headed out on a short tour through B.C. before heading into the studio to create the follow-up to their double nominated 2011 album Every Whisper Is A Shout Across The Void.
Fish & Bird has enjoyed a lot of success and attention since releasing the album – two Western Canadian Music Awards nominations (2011 and 2012), three official invites to the International Folk Alliance Conference, major Canadian folk festivals, rave reviews and international attention, and the top most frequently played album on Galaxie’s Folk/Roots channel for 2011.
The future is even more promising though, as the band is touring the UK next fall after being picked up by an agent at Folk Alliance.
Fish & Bird’s fourth album is slated for a winter release, so keep your ear to the ground on what’s to come.
The new album will be recorded on Mayne Island at Fiddle Head Studios. The yet to be titled album will be released in early 2014, and the band will be breaking out some new material on this tour.
Hear Fish & Bird along with Dougal Bain McLean and Seattle’s Impossible Bird, a duo featuring Nick Drummond, former frontman and songwriter for Seattle band The Senate and Victoria native fiddler Tyler Carson, April 19 at 7:30 p.m. at the Upstairs Cabaret. Tickets are $14 and are available at Sitka.
Alt-folk darlings Fish & Bird play the Upstairs Cabaret on April 19.
Folk and roots onstage upstairs
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Publications: Saanich News Build # E1 Date: Mar. 28, 2013
†MSRP is $46 ,945 for a new Lexus 2013 RX 350 sfx ‘A’. ~2013 F Sport package shown: $59,895. MSRP includes freight and PDI ($1 ,995). License, insurance, registration (if applicable) and taxes are extra. *Lease and finance of fers provided through Lexus Financial Services, on approved credit to qualified retail customers. 1 .9% lease rate/0.9% finance rate available on all new Lexus 2013 RX 350 models . Lease example based on a 48 month term at an annual rate of 1 .9% and MSRP of $ 4 6 ,945 (includes $1 ,995 freight/PDI). Monthly payment is $51 0/$56 4/$619 with $5 ,0 0 0/$2, 50 0/$0 down payment or equivalent trade in , $0 security deposit and f irst monthly payment due at lease inception. Total lease obl igation is $29, 502/$29, 596/$29, 690 . Taxes , l icense, registration (i f appl icable) and insurance are extra . 8 0 ,0 0 0 ki lometre al lowance; charge of $0 . 20/km for excess ki lometers . **Finance example includes taxes and is based on a 24 month term at an annual rate of 0.9% and MSRP of $46,945 (excludes taxes and includes $1,995 freight/PDI). Monthly payment is $2,211. Cost of borrowing is $494 for a total obligation of $53,073. License, registration (if applicable) and insurance are extra. Lexus Dealers are free to set their own prices. Limited time offers only apply to retail customers at participating Lexus dealers. Dealer order/trade may be required. Offers are subject to change without notice. Offers expire at month’s end unless extended or revised. See your Lexus dealer for complete details.
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Kyle WellsNews staff
Being able to golf year round is going to be a new experience for Gina Hosie, Victoria Golf Club’s first women’s golf program director.
Working in the golf industry in Ontario since 1995, Hosie said she isn’t used to being out on the links in early April. Out on the course recently, playing in the sun, Hosie said she couldn’t help but think of her husband, visiting Ontario and trudging through two inches of fresh snow.
The new title Hosie is taking on is reflective of an industry realizing the strong presence and importance of female players.
“I think the idea was to have some female presence on the professional team.” Hosie said. “And just have somebody whose focus it is to enhance the membership experience for the ladies here and try some new things.”
Long gone are the days of golf being a male-dominated sport, Hosie said. For seven years she worked at the Ladies Golf Club of Toronto, the only remaining private golf club in North America with a strictly female membership.
“That kind of demonstrates that it’s not a men-only sport,” Hosie said.
In 1896 the Victoria Golf Club had 27 female members, but they were only honorary members, meaning they had no say in committees and couldn’t vote. This rule didn’t change until more than 100 years later, when in 1999.
The passion for golf didn’t come to Hosie until she moved to Canada from the U.K. A couple of years in, she fell in love with the game and decided to make a career out of it.
Victoria Golf Club is the perfect fit to continue making a career out of her passion, she said. She and her husband are moving into Oak Bay and is excited to become a part of the golf community.
“I’ve played golf courses all over the world, some really top-level courses, and this course, without a doubt, is one of the most spectacular settings for a golf course I’ve ever played,” Hosie said. “It’s just beautiful out there. It’s kind of hard to concentrate on my game when there’s so much to look at.”
Gina Hosie joins staff as the first female program director
New pro tees off at Victoria Golf Club
Gina Hosie
www.vicnews.comApril 24 - May 4th
Nightly 7 p.m.(No Show Sun/Mon)
Additional 2 pm Matinée May 4thReservations Recommended:
250-658-66724980 Wesley Rd., Saanich
Please Note: Suggestive Language Used
CLAREMONT MUSICAL THEATRE PRESENTS
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SAANICH NEWS - Wednesday, April 17, 2013 www.vicnews.com • A19
Who Can Vote?You can vote if you are:
• 18 years of age or older, or will be 18 on General Voting Day (May 14, 2013)
• a Canadian citizen, and• a resident of British Columbia for
the past six months
Voter Registration is EasyRegister online at elections.bc.ca/ovr or call toll-free 1-800-661-8683 until April 23, 2013.
If you aren’t registered by April 23, you can register when you vote. You’ll need identification that proves both your identity and residential address. A complete list of acceptable identification is available from Elections BC.
How to Nominate a CandidateA candidate must be nominated in writing by 75 eligible voters of the electoral district. Nomination kits are available from your District Electoral Officer or online at elections.bc.ca
Deadline for NominationsNominations must be delivered to your District Electoral Officer by 1 p.m. (Pacific time) on Friday, April 26, 2013.
BC Has More Ways to VoteAll voters can:
Vote in any district electoral office from now until 4 p.m. (Pacific time) on General Voting Day, Tuesday, May 14, 2013.
Vote by Mail You can ask for a Vote by Mail package from your district electoral office or through the Elections BC website at elections.bc.ca
Vote at advance voting Voters can attend any advance voting location in the province from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. (local time), Wednesday, May 8 through Saturday, May 11. All advance voting locations are wheelchair accessible.
Vote on General Voting Day Voters can attend any general voting location in the province from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. (Pacific time), Tuesday, May 14, 2013.
Election Workers RequiredOver 37,000 election officials are required to work at voting places in the province. View the job descriptions at elections.bc.ca/jobs. Please apply in person at your district electoral office.
Any Questions? For further information visit Elections BC’s website at elections.bc.ca or call toll-free 1-800-661-8683.
Get our OTEBC App for iPhones and iPads to find the closest voting place and for information you need to vote.
Or, contact your district electoral office.
MAY 2013
GENERAL ELECTIONThe 40th Provincial General Election is Underway.
Esquimalt-Royal Roads1195 Esquimalt Rd Esquimalt, BC (250) 952-7833
Juan de Fuca108-1016 McCallum Rd Langford, BC (250) 391-2820
Oak Bay-Gordon Head2780 Richmond Rd Saanich, BC (250) 952-7819
Saanich North and the Islands1528 Stellys Cross Rd Central Saanich, BC (250) 952-4100
Saanich South220-4460 Chatterton Way Saanich, BC (250) 952-7826
Victoria-Beacon Hill103-1803 Douglas St Victoria, BC (250) 952-4201
Victoria-Swan Lake201-415 Gorge Rd E Victoria, BC (250) 952-4509
Hours of OperationMonday - Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
#21 (ESR) Esquimalt-Royal Roads#24 (JDF) Juan de Fuca#43 (OBG) Oak Bay-Gordon Head#56 (SAN) Saanich North and the Islands#57 (SAS) Saanich South#81 (VTB) Victoria-Beacon Hill#82 (VTS) Victoria-Swan Lake
Travis Paterson and Daniel PalmerNews staff
If it wasn’t for a missed subway stop, a trio of Victoria residents would have been at the Boston Marathon finish line when two explosions occurred Monday.
Saanich fitness instructor Pam Glover, who teaches at Cedar Hill Recreation Cen-tre, ran the marathon with a target of four hours and was redirected a half mile from the end within minutes of the finish.
Her daughter Dana, Dana’s boyfriend Aztec King, and friend Susan Rogers had all made their way to the finish line anticipat-ing Pam’s arrival.
But the trio of supporters got off at the wrong subway station and were out of sight of the finish line at the time of the explosions, around 3 p.m. Eastern Time or noon Pacific Time.
“They were minutes away and were try-ing to get to where the bomb hit but got off the train a stop early, and were upset
about that actually, so it’s like a miracle that none of us were there,” Glover said.
Glover heard the explosions during the last mile of her race but had no idea what it was.
“I heard two bangs like fireworks or some sort of celebration,” she said. “As I rounded the final corner and could see the finish line, there was a barricade with policeman telling people to go away, and I’m thinking, ‘this is not the finish line.’ I know my time was right on, I was about two minutes from finishing.”
Police told runners and spectators to head to the nearby river.
That’s when a Good Samaritan helped Glover connect with her family and get her bearings.
“It was chaos … this woman, she was my angel, all of a sudden she was by my side and said, “I’ll lead you to safety.”
The woman gave Glover warm clothes, and let Glover use her cellphone to text Dana.
“We connected with my family and friends, and made sure they (Dana, King and Rogers) were safe. The woman gave me food and water – she was my angel.”
Glover waited for about an hour before returning to her hotel, the Boston Park Plaza, which is a block away from the
explosion scene.Speaking from inside the hotel on Mon-
day, Glover said the plan is to “hunker down” and wait for more information. The group was going stay until Friday but are now unsure about the trip’s itinerary.
“We’re all safe, everyone’s been texting family and friends. We’re told the (local) cellphones are off and to stay in the hotel, and do not join any large groups or congre-gate with others.”
It was Glover’s first Boston Marathon, one she thought would be “a dream come true.” Glover plans to reconnect with her Good Samaritan and send her flowers.
“She was a typical person from Boston, she was so supportive. The people here in Boston are so wonderful. The whole event is so positive. The streets are lined with people high-fiving us the whole way. This is terrible.”
Katie Munro, a Camosun College busi-ness student, spoke with the News from the home of a friend’s mother in Boston. After finishing her run, she left the fin-ish line about 10 minutes before the first explosion. “I hung around the finish line (area) for probably 15 minutes, maybe 20 minutes, and was sitting a block and a half from where it happened for a while after that,” she said.
“Finally I decided to get up and move onto the subway, and I think (the explo-sions) happened right when I got down into the subway because a whole bunch of people came down the stairs. I was still totally oblivious. I thought ‘Oh, people in a hurry.’”
Munro heard comments about an explo-sion, but she wasn’t aware of how serious the incident was until she arrived back to her friend’s home.
“When I got back (my host) hugged me and I thought she was congratulating me at first,” she said. “And then she confirmed, it was all over the news. She said, ‘I can’t believe it. You’re so lucky, you’re fine.’”
Munro was the only member of her Pen-insula Runners running group to attend the Boston Marathon. She said the atmosphere in the city is tense, and she wasn’t sure if she’d be on her flight back to Victoria, scheduled for Tuesday morning.
“I’m assuming lists of the travellers want to get out as soon as possible,” she said.
At least 27 Greater Victoria runners were scheduled to attend the Boston Marathon, according to the Boston Athletic Associa-tion website.
More than 230 British Columbians were scheduled to run the race.
Victoria runners recount Boston Marathon chaosGood Samaritan guides athlete to safety as explosions rip through finish line area
A20 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, April 17, 2013 - SAANICH NEWS
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A22 • www.vicnews.com Wednesday, April 17, 2013 - SAANICH NEWS
Travis PatersonNews staff
Rugby Canada’s Langford factory is now producing a full line of products.
The nation’s locally based rugby pro-gram held its first annual awards dinner at the Westin Bear Mountain on Satur-day.
Of the dozen award winners, seven were players who’ve trained regularly with the under-20 and senior national teams at Rugby Canada’s Centre of Excel-lence at City Centre Park in Langford.
It’s all part of Rugby Canada’s newly established development model, with players coming through the provincial channels and into the under-20 and senior national programs at the COE.
Tyler Ardron was named the men’s 15s Player of the Year.
He is quick to attribute his success to the amount of time he’s spent on the Island in the past few years. For Ardron, a former McMaster Marauders CIS rugby player, it’s meant relocating to Langford full time, twice.
“When I came out in 2012 I didn’t know where to live,” Ardron said. “Now there’s about 10 of us who live in Langford. And it’s starting to catch on (with the com-munity), people recognize me now.”
Though the men’s and women’s national programs have been more-or-less based in Victoria for over a decade, having players living in Langford is a new phenomenon.
Next for the COE is a dormitory to
house players for short and extended training camps, though Ardron was unsure about staying there over the long term.
“I don’t know how that will change things but it will be very helpful to play-ers coming here for the first time.”
The 21-year-old captained Canada to second place at the 2012 Americas Rugby Championship hosted in Lang-ford back in October. Since then he com-pleted a full semester towards his eco-nomics and finance degree at McMas-ter University in Hamilton and is now back in Langford, continuing his stud-ies online, while preparing for a massive summer schedule on Canada’s sevens
and 15s teams.Ardron’s 15s Player of the Year coun-
terpart is Maria Samson, a second rower from Calgary.
Eleven of the trophies are brand new. Prop Hubert Buydens, a former Cast-away Wanderers player, won the resur-rected Canadian Shield, the national 15s Player’s Player of the Year award, as voted on by his teammates. The Cana-dian Shield was last awarded in 2006-07, shared between World Rugby Cup vet-erans Morgan Williams and Pat Riordan, who both played club rugby in Victoria.
Also winning awards on Saturday were Jen Kish and John Moonlight win-ning the respective women’s and men’s sevens Player of the Year trophies.
Bianca Farella and Lucas Hammond were named the respective Young Player of the Year (under-20) awards. Coach of the Year awards went to Chris Sil-verthorn (male) and Jen Ross (female). The Match Official of the Year is Andrew McMaster and the Provincial Union Award went to the Federation de Rugby du Quebec.
Volunteer of the Year Award went to Dean Kittleson of Calgary, Alta.
“The players will get their recogni-tion, so it’s really important to recognize everyone that makes the game happen, the volunteers, referees and administra-tors,” said Gareth Rees, manager of the men’s 15s team.
“(The awards dinner) is something that can become an annual event.”
Fitzgeralds will return to GrizzliesSchool upgrades force triplets to postpone NCAATravis PatersonNews staff
The ice may be out at Bear Mountain Arena but there is already reason to look forward to the Vic-toria Grizzlies 2013-14 season in the B.C. Hockey League.
Namely, the return of the Fitzgerald brothers.BCHL fans should rejoice the Grizzlies’ are retaining the ser-vices of arguably the league’s most electric line of siblings Myles, Leo and Gerry.
Few lines bring highlight reel plays and competitive drive the
likes of the Port Alberni trio.Their play carried the Grizzlies to first in the
league for a good stretch of the season and, when an injury ended Gerry’s season, the Grizz’ season seemed to hit the injury reserve too – though the team bounced back to play two full playoff rounds.
The fact the Fitzgeralds are returning to Col-wood in September instead of entering Div. 1 of the NCAA to the Grizzlies is due to some missing pieces in their education to date.
After their breakout year in 2012-13 it’s clear the bros were ready for Div. 1 this September. The yhave a scholarship deal with the Bemidji State Beavers, but not until 2014-15.
“They’re Div. 1 calibre players, there’s no ques-tion about that, they just have to make themselves Div. 1 post-secondary eligible,” Bestwick said.
“Their focus hasn’t been academics. They’ve been given that opportunity now to focus on aca-demics while they play their last year of Jr. A hockey. I’m certain that they comprehend the value of the opportunity they have and I’m sure they’ll be successful,” Bestwick added.
Many Div. 1 hockey programs showed interest in the brothers, but the best offer so far is from the Bemidji State Beavers, who are willing to give all three a chance together. Bemidji is also willing to wait while the brothers upgrade their marks at Camosun College in the fall and winter semesters.
As for the Grizzlies, it will be hard for Bestwick to repeat the magic of this season. The esteemed coach, with help from Craig Didmon, overhauled the Grizzlies’ depleted roster last summer and cre-ated a league contender.
The club never recovered from a series of game-ending incidents against the Chilliwack Chiefs on Jan. 17.
“Unfortunately for us (that) debacle with Chilli-wack significantly impacted our uniform in rela-tion to suspensions,” Bestwick said.
From Jan. 17 onward the Grizzlies players were suspended a total of 33 games, including one to Bestwick.
“We’re very proud of what we accomplished, we also know we came up short getting the league title. We came up short of getting to the Coastal final and beyond. And when you don’t win your last game I think you’re always disappointed,” Bestwick said.
“We’ll make some changes, yes, but I don’t fore-see ever making as many as last summer.”
Like it or not, the Victoria Cougars are settling for silver for the second year in a row.
The Cougars lost 4-1 to the Richmond Sockeyes in the gold medal final of the Cyclone Taylor Cup in Comox on Sunday.
Matthew Ho scored the only goal of the first period to put the Cougars up 1-0 and goalie Evan Roch held the Cougars in it with some good saves and some luck.
But the luck ran out as the Sockeyes scored three goals in the second period to chase Roch. Michael Herringer, a Victoria Royals prospect, came in to replace Roch, though the Sockeyes scored once more. Jeremy Hamagu-chi, Jake Roder, Liam Law-son and Rudie Thorstenson scored for the Sockeyes.
The Castlegar Rebels took home the bronze medal with
a 5-4 comeback win over the host Comox Valley Gla-cier Kings. The Glacier Kings went up 3-0 early on goals from Sheldon Brett, Tyson Rennie and Nick Tupper. But the Rebels came back with five straight goals, from Jamie Vlanich, Kody Disher, Vlanich again, Erik Alden and Travis Wellman. Glacier King Rylan Ball scored the only goal of the third period but the Gla-cier Kings couldn't draw even.
The Sockeyes, which three weeks ago won the Pacific Junior Hockey League title, went a perfect 4-0 in the Cyclone Cup provincial Junior B hockey champion-ship.
The Cougars finish 2-2, hav-ing defeated the Kootenay league champion Castlegar Rebels 1-0 and tournament host Comox Valley Glacier Kings 6-1.
The Sockeyes had the Cou-gars’ number all weekend,
winning 5-2 in their round robin game on Friday and then 4-1 in the final.
The Sockeyes now advance to St. Malo, Man., this week for the Keystone Cup, West-ern Canadian junior B hockey championship.
“(Victoria) is a good team
and our guys had to play real hard,” said Richmond head coach Aaron Wilbur.
The Cougars graduate sev-eral players from its core, including captain Brody Coul-ter and assistant captain Sam Rice.
Victoria Cougars goalie Evan Roch, Richmond Sockeyes forward Jeremy Hamaguchi, No. 8, and Cougars defencemen Graham Zagrodney, No. 24, look for the puck during the gold medal final of the Cyclone Taylor Cup provincial junior B championship on Sunday.
Cougars fall in Cyclone final
Rugby’s centre of attention
Judy Teasdale/Rugby Canada
Maria Samson and Tyler Ardron are the 2012 national 15s rugby team players of the year.
Tools
SAANICH NEWS - Wednesday, April 17, 2013 www.vicnews.com • A23
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St. Mikes win Boot trophy
Travis PatersonNews staff
The St. Michaels Univer-sity School Blue Jaguars
brought the Gareth Rees Boot Game trophy home with a 10-5 win over the Oak Bay Barbarians in high school rugby play last week.
The close-scoring game was played at Oak Bay with high winds making for an unpredictable kicking game.
Flanker Zach Khan scored the try for St. Mikes. Dowit Workie converted the try and also notched a penalty goal.
Oak Bay's Matt Carson scored his team's only try.
The win is a bit of an upset for St. Mikes. Oak Bay is
much bigger, and is led by a core of provincial level play-ers, Tyler McDiarmid, Conor McDiarmid, Jack Nyren and Morgan Tate (scrum half) in the backs and Evan Cam-bridge in the back row of the scrum. Which goes to show St. Mikes is also going to be a force among boys rugby high school teams this year.
But instead of running with the bigger schools at the AAA level, St. Mikes has chosen to play within their numbers at the AA level, though they'll play cross-over games with AAA teams in the city's high school rugby league. It should give St. Mikes a fighting chance when it comes time for pro-vincials.
The decision to play at the AA level is due to St. Mikes’ lack of physical size more than its lack of numbers, coach Ian Hyde-Lay said.
“This year’s team is tiny, they more than punched over their weight class (Wednesday).
“It will wear on them, we have eight games coming up, and it’s going to be an issue keeping them ready.
“We have some guys who are at the provincial level in terms of talent, but are in dif-ferent situations.”
The boot game was St. Mikes’ second win of the sea-son, having earlier defeated the Claremont Spartans 28-5.
St. Mikes, Oak Bay qualify for rugby sevens provincialsTravis PatersonNews staff
The renowned Shawnigan Lake Stags rugby pro-gram reared reclaimed its dominant form winning the Vancouver Island Seven Aside Rugby Championships at UVic’s Centennial Stadium on Sunday (April 14).
The Stags won the Radu Shield in the final, 31-7 over the St. Michaels University School Blue Jaguars.
Saanich Police sponsored the tournament, as the Shield is named for Saanich Police officer Roy Radu, a former captain of Canada’s 15s team.
The Oak Bay Barbarians finished third, defeating G.P. Vanier 19-15 in the third-place game.
The top four teams, Shawnigan, St. Mikes, Oak Bay and Vanier all qualify for the high school boys rugby sevens provincials at the University of B.C., April 27 and 28.
Brentwood finished fifth, Cowichan was sixth, Shawnigan Lake’s B squad was seventh and Lady-smith was seventh.
The Glenlyon Norfolk School Gryphons took down the Pacific Christian School Pacers 24-12 for ninth place.
Over 1,200 visit for Scrum Fest Schools from far and near scrummed down in the
Spartan Scrum Fest earlier last week, from Thursday to Saturday at Claremont secondary.
The fifth annual Scrum Fest featured 30 high school teams in the senior and junior boys divisions. The event drew approximatley 1,200 visiting players, coaches and parents said organzier Phil Ohl, coach of the Claremont Spartans.
This year’s tourney included a middle and elemen-tary school clinic and jamboree with instruction from UVic Vikes coach Doug Tate and B.C. Sevens youth coach Shane Thompson.
A high schoo. players clinic was put on by mem-bers of Rugby Canada’s men’s team.
MAY 11, 2013 The GVHPA (Greater Victoria Horseshoe
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STEEL BUILDING - Blowout clearance sale! 20x22 $4,188. 25x26 $4,799. 30x34 $6,860. 32x44 $8,795. 40x50 $12,760. 47x74 $17,888. One end wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422. or visit us online at: www.pioneersteel.ca
STEEL BUILDINGS/metal buildings 60% off! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for bal-ance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 or visit us online at: www.crownsteelbuildings.ca
TRUCKLOAD MATTRESS Sale, All sizes, All models ON SALE! Sidney Buy & Sell 9818 4th St. Sidney.sidneybuyandsell.ca
UNIVERSAL GYM $150. Dumbbells $75. Senya fax machine $25. Please call Dean at 250-727-7905.
CEDAR TREES (16 Emerald trees available), 6’ high, $20 each. Call (250)592-1295.
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE BY OWNER
COLLEGE HEIGHTS. 3-level, 4bdrm +1bdrm suite. Beautiful Ocean & City views. 0% Down! Easy to buy. Call (250)753-0160 for more info.
VACATION HOME. Pent-house Condo, great view, La Penita (Mexico), 3 bdrms, 2 bathrooms, 2 balconies. For sale by owner. Please see:www.jaltembasol.com or [email protected]
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE BY OWNER
COLLEGE HEIGHTS. 5bdrm +1bdrm suite. Gorgeous Ocean & City views. Easy to buy. 0% Down! Call (250)753-0160 for more info.
COLLEGE HEIGHTS. Beauti-ful Ocean & City views. 4bdrms + 2bdrm suite. Easy to buy. 0% down. (250)753-0160 for more info.
FOR SALE by Owner Town-house $389,500. MLS #320099. Open House every Sat & Sun 12-3pm, 20-1950 Cultra Ave, Saanichton. Call 250-818-7038 for more info.
MUST SEE: 3 Bdrm, 1 1/2 Bath, sep. offi ce with private entry nestled in Qualicum Woods. Just 5 mins to Village, beach, forest & 2 golf courses. Low maint. gardens, fenced backyard, offers privacy & peaceful surrounding. Lots of updates & reno’s, infra-red sauna in garage. $349,000.00 If interested call:250-594-5654
OAK BAY. Updated home on two levels. 3 bedrooms, 1 bathroom, sunroom + balcony, unfi nished basement. 1766 sq ft & 956 unfi nished sq ft. $644,000. Call 250-598-6902.
(OR: Rent Upper level only for $1,650/mo. 3-bdrms, 2 baths)
www.wesellhomesbc.comC: 250-616-9053
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE BY OWNER
Sidney luxury Condo- beauti-ful 2 Bdrms, 2 full baths, close to downtown, ocean views. #201-9942-Third St. $498,000.778-351-1239 ID#192331www.propertyguys.com
We will Buy your HouseQuick Cash & Private.Mortgage Too High and
House won’t sell?Can’t make payments?
We will Lease Your House,Make your Payments
and Buy it Later!
Call: 1-250-616-9053www.webuyhomesbc.com
REAL ESTATE
MOBILE HOMES & PARKS
OTTER POINT RV Trailer Park. 40’ park model trailer (no pad fees) 3 slide outs + 30’x52’ lot, fi nished deck & shed in new condition. Open to offers. Call 306-290-8764.
SIDNEY- NEW 2 bdrm + den, W/D. NS/NP. $1600 mo. Avail now. Call 250-217-4060.
TRANSPORTATION
AUTO FINANCING
DreamTeam Auto Financing“0” Down, Bankruptcy OK -
Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals1-800-961-7022
www.iDreamAuto.com DL# 7557
TRANSPORTATION
AUTO FINANCING
Auto Financing 1.800.910.6402
AUTO SERVICES
TOP CASH PAID
For ALL unwanted vehicles.
Free Towing $$$ 250-885-1427 $$$
CARS
2007 CUSTOM Chev HHR. Excellent condition. Loaded. White. 119,000 km, mostly hwy driven. On-Star. $11,900 fi rm. 250-755-5191.
$50 to $1000Scrap Junk
Broken Down Cars Trucks Vans
FREE TOW AWAY
250-686-3933
SPORTS & IMPORTS
2004 FORD MUSTANG Con-vertible, 40th anniversary Spe-cial Edition. Black Beauty! 56,000 km, V-6 automatic, new soft top, fully loaded. $11,500 obo. Serious inquiries only. 250-474-1293, Barb.
RECREATIONAL VEHICLESFOR SALE
2000, 26’ Golden Falcon 5th wheel, 3 way fridge, slide out, new hot water 10gal tank, queen bed. In exc. cond. Stored in Ladysmith. $7200 fi rm. Call (250)580-2566.
VTRUCKS & ANS
1969 CHEVY Pickup, 350 Au-tomatic, headers, dual ex-haust, runs mint, excellent condition, 60,000 miles. A must see to believe, asking $6000 obo. (250)893-9817.
TRANSPORTATION
VTRUCKS & ANS
2008 TOYOTA TACOMA 4x4-mint, 65,000 km, 4 doors, au-tomatic. Asking $26,700. Call(250)655-6558.
UTILITY TRAILERS
7’x12’ Deck Utility Trailer. Good for small tractors andquads. 4 wheels, loadingramps, green. $1350 obo. Call(250)384-7954.
MARINE
BOATS
1993 BAYLINER 2452, in ex-cellent condition, 2 sounders &GPS, head, galley, canopy,9.9 hp 4 stroke Yamaha on hy-draulics, downriggers, dinghyin 27’ newer Van Isle Marinaboathouse near the ramp.Best offer. 250-656-6136.
TAX RETURNS $40 EFILE. Accounting, year ends. Call Mike 250-595-8110.
BUSINESS SERVICES
ARE YOU applying for or have you been denied Canada Pen-sion Plan disability benefi ts? Do not proceed alone. Call Al-lison Schmidt 1-877-793-3222 www.dcac.ca
250-216-9476 ACCEPTING new clients, From the Ground Up, custom landscapes, fi nish carpentry, garden clean-ups.
250-479-7950FREE ESTIMATES
• Lawn Maintenance• Landscaping• Hedge Trimming• Tree Pruning• Yard Cleanups• Gardening/Weeding • Aeration, Odd JobsNO SURPRISES NO MESS
www.hollandave.ca
(250) 858-0588- Tree Service - Landscaping- Lawn & Garden Clean ups- Hedge trimming & Pruning- Pressure washing - Gutters
Free estimates * WCBwww.mowtime.ca
BEST DEAL Yard main. Lawns, power raking, hedging, power washing, clean-ups. 250-217-6850
DPM SERVICES- lawn & gar-den, seasonal pruning, clean ups, landscape, power wash, etc. 15yrs exp. (250)883-8141
ELITE GARDEN MAINTENANCERenovating Older
Gardens,Horticulturalist,
Clean-ups
778-678-2524
GARDEN OVERGROWN? Weeding, lawn cuts, clean-ups, pruning. John Kaiser 250-478-7314, 250-812-8236.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
GARDENING
GORDON HEAD - Dad and Son - Lawn and Garden. We mow and hoe. We also trim Hedges + Prune. Most lawns $30-40 then $20 hour. Gary and Michael 250-472-0635
LAWN AND Garden Mainte-nance. Garden cleanups and upgrades. Premium Bark Mulch delivery and installation. Hedge trimming. Quality and value. 250-652-4879
LAWNCUTTING~ QUALITY mowing and trimming! Aver-age size city lots around $30. Call Andy @ 250-475-0424.
SPRING CLEANups, complete maintenance. Residential & Commercial. 250-474-4373.
WILL DO GARDENING etc. $15/hr. Your tools. Reliable. Call (250)383-3995.
Phone: (250) 213-5781• Kitchen and bathroom• Home suites to code • Fencing, decks, porches• 15% discount for seniors
SMALL ADS, BIG DEALS!www.bcclassifi ed.com
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
THE MOSS MAN Chemical- Free Roof De-Mossing & Gut-ter Cleaning since 1996. Call 250-881-5515. Free estimates!www.mossman.ca
INSULATION
QUALITY INSULATION blown fi berglass. Affordable rates. WCB. (250)896-6652.
MASONRY & BRICKWORK
CBS MASONRY BBB. WCB. Chimneys, Fireplaces, Flag-stone Rock, Concrete Pavers, Natural & Veneered Stone. Replace, Rebuild, Renew! “Quality is our Guarantee”. Free Competitive Estimates. (250)294-9942/(250)589-9942. www.cbsmasonry.com
MAMMOTH LANDSCAPING & Masonry - Have the luxury of masons and horticulturists working together on your pro-ject. For consult call Calvin Veenstra - 250-883-7666
2 BURLEY MEN MOVING. $85/hr for 2 men (no before or after travel time charges on lo-cal moves. Please call Scott or Joshua, (250)686-6507.
DIAMOND Moving- 1 ton 2 ton. Prices starting at $80/hr. Call 250-220-0734.
DONE RIGHT MOVING $80/hr. Senior Discount. Free Est’s. No travel time before or after. SMOOTH MOVES. Call Tyler at 250-418-1747.
WRIGHT BROS Moving. $80/HR for 2 men. Senior’s discount. Philip (250)383-8283
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.
B L Coastal Coatings. Quality, reliable, great rates. All your Painting needs. (250)818-7443
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
PAINTING
LADY PAINTERServing the Peninsula for over20 yrs. Interior/exterior. CallBernice, 250-655-1127.
ST PAINTING free est, written guarantee and full ref’s. WCBins. Call Kaleb (250)884-2597.
PLUMBING
EXPERIENCED JOURNEY-MAN Plumber. Renos, New Construction & Service. Fairrates. Insured. Reliable,friendly. Great references. CallMike at KNA (250)880-0104.
FELIX PLUMBING. Over 35 years experience. Reasonablerates. Call 250-514-2376.
FREE ESTIMATES. Rea-sonable. Reliable. No job toosmall. Call 250-388-5544.
PRESSURE WASHING
DRIVEWAYS, WALKWAYS, Decks, etc. Reasonable rates.250-744-8588, Norm.
ISLAND POWER Washing.Driveways, patios, walkways.Free est. Chris (250)885-7494.
ALFRED, ALFRED QualityWindows Wholesale, Dis-counts! 50 years Constructionexperience. 250-382-3694.
SERVICE DIRECTORYwww.bcclassified.com 250.388.3535
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SAANICH NEWS - Wednesday, April 17, 2013 www.vicnews.com • A27SAANICH NEWS - Wednesday, April 17, 2013 www.vicnews.com • A27
Tom FletcherBlack Press
A conflict-of-interest complaint against Pre-mier Christy Clark for her role in the 2003 sale of B.C. Rail assets has been dismissed.
Saskatchewan law-yer Gerald Gerrand reviewed the com-plaint made by Abbots-ford South MLA John van Dongen after he quit the B.C. Liberal Party last year.
In a 40-page deci-sion, Gerrand found that Clark had no way to benefit personally from the sale, and that her decision to absent herself from 2003 cabi-net discussions did not demonstrate a real or perceived conflict of interest.
Clark said she is relieved that the report is out, putting to rest what she described as “rumours, gossip and nasty untruths” about her conduct as educa-tion minister.
“For me it’s proof that anybody can say anything, and it doesn’t have to be true for it to be hurtful, and it doesn’t have to be true for it to be reported again and again and again,” Clark said.
Gerrand was harshly critical of some of van Dongen’s accusations, noting that they arose nine years after cabinet meetings that van Don-gen attended as agri-culture minister.
Van Dongen’s com-plaints about Clark’s dealings with a lobby-ing firm representing one of the bidders for B.C. Rail are “replete with suspicion and innuendo,” Gerrand wrote.
One of the accusa-tions was that Clark may have been a source of confidential information that was passed to the bidder,
U.S.-based OmniTRAX. The leaked information was cen-tral to the case against two former ministerial assistants in the B.C. government, Dave Basi and Bobby Virk.
Basi and Virk eventually pleaded guilty to breach of trust and accepting benefits for their role in the case, admitting to providing con-fidential bid information to
OmniTRAX in exchange for money and a trip to Denver to take in a football game.
Garrand interviewed a long list of players in the B.C. Rail controversy, includ-
ing Clark’s former husband Mark Marrissen and Erik Bornmann, a lobbyist with Pilothouse Public Affairs, which represented Omni-TRAX.
Its findings offer a preview of a commission of inquiry into the sale of the railway that NDP leader Adrian Dix has pledged to hold if he wins the provincial election.
B.C. Rail conflict complaint rejected
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