july 1, 2011 saanich news
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Complete Friday, July 1, 2011 Saanich NewsTRANSCRIPT
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SAANICHNEWS
Friday, July 1, 2011
Rare diagnosisCommunity pulls together to help family of boy suffering debilitating brittle bone disease.
News, Page A4
Missing womanSearch of Thetis Lake for missing Saanich woman called off after 30 hours.
News, Page A7
Canada Day crackdown steps up enforcement of open liquor at fireworks
Kyle SlavinNews staff
Police will be cracking down on liquor-related offences tonight (Canada Day) to ensure a good time is had by all – and every-one makes it home safe.
A contingent of 200-plus officers from Vic-toria, Saanich, Oak Bay and Central Saanich will be roaming the downtown core, while Saanich police and the Integrated Road Safety Unit will have roadblocks set up exit-ing the city.
Saanich has tripled the number of its on-duty officers for a Friday night to ensure alcohol doesn’t fuel problems for revellers.
“We want everybody in our community to have a good time but we will not tolerate any drunken rowdy behaviour,” Sgt. Dean Jantzen said.
Officers will be monitoring liquor sales outlets, conducting roadblocks starting early in the night and co-ordinating with B.C. Transit to intercept drunken riders before they get downtown.
VicPD Chief Jamie Graham said people busted with open liquor, or found to be drunk in public will be ticketed.
Although it’s up to individual officers whether to ticket someone caught breaking liquor laws, VicPD is “going to do our very best to remove that discretion,” Graham
said. “If you have open liquor, you’re going to get a fine.”
The fine for consuming or being in pos-session of open liquor is $200, plus officers could slap another $150 fine on partiers who are drunk in public.
More than 100 B.C. Transit employees will be on the roads and on standby Friday. Two
years ago, the bus company transported 61,500 riders on July 1, said B.C. Transit spokesperson Joanna Linsangan.
“All hands are on deck that night,” she said.
The transit company’s Friday late-night bus service, which it implemented last Sep-tember, is expected to make a difference in getting more people home following the Canada Day fireworks.
“We think it will be beneficial especially for those wanting to stay later,” said Lin-sangan.
Late-night service will be available until 1:30 a.m. on the No. 4 University of Victoria bus, the No. 6 Esquimalt-Royal Oak and the No. 14 UVic-Victoria General bus.
– with files from Erin [email protected]
Trans-Canada CrawlersRoyal Roads University students Solange des Vignes, left, Justine Shu, Eric Berg, Erin Richards and Andrea Klassen crawl across the intersection of McKenzie Avenue and the Trans- Canada Highway. The students are organizing a “Crawlture Jam” where they’ll repeat the stunt on July 6 at 5:30 p.m. to poke fun at the time commuters waste in traffic. See story, Page A10.Sam Van Schie/News staff
Leave liquor at home, police warnAlso Inside
■ Flavour of Canada
Page A3
Please see EditorialPage A8
A2 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWS
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SAANICH NEWS -Friday, July 1, 2011 www.saanichnews.com • A3
Next to Save-On-Foods
SAANICH NEWS -Friday, July 1, 2011 www.saanichnews.com • A3
Emma PrestwichNews staff
Antonio Espinoza considers his mobile restaurant to be the “embassy” of Puerto Vallarta.
He, his wife Angelina and their two sons run Puerto Vallarta Amigos, a food cart business that focuses on fresh, tra-ditional Mexican fare. They brought the fourth-generation business with them when they moved here from the resort city seven years ago and found the area wanting for authentic Mexican food.
Espinoza says food trucks are a popular Mexican business in California, where the focus is on bringing food to the street.
Now that they’ve settled in, the family has found Victoria has a strong connec-tion to Puerto Vallarta.
Many people who previously lived in the city come up to them, saying the dishes make them feel like they're back home.
Puerto Vallarta Amigos is just one of the international food vendors at Ship Point until July 3 for Flavour of Canada, an international food village.
Other vendors will be cooking up dishes from Hungary, India, Argentina, Greece and Hawaii, while West Shore restaurant Smoken Bones Cookshack features south-ern barbecue, Creole and local foods.
The event, which effectively replaces the food fair at the former Folkfest, will also have activities and presentations from cultural groups throughout the weekend.
A performance stage will host 10 local bands and artists, including Krystle Dos Santos, Mike Hann and Salsa Caliente.
Canada’s culinary mix celebrated this weekend
Flavour of Canada July 1-3Ship Point, Victoria
Teachers vote for teach-only strikeB.C. teachers voted 90 per cent in favour of a September
strike that could see them only doing work that directly involves classroom duties and communicating with parents. If a settlement isn’t reached by the fall, teachers will not do administrative duties as of Sept. 6.
The B.C. Teachers’ Federation president, Susan Lambert, said the teach-only strike will go ahead if ongoing bargaining doesn’t achieve better classroom conditions, salary and ben-efit improvements and restoration of local bargaining rights.
The teachers held a series of votes on June 24, 27 and 28 to decide they are willing to strike.
Posties challenge back-to-work orderMail delivery will carry on while union takes matter to court
The postal workers’ union will challenge a federal back-to-work order in court, but the process could take years.
“We think (the legislation) might be illegal,” said John Bail, national director for CUPW Pacific.
After 12 days of rotating strikes and 13 days of being locked out, postal workers were legislated back to work Sunday.
Bail said back-to-work orders “tend to tear up (parts of) collective agreements. They have no roots in democracy.”
The next step is arbitration, in which the union and employer each make offers on non-wage issues. One offer will be chosen.
In terms of wages, the union was forced to accept wages that are actually less than what Canada Post had offered in its last offer.
Meanwhile, workers resumed mail delivery mid-week in Greater Victoria. Bail said employees are “grumbling” about the effects of the legislation, but are happy to be receiving paycheques.
“They’re grumbling. They’ve got jobs, though. They’re happy to be serving the public. We got a lot of public sup-port on this, so they’re happy about that.”
Bail added the public needn’t worry about postal workers defying the back-to-work order. Mail delivery will continue while the legal challenge develops.
Sharon Tiffin/News staff
Bean thereNate Poetker enjoys fava beans from his farm plot at the Haliburton Community Organic Farm, a publicly-owned farm in the Agricultural Land Reserve. The farm was saved from development in 2001 by concerned citizens. Saanich purchased the land and now leases it to the farm.
A4 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWS
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A4 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWS
Teacher deals with son’s rare diagnosis
What started as a kind gesture between staff members at Claremont secondary turned into a fundraiser in support a teacher dealing with her young son’s genetic disease.
Administrative assistant Christine Knapp knew English teacher Jennifer Loukes needed help with her three-year-old son, who suffers from osteo-genesis imperfecta, or brittle bone dis-ease.
Nathan Loukes has had multiple sur-geries since he was two months old and currently has five fractures, but cannot take painkillers since he was also born with congenital glaucoma.
Knapp suggested to her co-workers and students to chip in a few dollars in hopes of buying a dinner out for Loukes and her husband. In the last two weeks of June the school raised more than $8,000 for the family, through pizza and bake sales, toonie and bottle drives, a car wash and a raffle. The money will allow the whole family to accompany Nathan to see a specialist in Vancou-ver.
Osteogenesis imperfecta is a group of rare disorders affecting the con-nective tissue and characterized by extremely fragile bones that break eas-ily. While no current figures exist on how frequently the disease occurs in Canada, conservative estimates place it at around one in 60,000 births.
School community helps family
Submitted
Three-year-old Nathan Loukes suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta, or brittle bone disease, which affects about one in 60,000 children in Canada.
SAANICH NEWS - Friday, July 1, 2011 www.saanichnews.com • A5SAANICH NEWS - Friday, July 1, 2011 www.saanichnews.com • A5
Emma Prestwich News staff
The small group of volunteers that pull together Victoria Pride Week every year are feeling the love.
David Tillson, director of the Victoria Pride Soci-ety, which has organized Pride Week for 16 years, said he feels safe as a gay man in Victoria.
He thinks there’s no need for the queer commu-nity to be “all stuck together” as there are a lot of people in Victoria who support the festivities.
“We as a community bring our friends and I think it’s a really great thing that they’re welcome.”
Attila Bassett, spokesperson for Paparazzi Night-club, said he doesn’t want his club to be a place where straight people feel they don’t belong.
“Those days are gone, when it (was) just open for gays,” he said.
While there are still problems in the queer com-munity, he prefers to put them aside during Pride Week, which is his favourite time of the year.
It’s a chance to “be proud about yourself” regard-less of your sexual identity, he said.
Bassett donated $26,000 out of his own pocket this year to support the Victoria Pride Society, which he applauds for keeping Pride afloat. Paparazzi is also running several contests and club nights of their own.
While Pride is a huge undertaking, the Victoria Pride Society board consists of nine unpaid mem-bers, many of whom have other jobs. So the suc-cess of the week depends on the support of other community groups and venues like Paparazzi, who put on their own events.
Pride grew out of a yearly picnic in Beacon Hill Park in the early 1980s and developed into a small, rag-tag parade in 1992. The city denied the first parade’s organizers a permit to march on the road, so participants were forced to the sidewalk. The city is now one of Pride’s biggest sponsors.
Marcus Tipton, a friend of Tillson, came up with the idea in 1996 to play a softball game in drag.
When Tipton died of AIDS, Tillson named it after him, and the Marcus Tipton Memorial Drag Ball Tournament draws more extravagant costumes and a bigger turnout every year.
Pride party highlightsFriday, July 1: Annual Marcus Tipton Memorial
Drag Ball Game at noon in Vic West Park. This year’s theme: Superheroes versus Villains.
Saturday, July 2: Pride and the Word – informal coffeehouse showcasing local word-spinners and literary talents. Doors, 6:30 p.m., starts at 7, Ambrosia Centre. Tickets at the door.
Sunday, July 3: Big Gay Dog Walk – dog owners and pets dress up in their wildest costumes. Meet Cook St. at Dallas Rd. 1 p.m.
Friday, July 8: Homospun Youth Dance Party – open to youth 18 and younger. Starts at 7 p.m., runs until midnight, Norway House, 1110 Hillside Ave.
Saturday, July 9: Paparazzi Diva League – big Pride Week drag show featuring performer Gouda Gabor and go-go dancer Beau deJour. 10 p.m. at Paparazzi Nightclub. Tickets, $10 at the door.
Sunday, July 10: Pride Parade and Festival – parade starts at noon, corner of Government and Pandora streets, finishes at MacDonald Park with a festival featuring more than 100 vendors, entertainment and children’s events. For more events, www.victoriapridesociety.org/
eventlist.html
Pride swells for celebration
Motorcyclists take ride along Government Street during the 2009 Pride Parade.Sharon Tiffin/News staff
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A4 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWS
Teacher deals with son’s rare diagnosis
What started as a kind gesture between staff members at Claremont secondary turned into a fundraiser in support a teacher dealing with her young son’s genetic disease.
Administrative assistant Christine Knapp knew English teacher Jennifer Loukes needed help with her three-year-old son, who suffers from osteo-genesis imperfecta, or brittle bone dis-ease.
Nathan Loukes has had multiple sur-geries since he was two months old and currently has five fractures, but cannot take painkillers since he was also born with congenital glaucoma.
Knapp suggested to her co-workers and students to chip in a few dollars in hopes of buying a dinner out for Loukes and her husband. In the last two weeks of June the school raised more than $8,000 for the family, through pizza and bake sales, toonie and bottle drives, a car wash and a raffle. The money will allow the whole family to accompany Nathan to see a specialist in Vancou-ver.
Osteogenesis imperfecta is a group of rare disorders affecting the con-nective tissue and characterized by extremely fragile bones that break eas-ily. While no current figures exist on how frequently the disease occurs in Canada, conservative estimates place it at around one in 60,000 births.
School community helps family
Submitted
Three-year-old Nathan Loukes suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta, or brittle bone disease, which affects about one in 60,000 children in Canada.
There’s more online For more stories and web
exclusives visit saanichnews.com
A6 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011- SAANICH NEWS
Exchange student secretly kept dead baby for 10 days just to ‘be together’
Kyle SlavinNews staff
Narumi Bito first knew for certain she had been pregnant after looking into the toilet just after midnight on Sept. 17, 2010, during a bout of “excru-ciating” abdominal pains.
That’s when she saw what appeared to be a lifeless baby in the bowl, Bito told the B.C. Supreme Court this week.
The 20-year-old Japanese exchange student passed out shortly after she gave birth in the ground-floor bathroom of home-stay mother Gayle Floyd’s Saanich residence.
Roughly 11 hours later, the girl retreated from the bath-room to find a towel to wrap the full-term baby in.
Instead, she found a plastic shopping bag, wrapped the baby and left it behind a chair near her bed.
“I just wanted to be together,” Bito, now 21, said, through a
Japanese interpreter, when questioned why she left the baby in her bedroom.
“Miss Bito, did you want to hide the fetus?” asked her defence attorney Christopher Mackie.
“No.”“Did you want to hide the
fact you had given birth to it?”
“No. No.”“Did you want to get rid of
the fetus?”“No. Not at all.”Floyd discovered the baby,
wrapped in the bag and behind the chair 10 days later, when a foul odour was detected com-ing from Bito’s room.
Bito testified she didn’t notice the smell.
“I suggest that if your moti-vation was to stay with the remains, you wouldn’t have left the remains behind the chair in such an undignified manner,” Crown counsel-lor Dan Scanlan said during cross examination Wednesday morning.
“I wanted to stay together,” Bito replied.
“I suggest you treated the remains of the child in the same manner in which gar-bage is commonly treated.”
“No.”
Bito, who came to Canada in July to participate in a semes-ter-long program at the Uni-versity of Victoria, didn’t tell anyone she was pregnant.
She had her suspicions – after six months of missing her period – but never shared them with anyone.
She testified she never had morning sickness or felt move-ment from the baby.
After giving birth, she again didn’t tell anyone.
Only once police got involved on Sept. 27 did oth-ers learn she had been preg-nant and given birth.
“I didn’t have anybody I was able to talk to.”
Scanlan pressed Bito on her lack of concern for the health of the baby during the months leading up to the birth.
“It’s true that you knew you were likely to give birth in September 2010, correct?” he asked.
“I thought ‘If I am pregnant I am going to give birth in Canada,’” said Bito, who was impregnated in December 2009.
“At that point of (early) Sep-tember, I knew,” Bito said, after having missed her period for eight months straight.
“And you didn’t make arrangements for the safe birth of the child, is that cor-rect?”
“Because I thought it would be in October.”
“You’re telling the court you were planning to make arrangements for the birth in October?”
“I cannot say that because it was not a clear plan.”
Bito said she thinks a typical pregnancy lasts 10 months.
Closing arguments were expected to take place yester-day afternoon.
The 12-person jury will be sequestered as of Monday until it determines whether Bito is guilty of offering an indignity to human remains and disposing of a body with the intent to conceal.
Bito wraps up testimony “I suggest that if
your motivation was to stay with the remains, you wouldn’t have left the remains behind the chair in such an undignified manner.”
– Crown counsel Dan Scanlan
A6 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011- SAANICH NEWS
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A6 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011- SAANICH NEWS
Exchange student secretly kept dead baby for 10 days just to ‘be together’
Kyle SlavinNews staff
Narumi Bito first knew for certain she had been pregnant after looking into the toilet just after midnight on Sept. 17, 2010, during a bout of “excru-ciating” abdominal pains.
That’s when she saw what appeared to be a lifeless baby in the bowl, Bito told the B.C. Supreme Court this week.
The 20-year-old Japanese exchange student passed out shortly after she gave birth in the ground-floor bathroom of home-stay mother Gayle Floyd’s Saanich residence.
Roughly 11 hours later, the girl retreated from the bath-room to find a towel to wrap the full-term baby in.
Instead, she found a plastic shopping bag, wrapped the baby and left it behind a chair near her bed.
“I just wanted to be together,” Bito, now 21, said, through a
Japanese interpreter, when questioned why she left the baby in her bedroom.
“Miss Bito, did you want to hide the fetus?” asked her defence attorney Christopher Mackie.
“No.”“Did you want to hide the
fact you had given birth to it?”
“No. No.”“Did you want to get rid of
the fetus?”“No. Not at all.”Floyd discovered the baby,
wrapped in the bag and behind the chair 10 days later, when a foul odour was detected com-ing from Bito’s room.
Bito testified she didn’t notice the smell.
“I suggest that if your moti-vation was to stay with the remains, you wouldn’t have left the remains behind the chair in such an undignified manner,” Crown counsel-lor Dan Scanlan said during cross examination Wednesday morning.
“I wanted to stay together,” Bito replied.
“I suggest you treated the remains of the child in the same manner in which gar-bage is commonly treated.”
“No.”
Bito, who came to Canada in July to participate in a semes-ter-long program at the Uni-versity of Victoria, didn’t tell anyone she was pregnant.
She had her suspicions – after six months of missing her period – but never shared them with anyone.
She testified she never had morning sickness or felt move-ment from the baby.
After giving birth, she again didn’t tell anyone.
Only once police got involved on Sept. 27 did oth-ers learn she had been preg-nant and given birth.
“I didn’t have anybody I was able to talk to.”
Scanlan pressed Bito on her lack of concern for the health of the baby during the months leading up to the birth.
“It’s true that you knew you were likely to give birth in September 2010, correct?” he asked.
“I thought ‘If I am pregnant I am going to give birth in Canada,’” said Bito, who was impregnated in December 2009.
“At that point of (early) Sep-tember, I knew,” Bito said, after having missed her period for eight months straight.
“And you didn’t make arrangements for the safe birth of the child, is that cor-rect?”
“Because I thought it would be in October.”
“You’re telling the court you were planning to make arrangements for the birth in October?”
“I cannot say that because it was not a clear plan.”
Bito said she thinks a typical pregnancy lasts 10 months.
Closing arguments were expected to take place yester-day afternoon.
The 12-person jury will be sequestered as of Monday until it determines whether Bito is guilty of offering an indignity to human remains and disposing of a body with the intent to conceal.
Bito wraps up testimony “I suggest that if
your motivation was to stay with the remains, you wouldn’t have left the remains behind the chair in such an undignified manner.”
– Crown counsel Dan Scanlan
SAANICH NEWS -Friday, July 1, 2011 www.saanichnews.com • A7
Edward HillNews staff
The search for a Saanich woman thought to be lost overnight in Thetis Lake park was called off after crews found no trace of the 67-year-old.
The final search team hit remote McKenzie Creek trail early Tuesday afternoon, but emer-gency responders dismantled the command cen-tre around noon after 30 hours of scouring the park.
“There’s been nothing at all,” said Linda Hillard of Metchosin Search and Rescue. “It’s very dis-couraging. We’ve got no clues, no signs to her pref-
erence for a particular area. It makes searching very dif-ficult.”
Maria Huyben parked at Thetis Lake sometime Mon-day morning and her car was slapped with a violation ticket at 11:31 a.m.
Family members told police she was “distraught” and search and rescue teams were called in just after 6 p.m. last night. A purse was visible in the front seat of Huyben’s car.
West Shore RCMP Const. Mark Haggan confirmed that family members feared Huyben could be out to harm herself.
Metchosin SAR and Capital Regional District parks teams hit the main trails around upper and lower Thetis lakes until 3 a.m., calling her name and blowing whistles.
View Royal Fire Rescue, Langford Fire Rescue, West Shore RCMP, Saanich Search and Rescue and a Victoria police canine unit also supported the search effort.
Emergency crews found a few hours to grab a nap on cots in the parking lot and the search resumed at first light Tuesday.
Searchers on land and in boats hit shorelines of Upper and Lower Thetis Lake and Prior Lake as well as along Highland Road. They also retraced main trails and hiked dozens of unmarked trails.
The effort covered the southern reaches of the vast, 833 hectare park.
Huyben frequently walks and hikes the marked trails around Thetis Lake and is known to be a fit person. The weather was mild Monday night and the forest extremely dry, giving Huyben an excel-lent chance of surviving alone in the elements, if she was in the park.
Finding no sign of Huyben is distressing for her family and for search crews, Hillard said.
“I’ve been at this a long time and it’s never easy,” she said. “It’s hard on the whole team. They take this stuff very personally.”
An extensive search involving dozens of volun-teers yielded no clues either way as to the fate of Huyben, and the operation wrapped up around noon. RCMP released Huyben’s car to her rela-tives.
West Shore RCMP say the case has been handed to Saanich police as a missing person file.
“It is very unfortunate, we really feel for the fam-ily,” said CRD parks manager Janette Loveys. “We had hoped for some news.”
Sgt. Dean Jantzen with Saanich police said two detectives have been assigned the Huyben case and are forming a plan of attack.
Investigators are considering an aerial search of the park with a thermal camera or possibly employing the department’s dive team.
“We consider the park well searched,” Jantzen said. “The investigators are considering their options.”
Saanich woman still missing after failed Thetis park search
Maria Huyben has been missing since Monday.
Edward Hill/News staff
View Royal firefighters Buchanan Elliott and Gerry Cadwallader search Upper Thetis Lake for a missing woman from Saanich.
SAANICH NEWS -Friday, July 1, 2011 www.saanichnews.com • A7
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A8 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011- SAANICH NEWS
OUR VIEW
As advanced as we may now be in terms of technological progress, we’ve always had the ability to seek out a better life or, at least, a change.
For some of us that means the condo down the hall; for others, a continent on the other side of the globe. For me, it means a promotion to a newspaper in the province next door.
It’ll be sort of like going against the flow during rush hour, trading in the end-of-the-line, frontier land-rush environment of Sooke for the wide open landscape directly east of Red Deer.
As editor of the Stettler Independent (another paper in the Black Press chain) I get a new set of people, facts, figures and burning issues to become acquainted with. There are even two other papers to oversee in neighbouring villages called Bashaw and Castor.
The situation will be just about as different as it could be: going from Sooke, a scenic, relatively affordable bedroom community with nagging growing pains, to a young municipality with a lot of catching up to do, especially in terms of infrastructure keeping pace with an exploding population.
Geography and maturity (not to mention a fairly healthy oil- and gas-
driven economy) have teamed up to furnish Stettler with some of the
amenities so badly craved in a town like Sooke, things taken for granted elsewhere, like enough sidewalks and streetlights.
The town has a population of close to 6,000, about half that of Sooke. But it seems much bigger because it serves a regional population of 30,000. It’s kind of like Langford East with all of the commercial accoutrements you’d expect. Stettler is home
to a healthy arts and culture community, along with – as the pamphleteers eloquently assert – a world of recreational opportunities.
Claustrophobia is less likely to occur on the sprawling prairie than in a foggy rock-and-conifer dominated Island environment. But if a need for more cosmopolitan stimulus shows up in Stettler, there is a city of 90,000 just 40 minutes to the west, plus Calgary and Edmonton are each only about two hours away.
These points indicate a rewarding, interesting future is possible in an area that residents like to call “the Heart of Alberta.” But they will not dilute the fond feelings for Greater Victoria and the West Coast climate built up over so
many years.The last five years have been
good, a good start on a connection with Black Press I’m pleased to be continuing.
I get to trade in my fear of earthquakes and tsunamis for a fear of tornadoes and drought. As for flooding, I don’t yet know enough to cultivate a decent phobia.
Many thanks to the thoughtful folks who have reminded me of the lower temperatures I’m likely to notice in the winter months – it’s very caring and I appreciate it a lot. Thanks to you, I’ve made a note to consider switching to long-sleeve shirts in late October.
Truth be known, my wife Barb and I have spent many years in an area with much more extreme weather than Stettler, and we can report we’ve retained 100 per cent of the feeling in our extremities.
I’ll keep up with what’s going on in the Capital Regional District and watch with interest what happens to Sooke’s transportation arrangements and the ongoing development controversies in the Juan de Fuca Electoral Area.
Thanks to Rod Sluggett, Pirjo Raits and Mike Kraft for the past five years, and to the very good friends we’ve made here – we will stay in touch.
Jim Sinclair was the reporter at the Sooke News Mirror.
Time to swap scenes, hazards
‘It’s kind of like Langford East with all the commercial accoutrements.’
Fireworks fun without booze
We think the message has been made loud and clear: If you want to take in the annual display of Canada Day fireworks in Victoria’s Inner Harbour you better plan on being sober.
Over the past few years, the patriotic party has carried the unwanted baggage of being seen as an excuse by some for public drunkenness. It’s the kind of behaviour that can become enshrined in an annual event if left unchecked. Canada Day is about celebrating a lot of things, including the exceptional level of freedom we enjoy. However, we think the City of Victoria and local police departments are right in reminding people that, despite what some might think, the usual laws still apply.
Victoria is a fun place to go out for a night and there are areas of downtown where police should take a progressive approach to partyers whose revelry spills out into the street.
But the boozy behaviour of past Canada Days has too often created an edgy atmosphere unsuitable for families. The Inner Harbour is a public space that belongs to everyone and July 1 is a special day for all Canadians.
We support the efforts to ensure the few don’t ruin a good time for the many.
Good enough, but getting betterThere’s a philosophy based on being “good
enough.” The simple explanation is you find a way to make something work and allow it to evolve over time rather than grasp for unreachable perfection from the start.
In many ways our own country has followed this approach, especially when compared to the grandiose planning and pomp that led to the founding of our neighbours to the south.
The “good enough” concept was originally used to describe the success of technology companies like Google but is now popular as a general approach to life. For some people, stressed out by the rat race, the philosophy allows them a personal way to find their footing. It’s worked well for Canada, with our current attempts at Senate reform and the ongoing tinkering with our constitution (Quebec, are you finally onboard?).
And that’s good enough for us.
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.
Jim SinclairJust Suppose
A8 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011- SAANICH NEWS
EDITORIALPenny Sakamoto Group PublisherKevin Laird Editorial DirectorJim Zeeben EditorOliver Sommer Advertising Director
The Saanich News is published by Black Press Ltd. | 818 Broughton St., Victoria, B.C. V8W 1E4 | Phone: 250-920-2090 • Fax: 250-386-2624 • Web: www.saanichnews.com
SAANICHNEWS
SAANICH NEWS - Friday, July 1, 2011 www.saanichnews.com • A9
LETTERS
Re: Death’s shades of grey (Comment, June 24)
Doctor’s experience shows other angle to wishes of death
I am a doctor in Oregon where physician-assisted suicide is legal.
In my practice, I have discussed assisted suicide with more than a dozen patients. One of the first was with a man in a wheelchair with a progressive form of multiple sclerosis. He told me that if it got too much worse, he might want to “just end it.” I answered that he seemed to be asking for assistance with his suicide. He nodded affirmatively.
I told him that I could readily understand his fear and his frustration and even his belief that assisted suicide might be a good path for him. At the same time, I told him that should he become sicker or weaker, I would work to give him the best care and support available. I told him that no matter how debilitated he might become, that, at least to me, his life was and would always be, inherently valuable. As such, I would not recommend, nor could I participate in his assisted-suicide. He said: “Thank you.”
When a person says, “I want to die”; it may simply mean, “I feel useless.” When a person says, “I don’t want to be a burden”; it may really be a question, “Am I a burden?” When someone says, “I might as well be dead”; they may really be saying, “No one cares about me.” In essence, we are not islands. How we respond can either reflect the inherent worth of the person requesting assistance with suicide or cause the person even
deeper desperation. Patients can even feel pressured to proceed.
As such, in Oregon legal assisted suicide has undermined trust in the motives of both physicians and family. Under our law, there is no assurance that the deaths are voluntary. Don’t make our mistake.
Dr. William L. TofflerPortland, Ore.
Doctor-assisted suicide not legal after Montana court case
First, Slavin’s article implies that doctor-assisted suicide is legal in Montana, which is not the case. In 2009, the Montana Supreme Court issued an opinion giving doctors who caused or assisted a suicide a potential defense to a homicide conviction. That opinion did not legalize assisted suicide by giving doctors or anyone else immunity from criminal and civil liability for assisting a suicide, which is the case in Oregon and Washington where assisted suicide is legal.
In our last legislative session, a bill that would have legalized assisted suicide was defeated in our legislature. During hearings on that bill, the sponsor, Senator Anders Blewett, conceded that assisted suicide is not legal in Montana. He said: “Under the current law, there’s nothing to protect the doctor from prosecution.”
Second, in Oregon, legalization has allowed the state-run health plan to steer patients to suicide. The most well-known cases involve Barbara Wagner and Randy Stroup. Each wanted treatment. The plan offered them assisted suicide instead. They were steered to suicide. Moreover, it was
the Oregon Health Plan, a government entity, doing the steering. State-sanctioned suicide empowers the government, not the individual.
See Susan Donaldson James, “Death, Drugs Cause Uproar in Oregon” on ABC News, and “Letter noting assisted suicide raises questions.”
Bradley D. Williamsco-ordinator,
Montanans Against Assisted Suicide and For Living with Dignity
Shades of grey also exist in choice-homicide debate
I am an attorney in Washington State. Kyle Slavin’s claim that our assisted suicide law assures patient choice is incorrect. Gaps in our law instead render our law a recipe for elder abuse.
The most obvious gap in our law is a lack of witnesses at the death. Without witnesses, an opportunity is created for an heir to administer the lethal dose to the patient without his consent. Without witnesses, no one would know what really happened except for the perpetrator. “Dad” would be dead and unable to give his side of the story. Oregon’s law has this same gap.
In February, I testified before the Montana Senate Judiciary Committee regarding a proposed bill to legalize assisted suicide, which failed. At the time of the vote, Senator Jeff Essmann made this observation:
“All the protections (in Oregon’s law) end after the prescription is written. (The proponents) admitted that the provisions
in the Oregon law would permit one person to be alone in that room with the patient. And in that situation, there is no guarantee that that medication is self-administered.
“So frankly, any of the studies that come out of the state of Oregon’s experience are invalid because no one who administers that drug against/to that patient is going to be turning themselves in for the commission of a homicide.”
Assisted suicide is a recipe for elder abuse. It empowers other people to kill you and get away with it. Don’t make Washington and Oregon’s mistake.
Margaret DoreSeattle, Wash.
the HST, taxes, federal partisan entitlementsReaders respond:
To put readers on equal footing, and to be sure that all opinions are heard, please keep letters to less than 300 words.
The News reserves the right to edit letters for style, legality, length and taste. The News will not print anonymous letters.
Please enclose your phone number for verification of your letter’s authenticity. Phone numbers are not printed.
Send your letters to:■ Mail: Letters to the Editor, Victoria
News, 818 Broughton St., Victoria, B.C., V8W 1E4
■ Fax: 386-2624■ E-mail: [email protected]
Letters to the Editor
Liberals gave away tax-collection power
In this whole HST debate the one question that doesn’t seem to come up too often is this: What government in its right mind would give up its ability to collect its own taxes?
I mean, if the American federal government were to try to implement something like the HST south of the border, the individual states would start to scream bloody murder and probably a whole new civil war would break out.
Here, though, the provincial Liberals just quietly rolled over and handed one of their greatest powers, the right under law of a government to collect money from its citizens, without any fuss or debate, and rights once given away are very hard to get back.
Now I don’t want to get all Quebec here and start ranting about “sovereignty” this and “sovereignty” that, but it is important for B.C. to maintain its independence from Ottawa, especially in such an important financial matter like this.
I mean, sure, it is all goodness and light between the two levels of government right now, but it wasn’t that long ago that the federal government was
withholding transfer payments from our health care system because they didn’t like how we were handling it, and what’s to keep them from turning around in the future and doing the same with the HST?
This whole thing seems to be a part of a pattern with the B.C. Liberals. When something gets too tough to deal with they fob it off on somebody else so that they can claim to have clean hands for the next election. They did it with B.C. Ferries and now they’ve done it with provincial taxes.
Well, no matter how it goes with this HST vote, they should remember for the next election that the Liberal Party in British Columbia has already been voted out of existence once already back in the 1950s, and if this situation reminds too many people of Brian Mulroney and the GST, Christy Clark and Kim Campbell could end up with all too much in common.
Jeff TaylorVictoria
Some businesses see – and keep – HST benefits
Last year I asked a friend who runs a small business what effect the HST had on his company. He gleefully told me that it increased
his bottom line by about $5000. When I asked if he planned to pass some of these savings on to his customers, he looked at me like I was deranged. No, he planned to keep the profit for himself.
The recent Dinning report (Independent Panel on the HST) assumes that “...90 per cent of business’ HST rebates are passed on to the consumer.” This appears to be wishful thinking. They also state “17 per cent of your spending has an extra seven per cent sales tax.” whereas the other 83 per cent is unchanged. How is this good?
I’ll be voting to get rid of the HST.
Roel HurkensVictoria
Profit sharing the answer to gov’t overspending
Re: Lessons from history apply to HST today (Letters, June 24)
The problem with Louis XIV was, possibly, he plucked one too many feathers from the goose.
There seems to be a disconnect going on between the amount of money spent and taxes. Everyone is in favour of spending, however they don’t want to pay higher taxes. Unfortunately the two go together.
Higher spending equals higher taxes. Higher wages means more taxes. More military means more taxes. More health care means more taxes. More police officers means more taxes. Higher wages for postal employees equals a higher price of stamps.
In today’s world of globalization, only one type of pay scale makes sense and that is profit sharing.
Profit sharing could be applied to everything. Small businesses, and government as well.
How it would work would be a certain percentage of the government’s income is devoted to each category of spending. Then all the the employees have to get a percentage of the percentage. If this were applied to pensions, then the seniors would start complaining about governments that overspend. It would help society in general.
Also, politicians who like to spend and spend to get elected would not be popular.
Judy WhytockVictoria
Senators’ roles show pros of partisanship
The contrast between the recent Conservative and NDP
federal conventions is already evident.
Stephen Harper began his convention speech by stating that the Conservatives were not a party of entitlement. Did he mean that the three defeated Conservative candidates who he recently appointed to the Senate were not entitled? Did he mean that the $50 million of G20 money spent in Tony Clement’s riding prior to the recent election was not Tory pork they were entitled to distribute as they flaunted federal budgetary procedures?
Jack Layton has repeated his promise to abolish the Canadian Senate – a major source of partisan patronage. But he will face opposition from both federal Conservatives and Liberals.
Both old-line parties used their Senators as campaign chairs and as chief fundraisers during the last election. Why did taxpayers pay for these partisan activities? Should the Liberal and Conservative party budgets not pay for these functions - like the New Democrats do?
The NDP convention was about ending partisan entitlements while the Conservative convention was about covering them up.
Ron FarisSaanich
U.S. assisted suicide cases poor examplesOUR VIEW
As advanced as we may now be in terms of technological progress, we’ve always had the ability to seek out a better life or, at least, a change.
For some of us that means the condo down the hall; for others, a continent on the other side of the globe. For me, it means a promotion to a newspaper in the province next door.
It’ll be sort of like going against the flow during rush hour, trading in the end-of-the-line, frontier land-rush environment of Sooke for the wide open landscape directly east of Red Deer.
As editor of the Stettler Independent (another paper in the Black Press chain) I get a new set of people, facts, figures and burning issues to become acquainted with. There are even two other papers to oversee in neighbouring villages called Bashaw and Castor.
The situation will be just about as different as it could be: going from Sooke, a scenic, relatively affordable bedroom community with nagging growing pains, to a young municipality with a lot of catching up to do, especially in terms of infrastructure keeping pace with an exploding population.
Geography and maturity (not to mention a fairly healthy oil- and gas-
driven economy) have teamed up to furnish Stettler with some of the
amenities so badly craved in a town like Sooke, things taken for granted elsewhere, like enough sidewalks and streetlights.
The town has a population of close to 6,000, about half that of Sooke. But it seems much bigger because it serves a regional population of 30,000. It’s kind of like Langford East with all of the commercial accoutrements you’d expect. Stettler is home
to a healthy arts and culture community, along with – as the pamphleteers eloquently assert – a world of recreational opportunities.
Claustrophobia is less likely to occur on the sprawling prairie than in a foggy rock-and-conifer dominated Island environment. But if a need for more cosmopolitan stimulus shows up in Stettler, there is a city of 90,000 just 40 minutes to the west, plus Calgary and Edmonton are each only about two hours away.
These points indicate a rewarding, interesting future is possible in an area that residents like to call “the Heart of Alberta.” But they will not dilute the fond feelings for Greater Victoria and the West Coast climate built up over so
many years.The last five years have been
good, a good start on a connection with Black Press I’m pleased to be continuing.
I get to trade in my fear of earthquakes and tsunamis for a fear of tornadoes and drought. As for flooding, I don’t yet know enough to cultivate a decent phobia.
Many thanks to the thoughtful folks who have reminded me of the lower temperatures I’m likely to notice in the winter months – it’s very caring and I appreciate it a lot. Thanks to you, I’ve made a note to consider switching to long-sleeve shirts in late October.
Truth be known, my wife Barb and I have spent many years in an area with much more extreme weather than Stettler, and we can report we’ve retained 100 per cent of the feeling in our extremities.
I’ll keep up with what’s going on in the Capital Regional District and watch with interest what happens to Sooke’s transportation arrangements and the ongoing development controversies in the Juan de Fuca Electoral Area.
Thanks to Rod Sluggett, Pirjo Raits and Mike Kraft for the past five years, and to the very good friends we’ve made here – we will stay in touch.
Jim Sinclair was the reporter at the Sooke News Mirror.
Time to swap scenes, hazards
‘It’s kind of like Langford East with all the commercial accoutrements.’
Fireworks fun without booze
We think the message has been made loud and clear: If you want to take in the annual display of Canada Day fireworks in Victoria’s Inner Harbour you better plan on being sober.
Over the past few years, the patriotic party has carried the unwanted baggage of being seen as an excuse by some for public drunkenness. It’s the kind of behaviour that can become enshrined in an annual event if left unchecked. Canada Day is about celebrating a lot of things, including the exceptional level of freedom we enjoy. However, we think the City of Victoria and local police departments are right in reminding people that, despite what some might think, the usual laws still apply.
Victoria is a fun place to go out for a night and there are areas of downtown where police should take a progressive approach to partyers whose revelry spills out into the street.
But the boozy behaviour of past Canada Days has too often created an edgy atmosphere unsuitable for families. The Inner Harbour is a public space that belongs to everyone and July 1 is a special day for all Canadians.
We support the efforts to ensure the few don’t ruin a good time for the many.
Good enough, but getting betterThere’s a philosophy based on being “good
enough.” The simple explanation is you find a way to make something work and allow it to evolve over time rather than grasp for unreachable perfection from the start.
In many ways our own country has followed this approach, especially when compared to the grandiose planning and pomp that led to the founding of our neighbours to the south.
The “good enough” concept was originally used to describe the success of technology companies like Google but is now popular as a general approach to life. For some people, stressed out by the rat race, the philosophy allows them a personal way to find their footing. It’s worked well for Canada, with our current attempts at Senate reform and the ongoing tinkering with our constitution (Quebec, are you finally onboard?).
And that’s good enough for us.
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.
Jim SinclairJust Suppose
A8 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011- SAANICH NEWS
EDITORIALPenny Sakamoto Group PublisherKevin Laird Editorial DirectorJim Zeeben EditorOliver Sommer Advertising Director
The Saanich News is published by Black Press Ltd. | 818 Broughton St., Victoria, B.C. V8W 1E4 | Phone: 250-920-2090 • Fax: 250-386-2624 • Web: www.saanichnews.com
SAANICHNEWS
A10 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWSA10 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWS
Sam Van SchieNews staff
Royal Roads University students plan to hold a flash-mob style protest at the intersection of Trans-Canada Highway and McKenzie Avenue dur-ing the evening rush hour next Wednesday.
Completing a final project in a professional com-munications class, the group of five hope to recruit at least 100 people to participate in their “Crawl-
ture Jam,” crawling on their hands and knees through the intersection while the event is cap-tured on video.
The RRU students will use the footage in a docu-mentary about culture jamming, a form of activism that uses irony to inspire people to question the status quo.
“We hope drivers see us and make the connec-tion between what we’re doing and what they’re doing every day in the Colwood Crawl,” organizer Erin Richards said.
“If (drivers) think we look stupid, they can look in their rearview mirror and see all the people behind them crawling through traffic twice a day.”
On the pedestrian overpass west of the McKen-zie intersection, the students will hang a banner that reads “Stop crawling and stand up” in hopes of encouraging people to change their commuter ways.
“We’re not attached to any particular cause – we’re not calling for an overpass or improved tran-sit,” Richards said. “We’re just raising the issue, asking people to notice how absurd it is, and leav-ing them to find their own solution.”
The group plans to spend about 15 minutes at the intersection, crawling legally through the pedestrian crossings as the walk signal permits.
“We hope we don’t totally enrage any drivers,” Richards said. “We want to make them smile, and think.”
To participate in the event meet July 6 outside St. Joseph’s Church Hall (785 Burnside Rd.) at 5 p.m. The group will start crawling the intersection at 5:30 p.m. sharp and disperse shortly afterward.
The finished documentary, about 10 minutes long, will include interviews with authorities on culture jamming and will be available free on You-Tube.
For more information and updates, RSVP to the Facebook event “Crawlture Jam” or follow @crawl-turejam on Twitter.
Students protest commuter crawl
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Teenage girls threatened with knife for singing while waiting for bus
Two teenage girls were threatened with a knife at a bus stop Friday night because they were singing and dancing as they waited for the bus.
The 16-year-olds were waiting at Wilkinson and Interurban roads when an 18-year-old man, also waiting at the bus stop, approached them around 9 p.m., June 24, and pulled out a folding knife and threatened the girls.
“Apparently the suspect became bothered by the two youths, who were singing and dancing,” Saanich police Sgt. Dean Jantzen said.
The suspect fled, but the girls provided police with a good description of the man and an indi-vidual matching his description was arrested a short distance away. A small folding knife was seized.
Arresting officers had concerns for the man’s mental health, and he was brought to Royal Jubilee Hospital for an assessment.
The 18-year-old faces threat-related charges.
Egg-throwing ball players arrested; now facing mischief charges
Four teenaged baseball players were arrested after showing off their throwing accuracy with eggs, using people and cars as targets.
Saanich police received seven different com-plaints between 11 p.m., Sunday night and 3:30 a.m., Monday.
A cab driver who had been targeted by the teens flagged down a patrol officer around 3:30 a.m. near the Lochside Trail on McKenzie Ave-nue.
Two officers walked a portion of the trail and found four teenagers, aged 16 and 17, who admitted their involvement.
“Apparently all four of these young men were baseball players, which explained the high degree of accuracy. It is just through luck that none of the people struck were injured,” Sgt. Dean Jantzen said.
Parents of all four teens were contacted, and all four boys took responsibility for their actions and expressed remorse, Jantzen said.
Charges of mischief are being considered.
Woman using McDonald’s washroom spots man recording her
A man was arrested for voyeurism Friday night when a woman spotted an electronic device being held above her while she occupied a stall in the washroom of a Saanich McDonald’s res-taurant.
Around 9 p.m., June 24, a 45-year-old Lang-ford woman saw the top of a man’s head above the stall and his arm outstretched above her.
Her husband along with the the manager of the Saanich Road restaurant, located across from Uptown, confronted the suspected voy-eur, keeping him without incident until a Saan-ich police officer arrived. A cell phone and iPod were seized from the man.
“This appears to be a one-off at that point of time,” Sgt. Dean Jantzen said, adding that it’s not believed the man had been waiting for women to enter the washroom.
A 26-year-old Saanich man now faces one count of voyeurism.
SAANICH POLICENEWSIN BRIEF
SAANICHNEWSLet the headlines come to you
A10 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWS
Sam Van SchieNews staff
Royal Roads University students plan to hold a flash-mob style protest at the intersection of Trans-Canada Highway and McKenzie Avenue dur-ing the evening rush hour next Wednesday.
Completing a final project in a professional com-munications class, the group of five hope to recruit at least 100 people to participate in their “Crawl-
ture Jam,” crawling on their hands and knees through the intersection while the event is cap-tured on video.
The RRU students will use the footage in a docu-mentary about culture jamming, a form of activism that uses irony to inspire people to question the status quo.
“We hope drivers see us and make the connec-tion between what we’re doing and what they’re doing every day in the Colwood Crawl,” organizer Erin Richards said.
“If (drivers) think we look stupid, they can look in their rearview mirror and see all the people behind them crawling through traffic twice a day.”
On the pedestrian overpass west of the McKen-zie intersection, the students will hang a banner that reads “Stop crawling and stand up” in hopes of encouraging people to change their commuter ways.
“We’re not attached to any particular cause – we’re not calling for an overpass or improved tran-sit,” Richards said. “We’re just raising the issue, asking people to notice how absurd it is, and leav-ing them to find their own solution.”
The group plans to spend about 15 minutes at the intersection, crawling legally through the pedestrian crossings as the walk signal permits.
“We hope we don’t totally enrage any drivers,” Richards said. “We want to make them smile, and think.”
To participate in the event meet July 6 outside St. Joseph’s Church Hall (785 Burnside Rd.) at 5 p.m. The group will start crawling the intersection at 5:30 p.m. sharp and disperse shortly afterward.
The finished documentary, about 10 minutes long, will include interviews with authorities on culture jamming and will be available free on You-Tube.
For more information and updates, RSVP to the Facebook event “Crawlture Jam” or follow @crawl-turejam on Twitter.
Students protest commuter crawl
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A12 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWS
Celebrate Canada weekendat Hindu Temple
Get your hand painted, enjoy the vegetarian dishes and take in the music and dance of India this week-end.
The Cultural and Arts Festival of India takes place from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday and Saturday (July 1 and 2), and from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday.
The festival happens at the Victo-
ria Hindu Temple, 1934 Cultra Ave. in Saanichton.
For more information, visit www.victoriahindutemple.com.
Forestry theatre returnsto Royal B.C. Museum
Good Timber: Songs and Stories of the Western Logger is back at the Royal B.C. Museum, Aug. 10 to 27.
The shows run Mondays through Saturdays at 8 p.m. Tickets are $17 to $22, plus tax and service fee, available at the door, by phone at 250-721-8480 or online at www.otherguystheatre.ca.
A12 • www.oakbaynews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - OAK BAY NEWS
The Victoria Shakespeare Society’s popular “Shakespeare In the Summer” festival is back for its ninth year, with a pair of favourites from opposite ends of the theatrical spectrum.
This year’s productions are Hamlet and The Comedy of Errors.
Hamlet, which opens the festival on Wednes-day (July 6), features a woman in the role of the titular Dane, which allows for a whole new interpretation of the play’s central relation-ships and themes.
The Comedy of Errors, opening the next night, is among the most lighthearted of Shake-
speare’s works. Mistaken identities abound in a play which features not one, but two sets of identical twins.
The festival runs until Aug. 13 at its tradi-tional outdoor site on the grounds of the Camo-sun College Lansdowne Campus. All shows begin at 7:30 p.m.
Tickets are $22, or $32 for both shows, avail-able at www.ticketrocket.org or by phoning 250-590-6291.
For full schedule and ticket info visit www.vicshakespeare.com.
Natalie NorthNews staff
Ska Fest is going back to its roots this year with the addition of the festival’s original outdoor venue and a musical legend.
Those who were among the 1,000 people moving to ska beats 12 years ago in Market Square at the first Ska Fest can relive the good vibes this year with the return of the much-loved venue, poised to host some positive par-tying throughout the event, includ-ing late on Friday and Saturday night.
This is just one feature that has festival founder Dane Roberts look-ing forward to next week’s celebra-tion. Fly in Jamaican rocksteady star Ken Boothe and extend the festival by a day and Roberts is a happy man.
“There’s been a lot more buzz about rocksteady because a lot of the singers have started to pass (away),” Roberts said.
“Now we have Ken Boothe, who is one of the living embodiments
of the genre.”Roberts describes rocksteady
– loosely the 2011 festival theme and the focus of this year’s accom-panying art exhibit – as less politi-cal and more light-hearted than ska or early reggae.
Breaking down the sounds for the untrained ear is something Roberts is used to doing.
The Victoria B.C. Ska Society considered changing its name at one point to include the word reg-gae, in hopes of attracting new members. But in the end, Rob-erts explained, the group elected to keep its original moniker as an educational tool.
“A lot more people on Vancou-ver Island will know what ska is because of the festival, but in terms of North America, it’s still pretty unknown,” he said. “People listen to ska all the time and don’t know that they’re listening to it.”
Bands from Colombia, Mexico City, Australia and New Orleans perform at various venues around town from July 5-9, starting with a free show at Ship Point in the Inner
Harbour at 5 p.m. next Tuesday.Styles from traditional dance
hall ska to global electronic roots will be featured throughout the festival.“And maybe a light sprin-kling of punk with the Hillside Hooligans,” Roberts said.
Hillside Hooligans are a six-piece reggae-ska-punk band born from the ashes of OneDrop in 2009 and include four of the band’s original members. The Ska Fest vets will
sample songs from their new CD, Tales from Rock Bay, July 8 in Mar-ket Square.
“It really brings the city together,” said Hillside Hooligans’ frontman Brandon Leahy. “Ska is more of an underground genre, not really widely listened to or played, except for by the people who love it and keep the scene going.”
“We don’t care what people in North America are saying or lis-
tening to as the flavour of the month – the quality and the vibe of (Ska Fest) was worth keeping … we always had the core audi-ence because we believed in it so much,” Roberts said.
Tickets are available through TicketWeb and in person at The Reef and Lyle’s Place. For full schedule and more details, visit www.victoriaskafest.ca.
The further adventures of GirlArtist Diyan Achjadi’s post-apocalyptic character is featured in drawings and animation screenings July 15 to Oct 16 at the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria.THE ARTS
Ska Fest strong in its 12th year
Sharon Tiffin/News staff
Hillside Hooligans musicians Nev Gibson, left, and Brandon Leahy flank Ska Fest organizer Dane Roberts at Ship Point. The Victoria-based band performs next Friday, (July 8) in Market Square. The festival returns to the venue after being centred at Victoria Curling Club in recent years.
Purists and newbies of the genre unite
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SAANICH NEWS - Friday, July 1, 2011 www.saanichnews.com • A13OAK BAY NEWS - Friday, July 1, 2011 www.oakbaynews.com • A13
Summer is alight with song Conservatory of Music’s Summer Series fills July schedule
Travis PatersonNews staff
For musicians, the Victoria Conserva-tory of Music’s summer academies are an all-consuming, week-long study of music.
For music fans, they mean a blissful July schedule of shows known as the Summer Series.
“It’s the best thing that’s happening in the summer and (the performances) shouldn’t be missed,” said Gergana Velinova.
The accomplished jazz singer is teach-ing and performing in a week-long sum-mer jazz workshop, one of 25 VCM acad-emies running July 4 to Aug. 6.
Each academy organizes at least two performances, with faculty and students holding court in venues as low key as Moxie’s Classic Grill and as big as the Alix Goolden Performance Hall.
It’s a regime of theory and rehearsal by day, followed by performances at night.
“People who visit and do the workshop with me talk about it for the rest of the year. It’s so different than having just a lesson. It’s growing with each other and getting in the zone of studying music intensely.”
The News caught up with the Victo-ria-based singer on Tuesday at the con-servatory. She recently returned from doing a show in New York, where she performs semi-regularly. From September
to April, Velinova is the vocal teacher and instructor for the Camosun College music diploma program through VCM, and con-ducts the VCM vocal jazz ensemble.
From July 4 to 9 she is leading the “jazz and gospel days” portion of the jazz work-shop’s itinerary.
And she’ll have some help.Joining her from South Carolina are
gospel singer Kim Pacheco and gospel and jazz pianist Richard White Jr. Guest instructors are what make the VCM work-shops so valuable, and the visiting musi-cians find them mutually beneficial too, said VCM community school registrar Bethany McNeil.
Not all students are youths, but many are and it prepares them for life as a pro-fessional musician.
“It’s a concentrated week of study with master classes and quick concert prepa-rations. They get the music a week before the class starts,” McNeil said.
Some classes, like VCM’s baroque vocal, draw musicians from across Can-ada, she said. “Some of the students are quite advanced and many of the shows will be high quality.”
Velinova, Pacheco and White Jr. will take part in the faculty jazz show of professional musicians hosted by Don Thompson in the Alix Goolden Hall next Friday (July 8), followed by a different era of jazz on Saturday (July 9) with Brad Turner and the All Star Faculty Big Band, also in the Goolden Hall. Both shows are at 8 p.m. and cost $20 to attend.
The first show in the series happens at 7:30 p.m. Sunday night (July 3) at St. Michaels University School, a string recital led by Michael van der Sloot. Tick-ets are $15, or $10 for students.
See this story on www.vicnews.com for a complete listing of the Summer Series concerts.
Vocalist Gergana Velinova sits at the piano in Alix Goolden Hall in the Victoria Conservatory of Music. She is performing and teaching as part of the school’s Music Summer Series, including a jazz recital in the hall July 8.Sharon Tiffin/News staff
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A14 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWS
By Jennifer BlythBlack Press
From the relaxing sound of gently run-ning water after a
long day to watching the wildlife attracted to their pond, the water garden plays a central role in the landscaping of sisters Mary and Margaret Segul.
Moving to the North Saanich property from Broadmead 13 years ago, after building their new home, “we started putting the garden together incrementally,” Mary says.
Work began in the front, where rocks and boulders were brought in to create a space for evergreens, shrubs, and a few perennials dot-ted here and there with vines, bulbs and annu-als for colour. Then, moving to the rear of the acreage, “we added a section every year.”
Venturing to the side garden visitors are greeted with a glimpse of the amazing garden that awaits – including a beautiful, relaxing pond with small waterfall and a lower pond fed by a creek, which together creatively accom-modate water flow from higher properties.
While Mary suggests she “doesn’t like plan-ning,” the property has evolved in a way that
feels well-planned. The two have created a beau-tiful garden that truly feels like it was designed for their sloping site, a challenge both for man-aging waterflow and for bringing in materials – necessary as the site sits on rock and clay. Not inclined to fuss over a plant or battle the deer too much, “if something
grows, it grows. You have to work with what you have.”
Starting first with the area closest to the house, which features perennial beds circling a large patio and leading to the water garden, the Seguls then moved forward, creating wind-ing paths that invite visitors to come explore. At the bottom of the property is a dog run and small orchard, backed by beds of berries and rhubarb.
The gorgeous garden is among the many beautiful properties on the fifth annual Water Garden Tour July 9, hosted by the For the Love of Africa Society.
A fundraiser for the local group’s efforts in Africa, the 10-home, self-guided tour will include properties ranging from an English-style cottage garden with stream and pond in
the Highlands to a colourful artist’s garden, with sculptural water features and a lovely koi pond. At another property, be inspired by a for-mal water feature at the entrance, leading to a spectacular waterfall, cascading from a hillside rock garden.
All proceeds of the tour support the work
FEATURE SECTION
HOME GARDEN REAL ESTATE FASHION TRAVEL FOOD WINE CULTURE LEISURE
coastal living
Cont. on page 15
about townMusic & more at Goward House
Join Cadboro Bay’s Goward House this coming Tuesday, July 5, for Music on the Lawn.
Featuring hot jazz, Dixieland, swing music and more, the fun gets under way with barbecue food available for purchase from 4:30 to 6 p.m., followed by a free concert from 6 to 8 p.m.
Bring a picnic blanket or lawn chair and enjoy an evening of music on the lawn. In the event of inclem-ent weather, the event will move indoors.
Part of the Music in the Park sum-mer series sponsored by Saanich Parks & Recreation and the Saanich Legacy Foundation, visit Goward House at 2495 Arbutus Rd.
red gallery welcomesartist’s first local show
Join red gallery on Oak Bay Avenue this weekend for the opening of art-ist Galen Davison’s first local gallery show.
Showing July 2 to 30, Davison’s tex-tural and evocative works reveal mys-teries in each layer of plaster, zinc, copper and oil paint, creating “works of bold beauty that fill their spaces with wonder, peace and delight,” the gallery says.
Meet the artist at the gallery from 6 to 8 p.m Tuesday, July 5.
Water feature a starring centrepiece for stunning North Saanich garden
Jennifer Blyth photos
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not for profit
A new art gallery that celebrates the senior artist is opening at Ross Place Retirement Residence.
Showcasing art created by profes-sional artists, Ross Place residents, and Artist-in-Residence Jeffrey Boron, Studio65 is focused on celebrating art-ists who are 65 and beyond.
“Studio65 will be a venue for our residents to show their work along-side other senior artists in our com-munity,” says Andrew Trinder, Gen-eral Manager, Ross Place Retirement Residence.
Boron, a Plein Air artist, will share his time between Studio65 and the outdoors that inspire his work. His paintings capture a love of the out-doors and those sometimes over-looked small areas of our landscape. He frequently captures meadows and ocean shore scenes on southern Van-couver Island.
“Celebrating art and the creative process is an important human desire, it is one of the things that make us human. The creation of art at any level
or age allows us to ‘come out and play’ and ‘let loose the child in us all,’” Boron says. “When we are in the processes of creating, our age has no meaning and the therapeutic implications of mak-ing art have been well documented. I must say that I am thrilled to be part of this new venture.”
Visit Studio65 in Ross Place Retire-ment Residence, 2638 Ross Lane. Gal-lery hours are Tuesday and Thursday from 1 to 4 p.m., or by appointment.
Fridays – Church of Our Lord Thrift Shop, 626 Blanshard St. (at Humboldt), 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Household items, clothing, jewellery and more. Parking at rear of church. FMI: 250-383-8915.
Fridays – Oak Bay Lawn Bowling Friday Night Visitors event. Try the family sport of lawn bowling for free – ages 10+, with basic instruction to play in a fun game. Wear flat-soled shoes. Oak Bay Lawn Bowling Club, 2190 Harlow Dr. (Carnarvon Park). Fridays at 6 p.m. FMI: www.bowlsoakbay.ca
Wednesdays, 6:30 to 8 p.m., Victoria Horseshoe Club’s free Junior League pro-
gram (eight to 17 years); instruction and horseshoes provided, in Glanford Park. FMI: 250-478-5928.
Wednesdays, 7:45 p.m. – Oak Bay, free introduction to the Transcendental Medi-tation technique. FMI: 250-383-9822 or www.meditationvictoria.org
Fridays to Aug. 26 – Victoria Lawn Bowl-ing Club community open house, 6 p.m. Come try lawn bowling, a fun, social sport for all ages! To protect the greens, wear flat, smooth-soled shoes, no heels. No charge for up to three visits. Cook Street & Park Blvd., Beacon Hill Park. FMI: Chris,
250-383-5039 or www.victorialbc.comFridays, 6:30 p.m. – Victoria Horseshoe
Club’s Adult Fun Drop-in Horseshoes; no cost at this time; no experience necessary; instruction and horseshoes provided. Glanford Park. FMI: 250-478-5928
July 3 – Victoria International Track Classic, 2 to 4 p.m. at UVic’s Centennial Stadium. Featuring Canadian and Interna-tional track and field athletes. Admission: $10/adults; $7.50/seniors & children under 12; $20/family of four.
Send your non-profit events to [email protected]
Ross Place opens Victoria’s newest art gallery
new galleryof For the Love of Africa Society, which has built two schools, a clinic and an orphan centre in Africa. As all members volunteer their time and talents and skills, 100 per cent of all direct donations go to projects in Africa.
IN THE KNOW■ Take part in the For the Love of Africa Society’s annual Water Garden Tour July 9 and help the local group’s efforts to build facilities for children and families in Tanzania.■ Tickets are $25 and are available at Cannor Nursery, Dig This locations, Elk Lake Garden Centre, Gardenworks locations and Marigold Nurseries.■ In consideration of the homeowners please leave pets at home and note that the gardens are not wheelchair or stroller accessible. The tour is not suitable for children under 12 and visitors are asked to stay on designated paths. Organizers recommend visitors wear comfortable walking shoes and bring their own street map.■ Those with a water garden to submit to the committee for possible inclusion in the 2012 tour are asked to e-mail [email protected] or call 250-891-0762.■ Learn more at www.fortheloveofafrica.org
Cont. from page 14
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A16 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWS
Brad Cook back with Saanich BravesTravis PatersonNews staff
After one season as an assistant coach in the B.C. Hockey League, Brad Cook is returning to coach the Saanich Braves of the Vancouver Island Junior Hockey League.
Cook was let go by the Victoria Grizzlies earlier this month as that club restruc-tures its coaching staff.
“Len Barrie is talking to a couple of key candidates for the head coaching job. It meant too many assistants and it’s unfor-tunate we had to let Cook go. He’s a hell of a communicator, a great coach and motivator,” Grizzlies co-owner Reza Binab said.
Barrie, the majority owner of the Griz-zlies, returned to coach the team along-side Vic Gervais with only a handful of games left in the season. The Grizzlies lost in seven games in the second round of playoffs against the Powell River Kings.
Gervais was given full control of the team as head coach and general manager for the past two seasons. He pulled off a flurry of trades over the course of the 2010-11 season. The moves seemed suc-cessful, as Gervais brought in an ‘A list’ of BCHL talent. Players such as David Mor-ley, Kyle St. Denis, Dustin Johnson and Graeme Strukoff, were key contributors down the stretch and in the playoffs.
And Gervais continues to recruit players as the acting GM.
“The situation is just as Barrie left it at the end of the season,” Gervais said.
With the more experienced Cook avail-able, the junior-B Braves offered the posi-tion to him, forcing Robin Gomez to step down after one year as head coach.
Both Gomez and Cook are former ECHL players who played for the Salmon Kings.
Dropping down to a lower league is a setback for Cook’s coaching career, but the well-travelled former pro is happy to return to the Braves, where he had suc-cess during his first stint with the club two years ago.
“It’s a not the way forward I would’ve like but you knowI fit well with the Braves, I know and like the owners and with my
family and the Spectrum hockey school ,this is a good thing right now,” Cook said.
“Leaving the Braves in the first place, I thought maybe the timing was a bit pre-mature.”
Cook initially took over the Braves in 2009 from Dick Crowder and the team won 28 games before nearly upsetting the Vic-toria Cougars in the first round of the play-offs.
“We are very pleased to have Brad back with the team. Not only is he good for the organization, he is good for the whole league,” Braves owner Norm Kelly said.
The Braves hold a prospect camp at Pearkes arena from July 8 to 10.
SPORTSSPORTSNEWS IN BRIEF
A16 • www.vicnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - VICTORIA NEWS
Pro golf series in Victoria It’s a tourney for the pros of pros. The Professional Golf Association of
B.C.’s professional series held its second event of 2011 at the Victoria Golf Club on Monday (June 27).
The tourney is part of a conference, with randomly drawn teams of two playing an 18-hole, best-ball format.
Derek Thornley (Richmond Country Club) and Steve Phillips (Morningstar Golf Club) split the top prize of $1,250 by shooting 65, 5-under par.
Host Scott Kolb of VGC and Brice Mac-Dermott (Black Mountain Golf Club) were one of three teams tied for second over-all at 67, with Olympic View Golf Club’s Randy Frank and Dan Swanson (Guildford Golf & Country Club) also in that tie. Kolb joined locals Kevin Maxwell (Olympic View) and Doug Hastie (Highland Pacific) by each winning a round of the skins tourna-ment, pulling in $120 each.
The series continues at Kelowna’s Black Mountain Golf Club on Aug. 9.
Rowers join Canada U23 teamVictoria rowers Liz Fenje and Patricia
Obee will compete at the World Rowing Under-23 Championships in Amsterdam, July 20 to 24.
Fenje and Obee, who once rowed together as juniors, will compete sepa-rately. Fenje, who also competes for Stanford University, is paired with Sydney Boyes of St. Catharines in the lightweight double.
Obee is going alone in the lightweight single.
Non-traveling reserves include Victoria’s Julia Thompson, a teammate with Fenje at Stanford.
McCormick named to World’sYoung Olympian Riley McCormick is
the lone Boardworks diver named to Div-ing Canada’s team for the World Aquatic Championships in Shanghai, China, July 16 to 24.
McCormick recently won his second NCAA Pac-10 conference diver of the year award this season, his second in two years as an Arizona Sun Devil.
An injury kept Rachel Kemp from com-peting at Canada’s World qualifier this spring. Kemp is still on track to com-pete at the 2012 Olympics, however. She placed second in Canada on the 10 metre platform at the recent Summer Senior Nationals in Edmonton.
No Sooke on Junior B schedule The Victoria Cougars released their
Vancouver Island Junior Hockey League schedule this week with the Sooke Sting-ers a noticeable absence.
The Cougars open the season Sept. 8 against the Oceanside Generals. The Pen-insula Panthers first visit Archie Browning Sports Centre on Sept. 22, the Saanich Braves on Sept. 29.
Without Sooke the adjusted schedule means eight games versus South divi-sion teams Kerry Park Islanders, Peninsula Panthers and Saanich Braves. The Cou-gars will play six games against the North division’s Campbell River Storm, Comox Valley Glacier Kings, and Oceanside Gen-erals.
The Stingers’ franchise was frozen partway through the 2010-11 season.
Legging it out
Penticton Pinnacles Kyle Logan and Victoria
United’s Jonas Golf-Myers battle for ball
control at midfield during Sunday’s Pacific
Coast Soccer League U21 match at King’s
Park in Penticton. The teams battled to a 2-2
draw. Both Vic United’s senior and U21 squads
have the weekend off and return to action
at Royal Athletic Park on Saturday, July 9.
The senior United and Victoria Highlanders
PDL team played their annual derby at Bear
Mountain Stadium Wednesday (June 29).
Mark Brett/Black Press
Dominos fall in coaching shuffle
Coach Brad Cook will once again be behind the bench at Pearkes Arena this winter with the Saanich Braves. Scott Smith
For days like today!
SAANICH NEWS - Friday, July 1, 2011 www.saanichnews.com • A17
experience
life in their shoes
The Hero In You® education program
offers a series of FREE curriculum-linked lesson plans (grades 4-7) aimed to motivate children to find the champion within themselves. In addition, teachers can request a FREE classroom presentation delivered in-person by a Hall of Fame athlete!
If you are a principal, teacher or parent and would like to book a presentation for your classroom, call
Michael Markowsky at (604) 647-7449 or visit www.heroinyou.ca to download lesson plans.
When children are exposed to inspiring stories of athletes,
they begin to imagine what they can do and how they too
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AttentionTeachers:AttentionTeachers:
VICTORIA NEWS - Friday, July 1, 2011 www.vicnews.com • A17
When she isn’t practising with the national team, Ali Lee works to promote it
Travis PatersonNews staff
When it’s game time, Ali Lee does everything she can on the field to help Canada win.
After the game, win or lose, it’s her job to post the result on the national women’s field hockey team’s website, as well as to Twitter and Face-book.
She also handles media inquiries.Lee’s been doing it all this week, pulling double
duty as a player with Team B.C. Blue while han-dling her media relations duties as the face of the national field hockey champi-onships at the University of Vic-toria. Before the tourney started on Wednesday she had already run through Victoria’s media gaunt-let to raise awareness about the event. Add in post-game responsi-bilities and it can make for a heavy workload on game day.
“If I personally have a really hard game, I’m not in the mind state to put together a game report,” Lee said.
“But fans, (media) and sponsors (across Canada) don’t know what’s going on and we owe it to them to share what happened, so I have to cool down, get a shower and get back to the hotel.
“They want to know the good and the bad.”The former Vikes star and St. Margaret’s School
grad now lives in Vancouver where she trains full time with the national team.
It’s all part of the 24-year-old defender’s poten-tial career in sports media (post hockey), a signifi-cant detour from the biochemistry degree she just completed at UVic.
“It’s about promoting field hockey and that’s
what we need to do in this country,” she said. “Just from my own experience I’ve become interested in it. Field Hockey Canada asked if I wanted to help with the national championships (in Victoria) last year and this year I’ve taken the torch.”
Lee’s brought FHC up to speed with Twitter, Facebook and YouTube, and makes regular post-
ings to the team’s website, www.field4dreams.ca.
When her days as an interna-tional player eventually come to a close, she plans to look at con-tinuing her education in broadcast journalism or communications.
Of course, the current chal-lenges for Lee go beyond suffering a tough loss. For the second year in a row, the senior nationals are being played in Victoria, a plus for the many hometown players.
But there’s always a backlash from hockey’s other hotspots, namely Alberta and Ontario, who want just as badly to see the nation’s best.
“It happens with the nationals at all age levels. People aren’t paid, all the work is volunteer work.
“We have that strong group in Victoria and UVic’s water-based, field hockey-only turf, one of a few in Canada, which is a major criterion for host-ing the event.”
Playoffs for the nationals go all day Saturday (July 2). Women’s and men’s gold medal games at 12:30 and 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, respectively.
Travis Paterson/News staff
Ali Lee packs more than sticks in her stick bag, as she switches hats from player during games to handling the media post game.
Media Game
and the
Follow FH Canada■ On Twitter Field Hockey Canada @fieldhockeycan and Ali Lee @AliLee05. ■ On Facebook at www.facebook.com/FHCanada. ■ Field Hockey Canada is on the web at www.field4dreams.ca, www.fieldhockey.ca.
Royals, Giants set early rivalry
To the Victoria Roy-als fans who want to see an early rivalry with the Vancouver Giants, you’re in luck. The teams will play each other 10 times this year.
Just as the Giants were recently announced as the Royals’ first visitor to Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre in a preseason game on Sept. 16, the Giants will also play in the Royals first regu-lar season Western Hockey League game on Sept. 24.
The game will be broadcast on SHAW TV at 7 p.m.
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A18 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWSA18 www.saanichnews.com Fri, July 1, 2011, Saanich News
PUBLISHERThe Morning Star in Vernon, B.C. currently has an opening for the position of Publisher.
The Morning Star, one of Canada’s leading communitynewspapers, is published every Wednesday, Friday and Sunday and has an extensive distribution net-work throughout the North Okanagan. Reaching more than 33,000 homes & busi-nesses in the communities of Vernon, Coldstream, Armstrong, Enderby, Lumby, Cherryville, Oyama, Spal-lumcheen, Grinrod, Falkland and Silver Star.
The Morning Star is the No.1 news source in the North Okanagan and has been committed to serving its communities w/in-depth local news, sports, entertainment, events and happenings since 1988. The Morning Star is part of Black Press, Canada’s largest private, independent newspaper company, with over 150 community, daily and urban newspapers located in BC, Alberta, Washington State, Ohio and Hawaii.
Black Press is seeking a proven leader with an impressive track record in newspaper management, to build on the considerable growth the Morning Star has experienced over the past 23 years.
Ideally, you should have a good understanding of all facets of newspaper opera-tions with emphasis on sales, marketing & fi nancial management. As publisher, you will be instrumental in developing a multi platform strategy for the newspaper and its online initiatives, as it continues to serve a rapidly expanding and diverse marketplace. If you are a critical thinker, customer driven and possess strong entrepreneurial skills, Black Press wants to hear from you.
Please send your resume by July 22, 2011 to:
Bruce McAuliffe, PresidentBlack Press BC South
c/o Kelowna Capital News2495 Enterprise Way,
Kelowna, B.C. V1X 7K2Email: brucem@
blackpress.caVisit: www.blackpress.ca
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMING EVENTS
KIDS Day Camp (Ages 5-12): July 4-8, 9:00am-2:30pm @The Salva-tion Army, Victoria Citadel Church,4030 Douglas St.(near Pat Bay Highway and Mackenzie Ave). Cost:$45.00. Some scholarships available. Contact: 250-727-3770; email: [email protected]
INFORMATION
Government Surplus Asset Sales/Recycling
The Province of BC’s Victoria Cash & Carry outlet located at 4234 Glanford Avenue will now be open Monday through Friday from
10:00 am to 2:00 pm, except statutory holidays.
Selling items such as: used offi ce furniture and
equipment, computer monitors, assorted new 2010 Olympic clothing
and collectibles, plus much more!
Inventory added daily.We are also a large
volume drop off location for the Encorp “Return-It” program, accepting end
of life electronics for recycling, as well we also provide Secure
Electronic Media Destruction (computer
hard drives, cell phones, fl exible media) with our
Media Shredders.For more information
please contact: (250) 952-4439.
PERSONALS
HOT GUYS! HOT CHAT! HOT FUN! Try Free! Call 250-220-3334 or 800-777-8000.www.interactivemale.com
TRAVEL
GETAWAYS
MILL BAY- (2 minutes from Mill Bay ferry) Beautiful ocean front cottage, sleeps 2 to 4. Weekly, $1000, Monthly $3000, all inclusive. Includes all amenities. NS/NP. 250-743-6186.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
ARE You Ready To Finally Earn Some EXTRA INCOME Working Full-Time Or Part-Time From Your Home Or Offi ce? If Your Answer is YES..contact [email protected] for more info
Flower StoreWake up & smell the roses - be your own boss! Existing 20 year old turnkey franchise available in Victoria. $49,900. Serious inquiries only, 604-444-4476 or Toll Free 1-866-444-9114.
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
HSSE SUPERVISOR Competition #BU11-0078 We have an immedi-ate opening for a Health, Safety, Security & Environment Supervisor. The successful candidate can be lo-cated in either the lower mainland or Okanagan area. You will be re-sponsible for providing Health, Safety, Security & Environment support to our Ready Mix, Aggre-gate, Asphalt and Landscape divi-sions in Metro Vancouver, Okana-gan Valley, the Shuswapp and Central BC, but not limited to these locations. Duties: promoting job safety and environment awareness; implementation of acceptable work-ing methods and practices; compli-ance with Safety & Environmental responsibilities; and act as cham-pion on defi ned HSSE topics. Suc-cessful applicant will have 5 years of HSSE experience. Qualifi cations should include: Construction Safety Offi cer and a combination of educa-tion and experience. Extensive trav-el will be required. Submit your re-sume by quoting competition number by July 12, 2011 to: BURN-CO Rock Products Ltd Fax: (403) 440-3454 Attention: Human Resources OR E-mail: [email protected] www.burn-co.com We thank all applicants for their interest. Only those chosen for an interview will be contacted.
EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS
INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIP-MENT OPERATOR SCHOOL.Locations in Alberta & BC. Hands on real world training. Full sized equipment. Job placement assist. Funding Avail. www.iheschool.com1-866-399-3853
HELP WANTED
ALPHA Safety Ltd is looking for First Aid Instructors for industry at our Training School in Ft St John, BC. Please send resumes by email or fax Attention: Martin Weideman Email: [email protected] Fax: (250) 787 8839
Holbrook Dyson Logging Ltd Has vacancies in the following jobs: 1)Heavy Duty Mechanic. 2)Driller Blaster Details can be seen at http://hdlogging.com/ Fax resume to 250-287-9259
JOE’S AUTOBODY REPAIR in Prince Rupert, BC. Current-ly has an opening for a Colli-sion Autobody Technician. Must be a team player for this relaxed and friendly,but hard working atmosphere. Wages and moving expenses nego-tiable. Email resume to:[email protected] Fax: 250-627-4702. Call: 250-624-1795
LIMOUSINE/VAN DRIVER, class 4, P/T, N/S, 2-3 days/eves per week for private sightseeing tours. Please call 250-361-6176.
STEEL FABRICATOR. Must have Red Seal, experience in running a crew, structural steel fab, installation, piping layout, painting & produce simple shop drawings. Email resume to offi [email protected] or fax 250-365-2131
The Lemare Group is currently seeking a heavy duty me-chanic for the North Vancou-ver Island area. Full time, un-ion wages. Email resume to offi [email protected] or fax to: 250-956-4888.
The Lemare Group is currently seeking a hoe chucker/load-er operator, and a boom man for the North Vancouver Island area. Full time, union wages. Fax resume to 250-956-4888 or email: offi [email protected].
JANITORIAL
CLEANER- required for eve-ning work in Sidney. 5 hrs per evening, Mon to Fri. Experi-ence & DL an asset. Wages & Benefi ts based on experience. Fax: 250-665-7436.
MEDICAL/DENTAL
MEDICAL OFFICE Trainees Needed! Hospitals & Dr’s
Need Medical Offi ce & Medical Admin Staff! No Experience?
Need Training? Career Training & Job Placement Available! 1-888-778-0459
RETAIL
FASHIONSALES PERSON
needed for aPart Time casual position
with a mobileclothing company.
Must have clothing sales experience, enjoy working with seniors and own transporta-tion. Hours are one week per month, Monday - Friday, approx. 5-7 hours/day $12.00/hour.
Start week is July 11th - 15th.
Ideal position for semi retired sales people.
Please fax resume to 1-604-528-8084 or email:
CoCosclothestoyou @shaw.ca
PERSONAL SERVICES
FINANCIAL SERVICES
GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420.
www.pioneerwest.com
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✓ Do you Own a Car?✓ Borrow up to $20000.00✓ No Credit Checks!✓ Cash same day, local offi ce
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HOME CARE SUPPORT
COMPASSIONATE HOME Support. Companionship, res-pite, light housekeeping, laun-dry, shopping, meal prep & transportation. First aid, CPR, Food Safe & ref’s. Dianna (250)381-1951, (250)818-8123 [email protected]
PERSONAL SERVICES
PHOTOGRAPHY/VIDEO
DIGITAL PHOTO retouch, ed-iting, add/remove objects/peo-ple. Tribute posters, home mo-vies to CD/DVD. 250-475-3332. www.cwpics.com
PETS
PETS
FREE KITTENS. to a good home. (250)479-2179.
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
ANTIQUES/VINTAGE
WANTED: ANTIQUES, books, collectibles, furniture, china, jewellery. Estates/pri-vate libraries purchased. Galleon Books & Antiques, Call 250-655-0700.
APPLIANCES
WANTED: CLEAN fridge’s, upright freezers, 24” stoves, portable dishwashers, less than 15 yrs old. McFarland In-dustries, (250)885-4531.
BUILDING SUPPLIES
METAL ROOFING & siding sales. Seconds avail. Custom roof Flashings. 250-544-3106.
FREE ITEMS
FREE: 3 pc sectional couch, fl oral/green. good condition. 250-479-6908 (View Royal).
FREE: RED interlocking stone (truck load), you pick up. Call 250-656-2518.
FRIENDLY FRANK
11’ WOOD ladder. Decosonic food sealer $20. each. 250-508-9008.
2 STAINLESS STEEL sinks, double, $60, single, $30. (250)385-7274.
ADULT BICYCLE, 15 speed, $80. Walking cane, $14. both excellent. 250-381-7428.
LIGHT BROWN leather slider recliner w/slider foot stool, $50. (250)656-4017.
SOFA BED, as new, 6” mat-tress, $90. Call (250)474-6337
FUEL/FIREWOOD
ALL SEASONS FIREWOOD True Cord or 1/2 Cord. Cut, Split & Delivered. 250-588-8749
ARBUTUS, CYPRESS, fi r, hardwoods. Seasoned. Call 250-661-7391.
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/news-paper?
RAILINGS, WHITE metal, dif-ferent lengths,$15/linear ft, obo. (250)479-1239.
MISCELLANEOUS WANTED
ANTIQUES, BOOKS, col-lectibles, furniture, china, jew-ellery. Estates/private libraries purchased. Galleon Books & Antiques, 250-655-0700
BOOKS BOOKS & antique paper collectibles. Qualifi ed appraisers. House calls for large libraries. Haunted Book-shop (Est. 1947)250-656-8805
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
MISCELLANEOUS WANTED
CASH PAID FOR SCRAP METAL Copper, brass, stain-less steel, aluminum. William’sScrap Metal, 2690 MunnRoad. 250-479-8335.
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE BY OWNER
JAMES BAY: Dallas Rd. Wa-ter, Mnt view beautiful lrg 1bdrm condo, 906sqft, recentlyreno’d. Inclds parking, sauna,workshop, comm. rm., stor-age. $278,000. (778)679-0634, [email protected]
WELL-MAINTAINED HOME/ Recreational Property. 1500sq.ft, 3-bdrm 2ba, 5 acresusable timbered land, garage.A stone throw from pristineCowichan Lake. Priced to sell-$435k 250-478-2648, 250-745-3387. By appt ONLY.
HOUSES FOR SALE
EXQUISITE SANCTUARYFabulous 2.26 private acreswith creek in beautiful AlberniValley. Enchanting 3600 sq.ft.4 bedroom, 4 bathroom cus-tom built 1995 home. Out-standing 57x40 shop with ownbathroom, lots of parking. Fea-tures hardwood, tile through-out, custom cabinetry. Gasfi replaces, stove, heat and hotwater; ensuite with soaker tub. Thinking of a life stylechange? Move to Port Alberni,the Salmon Capital of theWorld!
Visit www.albernihomes4u.ca for more information on this
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RE/MAX Mid Island RealtyPort Alberni, B.C.John Stilinovic250-724-4725
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SAANICH NEWS - Friday, July 1, 2011 www.saanichnews.com • A19Saanich News Fri, July 1, 2011 www.saanichnews.com A19 REAL ESTATE
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RENTALS
APARTMENT/CONDO
RENTALS
APARTMENT/CONDO
COLWOOD, NEWLY reno’d 1 bdrm condo, avail immed, $700, D. Ashby 250-478-9141.
MALAHAT 1 & 2 Bdrms- Panoramic views. Serene & secure. All amenities on-site, fi rewood. $700-$1200 inclu-sive. Monthly/Weekly. Pets ok with refs. 25 min commute to downtown Victoria. Must have references. 250-478-9231.
ROYAL OAK Bachelor suite walk to Broadmead mall. $725 inclusive. Call (250)658-9295.
SIDNEY APT- 2 bdrms, F/S, W/D, NS/NP. $1450/mo, year-ly lease. Close to all amenities. 250-656-4003.
VIC WEST: 1 bdrm waterfront, spacious apt. Quiet, near bus. Heat, appl’s, laundry incld’d. Seeking quiet mature occu-pant. $1000. (778)977-7885.
WESTERN COMMUNITIES Available Now. 2 bdrms, 2 bath, off Goldstream Ave, pet negotiable, balcony, en-suite laundry. $1395. Achieve Prop-erties, 250-478-2455.
COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL
FOR LEASE 18,000 sq. ft., heavy industrial, M3 zoned lot, fully fenced. $1500/mo or will sell 1/2 interest in full acre. Also we sell portable metal buildings for boats, RV’s etc., any size. Ted (250)216-3262.
FOR RENT/LEASE- Highway frontage, 2 units on McDonald Park Rd, West. 1 unit offi ce space+ sm shop, $1500/mo+ hydro. 2 unit offi ce has bay door shop w/mezzanine, $1950+ hydro. Yard space & secure gate. (250)726-5522.
RENTALS
COTTAGES
SOUTH SHAWIGAN Lk, sm waterfront cabin, 2 bdrm, utils incld, private wharf. $1200. 1 yr lease. (250)883-0475.
HOMES FOR RENT
COLWOOD, 3 bdrm house, utils incl, 1.5 bath, pets ok, Ju-ly. 1, $1250, 250-590-3868.
MILL BAY- 3 Bdrms, 2.5 bath, fully reno’d, oceanview, hard-wood fl rs, 6 appls, close to shops, marina & Victoria com-muter bus. N/S, dogs on ap-proval, credit check & refer-ences req’d, $1750+utils. Avail Aug 1. Call [email protected]
SIDNEY 3 BDRM- 5 appls, oil heat, air tight F/P, lrg covered deck, big yrd. $1350. July 1. Please phone (250)656-9910.
SIDNEY 3 BDRMS+ base-ment, garage. $1375+ utils. (250)656-4513.
SOUTH SHAWIGAN Lake- new 2 bdrm waterfront home, private wharf. $1500. 1 year lease. (250)883-0475.
UVIC AREA, furn, clean, NEW 1 bdrm, W/D, private ent/deck, hrdwd fl oors, stainless appls, $1180 mo, 250-590-9568.
SUITES, LOWER
COOK STREET Village- lrg secure, furn bachelor. Avail July & Aug. $800 inclusive. Must see! (250)389-0129.
LANGFORD: 2 bdrm, W/D, F/P, NS/NP. $1100 incld’s util’s. Call (250)220-5907.
LANGFORD (Costco). Bus, shops, school. 2 Bdrm suite, yard, 4 appls, cable/water incl, shared laundry, $1000.+util. NS/NP. (Now). (250)881-2283
Move in on Jul 15th for 1/2 price: $625
STRAWBERRY VALE: 2-3 bdrm, 2 bdrm 1 bath + 1 smaller room that can be used as an offi ce, playroom or an-other bdrm. Private ent., fenced backyard. 15 mins to downtown. W/D, F/P. No smoking inside. Cats ok, dogs negotiable. $1250/mo + 35% hydro. Avail. Jul. 15th or Aug. 1st. Ref’s req’d no partiers. Call Monika 250-294-2374.
NEAR BEAR Mountain. Spa-cious level entry 2-bdrm, 5 appl’s. Sep. laundry, F/P, patio, views. NS/NP. $1150. inclds utils. (250)391-8817.
ROYAL OAK area, new, bright lrg 1 bdrm, all incl, N/S, N/P, close to all amens, $850 mo, avail July 1, 250-744-1662
SAANICH, GRD level 2 bdrm, newly reno’d, all utils incl, close to all amens, N/P, N/S, $1000,(Immed), 250-704-6613
RENTALS
SUITES, LOWER
SAANICHTON: BRIGHT 3 bdrm, 1.5 bath, updated bath/kitchen, ocean/pastoral views, 3 fl oors, deck, close to amenities, transit, N/S. $1600, Jul. 1st. (250)589-3264
SUITES, UPPER
LANGFORD GORGEOUS brand new 1Bdrm above gar-age, sep ent, own laundry, all util’s incl + cable & internet. Maple cabinets, granite coun-ter-tops, alarm system. N/S, N/P. $1000 mo furn (incls 50” LCD high-def TV) or $900 un-furn. July 1. 250-812-9354.
N. SAANICH, bright upper one bdrm suite, $900 inclusive, full kitchen, full bath, W/D, stor-age, private patio. Avail Aug. 1, call 250-516-8086.
TOWNHOUSES
SIDNEY- NEW 2 bdrm + den, W/D. NS/NP. $1700 mo. Avail Aug 1. Call 250-217-4060.
WANTED TO RENT
LOOKING FOR 1 bdrm fur-nished cottage on water for about $1000. Utils incld’d, TV/web. I’m reno’ing my place have 1 adult dog, 1 pup, both well behaved. (250)217-3000.
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BEATERS UNDER $1000
CARS
1986 TOYOTA Corolla, runs well, tires in good shape, $500 obo. Call 250-478-0203.
1987 V6 Chrysler Sebring con-vertible, 142,151 kms, good looking, runs good, many nice things, $3800. 250-592-5283.
2004 Grey Volkswagen Diesel Jetta sedan. PW, PB, PL, CD player, front and side
air bags, abs and it has a trailer hitch. 200kms, great
tires, brakes replaced recently.
Asking $8,900 call 250-813-2866
2004 V6 Mustang convertible, 20,100 kms, silver, like new, $11,900. Call 250-592-5283.
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2004 MAZDA MIATA- 51,000 km, 6 speed manual, mint. $12,900. (250)881-1929.
TRANSPORTATION
SPORTS & IMPORTS
1989 TOYOTA Corolla, origi-nal owner. Gave up license due to health issues. 4-door auto. Regular maintenance 2x annually; needs new front brakes. 200K. Asking $1500. Hillside/Quadra area. [email protected]
RECREATIONAL VEHICLESFOR SALE
1995 KODIAC 24’ 5th Wheel. Immaculate condition. Sleeps six. Fully equipped with fridge, stove/oven, microwave, etc. Ready to travel, comes stocked with bedding, towels, dishes, etc. Sacrifi ce at $9500. Call 250-391-9707.
2000 FRONTIER 24’ 5th Wheel Trailer- sleeps 6, in ex-cellent cond, smoke & pet free, stove w/oven, fridge, mi-crowave. $15,000 obo. (250)598-1947.
2004 8’ VENTURE- toilet, very clean. $6200. (250)474-1353 or 250-881-4145.
WINNEBAGO MOTOR home, 1979, 60,000K, fully equipped, great condition, new roof re-placed, $5400. 250-658-8859.
TRANSPORTATION
VTRUCKS & ANS
$0-$1000 CASH For Junk Cars/Trucks Will tow away any car or truck in 45 mins. FREE!
TowPimp.com 250-588-7172
toll free 1-888-588-7172
MARINE
BOATS
$$$ BOATS Wanted. Any size. Cash buyer. Also trailersand outboards. 250-544-2628.
GARAGE SALES
MT. TOLMIE. MOVING. Sat & Sun, July 2 & 3, 9am-1pm. Furniture, household, tons of books, Lady’s clothes sz 3x-5x Fabulous deals! 1688 Stan-hope Place.
OAK BAY- 2100 Falkland Pl, Sat, July 2, 9am-1pm. Wide variety of household items.
SIDNEY, 2420 Amelia Ave., Sat, July 2, 9am-1pm. Avon rubber dinghy, furniture, col-lectibles and much more.
WHERE BUYERS AND SELLERS MEET
GARAGE SALES
Garage SalesGarage Sales
- BUYING -- RENTING - - SELLING -
www.bcclassifi ed.com
fi l here please
KIDS
LEA
RNING TO DRIVE?
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IVE?
Watch for our Auto Section
InMotion
KIDS
LKKII iIn your community
At the SpeedwayReader’s Rides Driver Ed Tips By the Water
A20 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWSA20 www.saanichnews.com Fri, July 1, 2011, Saanich News
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
ACCOUNTING/TAX/BOOKKEEPING
ACCOUNTINGVida Samimi
Certifi ed General Accountant
Bookkeeping, Audit,Payroll, HST. Set up &
Training. E-FileTAX
250-477-4601
PENNIE’$ BOOKKEEPING Services for small business. Simply/Quickbooks. No time to get that paperwork done? We do data-entry, GST, payroll, year-end prep, and training. 250-661-1237
CARPENTRY
ABSOLUTELY THE BEST! New, reno’s, historical, decks, driveways, etc. WCB/Member of BBB. John, 250-658-2656.
ALL YOUR renovation needs. Decks, Fencing, all jobs. Car-pentry, repairs. 250-818-7977
BENOIT CONSTRUCTION. Reno’s & Additions. Windows, Doors, Decks. 250-479-0748.
DAVID GALE Construction, for all your renovation needs. - 26 yr. exp. 778-977-7737 www.davidgaleconstruction.ca
CLEANING SERVICES
ABSOLUTELY CLEAN. Hus-band & wife team. Power Washing. (250)380-2526.
AMANDA’S EARTHFRIENDLYHOUSEKEEPING
Exp’d. Affordable. Reliable. Supp incl. refs 250-888-3899
www.friendlycleaning.ca
AUNTIE MESS CLEANING. Reliable, effi cient, honest, 40 years exp, seniors discount. $20/hr. Call 250-634-1077.
CAREBEAR CLEANING. Earth friendly products. House, offi ce & rental. Senior discount. $25hr. 250-217-5507
HOUSE AND CARPET CLEANING- Carpet Special! $69/2 rooms. 250-514-6055.
HOUSEKEEPER EXPERI-ENCED, reliable. References. 250-920-6516, 250-881-7444.
COMPUTER SERVICES
A HOME COMPUTER Coach. Senior friendly. Computer les-sons, maintenance and prob-lem solving. Des, 250-656-9363, 250-727-5519.
COMPUDOC MOBILE Com-puter Services. Repairs, tune-ups, tutoring, web sites and more. Call 250-886-8053.
CONCRETE & PLACING
RBC CONCRETE Finishing. All types of concrete work. No job too small. Seniors dis-count. Call 250-386-7007.
SMALL ADS GET BIG RESULTS! Call 250.388.3535
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
CONTRACTORS
ABSOLUTELY THE BEST! New, reno’s, historical, decks, driveways, etc. WCB/Member of BBB. John, 250-658-2656.
BASEMENT RENO’S. Local grant expertise. Legal suites. 883-6810. suitebcontracting.ca
CARPENTRY, DRYWALL, kitch/bath, wood fl oor, tiles, plumbing, renos 250-213-6877
DEEP COVE Renovations. General Contracting. Special-izing in fi nish carpentry. Hon-est , Reliable. (250) 882-0897.
REDSEAL JOURNEYMAN Carpenter. Simple hourly rate. (250)886-1596.
DRAFTING & DESIGN
DESIGN FOR PERMIT. Home Renovation Plus. Call Steven (250) 881-4197.
ELECTRICAL
250-361-6193. QUALITY Electric. Reno’s plus. Visa ac-cepted. Small jobs ok. #22779
AT&T ELECTRIC. Renova-tions. Residential & Commer-cial. Knob & tube replacement. #26125. (250)744-4550.
EXPERIENCED ELECTRI-CIAN. Reasonable rates. 250-744-6884. Licence #22202.
GNC ELECTRIC Res/Comm. Reasonable rates for quality work. #43619. 250-883-7632.
VAEXCA TING & DRAINAGE
BUBBA’S HAULING. Mini ex-cavator & bob cat services. Call 250-478-8858.
FENCING
AAA. NO job too small. Fenc-es, decks, installation & repair. Glowing References. Insured. Affordable. 15+yrs. experience Call Les at (250)880-2002.
ALL TYPES of fencing, re-pairs. Reliable, on-time. Free estimates. Call 250-888-8637.
DECKS FENCES. Installation & repairs. Vinyl decks & alumi-num rails. Book now and save. Robert (250)580-3325.
SIMPLY FENCING. Custom gates, fences and decks. Licensed & WCB Insured. Visit: simplyfencing.caCall (250)886-1596.
FLOOR REFINISHING/INSTALLATIONS
MR Sandless, The Quick, No Sand-ing Solution to Beautiful Wood Floors In One Day at 1/2 the Cost of Sanding. Check out our website for more info. www.mrsandless.ca or Call for a free estimate 250-734-3773
FURNITURE REFINISHING
FURNITURE REFINISHING. Specializing in small items, end-tables, coffee tables, chairs. Free pick-up & deliv-ery. References available. 250-475-1462.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
FURNITURE REFINISHING
U-NEEK SEATS. Hand cane, Danish weave, sea grass. UK Trained. Fran, 250-382-8602.
GARDENING
10% OFF! Yard Cleanups, Mowing, Pruning, Hedge & Shrub Trim. 250-479-6495.
250-208-8535 WOODCHUCK: specializing in Lawn (Sod & Seed), Landscaping, Tree & Stump, Hedges, Blackberry, Ivy removal, Yard Cleanup, 23 yrs exp. WCB.
AURICLE LAWNS- Hedge, beds, irrigation, commer, stra-ta. 25 yrs. Insured. 882-3129.
BIG JOBS or small, we do it all. Weekly or monthly visits. Commercial & Residential. Call (250)885-8513.
DPM SERVICES: Lawns, clean-ups, tree pruning, hedg-ing, landscaping & gutters. 15 yrs exp. Call 250-883-8141.
GARDEN OVERGROWN? Big cleanups our specialty Complete garden maint. Call 250-478-7314, 250-812-8236.
INSTALLATION OF patios, ponds, gardens and more. Plus, top quality maintenance. g lenwoodgardenworks.com Call (250)474-4373.
J.ENG LANDSCAPING Co. Custom landscaping design. Rock gardens, water features, pavers. Jan, 250-881-5680.
J&L GARDENING Full yard maintenance pruning & trim-ming. John (250)885-7343.
LANDSCAPE CONTRACTOR- custom design install, gardens, lawns & patios, irrigation & fences. Call 250-858-3564.
LANDSCAPE & TREE CARE. Hedges - pruning & shaping. Lawns, clean-ups. Andrew, 17 yrs. exp. (250)893-3465.
LEVEL GROUND Landscaping Spring lawn renovations. Complete Garden and Arborist Services. Insured. Free estimates. 250-818-0587.
NEED HELP with your gar-den? Use Your Tools. $15/hr. Call Ken, (250)385-4717.
PROFESSIONAL LAWN gar-den maint, Spring clean-up. Hammer & Spade accepting new clients. 250-474-4165.
THOUSANDS OF Succulents for sale at Doyle & Bond farm. 6666 W. Saanich Rd. Website www.doyleandbond.ca
WEEDING, MOWING, prun-ing, planting, composts. Or-ganic spraying, fertilizing. Howard, (250)661-0134.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS
DIAMOND DAVE Gutter cleaning, gutter guard, power washing, roof de-mossing. Call 250-889-5794.
GUTTER CLEANING, repairs, de-mossing. Windows, power washing. 250-478-6323.
GUTTER CLEANING. Re-pairs, Maintenance, Gutter-guard, Leaf traps. Grand Xteri-or Cleaning Services. WCB Insured. Call 250-380-7778.
PERIMETER EXTERIORS. Gutter cleaning, repairs, up-grades, roof demossing. WCB, Free est. 250-881-2440.
V.I.P. GUTTER Cleaning. Gutter guards, all exterior, power washing, roof de-moss-ing, spray, windows. Package deals! Insured. (250)507-6543
HANDYPERSONS
Aroundthehouse.caALL, Repairs & Renovations
Ben 250-884-6603
ACTIVE HANDYMAN Reno’s, drywall, decks, fencing, pwr-wash, gutters, triming, yrd work, etc. Sen disc. 595-3327.
AL’S AVAILABLE to update your home. Kitchens, baths, basements, etc. Licensed & Insured. Al 250-415-1397.
BEETLES RESIDENTIAL Renovations Ltd. Bathrooms, decks, painting, landscaping and handyman services. Fully insured and guaranteed. Free estimates. Call 250-889-4245.
★REPAIRS/RENOS. Painting, plumbing, electrical, etc. Free estimates. Call 250-217-8666.
SENIOR HANDYMAN - Household repairs. Will assist do-it yourselfers. Fred, 250-888-5345.
HAULING AND SALVAGE
250-217-0062GARDEN CITY GREEN
Hauling & Recycle◆Yard & Garden debris◆Construction Clean-ups◆Full House Clean-ups◆Basements & Attics◆Furniture, Appliances◆Free Estimates
CITY HAUL- a lot of junk won’t fi t in your trunk, you’re in luck I own a truck. 250-891-2489.
CLEAN-UP SPECIAL. You load bins, size 12 yard $100 plus dump fee or we do it all. Call 250-361-6164.
FAMILY MAN Hauling. Prompt, Courteous. Call Chris for all your hauling needs. 250-386-1119.
SAVE-A-LOT HAULING Furniture, appliance, garden waste, we take it all! Always lowest rate, senior discount. Brad 250-217-9578.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
HAULING AND SALVAGE
✭BUBBA’’S HAULING✭ Honest & on time. Demolition, construction clean-ups, small load deliveries (sand, gravel, topsoil, mulch), garden waste removal, mini excavator, bob cat service.(250)478-8858.
SMART GUYS Hauling. Gar-den waste, junk removal, clean-ups, etc. Reliable, cour-teous service. 250-544-0611 or 250-889-1051.
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
ABSOLUTELY THE BEST! New, reno’s, historical, decks, driveways, etc. WCB/Member of BBB. John, 250-658-2656.
IFIX HANDYMAN Services. Household repairs and reno-vations. Free estimates. Call Denis at 250-634-8086 or email: denisifi [email protected]
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
M&S OXFORD Home/Com-mercial Reno’s & Painting. Patio’s, Decks, Sheds, Hard-wood and Trim. 25 yrs exp. Quality Guar. 250-213-5204.
MASONRY & BRICKWORK
BILL’S MASONRY. Brick, tiles, pavers. All masonry & F/P repairs. Chimney re-point-ing. 250-478-0186.C.B.S. MASONRY Brick, Stone, Concrete, Paving, Chimneys, Sidewalks, Patios Repair. Renew. Replace “Quality is our Guarantee” Free Estimate & Competitive Prices. Charlie 294-9942, 589- 9942 Licensed Insured & WCBI.D. Masonry - Chimney repointing & capping, chimney rebuilds, brick & block, stonework. Licenced & WCB. Free Quotes. Call Ian @ 250-217-1012
& MOVING STORAGE
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, 5 ton. Prices starting at $75/hr. 250-889-5794.
PAINTING
ALFRED, ALFRED Quality Painting. Wholesale, Dis-counts! 50 years experience. 250-382-3694.A PROFESSIONAL WOMAN painter. Karen Bales Painting & Wallcoverings. Over 22 yrs exp. Free est. 250-514-5220.BLAINE’S PAINTING- Quality workmanship. $20 hr, 20 yrs exp. Blaine, 250-580-2602.CLEAN AND Quality Painting. Work guaranteed, competitive prices and free estimates. 10 years certifi ed Master Painter. Call anytime at 250-686-8198.DO IT NOW Painting. 20 yrs exp. Interior/exterior. Also do hauling. Len 250-888-0596.DRYWALL REPAIRS & HOUSE PAINTING. Free esti-mates. If you, your family or friends need any of the above give Joseph Bronson a call 250-686-0663. Reasonable rates in a tight economy. I take pride in the end results.
LADY PAINTERServing the Peninsula for over 20 yrs. Interior/exterior. Call Bernice, 250-655-1127.PRICED RIGHT PAINTING Out-standing workmanship. Best Prices. 250 532 8372
SAFEWAY PAINTING
High quality, Organized. Interior/Exterior
Residential/Commercial Jeff, 250-472-6660 Cell 250-889-7715
Member BBB
ST PAINTING free est, written guarantee and full ref’s. WCB ins. Call Kaleb (250)884-2597.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
PLUMBING
FELIX PLUMBING. Over 35 years experience. Reasonablerates. Call 250-514-2376.
FREE ESTIMATES. Rea-sonable. Reliable. No job toosmall. Call 250-388-5544.
KERRY’S GAS & PLUMBING SERVICES- Repair, mainte-nance & install. 250-360-7663.
PLASTERING
PATCHES,Drywall, skimming, old world texturing, coves, fi re-places. Bob, 250-642-5178.
PRESSURE WASHING
DRIVEWAYS, WALKWAYS, Decks, etc. Reasonable rates.250-744-8588, Norm.
EDGE TO EDGE PressureWashing, RV’s, boats, drive-ways, sidewalks, siding, roofs,moss removal. (250)208-8535.
ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS
FOUR 12 ROOFING Licensedinsured. BBB member. Re-roofnew construction. 250-216-7923. www.four12roofi ng.com
Lo-cost Roofi ng- Free esti-mates, 20 yr warranty/guaran-tee. Senior discount. SpringSpecials. (250)391-9851.
SHORELINE ROOFING. Re-roofi ng specialist. WCB/BBBmember. Quality & satisfactionguaranteed. 250-413-7967.shorelineroofi [email protected]
STUCCO/SIDING
PATCHES, ADDITIONS, re-stucco, renos, chimney, water-proofi ng. Bob, 250-642-5178.
RE-STUCCO & HARDY Plank/Painting Specialist. 50years experience. Free esti-mates. Dan, 250-391-9851.
TILING
PROF & custom installs offl oor & wall tiles. Heated fl oor-ing, Custom Showers. Reno’s,new constr. Bob 250-812-7448
UPHOLSTERY
UPHOLSTERER NEEDS work. Your fabric or mine.250-480-7937.
WINDOW CLEANING
DAVE’S WINDOW Cleaning.Windows, Gutters, SweepingRoofs, Pressure Washing,Roof Demossing. Call 250-361-6190.
WILSON WINDOW Cleaning & Gutters. Insured. Owner does every job. No job to smallStarting at $25. - $75. Dave,(250)813-2243.
WINDOWS
ALFRED, ALFRED QualityWindows Wholesale, Dis-counts! 50 years Constructionexperience. 250-382-3694.
SERVICE DIRECTORYwww.bcclassified.com 250.388.3535
fi l here please
An Invitation From an Old Friend
Present this coupon when you buy dinner or lunch and get a second of equal or lesser value FOR ONLY $2.00. This coupon may only be used with a minimum of two beverages (need not be alcoholic). Present coupon at
time of ordering. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Maximum 3 coupons per group or table. Not valid at JBI Pub on Sundays between 3:30-8:00 p.m. EXPIRES JULY 31, 2011
250-384-7151 270 Government Street
Drop by the JBI Pub and
Restaurant and enjoy a Breakfast, Lunch, or
Dinner Entrée
THE JAMES BAY INN
WING’SRESTAURANT
Take Out or Eat In MenuDaily Lunch & Dinner Buffet
Combination Dinners for 1 to 8Seafood and Deluxe Dishes
Licenced PremisesOpen 11 a.m.- 10 p.m. daily
Free Home Delivery with min. $20 order
90 Gorge Rd. West
250-385-5564
Local Dining in Victoria
SAANICHNEWSeditor@
saanichnews.com
Send letters to the editor
SAANICH NEWS - Friday, July 1, 2011 www.saanichnews.com • A21Page 42 week beginning June 30, 2011 Real Estate Victoria OPEN HOUSE DIRECTORY
408-373 Tyee, $333,500Sunday 2-4Royal Lepage Coast CapitalRosemarie Colterman 250 384-7663 pg. 9
1-1827 Fairfi eld, $649,000Saturday, Sunday 2:30-4Re/Max CamosunDaniel Clover 250 507-5459 pg. 11
4-50 Montreal, $339,999Saturday 12:30-2Re/Max CamosunApril Prinz 250 744-3301 pg. 22
504 Cecelia Rd, $439,000Sunday 2-4Pemberton HolmesJerry Bola 857-0178 pg. 47
1515 Regents Pl, $827,500Saturday 1-3Royal LePage Coast Capital RealtyPat Meadows, 240-592-4422 pg. 21
1042 St. Charles St., $858,000Sunday 2-4Re/Max CamosunRoxanne Brass 250-744-3301 pg. 44
502-707 CourtneySaturday 1-3Royal Lepage Coast CapitalSladja Stojkovic 250 477-5353 pg. 50
238 Superior, $834,900Saturday 2-4Pemberton HolmesShawn Adye 250-384-8124 pg. 13
101-2520 Wark, $244,000Saturday 2-4Pemberton HolmesJerry Bola 857-0178 pg. 47
164 Eberts St, $629,900Saturday 2-4Pemberton Holmes LtdTom Dunn 250 384-8124 pg. 21
309-373 Tyee Rd., $364,900Saturday 2-4burr properties ltd.Andrew Hobbs 250-382-6636
110-379 Tyee Rd., $207,400Sunday 2-4burr properties ltd.Mike Janes 250-382-6636
247 St Andrews St, $664,900Sunday 1-3Pemberton HolmesNicole Burgess 250 384-8124 pg. 21
210 St Andrews, $949,900Saturday & Sunday 2-4DFH Real EstateSandy McManus 250 477-7291 pg. 48
349C Foul Bay Rd, $509,000Sunday 2-4Royal Lepage Coast CapitalVicky Turner 250 592-4422 pg. 9
3-1160 Burdett Ave, $479,900Saturday 1-4Century 21 In Town RealtyMagda Melounova, 604-323-6984
124 Rendall St., $574,900Sunday 12-2Address Realty Ltd.Mike Chubey 250-391-1893
2592 Empire St, $599,900Saturday 1-4Sutton West CoastMikko Ikonen 250 479-3333 pg. 48
3815 Campus, $699,900Sunday 1-3Royal LePage Coast Capital RealtyPat Meadows, 240-592-4422 pg. 26
1-242 Robert St, $449,900Sunday 1-3Burr Properties LtdJohn D McMillan 250 382-8838 pg. 21
1770 Rockland, $995,000Saturday & Sunday 3-4Pemberton HolmesStace Dewhurst 250 384-8124 pg. 7
301-1665 Oak Bay Ave., $300,000Sunday 1-3Royal LePage Coast Capital RealtyCheri Crause 250-592-4422
3-828 Rupert TerraceSaturday & Sunday 1-4Royal Lepage Coast CapitalMurray Lawson 250 385-9814 pg. 7
210-935 Johnson St., $329,900Saturday 2-4burr properties ltd.Mike Pearce 250-382-6636
2736 Gosworth, $474,900Sunday 1-3Pemberton HolmesAndrew Mara 250 384-8124 pg. 21
2926 Fifth, $598,888Saturday 1-3Sutton Group West Coast RealtyInder Taneja 250-479-3333 pg. 21
102-103 Gorge Rd E., $289,900Saturday & Sunday 2-4Remax AllianceDavid Rusen, 250-386-8875 pg. 6
905-379 TyeeSaturday 2-4Century 21 Queenswood RealtyGraham Bavington, 250-477-1100 pg. 18
1,2,3 277 MichiganSunday 2:30-4Re/Max CamosunDaniel Clover 250 507-5459 pg. 11
2245 Dalhousie, $624,000Saturday 2-4Newport RealtyHal Decter 250 385-2033 pg. 22
723 St. Patrick St., $689,999Saturday 1-3Re/Max AllianceKaren Love 250-386-8875 pg. 22
4378 Shelbourne, $579,900Sunday 1-3One Percent RealtyValentino, 250-686-2242 pg. 50
44 Caton, $699,900Saturday 2-4Re/Max CamosunVinnie Gill 250 744-3301 pg. 48
24-15 Helmcken, $529,900Saturday 1-3Newport RealtyGordon Lee 250-385-2033 pg. 19
409 Nursery Hill Rd, $689,900Sunday 2-4Re/Max CamosunKomal Dodd 250 744-3301 pg. 50
2809 Craigowan, $859,900Sunday 2-4Sutton Group West Coast RealtyLorraine Williams, 250-216-3317 pg. 50
10 Helmcken RdDaily noon-4Pemberton Holmes David Hale 250 595-3200 pg. 15
307-1156 Colville Rd., $319,900Thursday 12-2burr properties ltd.Tony Zarsadias 250-382-6636
1213 Juno, $449,000Saturday & Sunday 2-4Royal Lepage Coast Capital RealtyGina Sundberg, 250-812-4999 pg. 23
8-933 Admirals Rd, $369,900Saturday 2-4DFH Real Estate LtdDorothee Friese 250 477-7291 pg. 12
1245 Esquimalt RdFriday-Sunday 12-4Pemberton Holmes LtdIvica Kalabric, 250-590-8087 pg. 24
310-873 Esquimalt Rd., $364,900Saturday 2-4burr properties ltd.Mike Janes 250-382-6636
1023 Wollaston St., $593,000Sunday 1-3Royal Lepage Coast Capital RealtyCharlie DePape 250 477-5353
617 Lampson, $437,500Sunday 2-4Keller Williams RealtyMac Nanton 250 686-3200 pg. 51
1183 Munro St, $832,000Saturday 1-3Century 21 Queenswood RealtySheila Christmas, 250-477-1100
pg. 24
612-845 Dunsmuir, $609,000Saturday 2-4Royal Lepage Coast CapitalBrian Andrew 250 217-1048 pg. 10
4-1010 Ellery St.Saturday 1-3Sotheby’s InternationalGeorge Papaloukas 250-888-5335
1530 Cedarglen, $642,000Saturday & Sunday 2-4Fair RealtyAmy Yan, 250-893-8888 pg. 25
205-899 Darwin Ave, $299,000Saturday 2-4Royal Lepage Coast CapitalVicky Turner 250 592-4422 pg. 9
3811 EpsomSaturday 1-3Pemberton HolmesCorie Meyer 250 384-8124 pg. 27
6-942 Boulderwood, $685,000Saturday 2-4RE/MAX CamosunLeni Estell, 250-744-3301 pg. 26
5060 Cordova Bay Rd, $819,000Sunday 2-4MacDonald RealtyLorraine Stundon 250 812-0642 pg. 51
1523 Palahi Pl, $619,000Saturday 1-3RE/MAX CamosunJeremy Stillings, 250-744-3301 pg. 27
5000 Bonanza, $949,000Saturday 1-3Royal Lepage Coast CapitalJames Liu 250 477-5353 pg. 26
4386 Elnido, $639,900Saturday 1-3DFH Real Estate LtdCarol Crabb 250 477-7291 pg. 27
4854 Sea Ridge Dr, $1,877,000Sunday 2-4MacDonald RealtyJane Logan, 250-388-5882 pg. 27
3460 Quadra, $239,900Saturday 1-3Kroppmann RealtyDale Kroppmanns, 250-478-0808 pg. 33
206-976 Inverness, $223,000Saturday 2-4Pemberton Holmes LtdBob Davies 250 384-8124 pg. 20
4716 Amblewood, $949,900Saturday & Sunday 2-4Century 21 QueenswoodPat Parker 250 882-2607 pg. 16
3573 McInnis Rise, $649,900Saturday 2-4Sutton Group West Coast RealtyStuart Price, 250-479-3333 pg. 26
4961 Thunderbird Plc., $779,900Sunday 2-4Re/Max CamosunEd Sing 250-744-3301 pg. 25
304-3225 Alder St., $249,900Sunday 11-1burr properties ltd.Mike Janes 250-382-6636
4555 Seawood Terr, $699,000Saturday 1-3Royal LePage Coast Capital RealtyCheri Crause 250-592-4422
1877A Feltham Rd, $625,900Saturday 2-4Re/Max CamosunRick Turcotte, 250-744-3301
10-3633 Cedar Hill, $474,900Sunday 1-3Pemberton HolmesShawn Adye 250-384-8124 pg. 12
1724 LlandaffSunday 2-4DFH Real Estate LtdJoanne Brodersen 250 477-7291 pg. 27
3720 Craigmillar, $589,000Saturday 2-4DFH Real EstateCarol Crabb 250 477-7291 pg. 25
1642 McKenzie AveSaturday 2-4Boorman Real EstateJeff Shaw 250 595-1535 pg. 13
583 Carnation, $329,900Saturday 2:30-4Re/Max CamosunApril Prinz 250 744-3301 pg. 29
10-4525 Wilkinson Rd., $446,900Saturday 12-1:30burr propertiesMike Pearce 250-382-6636
4921 Prospect Ave, $1,225,000Saturday & Sunday 1-4Pemberton HolmesCharles Baird, 250-384-8124 pg. 28
519 Judah, $434,900Saturday 1-3Pemberton HolmesShawn Adye 250-384-8124 pg. 28
5858 West Saanich, $1,379,999Sunday 2-4Pemberton HolmesJerry Bola 857-0178 pg. 47
559-4678B Elk Lake Dr.Sunday 2-4Re/Max AllianceJason Binab 250-360-1929
874 Pepin Cres, $499,000Saturday 1-2:30Sutton Group West Coast RealtyClifton Mak, 250 479-3333 pg. 28
1191 Burnside Rd West, $485,000Saturday 1:00-3:00Sutton GroupPat Saulnier 250-727-8712 pg. 29
820 Roy Rd, $549,000Saturday 1-3Re/Max CamosunJohn Percy 250 744-3301 pg. 29
71-7570 Tetayut Rd, $298,000Sunday 1-3Remax CamosunCraig Walters,250-655-0608 pg. 29
510-9808 Second St, $489,000Saturday 2-4Sutton Group West CoastInez Louden 250 812-7710 pg. 30
2420 Mount Baker, $729,000Saturday & Sunday 2-4Pemberton HolmesShawn Adye 250-384-8124 pg. 14
10421 Allbay Rd., $975,000Saturday 1-3Royal LePage Coast Capital RealtyCheri Crause 250-592-4422
2115 Brethourpark Way, $529,900Saturday & Sunday 1-3Re/Max Camosun PropertiesGaye Phillips 250-655-0608 pg. 29
7106 Central Saanich, $545,000Sunday 2-4Sutton Group West CoastInez Louden 250 812-7710 pg. 30
10421 Resthaven, $384,900Saturday & Sunday 1-2:30, Mon & Tues 4-6Century 21 Queenswood RealtyChris Scott 250-477-1100 pg. 13
2455 Wilcox Terr, $619,900Sunday 2:30-4:30SmartMove Real EstateGary Brown, 250-380-6683 pg. 29
2516 Fielding Pl, $849,900Saturday and Sunday 2:30-4DFH Real Estate Ltd.Ed Ho, 250-477-7291 pg. 29
202-2475 Bevan AVE, $319,000 Saturday 2-4Sutton Group West Coast RealtySharon Schaalje 250-479-3333 pg. 6
8045 Lochside Dr, $599,900Sunday 2-4Fair RealtyRay Kong 250 590-7011 pg. 44
8506 Ebor TerrSunday 1-3DFH Real Estate Ltd.Stephen Postings, 250-656-0131 pg. 31
10613 McDonald Park, $1,499,900Sunday 2-4DFH Real EstateCarol Crabb 250 477-7291 pg. 30
1315 Readings Dr, $649,000Saturday 1-3Pemberton HolmesJim Fields 250-384-8124
8704 Pender Park, $597,500Saturday 1-3RE/MAX CamosunCraig Walters 250-655-0608 pg. 29
104-7070 West Saanich, $249,900Saturday 1-3Re/Max CamosunDavid Silletta 250 744-3301 pg. 30
851 Verdier Ave, $1,049,000Saturday & Sunday 1-4Sotheby’s International RealtyScott Piercy, 250-812-7212 pg. 39
2415 Amherst Ave.Saturday 2-4Re/Max AllianceJason Binab 250-360-1929
9115 Lochside, $699,900Saturday & Sunday 3-5, Mon & Tues 4-6Century 21 Queenswood RealtyChris Scott 250-477-1100 pg. 13
1985 Lands End RdSunday 1-3Re/Max CamosunDavid Silletta 250 744-3301 pg. 31
2387 Selwyn Rd., $629,888Saturday 2-4Re/Max Camosun WestshoreDarren Day 250-478-9600 pg. 34
211-608 Fairway Ave, $369,900Daily 1:30-4:00Century 21 Queenswood Realty LtdSheila Christmas 250-477-1100 pg. 7
207-2881 Peatt RdSaturday 12:30-2SmartMove Real EstateGary Brown 250 380-6683 pg. 18
2167 Blue Grouse, $859,900Sunday 2-4Pemberton HolmesJerry Bola 857-0178 pg. 47
114-1244 Muirfi eld, $659,900Saturday 1-3Pemberton Holmes LtdShelley Saldat 250 589-4014 pg. 46
65-2587 Selwyn, $189,900Saturday 1-3Royal LePage Coast Capital RealtyPat Tosczak, 250-474-4800 pg. 34
2200 Harrow Gate, $664,900Sunday 2-4DFH Real Estate Ltd.Richard Funnell 250-656-0131
101-3226 Jacklin $299,900Saturday 2:30-4:30SmartMove Real EstateBlair Veenstra 250 380-6683 pg. 20
3245 Jacklin Rd, $419,900Sunday 2-4Re/Max CamosunDarren Day, 250-478-9600 pg. 34
400 Latoria, $738,000Sunday 2-4Pemberton Holmes LtdGregg Mah 250 384-8124 pg. 46
735 Heaslip Pl, $359,900Saturday & Sunday 2-4Royal Lepage Coast CapitalDave O’Byrne 250 361-6213 pg. 35
114-2710 Jacklin, $234,888Sunday 12-2Re/Max AllianceRon Neal 250 386-8181 pg. 52
663 Strandlund, $419,900Saturday & Sunday 11-1DFH Real Estate Ltd.Rick Couvelier 250-477-7291 pg. 35
301-1375 Bear Mountain, $399,900Sunday 1-3Pemberton Holmes LtdShelley Saldat 250 589-4014 pg. 48
206-611 Goldstream Ave., $247,900Daily 1:30-4:00Century 21 Queenswood Realty Ltd.Sheila Christmas 250-477-1100 pg. 5
3359 Wellsmith Cres, $558,000Sunday 2-4Sutton West CoastHiro Nakatani 250 661-4476 pg. 49
2697 Whitehead Rd, $425,000Saturday 2-4Pemberton Holmes RealtyMike Lock,250-384-8124 pg. 34
102-627 Brookside RdSaturday & Sunday 1-4Pemberton Holmes LtdGreg Long 250 384-8124 pg. 15
118-2733 Peatt Rd., $374,900Sunday 3:30-4:30Re/Max AllianceBon Hollier 250-386-8875 pg. 34
This Weekend’s
Check the page number below in Real Estate Victoria or visit www.revweekly.com
Find more details on the Open Houses below in the June 30 - July 6 edition of
Published Every Thursday
OPENHOUSESSelect your home.
Select your mortgage.
Oak Bay 250-370-7601Westshore 250-391-2933
Victoria 250-483-1360Sidney 250-655-0632
www.vericoselect.com
A22 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWS
OPEN HOUSE DIRECTORY Real Estate Victoria week beginning June 30, 2011 Page 43
2006 Hannington, $698,800Sunday 1-4Sutton West CoastMikko Ikonen 250 479-3333 pg. 48
1005 Wild Ridge Way, $442,500Saturday 12:30-2SmartMove Real EstateBlair Veenstra, 250-380-6683 pg. 50
1919 Maple AvenueSunday 1-3Re/Max CamosunJohn Vernon 250-642-5050 pg. 14
Sunriver Estates Sales CentreSaturday-Thursday 11-4Newport RealtyBlair Watling 250 642-2233 pg. 11
1888 Tominny Road, $348,000Daily 11-1PMFair RealtyRay Kong 250 590-7011 pg. 36
228-1987 KaltasinSunday 2-4Royal Lepage Coast CapitalTammi Dimock 250 642-6361 pg. 37
121-6838 Grant Rd, $299,900Saturday & Sunday 2-4Pemberton Holmes RealtyJeff Shorter, 250-384-8124 pg. 11
11-6110 Seabroom, $249,900Sunday 12-2Royal Lepage Coast CapitalTammi Dimock 250 642-6361 pg. 37
3-1917 Kaltasin, $334,900Saturday 1-3Royal Lepage Coast CapitalTammi Dimock 250 642-6361 pg. 37
6467 Driftwood, $494,900Saturday 1-3Royal Lepage Coast CapitalTammi Dimock 250 642-6361 pg. 37
2733 Countryside Pl.Sunday 1-3Sutton Group West Coast RealtyIvan Delano PREC250-744-8506 pg. 50
2125 Butler Ave, $299,000Saturday 2-4Re/Max CamosunMette Pedersen 250 744-3301 pg. 40
6072 Kaspa Rd, $800,000Saturday 2-4Royal Lepage Coast CapitalLaurene Clark 800-263-4753 pg. 44
This Weekend’s
Check the page number below in Real Estate Victoria or visit www.revweekly.com
Find more details on the Open Housesbelow in the June 30 - July 6 edition of
Published Every Thursday
OPENHOUSES
CrosswordACROSS1. Gentle as a ____5. Uncertainty10. Submarine finder15. Wing-shaped16. Ridiculous18. Sheeplike19. Short-billed rail20. Frankfurter21. Four-wheeled vehicle22. Domestic24. FBI agent26. “____ Old Black Magic”27. Electrically charged atom28. Breakfast dish30. Extinct bird32. Possessive pronoun35. Long for36. Top39. Compel41. Newspaper section43. Make angry45. Passing grades
46. In a foreign country49. Hard drinker50. Wigwam’s relative52. Hot chocolate54. “Cheers” seat57. Site for rods and cones59. Work group63. Lethargy65. Bloodhound’s enticer66. “Berlin Express” mister67. Appetite68. Basil sauce71. Electric unit73. Yell74. Main thoroughfare76. Woolly mother78. Indefinite number80. Merrill or Meyer82. Bouquet seller86. Warn88. Certain film90. “____ in My Heart”91. Jargon
17. Playwright’s offering23. Black bird25. Glacial snow29. Slow, in music30. Kiddie pie ingredient31. Miner’s rock33. Ambush, e.g.34. Grave35. Dove’s noise37. Time period38. Each40. Prevent legally42. Cedar, e.g.44. Film producer Hal ____47. Etching fluid48. Contributor51. Wed in secret53. Attention54. Enclosure for swine55. ____ the line (conform)56. Decoration
92. Total93. Antitoxins94. Indian pole95. Photocopier’s fluid96. Card
DOWN1. Scottish maiden2. African lily plant3. Matrimony4. Hurrah5. Tony’s singing group6. Solemn notice7. Function8. Barrel plug9. Shiver10. Scatter seed11. Egg-shaped12. Final drink13. Wild ox of Sulawesi14. Budget item
Today’s Answers
58. Moreover60. Telephone part61. Sin62. Crooked64. Cleave69. Group of rooms70. Lodger72. MGM’s mascot75. Brink77. Take by force78. Popcorn topper79. Potpourri81. Choir member82. “Backdraft” event83. Malicious look84. Drought-ridden85. Platter87. Male cat89. Relative
Copyright © 2011 by Penny Press
Today’s Solution
Sudoku
Remember no number can occur more than once in any row, column or box.
To solve a Sudoku puzzle,every number 1 to 9must appear in:• Each of the nine vertical columns• Each of the nine horizontal rows• Each of the nine 3 x 3 boxes
#2-2333 Government St.
Drive safe this Canada Day
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SAANICH NEWS - Friday, July 1, 2011 www.saanichnews.com • A23
sceneandheardP H O T O F E A T U R E
Photos by Adriana DurianTo book events call 250-381-3484
or e-mail [email protected]
Photo reprints from this or past Scene & Heard pages are available through Black Press at www.vicnews.com. Just click on the Photo Store/Gallery link located below the “Search” box.
■ Best of the City readers’ choice awards ■ Tuesday, June 21 ■ Inn at Laurel Point
Black Press honoursthe Best of the City
at annual awards galaBlack Press welcomed the city’s fi nest last week, gathered at
the Inn at Laurel Point to celebrate the 17th annual Best of the City Awards.
The June 21 gala – the perfect way to welcome the sunny fi rst day of summer – honoured the 350 nominees in 117 categories, from books to bikes, marlets to martinis honoured, each waiting to fi nd out who would be named the city’s best, as voted by Black Press readers from throughout Greater Victoria.
Oak Bay News editor Don Descoteau emceed the event, which also offered guests a fi rst peek at this year’s 84-page Best of the City publication, showcasing both this year’s fi nalists and some of the many elements that make the Capital Region the best in its own right.
Latin jazz duo Los Gringos Loco entertained the guests, who also enjoyed delicious treats from the Inn at Laurel Point’s talented banquet and catering team.
More photos available online at:http://gallery.pictopia.com/bclocalnews/gallery/97246
Margaret Ramsay and Michele Venables, from Sears.
Visar Gashi, Mike Gibson and George Doulakis, from Jimmy’s Barber Shop.
Phil Lafreniere and Adam Orser, fromThe Rootcellar.
Steve Wickware and Dennis Andrews, from Metro Lexus Toyota.
Rod Jiang and Panda Isarasakdi, from the Little Thai Place.
Sisters Jessica and Andrea Sogai, from Japanese Village.
Gordy Dodd, from Dodd’s Furniture and Mattress, proudly shows off his No. 1 finish.
Victoria News Advertising Consultant Maria Kirley with Lauren Obee, of Shaw Ocean Discovery Centre.
Sara Pedersen and Dave Jeffrey, from Walmart.
Derek Oxtoby, from Canadian Tire. Jeff White and Barbara Kahlo, from Urge Tattoo Studios.
Catherine and David King, with Emily Cummings, from Galaxy Motors.
A24 • www.saanichnews.com Friday, July 1, 2011 - SAANICH NEWS
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