august 01, 2012
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Sidney Park SkateparkLocal skateboarder dude has decided that donning a “bucket”is preferable to ending up in the emergency ward. Page A2
Wednesday, August 1, 2012 Watch for breaking news at preventable.ca
If you think serious injuries only happen to other people, have a word with yourself.
Resident: “Wasn’t even winded.”
Dramatic weekend boating incident involves “bright orange” life jackets, mild windburn
A group of local residents re-turned from their day-long boating trip on an area lake laughing, joking around and generally enjoying each other’s company.
The group was allegedly seen boating, swimming and water-skiing on the lake throughout the day. Onlookers reported that the entire group was wearing CSA-approved life jackets. The life jackets appeared
securely fastened at all times. “Looked like they were having a
great time,” said boat launch super-visor Bill Donnelly. “I heard a lot of laughter. And it was laughing with, not laughing at, you know?”
Donnelly confi rmed the group was wearing life jackets for the en-tire day. “Yup, they put ’em on soon as they were on the boat,” Donnelly said. “The good ones - big and full-sized. Bright orange. Everyone put them on, without any fuss.”
While witnesses applauded the decision to stay safe on the water, some suggested it came at an excep-tionally heavy cost.
“Uhhh . . . that’s not what I meant at all,” said Donnelly obstinately. “OK, sure, one of the guys might have gotten a little windburn. He’s a
little red on his cheeks, you know? That’s about it.”
Despite the threat of tender, sore cheeks for the next 48 hours, Donnelly insisted the group had the right attitude about water safety.
“You always hear about ‘tragedy on the water’ – you know, people go out in a boat, not wearing any life jackets, thinking nothing will ever happen. They end up hurt, or worse,” Donnelly mused. “Well, this was about as far from a tragedy as pos-sible. Everybody laughing, having a good time. Wasn’t a tragedy. It was, like . . . reality. Yeah, a reality TV show. That’s what it was.”
When informed that the opposite of tragedy is, in fact, a comedy, Donnelly issued a terse reply.
“Oh,” he said.
The pristine beauty on the lake was shattered by spontaneous and vociferous hilarity this weekend.
Nicole Hatt, Victoria resident: “I could do this all day!”
Victoria resident Nicole Hatt de-liberately decided to use the cross-walk at Government Street and Fort Street instead of jaywalking late Thursday afternoon. The decision added an extra 3.048 metres to her journey.
“Sure, I could have run across the street,” admitted Hatt with confi -dence. “I mean, I’m fi t. I’m quick on my feet. I came in second in my high school in the 100-metre. But then I thought to myself: why risk it?”
When asked whether her snazzy new cross-trainers were a factor be-hind her impressive street-crossing performance, Hatt had no comment.
Victoria resident walks extra 3.048 metres to use crosswalk
Tim Booth
Janine Samra
Onlookers say: Group wearing bright orange life jackets at time of incident.
SPECIAL 4-PAGE FEATURE
Sandy Mah
Rhyse Thomson
If you think serious injuries only happen to other people, have a word with yourself.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012 - PENINSULA NEWS REVIEWA4 • www.preventable.ca SPECIAL FEATURE
COUPO
N
Vive JacquetteThe e s se n c e of s a f e t y.The e s se n c e of s a f e t y.
100% MORE SAVESUMMER
SALEvisible to motorists than having no light on the back of your bike.
yourself the trouble of having to build a new house from the ashes of your old one.
BIG AL’SSAFETY SHOP
BIG DEAL!Mostly because you’ll still be alive.
Fall out of your boat and you’ll say
Helping YOU stay alive since the day you were born!
on expensive chiropractic and physio treatments!
helmets are a lot cheaper than a brand new skull!
SAVE BIG BRAND NEW
of predictable and preventable injuries. Simply by changing your attitude.
FREEA lifetime
SAVEBuy a smoke detector, it could
your life one day.
DAILY HOROSCOPE
After careful deliberation, a local skateboard enthusiast has decided that wearing a helmet is preferable to ending up in the emergency ward with a broken skull and a severe concus-sion.
“Dude, a schralped head is, like, se-riously gnarly,” skateboarder Grant Tobin said. “It’s worse than noggles, you know?”
Sidney Skatepark locals gave Tobin “mad props” for wearing his “bucket,” more commonly known as a helmet. “It’s pretty sick,” admitted Tony Daluze. “To see a guy who can ollie a 12-set like that while keeping his brain safe – that is like, way, waayyyy ill.”
When asked to translate his strange cant into everyday English, Tobin was dismissive. “Dude, that question is so
on the hook,” he said. Daluze was equally unimpressed
with the question: “Seriously, you areso nussed,” he said, laughing and bust-ing out a 50-50 grind as he quicklyskated away along the sidewalk.
Local boarder: “Like, totally, bro.”
Mike Cernigoj
Local boarder dudes chill afterbusting out a session.
Local boarder decides helmet “way cooler” than broken skull
OOOO! PRETTY COLOURS! Pharmaceutical manufacturers are
introducing a vibrant new palette for this season’s wares. The new colours
should help patients avoid accidentally mixing their medications. New
colours include Perennial Ryegrass Pollen Grains, Mildly Spicy Mustard
Gamboge, and Homemade Pale Jazzberry Ram.
Jupiter has aligned with Neptune to cast an auspiciously safe aura over your karma today. Postpone bicycle-related travel unless wearing a helmet. Watch out for falling pianos. All traffi c signs point to a chance encounter with a crosswalk.
ALL MIXED UP
Wednesday, August 1, 2012 - PENINSULA NEWS REVIEWA2 • www.preventable.ca SPECIAL FEATURE
CROSSWORDX
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
119
8
10
14
12
13
ACROSS DOWN
1. You have the legal right to ______ unsafe work.
3. What they call helmets at the skateboard park.
5. If you think serious injuries only ______ to other people, have a word with yourself.
7. ______ injuries are the leading cause of death among British Columbians aged 1 to 44.
8. Many serious injuries involve this common household object.
10. Most people believe serious injuries only happen to these people.
14. Under age 6, most poisonings involve this.
2. Major source of distraction while driving.
3. Serious injuries affect over 400,000 residents every year in this province.
4. Leading contributor to traffi c fatalities.
5. Where most poisonings happen.
6. Look for this mark of approval when buying a life jacket.
9. Of children aged 1 to 4, 33% of drowning incidents happen here.
11. Annual cost of preventable injuries in B.C. (two words).
12. This can reduce the risk of head injury while cycling by 88%.
13. 75% of playground injuries are due to this.
Visit preventable.ca/crossword for the answers.
Belinda Nystrom
Leggett’s cellphone sits abandoned and, dare we say, a little
dejected on the passenger seat.
Alex Petersen
A Saanich man de-liberately chose to ig-nore his ringing cell-phone in the middle of his afternoon commute yesterday.
The incident oc-curred near the inter-section of McTavish Road and Highway 17 at 5:23pm.
“It all happened so fast,” driver Tom Leggett said. “I mean . . . it rang four times. Maybe it was fi ve. I don’t know. I started to reach for it – I guess you just go into automatic, you know? You don’t have time to think about it. You just react.”
“I’m not going to lie to you – I was going to answer it.”
But then Leggett had a change of heart. “I don’t know what it was – I just said to myself, whoever it is, they can wait,” he said. “I mean, I’m driving. Traffi c is kinda nuts. I should keep my mind on the road and concentrate on what I’m doing. That’s what voicemail is for, right?”
The decision turned out to be a fateful one for Leggett’s friend Mike Henrickson, who was forced to wait an agonizing twelve min-utes and 28 seconds longer for Leggett to get home before getting in touch.
“Actually, it wasn’t
agonizing at all,” Hen-rickson said defi antly. “It was only – what – twelve minutes or so. I mean, he was driving – I totally get it. I left a voicemail message. He called me back when he got home. It wasn’t a big deal.”
Leggett confi rmed the decision to let his cellphone go to voice-mail made absolutely no difference to his Fri-day-night plans, nor to his social life in general.
“Yeah, me and Mikey hooked up after din-ner,” Leggett said. “We watched the game to-gether – it didn’t seem like it was a big deal for him. He didn’t even mention it.”
When asked about how he felt about play-
ing second fi ddle to his friend’s safety, Henrickson was evasive and combative. “Listen, I mean, honestly; I don’t
know why you guys are interviewing me,” Henrickson said. “Real-ly, it was no big deal. Now leave me alone.”
Subsequent phone calls and voicemail messages to Henrick-son’s cellphone were not returned.
Friend says: “Call me back when youget this message.”
Commuter ignores ringing cellphone; friend forced to wait 12:28 for return call
Father defends character-building effort.
Son holds ladder for Dad; complains job contravenes allowance agreement
A North Saanich pre-teen’s busy social sched-ule was thrown into chaos when he was forced to hold a ladder for his father on Saturday morning. The incident was sparked by an at-tempt to clean the gut-ters on the family home.
“I’ve been meaning to clean the gutters for a couple months now,” the father said. “I guess I could have done it my-self. But it’s pretty high up there – I mean, what if the ladder slipped?”
“This is, like, totally lame,” the son com-plained. “Tommy and Jimmy were going to the mall – I couldn’t go with them because I was stuck here. Helping Dad.”
“I mean, I’m not even getting paid for this,” the son continued. “It’s like, totally not even part of my allowance. It’s like child labour or some-thing!”
The father ignored his son’s calls for fair and equitable compensation. “Look, you use a ladder, you need to stay safe. You need someone to hold it on the bottom. It’s as simple as that,” he said. “Besides, helping your old man builds character.”
When asked to con-fi rm whether his charac-ter had in fact been built by the 17 minutes of un-paid labour, the son ac-cused the father of side-stepping the issue. “You’re kidding me, right?” he said while scowling and putting sunglasses on.
When we use the word “accident,” what do we really mean?
The word accident suggests an event that just “happens.” Some-thing out of our control. Something there was nothing we could do about. It was just one of those things.
That’s just not true. In fact, most of the
injuries that happen in B.C. aren’t really “acci-dents” at all. They’re pre-dictable and prevent-able. Most of the time, we can stop such injuries from happening just by thinking twice about what we’re doing, and by asking ourselves wheth-
er we should take appro-priate precautions be-fore we do.
Now, I’m not suggest-ing we should be scared to leave the house in the morning. Or that we should all walk around wrapped in bubble-wrap. That’s no way to live.
All I’m saying is that we need to change our attitude when it comes
to preventable injuries.This whole idea that badthings only happen to“other people” – it’s timefor that to go.
Think about it for asecond, and have a wordwith yourself. A little ex-tra effort can make a bigdifference when it comesto preventable injuries.
Most of the injuries that happen in B.C. are predictable and preventable.
Dr. Ian Pike
Michael McIntyre
Area pre-teen re-creates “lame” Saturday morning.
“
www.preventable.ca • A3PENINSULA NEWS REVIEW - Wednesday, August 1, 2012 SPECIAL FEATURE
Dr. Ian PikeDirector, B.C. Injury Research and Prevention Unit
Tanya Kooner
Lee Abbott
DAILY HOROSCOPE
After careful deliberation, a local skateboard enthusiast has decided that wearing a helmet is preferable to ending up in the emergency ward with a broken skull and a severe concus-sion.
“Dude, a schralped head is, like, se-riously gnarly,” skateboarder Grant Tobin said. “It’s worse than noggles, you know?”
Sidney Skatepark locals gave Tobin “mad props” for wearing his “bucket,” more commonly known as a helmet. “It’s pretty sick,” admitted Tony Daluze. “To see a guy who can ollie a 12-set like that while keeping his brain safe – that is like, way, waayyyy ill.”
When asked to translate his strange cant into everyday English, Tobin was dismissive. “Dude, that question is so
on the hook,” he said. Daluze was equally unimpressed
with the question: “Seriously, you areso nussed,” he said, laughing and bust-ing out a 50-50 grind as he quicklyskated away along the sidewalk.
Local boarder: “Like, totally, bro.”
Mike Cernigoj
Local boarder dudes chill afterbusting out a session.
Local boarder decides helmet “way cooler” than broken skull
OOOO! PRETTY COLOURS! Pharmaceutical manufacturers are
introducing a vibrant new palette for this season’s wares. The new colours
should help patients avoid accidentally mixing their medications. New
colours include Perennial Ryegrass Pollen Grains, Mildly Spicy Mustard
Gamboge, and Homemade Pale Jazzberry Ram.
Jupiter has aligned with Neptune to cast an auspiciously safe aura over your karma today. Postpone bicycle-related travel unless wearing a helmet. Watch out for falling pianos. All traffi c signs point to a chance encounter with a crosswalk.
ALL MIXED UP
Wednesday, August 1, 2012 - PENINSULA NEWS REVIEWA2 • www.preventable.ca SPECIAL FEATURE
CROSSWORDX
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
119
8
10
14
12
13
ACROSS DOWN
1. You have the legal right to ______ unsafe work.
3. What they call helmets at the skateboard park.
5. If you think serious injuries only ______ to other people, have a word with yourself.
7. ______ injuries are the leading cause of death among British Columbians aged 1 to 44.
8. Many serious injuries involve this common household object.
10. Most people believe serious injuries only happen to these people.
14. Under age 6, most poisonings involve this.
2. Major source of distraction while driving.
3. Serious injuries affect over 400,000 residents every year in this province.
4. Leading contributor to traffi c fatalities.
5. Where most poisonings happen.
6. Look for this mark of approval when buying a life jacket.
9. Of children aged 1 to 4, 33% of drowning incidents happen here.
11. Annual cost of preventable injuries in B.C. (two words).
12. This can reduce the risk of head injury while cycling by 88%.
13. 75% of playground injuries are due to this.
Visit preventable.ca/crossword for the answers.
Belinda Nystrom
Leggett’s cellphone sits abandoned and, dare we say, a little
dejected on the passenger seat.
Alex Petersen
A Saanich man de-liberately chose to ig-nore his ringing cell-phone in the middle of his afternoon commute yesterday.
The incident oc-curred near the inter-section of McTavish Road and Highway 17 at 5:23pm.
“It all happened so fast,” driver Tom Leggett said. “I mean . . . it rang four times. Maybe it was fi ve. I don’t know. I started to reach for it – I guess you just go into automatic, you know? You don’t have time to think about it. You just react.”
“I’m not going to lie to you – I was going to answer it.”
But then Leggett had a change of heart. “I don’t know what it was – I just said to myself, whoever it is, they can wait,” he said. “I mean, I’m driving. Traffi c is kinda nuts. I should keep my mind on the road and concentrate on what I’m doing. That’s what voicemail is for, right?”
The decision turned out to be a fateful one for Leggett’s friend Mike Henrickson, who was forced to wait an agonizing twelve min-utes and 28 seconds longer for Leggett to get home before getting in touch.
“Actually, it wasn’t
agonizing at all,” Hen-rickson said defi antly. “It was only – what – twelve minutes or so. I mean, he was driving – I totally get it. I left a voicemail message. He called me back when he got home. It wasn’t a big deal.”
Leggett confi rmed the decision to let his cellphone go to voice-mail made absolutely no difference to his Fri-day-night plans, nor to his social life in general.
“Yeah, me and Mikey hooked up after din-ner,” Leggett said. “We watched the game to-gether – it didn’t seem like it was a big deal for him. He didn’t even mention it.”
When asked about how he felt about play-
ing second fi ddle to his friend’s safety, Henrickson was evasive and combative. “Listen, I mean, honestly; I don’t
know why you guys are interviewing me,” Henrickson said. “Real-ly, it was no big deal. Now leave me alone.”
Subsequent phone calls and voicemail messages to Henrick-son’s cellphone were not returned.
Friend says: “Call me back when youget this message.”
Commuter ignores ringing cellphone; friend forced to wait 12:28 for return call
Father defends character-building effort.
Son holds ladder for Dad; complains job contravenes allowance agreement
A North Saanich pre-teen’s busy social sched-ule was thrown into chaos when he was forced to hold a ladder for his father on Saturday morning. The incident was sparked by an at-tempt to clean the gut-ters on the family home.
“I’ve been meaning to clean the gutters for a couple months now,” the father said. “I guess I could have done it my-self. But it’s pretty high up there – I mean, what if the ladder slipped?”
“This is, like, totally lame,” the son com-plained. “Tommy and Jimmy were going to the mall – I couldn’t go with them because I was stuck here. Helping Dad.”
“I mean, I’m not even getting paid for this,” the son continued. “It’s like, totally not even part of my allowance. It’s like child labour or some-thing!”
The father ignored his son’s calls for fair and equitable compensation. “Look, you use a ladder, you need to stay safe. You need someone to hold it on the bottom. It’s as simple as that,” he said. “Besides, helping your old man builds character.”
When asked to con-fi rm whether his charac-ter had in fact been built by the 17 minutes of un-paid labour, the son ac-cused the father of side-stepping the issue. “You’re kidding me, right?” he said while scowling and putting sunglasses on.
When we use the word “accident,” what do we really mean?
The word accident suggests an event that just “happens.” Some-thing out of our control. Something there was nothing we could do about. It was just one of those things.
That’s just not true. In fact, most of the
injuries that happen in B.C. aren’t really “acci-dents” at all. They’re pre-dictable and prevent-able. Most of the time, we can stop such injuries from happening just by thinking twice about what we’re doing, and by asking ourselves wheth-
er we should take appro-priate precautions be-fore we do.
Now, I’m not suggest-ing we should be scared to leave the house in the morning. Or that we should all walk around wrapped in bubble-wrap. That’s no way to live.
All I’m saying is that we need to change our attitude when it comes
to preventable injuries.This whole idea that badthings only happen to“other people” – it’s timefor that to go.
Think about it for asecond, and have a wordwith yourself. A little ex-tra effort can make a bigdifference when it comesto preventable injuries.
Most of the injuries that happen in B.C. are predictable and preventable.
Dr. Ian Pike
Michael McIntyre
Area pre-teen re-creates “lame” Saturday morning.
“
www.preventable.ca • A3PENINSULA NEWS REVIEW - Wednesday, August 1, 2012 SPECIAL FEATURE
Dr. Ian PikeDirector, B.C. Injury Research and Prevention Unit
Tanya Kooner
Lee Abbott
Sidney Park SkateparkLocal skateboarder dude has decided that donning a “bucket”is preferable to ending up in the emergency ward. Page A2
Wednesday, August 1, 2012 Watch for breaking news at preventable.ca
If you think serious injuries only happen to other people, have a word with yourself.
Resident: “Wasn’t even winded.”
Dramatic weekend boating incident involves “bright orange” life jackets, mild windburn
A group of local residents re-turned from their day-long boating trip on an area lake laughing, joking around and generally enjoying each other’s company.
The group was allegedly seen boating, swimming and water-skiing on the lake throughout the day. Onlookers reported that the entire group was wearing CSA-approved life jackets. The life jackets appeared
securely fastened at all times. “Looked like they were having a
great time,” said boat launch super-visor Bill Donnelly. “I heard a lot of laughter. And it was laughing with, not laughing at, you know?”
Donnelly confi rmed the group was wearing life jackets for the en-tire day. “Yup, they put ’em on soon as they were on the boat,” Donnelly said. “The good ones - big and full-sized. Bright orange. Everyone put them on, without any fuss.”
While witnesses applauded the decision to stay safe on the water, some suggested it came at an excep-tionally heavy cost.
“Uhhh . . . that’s not what I meant at all,” said Donnelly obstinately. “OK, sure, one of the guys might have gotten a little windburn. He’s a
little red on his cheeks, you know? That’s about it.”
Despite the threat of tender, sore cheeks for the next 48 hours, Donnelly insisted the group had the right attitude about water safety.
“You always hear about ‘tragedy on the water’ – you know, people go out in a boat, not wearing any life jackets, thinking nothing will ever happen. They end up hurt, or worse,” Donnelly mused. “Well, this was about as far from a tragedy as pos-sible. Everybody laughing, having a good time. Wasn’t a tragedy. It was, like . . . reality. Yeah, a reality TV show. That’s what it was.”
When informed that the opposite of tragedy is, in fact, a comedy, Donnelly issued a terse reply.
“Oh,” he said.
The pristine beauty on the lake was shattered by spontaneous and vociferous hilarity this weekend.
Nicole Hatt, Victoria resident: “I could do this all day!”
Victoria resident Nicole Hatt de-liberately decided to use the cross-walk at Government Street and Fort Street instead of jaywalking late Thursday afternoon. The decision added an extra 3.048 metres to her journey.
“Sure, I could have run across the street,” admitted Hatt with confi -dence. “I mean, I’m fi t. I’m quick on my feet. I came in second in my high school in the 100-metre. But then I thought to myself: why risk it?”
When asked whether her snazzy new cross-trainers were a factor be-hind her impressive street-crossing performance, Hatt had no comment.
Victoria resident walks extra 3.048 metres to use crosswalk
Tim Booth
Janine Samra
Onlookers say: Group wearing bright orange life jackets at time of incident.
SPECIAL 4-PAGE FEATURE
Sandy Mah
Rhyse Thomson
If you think serious injuries only happen to other people, have a word with yourself.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012 - PENINSULA NEWS REVIEWA4 • www.preventable.ca SPECIAL FEATURE
COUPO
N
Vive JacquetteThe e s se n c e of s a f e t y.The e s se n c e of s a f e t y.
100% MORE SAVESUMMER
SALEvisible to motorists than having no light on the back of your bike.
yourself the trouble of having to build a new house from the ashes of your old one.
BIG AL’SSAFETY SHOP
BIG DEAL!Mostly because you’ll still be alive.
Fall out of your boat and you’ll say
Helping YOU stay alive since the day you were born!
on expensive chiropractic and physio treatments!
helmets are a lot cheaper than a brand new skull!
SAVE BIG BRAND NEW
of predictable and preventable injuries. Simply by changing your attitude.
FREEA lifetime
SAVEBuy a smoke detector, it could
your life one day.
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