revelstoke times review, january 27, 2016

20
Personal History – 2 Mackenzie Village – 3 Vacation rentals – 5 Syrian refugee night – 11 Grizzlies report – 15 Cold Rush – 16 Mount Fidelity snow science – 12 7 7819 5 5 0016 1 Wednesday January 27, 2016 Vol. 119, No. 04 PM40050491 $1.25 REVELSTOKE REVIEW 209 1st St. West, Revelstoke, BC V0E 2S0 250-837-5121/fax: 250-837-7020 revelstoke-realty.com OMREB "NOBODY WORKS HARDER FOR YOU THAN RE/MAX" #8 – 700 Center Street $329,000 55 A & B Burke Drive $369,000 368 Pearkes Drive $374,800 Revelstoke Realty "Right Agents for Today's Market" 1101 + 1007 Fourth St. E. $499,000 1810 Hiren Road $378,000 1221 First Street West $749,000 Okanagan Mainline Real Estate Board Craft distillery proposed for Revelstoke A Shuswap man is looking to turn the Mount Begbie Brewery into a distillery once the beer maker moves into its new location in Johnson Heights. Gareth Jones, the owner of Jones Distill- ing, is proposing to produce “ultra-premi- um” vodka, gin and whiskey inside the facil- ity at First Street West and Garden Avenue. “Jones Distilling has a strategy based on the relentless pursuit of outstanding prod- ucts & service using ecologically sound methods to ensure the very best products for our customers,” states the business con- cept provided to the City of Revelstoke. Jones Distilling has filed a zoning bylaw text amendment application with the City of Revelstoke to turn the brewery into a distillery once Mount Begbie moves into its new digs. The amendment would allow for craft distillery use in the building. The application says the distillery would source “the very best ingredients” and The distillery would include a tasting room and would provide a venue for “gin evenings and distillery tours.” Eventually, a bar would be developed on site and long- term plans include opening a restaurant. “This is a unique opportunity to create and build a sustainable brand and the first ever distillery located in the vibrant & grow- ing town of Revelstoke,” states the applica- tion. “Jones Distilling will take raw ingredi- ents and turn them into a sophisticated high prestige product. This business is starting in an industry which is still embryonic and has strong potential to continue the growth which has been seen in the last decade.” A report by Dean Strachan, the city’s man- ager of development services, recommends council support the bylaw amendment, say- ing the distillery would add to the diversity and vibrancy of downtown Revelstoke. ALEX COOPER [email protected] see Distillery, page 4 A stompin’ good time The community centre was packed on Saturday for the sold-out Revy Stomp. People dressed up in their country best for the dance that serves as a fundraiser for the Selkirk Saddle Club. ~ Photos by Alex Cooper, Revelstoke Review The Axis Mundi Festival has been canceled after one event due to financial losses, the organizers announced on Facebook on Monday. “Axis Mundi won’t be continuing for 2016,” they wrote. “Our September event was victim to some pretty foul weather, which had a significant impact on the bottom line. We have been seeking additional funding to move forward, but it has become apparent we won’t be able to meet our needs.” Axis Mundi was hoped to be a major shoulder season draw to Revelstoke. The Revelstoke Arts Council contracted with Hugo Rampen, the former organizer of Salmon Arm Roots & Blues, to put on a summer solstice festival and a fall harvest event. The inaugural festival in September featured major headliners Walk Off the Earth and Ashley MacIsaac, and lesser known groups like Baskery, Buckman Coe, Sticky Fingers and the Nyundo School Roadshow from Rwanda. It also included several guest speakers and outdoor markets. Shows were held at various venues around town throughout the day while the main event was in the evening at Revelstoke Moun- tain Resort. However, the festival was greeted by a deluge of rain, which nearly washed out Saturday’s outdoor market and turned the ven- ue at RMR into a giant mud pit. While the mud added to the vibe – people dubbed the festival Axis Muddy – the rain deterred the last-minute walk-up crowd. In an interview with the Review after the festival, Rampen estimated the rain cost them 1,000 ticket sales. ALEX COOPER [email protected] Axis Mundi festival cancelled see Axis Mundi, page 7

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January 27, 2016 edition of the Revelstoke Times Review

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

Personal History – 2Mackenzie Village – 3Vacation rentals – 5Syrian refugee night – 11Grizzlies report – 15Cold Rush – 16

Mount Fidelity snow science – 12

7 7 8 1 9 5 50 0 1 6 1

Wednesday January 27, 2016 Vol. 119, No. 04 PM40050491 $1.25

REVELSTOKE

REVIEW

209 1st St. West, Revelstoke, BC V0E 2S0250-837-5121/fax: 250-837-7020

revelstoke-realty.com OMREB

"NOBODY WORKS HARDER FOR YOU THAN RE/MAX"

#8 – 700 Center Street$329,000

55 A & B Burke Drive$369,000

368 Pearkes Drive $374,800

Revelstoke Realty"Right Agents for Today's Market"

1101 + 1007 Fourth St. E. $499,000

1810 Hiren Road$378,000

1221 First Street West$749,000

Okanagan Mainline Real Estate Board

Craft distillery proposed for Revelstoke

A Shuswap man is looking to turn the Mount Begbie Brewery into a distillery once the beer maker moves into its new location in Johnson Heights.

Gareth Jones, the owner of Jones Distill-ing, is proposing to produce “ultra-premi-um” vodka, gin and whiskey inside the facil-ity at First Street West and Garden Avenue.

“Jones Distilling has a strategy based on the relentless pursuit of outstanding prod-ucts & service using ecologically sound methods to ensure the very best products for our customers,” states the business con-cept provided to the City of Revelstoke.

Jones Distilling has filed a zoning bylaw text amendment application with the City of Revelstoke to turn the brewery into a distillery once Mount Begbie moves into its new digs. The amendment would allow for craft distillery use in the building.

The application says the distillery would source “the very best ingredients” and

The distillery would include a tasting room and would provide a venue for “gin evenings and distillery tours.” Eventually, a bar would be developed on site and long-term plans include opening a restaurant.

“This is a unique opportunity to create and build a sustainable brand and the first ever distillery located in the vibrant & grow-ing town of Revelstoke,” states the applica-tion. “Jones Distilling will take raw ingredi-ents and turn them into a sophisticated high prestige product. This business is starting in an industry which is still embryonic and has strong potential to continue the growth which has been seen in the last decade.”

A report by Dean Strachan, the city’s man-ager of development services, recommends council support the bylaw amendment, say-ing the distillery would add to the diversity and vibrancy of downtown Revelstoke.

ALEX [email protected]

see Distillery, page 4

A stompin’ good time

The community centre was packed on Saturday for the sold-out Revy Stomp. People dressed up in their country best for the dance that serves as a fundraiser for the Selkirk Saddle Club. ~ Photos by Alex Cooper, Revelstoke Review

The Axis Mundi Festival has been canceled after one event due to financial losses, the organizers announced on Facebook on Monday.

“Axis Mundi won’t be continuing for 2016,” they wrote. “Our September event was victim to some pretty foul weather, which had a significant impact on the bottom line. We have been seeking additional funding to move forward, but it has become apparent we won’t be able to meet our needs.”

Axis Mundi was hoped to be a major shoulder season draw to Revelstoke. The Revelstoke Arts Council contracted with Hugo Rampen, the former organizer of Salmon Arm Roots & Blues, to put on a summer solstice festival and a fall harvest event.

The inaugural festival in September featured major headliners

Walk Off the Earth and Ashley MacIsaac, and lesser known groups like Baskery, Buckman Coe, Sticky Fingers and the Nyundo School Roadshow from Rwanda. It also included several guest speakers and outdoor markets.

Shows were held at various venues around town throughout the day while the main event was in the evening at Revelstoke Moun-tain Resort.

However, the festival was greeted by a deluge of rain, which nearly washed out Saturday’s outdoor market and turned the ven-ue at RMR into a giant mud pit.

While the mud added to the vibe – people dubbed the festival Axis Muddy – the rain deterred the last-minute walk-up crowd. In an interview with the Review after the festival, Rampen estimated the rain cost them 1,000 ticket sales.

ALEX [email protected]

Axis Mundi festival cancelled

see Axis Mundi, page 7

Page 2: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

2 n Revelstoke Review n Wednesday January 27, 2016

Store Hours: Mon - Thurs & Sat: 9am - 6pmFri: 9am - 9pm Sunday: 11am - 5pm307 West Victoria Road, Revelstoke. 250-837-2028

www.pharmasaverevelstoke.com

Home Healthcare and more...We also carry - Yoga Mats, blocks, towels and other accesories - Exercise bands/tubing - Exercise Balls - Massagers & Massaging spikeballs - Pedometers - Diet/Food scales - Balance Boards & Foam rollers - Athletic support socks - Walking poles

Personal historiesED & MOIRA JAATEENMAKI HAVE A LONG HISTORY IN SKIING IN REVELSTOKE, HELPING WITH NORDIC, ALPINE AND SKI

JUMPING EVENTS AS OFFICIALS BOTH LOCALLY AND ALL THE WAY UP TO THE OLYMPICS.

Ed & Moira Jaateenmaki: The officials

When Ed Jaatteenmaki moved from Albert Canyon to Revelstoke at the age of 13, it was on board a freight train.

Ed's dad had successfully bid on the job for section foreman with CP Rail in Revelstoke. At that time CP Rail provided employees moving to a new location with a box car to move all of their belongings.

“The reason I was on the freight train is the passenger train came through Albert Canyon during the middle of the morning and somehow we missed that,” said Ed. “We didn't get on the passenger train so my dad said, 'well we'll have to go to Revelstoke on a freight train.' The house was empty, there was no furniture left. So we arranged to go on this freight train.”

Their timing was a bit off however, and the freight train began to move ahead sooner than they had anticipated.

“My dad ran ahead and got on the caboose. Mom and I couldn't go as fast as he could, we were still trying to get there and the train was already going. I think my dad – well in the caboose you can pull the air to put the train into emergency – so he grabbed the line to put the train in emer-gency, so it stopped and we got on.”

It wasn't until many years later that Ed would meet Moira onboard the boat the Empress of Canada in 1962. Moira had come from Scotland and was on her way to attend university in Saskatoon. The couple would even-tually make their way back to Revelstoke in 1970, where they raised their son and became heavily involved in skiing. At that time there was only one ski club which combined alpine, cross-country, and ski jumping.

Ed and Moira became involved with the ski club as soon as they moved to Revelstoke.

“My first ski club meeting I went to, our son was six weeks old. I left him with dad [Ed] and went to the meeting,” said Moira.

Moira said the first event she volunteered for was an alpine race at Mount Mackenzie and she was race secretary.

“I can remember doing it on a little portable type writer. The results were produced by gestetner [a type of copy machine].”

Over the years, Ed and Moira would volunteer and officiate for numer-ous alpine, cross-country and ski jumping events.

“Ed went to the Olympics, because I figured it was his turn,” joked Moira, who officiated for many World Cup events.

The couple also officiated at the last ski jump event held at Mount Rev-elstoke. “It was a junior jump,” said Ed. “The jump was all packed by foot. They had a roller they could work up and down the hill, but the final prepa-ration all had to be done by hand, foot pack. And if you live in Revelstoke and you run races, you know that Friday you get a dump of snow for a race on Saturday. I don't know how many times that happened out on the ski hill there,” said Moira.

During its heyday, foreign competitors from all over the world came to ski jump in Revelstoke.

“You were really, really close to them [jumpers],” said Moira. “I remem-ber the first time I went to watch, we were climbing up the hill and all of the sudden this [jumper] goes by me. I couldn't believe it. They go like a race car.”

At that time there were no ski lifts, jumpers had to climb back up the hill carrying their skiis.

“Those were the days,” said Moira.

MELISSA JAMESONSpecial to the Review

Top: Moira & Ed Jaatteenmaki. ~ Photo by Melissa Jameson Left: Ed Jaatteenmaki on skis at the age of 3.5.; Above: Ed at the 1988 Calgary Winter Olympics, where he served as an cross-coun-try race official. ~ Photos contributed

Page 3: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

Revelstoke Review n Wednesday January 27, 2016 n 3

NEWS

REVELSTOKE COMMUNITY HOUSING SOCIETYAffordable Rental Housing Project

Tenancy Applications

The Revelstoke Community Housing Society is now accepting applications for tenancy at the 12 unit Affordable Rental Housing Initiative located at 1014 Oscar Street, Revelstoke, BC. There are eight 2 bedrooms units and four 1 bedroom units (2 are accessible suites). All units have fridge, stove, washer & dryer and one parking stall. The following are tenant eligibility criteria: • Annual household income of less than $65,000 • Net combined assets of less than $60,000 • NO smoking and NO pets • Preference will be given to Revelstoke residents

For a copy of the application package, please contact Debra Wozniak at 250-837-5345 or via e-mail at [email protected].

Capsule CommentsWith David Lafreniere

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK!Monday to Saturday - 9 am - 6 pm, Sunday - 11 am - 4 pm

Alpine Village Shopping Centre • 250-837-5191 • 250-837-5658

Fertility Awareness Week was held last May. It was a week for governments, patients and families to reflect on the challenges that many people face to have children. The technology to improve the chances of conception have improved immensely during the past decade but still some couples have problems. It can be a sad and lonely time. For help and support, try this website: fertilitymatters.caThere are links to many resources to help couples feel not so alone.

It’s good to be aware of any changes in the appearance of any

part of your body. This applies to moles and other skin blemishes, feet (especially important for diabetics) and breasts. In the case of breast changes, watch for lumps, size and shape changes of the breast or nipples as well as any abnormal discharges. Share any body changes with your doctor.

The mid-day nap is a common cultural phenomenon in countries like Spain and Mexico. But daytime naps can be good for you, too. It can help lower your blood pressure which in turn can reduce your risk of heart attack. Not everyone can

insert a daily siesta into their life but if you can, give it a try.

The World Health Organization announced that we are a step closer to the total eradication of polio. The WHO has removed Nigeria from the list of countries where polio is still a threat. It has been a year without any cases of polio. When the country goes for three years, it can be declared polio free.

For information on vaccines, talk to our pharmacists. We believe in immunization.

The major Mackenzie Village development proposal for Arrow Heights would be a financial bonanza for the City of Revelstoke, according to reports prepared by the developer.

The development is going back to council for review af-ter the proponents produced a series of studies that were requested of them.

David & Shelley Evans are proposing a major develop-ment with up to 1,178 units on 35 acres of land off Nichol Road in Arrow Heights.

The proposal was made public last February and was the subject of an open house in April that was attended by 154 people. After, the city asked the Evanses to produce seven reports on the project, including a traffic study, infrastruc-ture study, environmental study, parks & trails plan, finan-cial impact analysis, a waste disposal study, and an afford-able housing strategy.

The reports were finally completed and will go in front of council for discussion on Tuesday, Jan. 26. They provide a basic overview on the impact the development would have on city infrastructure and finances.

According to the reports, which were produced by the developer, the development would provide a net financial gain to the city, particularly compared to if the property was developed as a low-density, single-family residential.

The proposed zoning would generate $7.9 million in de-velopment cost charges for the city, $1.5 million in proper-ty taxes and would create an annual net revenue of $1,170 per household compared. That's compared to $1.1 million, $238,000 and a loss of $170 per household if the property were sub-divided into single-family lots. The numbers were calculated using Community Infrastructure Planning Deci-sion Support Tool developed by the province. The tool al-lows someone to input the cost of developing and providing services and infrastructure and compares it to the potential revenue that will be generated by the development.

The Review contacted Graham Inglis, the city's director of finance, to see if the numbers looked reasonable, how-ever he said he had yet to look at the report.

Dean Strachan, the city's development manager, said that high-density, multi-family developments usually provide a net benefit to municipalities when it comes to taxation.

"Planners have known for a long time that single family development is a loss for the city as far as the tax collected," he said.

The traffic study, conducted by engineer Greg Saunders of Revelstoke Design Services, looks at the impact on the development on the major roads, including Fourth Street, Airport Way and Nichol Rod. It says the roads can handle the extra traffic that would be generated by the develop-ment, but that the Illecillewaet Bridge may require an up-grade or replacement if there's other development in the area.

The infrastructure study, by McElhanney Consulting Ser-vices, looks at roads, sewer and water. On top of indicating

how the development will be serviced, it also looks at the impact it will have on city infrastructure.

Notably, it says the Greeley water treatment plant and Arrow Heights reservoir would have to be expanded be-fore the development reaches full build. Sewage could be handled by existing city pipes, though the report makes no mention of the capacity of the sewage treatment plant.

Mike Thomas, the city's director of engineering, was not available Friday afternoon to respond to questions about the report.

Strachan said the reports were adequate for this phase, but more detailed engineering would be required for a de-velopment agreement to be reached between the Evans and the city.

"The issues that need more work before this project gets towards approval are in the traffic and the infrastructure," he said. "At this point, this is just a question of whether there's enough information for council to consider a bylaw. We're at the beginning phase and as it progresses there's going to be more information that's going to be required."

Strachan said it will now be up to council to decide how to move forward. His recommendation for Tuesday is for council to receive the report and to refer it to the Advisory

Planning Commission."Council has to think if they need to do more public con-

sultation in advance of a public hearing," he said. "Whether they want us to do an open house or some other type of consultation, or just proceed with the bylaw."

David Evans told the Review he was happy to see the development go back to council. He hoped that re-zoning could be completed by the end of March.

"I think the information we provided substantiates the plan," he said. "The financial benefits to the city are there. It makes sense. The footprint leaves more open space and park land."

Evans stressed the development would be for less than 1,200 units – not the 1,500 initially reported in the me-dia – and that number could change depending on market demand. He said if people were buying smaller units, they would build more of those. If they desired larger units, they would re-focus the development that way.

"There's a whole flex part to it depending on where the demand comes from," he said.

If approved, the development would start with the con-struction of 30 townhouses along Nichol Road and would continue through 12 phases over 10 years.

Major Mackenzie Village development proposal back to councilALEX COOPER

[email protected]

A conceptual drawing of the Mackenzie Village development, looking south towards Nichol Road. ~ Image by Fraser Blyth, Selkirk Planning & Design

Page 4: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

4 ■ REVELSTOKE REVIEW ■ Wednesday January 27, 2016

Royal Canadian LegionBranch #46 Revelstoke

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MEAT DRAW EVERY SATURDAYfrom 3:00 - 5:00pm

Fan ofthe Week!

If the person highlighted in the photo is YOU, cut out this ad, bring it to theRevelstoke SUBWAY and you will receive a free FOOTLONG of your choice.

This offer is redeemable once only and only at Subway in Revelstoke.

Offer valid 1 month from print date.Not valid with any Premium Sub,other promotion or offer.

RONALD'S RAVE REVIEW

1880 Trans-Canada Hwy. 837-6230

Attention service groups, community and non-profit organizations, Kevin & Cathy Blakely of the Revelstoke McDonald's are pleased to sponsor this spot to present your message. Please call Mavis Cannat the Times Review with your information at 837-4667.

WANTED - BOOKS AND MAGAZINES FOR REVELSTOKE BOOK EXCHANGEWe are looking for donations of novels and magazines for adults and youth and children's books for our Community Book Exchange.

If you have books you can donate or if you want more information about the Book Exchange please call Maryat 837-5739.

The Book Exchange offers books for free for all ages. There are 6 locations - the Community Centre, Family Literacy (in OC Farwell Centre), Queen Victoria Hospital waiting room, the Food Bank, RAOP and Family Laundry.

The Community Book Exchangeis a project of the

Literacy Action Committee

NEWS

Trial underway for man accused of drowning wife near Revelstoke

A former New Zealand politician charged with first-degree murder in the 2010 drowning death of his wife

in a B.C. lake killed out of greed, a jury has been told.

Peter Beckett’s trial began in B.C. Supreme Court in Kamloops last Tuesday, Jan. 19, with a lengthy opening statement from Crown

prosecutor Sarah Firestone.“The case you’re about to hear is not a ‘whodun-

it,'” she told the 14 jurors.“The case you’re about to hear is, rather, a ‘what

happened.'”Beckett, 59, was charged a year after his wife,

Laura Letts-Beckett, drowned on Upper Arrow Lake near Revelstoke.

Firestone outlined the case against Beckett, which includes wiretaps, an exhaustive financial investigation and a jailhouse snitch.

“The accused killed Laura Letts deliberately for financial gain,” she said, noting he hoped to ben-efit from her family inheritance and insurance payouts.

“He would also collect her schoolteacher’s pen-sion for the rest of his days, which he would spend in the house she owned when they married.”

Firestone said Beckett took out a number of life-insurance policies and accidental-death benefits on his wife between 2007 and 2010, the final one

going into effect the month before Letts-Beckett died.

Firestone said Beckett claimed to have no knowl-edge of the final insurance policy. But, she said, police found his fingerprints on the document.

Jurors were told Beckett was not immediately a suspect. He described the incident at times as an accident or suicide, Firestone said.

“One by one, certain police officers and civilians began to realize that the version of events painted by Mr. Beckett about the events of Aug. 18, 2010, were not accurate,” she said.

Beckett was arrested in August 2011.The Crown expects to call 50 witnesses in the

trial, which is slated to last three months.Beckett was formerly a city councillor in Napier,

New Zealand.Editor's note: This trial is an ongoing affair and this

article only deals with the first day. For more updates, please visit Kamloops This Week online. The Review will publish additional reports as space permits.

ALEX [email protected]

“The proposed business would also generate a made in Revelstoke product adding to the pro-motion of Revelstoke outside of the community,” writes Strachan.

The distillery would produce a maximum of 50,000 litres of alcohol per year, if permitted.

The Review spoke to Jones, but he declined an interview until things are further along in the process.

Council is scheduled to discuss the application on Tuesday, Jan. 26.

WHO IS GARETH JONES?

According to the Salmon Arm Observer, Jones is an immigrant from the United Kingdom who calls Salmon Arm home. He just received ap-proval to start a distillery in his hometown and is advertising his first bottles of vodka for sale, though he has yet to build the facility.

He told the Observer his father tinkered with the idea of brewing and Jones always considered running a distillery. After stints in the British army and in the food service industry, he im-

migrated to Canada with his wife and two young children and settled in the Shuswap. He decided to make his dream a reality and enrolled in a mas-ter distilling course in Kelowna.

“It’s all about making the best bloody product out there,” he said. “And it’s been amazing the response from people when they hear about it. Everyone’s been very positive. It’s been fantastic, absolutely brilliant.

“As with wines and beers, people are looking for something more than a cookie cutter product. That’s where craft wineries and breweries have gained huge traction. I’m looking to spread that into the spirit market.”

Jones plans to offer pre-sales on his products, which will also satisfy his desire to replicate a tra-dition in many British distilleries. This is where a relative or friend will purchase a barrel of whis-key to celebrate the birth of a baby and will let the spirit age in the barrel until the child is of legal age, at which point they will drink some on their birthday and on special occasions thereafter.

“I plan to do a barrel for each of my children and hope to be sharing the drink with them when they turn 21,” he said.

Jones Distillery also proposed for Salmon Arm

Distillery, from page 1

Gareth Jones of Jones Distilling. ~ Photo by Evan Buhler, Black Press

Page 5: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

Revelstoke Review n Wednesday January 27, 2016 n 5

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Grants available for projects that focus on the construction of new and/or upgrades to existing recreational infrastructure in the Basin. Eligible projects may include backcountry trail networks, swimming pools, ice rinks, curling arenas, sports fields and parks. Contact Rick Allen to discuss your project at 1.250.417.3665 or 1.800.505.8998. Learn more about this program at cbt.org/recreationapply.

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Deadline for first of two intakes is Monday, March 14.

Handyman ServiceStrong - Honest - Reliable

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All fixtures played at the Revelstoke Forum

Friday January 29th vs. SummerlandPuck Drops at 7:00 p.m.

Saturday January 30th vs. KamloopsPuck Drops at 7:00 p.m.

Friday February 5th vs. ChasePuck Drops at 7:00 p.m.

Next Home Games

REVELSTOKEGRIZZLIES

REVELSTOKEGRIZZLIES

FEATURE

Last November, I found myself in San Francisco on the eve of their municipal elections. One of the things residents were voting on was a ballot measure that sought to put a limit on short-term rentals. The city had legalized short-term rentals the previous February, with restrictions, but the measure sought to put further limits on them.

It was dubbed the AirBnB Initiative and would have limited short-term rentals to 75 days per year, with the goal of squashing a rapidly grow-ing sector that many felt was driving up housing prices in one of the most expensive cities in the world.

AirBnB, which is based in San Franciso, fought hard against the initiative, spending almost $8 million to oppose it. They were successful and the initiative was defeated.

Addressing short-term rentals is an issue gov-ernments across the world are dealing with. AirB-nB wasn't the first site to allow people to advertise short-term rentals, but it is now the biggest. It has allowed people to advertise or seek out rentals far more easily than before and forced communities to play catch up. A quick Google search reveals dozens of articles about different communities that are dealing with the issue. They range from small tourism communities to major metropolises like San Francisco and New York City.

The City of Revelstoke didn't really start explor-ing vacation rentals until 2012. An article in the Review reported there was 13 illegal vacation rent-als in February of that year. In April 2013, former city planner John Guenther unveiled a proposal that would have allowed vacation rentals in parts of downtown, all along Fourth Street East through Southside, and parts of Arrow Heights. The plan went nowhere and when council finally adopted a vacation rental bylaw in July 2014, they decided to allow them anywhere in the city. Each application would come forward individually, a public hearing would be held and council would vote.

"The reason I set this up this way and asked council to adopt it in this format is at any point council can stop," Dean Strachan, the city's man-ager of development services, told me. "They're under no legal obligation to continue it."

Last January, council adopted a policy to go af-ter illegal rentals on a complaints-only basis. That approach was adopted because it was deemed too expensive to actively pursue illegal rentals. Stra-chan said that once active enforcement starts, some people will comply right away, but it's the ones that don't that become a headache for the city. "The avenues of choice are not very wide for local government," he said. "You can end up in court, and that's very expensive."

THE ISLANDS TRUST STORY

Revelstoke's approach is one of several taken by communities in B.C. One of the first jurisdictions in British Columbia to tackle vacation rentals head on was the Islands Trust, the governing body for the many island communities in the Salish Sea. The Trust took up the issue when complaints started to come in about illegal vacation rentals on the various islands.

"In the gulf islands, people would rent out their houses or cabins by word of mouth, to friends of friends or relatives," said Miles Drew, the bylaw

enforcement manager for the Trust. That wasn't a concern, but as more and more

people began to advertise their homes online, il-legal rentals became a problem, said Drew.

"On most islands there was a high-level of con-cern about it changing the character of the neigh-bourhoods," he said. "I pretty quickly became aware that we couldn't deal with the issue one-by one."

There were also housing issues and instances where families were forced to leave their rentals in the summer so that the homes could be rented out at a much higher rate, he said.

The Trust took different tacts for different is-lands, depending on the desire of the residents. On Hornby Island, vacation rentals were embraced by the community and were made lawful, with con-ditions similar to the ones in place in Revelstoke. Other islands permitted them on a case-by-case basis by allowing temporary use permits.

"Other islands just insisted they didn't want them, and we proactively enforced and we had a couple of court cases that said they were unlaw-ful," said Drew. "We reduced the number of (short-term vacation rentals) to a hardcore number of people who refused to admit they were unlawful."

They found that unless there was pro-active en-forcement, there was no uptake on legalizing vaca-tion rentals. "You really have to establish that the risks about not doing it are dire," he said. "You ba-sically have to take some legal action against some people."

Enforcement wasn't easy. First, they would have to find out exactly where the rental was located, then they would have to take out a bylaw enforce-ment notice against the property owner. If the threat of a fine wasn't enough to get the home owner to comply, they would seek out an injunc-tion in court against the property owner.

In one case, on Salt Spring Island, the Island Trust unsuccessfully sought to get an injunction against the property management company West-coast Vacations, arguing it was in violation of by-laws by operating illegal rentals.

Drew said 20 per cent of the Trust's bylaw en-forcement files are related to vacation rentals. "There's lots of staff time and planning taken up because each of our gulf islands has been in debate about it," he said.

In Drew's opinion, the best tactic to dealing with vacation rentals is to allow them only in certain neighbourhoods, "and adopt hard-nosed, pro-active enforcement in areas that can't, otherwise they'll just proliferate."

ELSEWHERE IN B.C. & THE USA

In Whistler, they first started exploring vaca-tion rentals in the late-90s, said Mayor Nancy Wil-helm-Morden, who was a councillor at the time. They looked at re-zoning properties throughout the community to allow short-term rentals.

"The neighbourhoods rose up and said they didn't want this commercial activity in our neigh-bourhoods, so we put a moratorium on any fur-ther re-zoning applications, and took the opposite approach and started enforcement proceedings," she said. "There was active bylaw enforcement for several years."

Eventually, the resort switched to a complaints-based policy. In 2014, they received 66 complaints,

Development Matters The vacation rental story, part twoHOW DO YOU REGULATE AND ENFORCE VACATION RENTALS? IN PART

TWO OF OUR SERIES ON VACATION RENTALS, WE TAKE A LOOK AT WHAT OTHER COMMUNITIES ARE DOING TO TACKLE THE ISSUE.

ALEX [email protected]

see Vacation rentals, page 7

Page 6: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

6 ■ REVELSTOKE REVIEW ■ Wednesday January 27, 2016

We asked:

YES NO

Vote at: revelstokereview.com

QUESTIONOF THE WEEK

Do you think bylaw enforce-ment o� cers do a good job in Revelstoke?

Survey Results:

24% (19 VOTES)

76% (60 VOTES)

New Question:

Do you support the e� ort to bring a Syrian refugee family to Revelstoke?

LETTERS POLICY

BC Press Council: The Revelstoke Review 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. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent to B.C. Press Council, PO Box 1356, Ladysmith, B.C. V9G 1A9. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org.

It is agreed by the advertiser requesting space that the liability of the Revelstoke Review, in the event of an error appearing in the advertisement as published, shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser and that there shall be no liability greater than the amount paid for such advertising.

We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Periodical Fund of the Department of Canadian Heritage.

SUBSCRIPTION RATESLOCAL: 1 Year $47.61, 2 Years $80.95 + GST

NATIONAL: 1 Year $76.19, 2 Years $142.85 + GST

REVELSTOKEREVIEW

Mavis Cann, [email protected]

Alex Cooper, [email protected]

Fran Carlson, Of� ce [email protected]

Rob Stokes, [email protected]

Share your views with the community. The Revelstoke Review welcomes letters to the editor intended for publication, but reserves the right to edit for brevity, clarity, legality, accuracy and topicality. Letters should not be more than 300 words long. Anonymous letter will not be published. To assist in veri� cation, a telephone number must be supplied, but will not be published. Email letters to [email protected], drop them off at 518 2nd Street West or mail to PO Box 20, Revelstoke, B.C. V0E 2S0.

The Revelstoke Review is a publication of Black Press at 518 2nd Street West, Revelstoke, B.C. V0E 2S0. Mailing Address: P.O. Box 20, Revelstoke, B.C. V0E 2S0 Publisher: Mavis Cann. www.revelstokereview.com Phone: 250-837-4667 Fax: 250-837-2003.

Editor,I am the mother of Joshua Jeffs who

went missing in Revelstokemore than two years ago, on December 19, 2013. I am pleading that someone, any organiza-tions who are willing to help, conduct a search this upcoming spring.

I live in The Pas, Manitoba. I don’t have the resources to organize a search from two provinces away. If you are a parent you will understand my family’s need to locate my son's remains. I do understand some people look down on my son be-cause he decided to run into the bushes when the police were in pursuit of him. He is still my child and I never loved him less for the wrong choices he has made, just as I’m sure you wouldn’t if your child made those choices as well.

After Josh went missing, I told the RCMP that if he didn’t contact me by Christmas, as we were very close, I would know he never made it out of the bush. As time passed he was declared a missing person. I was informed that Revelstoke Search & Rescue (SAR) would conduct a search in the spring of 2014.

I then hitchhiked from northern Mani-toba in May 2014. I stayed in Revelstoke for two weeks waiting for a search, but sadly SAR was not ready. I hitchhiked back home and returned to work and waited to be contacted by SAR. When they reached out to me for a search in June, I once again, hitchhiked to Revel-stoke so I could be present.

Nothing was found, so I returned home. A few days later, I read the report on the search in the local Revelstoke pa-per, which said they would not be hav-ing anymore searches for my son. I don’t know why I was not told that when I was in British Columbia.

There was only the one search for my son after the snow had cleared up. Previ-ous paper clippings said they would con-tinue to do more searches after the foot search, which did not happen. This news was very upsetting, as any parent would understand.

I am pleading for any sort of help towards finding my son this upcom-ing spring. This experience has been extremely hard on me and my family. Please, for the peace of mind for myself and the rest of my children, help us bring my son home.

You can contact me directly on my cell-phone at 1-204-620-2412.

Thank you very much for taking the time to read this.

Charlene EhlertsThe Pas, Manitoba

LETTERS

Mother pleads for help finding son's body

Joshua Jeffs hasn't been seen since he fled from police near 12 Mile in De-cember 2013. ~ Photo contributed

The $2 million Shelter Bay boat launch improvements are nearing completion. Jen Walker-Larsen, a spokesperson for BC Hydro, says the floating walkway is installed, one of the breakwaters is in place and crews are working on the second. Up next is expansion of the lower turn-around area and the parking lot. ~ Photo contributed by BC Hydro

Shelter Bay boat launch

Page 7: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

REVELSTOKE REVIEW ■ Wednesday January 27, 2016 ■ 7

Be sure the baby’s name and birthday is PRINTED on the back of the photo.

Baby’s name _________________________________________________________

2015 Birthday _____________________________________ Boy ____ Girl _____

Parents are ___________________________________________________________

Photo submitted by ________________________ Phone number ______________

Prepaid: Visa ________ Master Card __________ Cash _________ Cheque_______

CALLING FOR ALL BABIES BORN IN 2015Make sure your child or grandchild is included

in our Babies of the Year Supplement.Email photos to [email protected] or fill out the form below

and bring the form and a photograph into our office at 518 2nd Street West. If emailing, please call the office at 250.837.4667 to pay with a credit card.

Please include baby’s name, date of birth, gender, parents names and contact number in the email. Photos should be at least 600 pixels wide.

Please Note: Payment must be made at time of submission. No exceptions.

Babies will be published on February 17th, 2016.Photo and payment of $25.00 incl. tax must be received in our office no later than 4:00pm on Wednesday, February 10th. Credit card payment over phone accepted.

Revelstoke Review

Publishing February 17th

Babiesof 2015

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COMMUNITY INITIATIVES AND AFFECTED AREAS PROGRAMS

Apply now

Wish to apply for project funding? The Community Initiatives & Affected Areas Program is now accepting applications for The City of Revelstoke and Electoral Area B of the Columbia Shuswap Regional District.

Learn more at:

• Email request to [email protected]• cbt.org/cipaap.

Apply by 4:30 pm on the 26th of February, 2016.

A PROGRAM OF

ADMINISTERED & MANAGED BY

1.250.837.5345

Wish to apply for projectfunding? The CommunityInitiatives & Affected AreasProgram is now acceptingapplicants for The City ofRevelstoke and Electoral AreaB of the Columbia ShuswapRegional District.

Learn more at:

• Email request to• [email protected]• cbt.org/cipaap.

Apply by 4:30 pm on the26th of February, 2016.

FEATURE

said Wihelm-Morden. Forty-five people complied with reg-ulations and the files were closed; the other 21 are still be-ing pursued. No one has been taken to court, yet.

The resort adopted regulations that vacation rentals aren't allowed in existing neighbourhoods, but new developments can be zoned to allow them — that way people buying in can know what to expect when they buy into an area.

Last year, the Colorado Association of Ski Towns pub-lished a report looking at how 10 different U.S. mountain towns were handling vacation rentals. The report looked at all aspects of vacation rentals, from the size of the in-dustry, to the impact on housing, and impact on the hotel industry. Some have embraced them fully while others have greatly restricted them. In Crested Butte, more than half the housing in the community is listed as a vacation rental. In Durango, where much stricter regulations are in place, that number is only one per cent.

The biggest concerns were the loss of long-term rental housing, the lack of collection of a hotel tax, and the impact on community and neighbourhood character. The report includes a lengthy list of best practices such as requiring licenses and inspections, tracking and publishing maps of rentals, hiring staff to ensure compliance, and having a lo-cal manager and emergency contact.

It also recommends putting a restriction on the number of vacation rentals allowed in a neighbourhood.

Dan Wilson, a community planning specialist with the Whistler Centre for Sustainability, said all tourism communi-ties should permit vacation rentals. How they go about doing it depends on the community. He noted that in Tofino, the regulations require that a caretaker live on site. In Sechelt, vacation rentals are allowed everywhere, but owners are re-quired to make a refundable $1,000 deposit with the munici-pality to cover any fines that result from bylaw enforcement.

"The communities that come up with the best ways are the ones that engage more people," said Wilson.

WHAT'S NEXT FOR REVELSTOKE

Dean Strachan said there were three complaints received about vacation rentals over the Christmas holidays — one was about a legal rental, another was an illegal one, and the third wasn't a rental, but was over some unruly house guests. He will be presenting a report to council in May that will look at vacation rental activity over the winter.

"(Council is) going to have to make decisions on whether they wish to change over from passive en-forcement – complaints-only – or a pur-suit type of enforcement where you actu-ally begin to hunt," said Strachan.

They might also choose to look at regu-lations. During the last vote to permit a vacation rental, councillor Aaron Orlando suggested the city should restrict them to certain neighbourhoods. Councillor Scott Duke, who does not take part in debates about vacation rentals, but owns and manages several through his company Revelstoke Property Services, said in an interview he thinks there should be an up-per limit on how many are allowed.

Dean Strachan said there were issues about putting in strict limits on the num-ber of rentals allowed. Do you look at the city as a whole, or a neighbourhood, or do you go street-by-street? How close can they be to each other? "How do you estab-lish that threshold?" he said. "Is it first to bar gets to have that use and nobody else gets to have that opportunity? Those are

all significant pitfalls."Getting the community to establish a number is almost

impossible," he added.There are also challenges with setting limits on which

neighbourhoods they're permitted in. Is it fair – to both home owners and their neighbours – to allow them in one place but not another? "We're trying to work away towards a solution that's going to work for the community in the long run," said Strachan.

Stay tuned for part three, which will look at the financial is-sues around vacation rentals. Look for more Development Mat-ter stories in the Review, Current & Mountaineer.

Different communities, different approaches to vacation rentalsVacation rentals, from page 5

The result was a festival that was successful ar-tistically, but a failure financially.

“It’s very disappointing,” said Norm Lanlois, the president of the Revelstoke Accommodation Association, who provided funding to support the festival. “We were quite excited about them. We thought it would bring some new business in a quieter period for us.”

Langlois said the expectation was that Rampen would host three festivals. The money made off the first one would go to start up the next two. However, due to the losses, the money wasn’t to get the next event, which was scheduled for June,

up and going.Carol Palladino, the president of the Revelstoke

Arts Council, credited Rampen with putting on an amazing event.

“I think Hugo really tried to hit a home run,” she said. “It was a first class lineup but the weath-er goddess did not shine on the event.

“If the weather had gone differently, this would be a different story.”

On Facebook, the organizers thanked the local supporters, including the Revelstoke Arts Coun-cil, the City of Revelstoke, Revelstoke Mountain Resort, various community groups, the ven-ues that hosted events and the volunteers that helped out.

Axis Mundi, from page 1

Page 8: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

Lodge on Saturday from 1–4 p.m. and at the Rockford on Sunday from 2–5 p.m.

Saturday, January 30CAROUSEL OF NATIONS A community-wide celebration of Revelstoke's diversity with events including ethnic song, dance performances, ethnic food samples, children's stories, and crafts from around the world. At the community centre from 4–7 p.m.REVELSTOKE GRIZZLIES vs. Kamloops Storm. At the Forum at 7 p.m.SHREDUCATION: KNOWLEDGE IS POWER A two hour workshop geared towards youth and shredders of all types. Marty Schaffer from Capow, pro skier Leah Evans and avalanche fore-caster Joe Lammers will deliver the goods. Get the beta from the pros and set yourself up for success. At the Revelstoke Performing Arts Centre at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are $10, or free for youth under 17.REVELSTOKE COFFEE HOUSE Come out a play a few songs, or simply enjoy this monthly evening of acoustic music. At the United Church. $3.PIGEON HOLE Live at the Traverse.

February 2–5RED BULL COLD RUSH A three-day freeskiing competition featuring some of the best skiers from around the world. At Revelstoke Mountain Resort.

Wednesday, February 3CORB LUND & THE HURTIN' ALBERTANS Corb Lund is a Juno Award winner with multiple Canadian Gold Records to his name, he also won the Canadian Country Music Awards Roots Artist of the Year eight times running. At the Revelstoke

Performing Arts Centre at 7:30 p.m. Show is sold out.

Thursday, February 4MAGIC MIKE LADIES NIGHT An adult show based on the movie Magic Mike. Ladies only. At the Traverse at 9 p.m. VIP tickets are $30, regular are $20, or $25 at the door. Buy advance tickets at www.magicmikeplayboyz.eventbrite.ca.

Friday, February 5REVELSTOKE GRIZZLIES vs. Chase Heat. At the Forum at 7 p.m.

Saturday, February 6MIXED CURLING FUNSPIEL At the Revelstoke Curling Club.LIVE MUSIC AT RMR The Rev plays in the Revel-stoke Lodge from 1–4 p.m.ANYTHING GOES ART The Revelstoke Visual Arts Centre hosts its annual art auction and fun-draiser. Numerous local artists will have work up for both silent and live auction. Tickets are $12.

Sunday, February 7LIVE MUSIC AT RMR Al Lukas plays in the Rock-ford from 2–5 p.m.

February 8–9BANFF MOUNTAIN FILM FESTIVAL The best films from the 2015 edition of the Banff Moun-tain Film Festival will be shown. At the Roxy Theatre. Doors at 6 p.m., the show starts at 7 p.m. Tickets are $20 for one night or $30 for two nights, available at the Visitor Information Centre.

8 ■ REVELSTOKE REVIEW ■ Wednesday January 27, 2016

RUN YOUR AD UNTIL IT IS

SOLD - RENTED - HIRED

REVELSTOKE

REVIEW

YOUR AD

HERE

(and online)

From

ONLY

$20.00

+ TAX*

* price applies to classified word ads only - picture & frame extra

Call 250.837.4667 or email [email protected]

FOR

ONLY$20.00

+ TAX*

Revelstoke District Health Foundation Scholarship CommitteeBox 2421, Revelstoke, B.C., V0E 2S0

CONGRATULATIONSto the following students who each have received a $1500scholarship from the Revelstoke District Health Foundation

Riley BayPhysical Therapy

Revelstoke District Health Foundation

Amanda JonesPharmaceutical Sciences

Taryn KehlerNursing

Hillary LavelleMedical School

Emma MagarianPharmaceutical Sciences

Jodie McNuttNursing

Alei MohrPharmaceutical Sciences

Samantha PhillipsNursing

John PodstawkaBiomedical Sciences

Wednesday, January 27BROWN BAG HISTORY Come learn about Revelstoke's history at this talk by Cathy English, the curator of the Revelstoke Museum & Archives. This week's topic is on VIP visitors. At the museum at 12:15 p.m.MOVIES IN THE MOUNTAINS: JIMMY'S HALL This movie recounts the incredible true story of activist Jimmy Gralton and his deportation from Ireland during the country’s ‘Red Scare’ of the 1930s. At the Revel-stoke Performing Arts Centre at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $8, available at the Revelstoke Arts Council website.

Thursday, January 28THE BITTERWEED DRAW High-

energy roots music, live at the Big Eddy Pub. $10.KYTAMI Violin mixed with electronic music. Live at the Traverse.

January 29–30CORNSTARR Hard rock cover band, live at the River City Pub.

Friday, January 29REVELSTOKE GRIZZLIES vs. Sum-merland Steam. At the Forum at 7 p.m.DJ BRYX Live at the Traverse.

January 30–31LIVE MUSIC AT RMR Mountain Music Duo play at the Revelation

List your community event here for FREE! Visit www.revelstokereview.com/calendar or email [email protected] to add your event.

Community CalendarCommunity Calendar

Page 9: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

Revelstoke Review n Wednesday January 27, 2016 n 9

DEVELOPMENT OF A PESTMANAGEMENT PLAN

Pest Management Plan Number:CSRD~MOS~PMP~2016-2021

Applicant: Columbia-Shuswap Regional District, 555 Harbourfront Dr

NE, Box 978, Salmon Arm, BC V1E 4P1 Tel: (250) 833-5942 Attention: Hamish Kassa ([email protected])

Location: The Pest Management Plan covers three distinct programs. 1) Scotch Creek/Lee Creek Fire Suppression Area including parts of

Roderick Haig-Brown and Shuswap Provincial Park; 2) City of Revelstoke & immediate surround area of Electoral Area ‘B’; and 3)

Town of Golden & surrounding area of Electoral Area ‘A’ extending

north to Donald Station & south to Harrogate.

Pesticides: The active ingredients and trade names of the Pesticides (including bacterial agent(s) proposed for use under this plan include: Bacillus thuringiensis var israelensis Strain H-14 (AM65-52) (Vectobac

200G); Bacillus thuringiensis var israelensis Strain H-14 (BMP-144) (Mosquito Dunks & Aquabac 200G); & Bacillus sphaericus (VectoLex

WSP & VectoLex CG).

Application Methods: Backpack applicator, granular spreader, &

manual placement for Vectobac 200G & Aquabac 200G. Manual placement only for Mosquito Dunks & VectoLex WSP. Helicopter or

fixed wing aircraft for Vectobac 200G, Aquabac 200G & VectoLex CG.

The selection of insecticides has been chosen to target mosquito

populations in the most environmentally responsible manner and will be

applied within the area outlined in the PMP.

The proposed duration of the PMP is from April 10, 2016 to April 10, 2021.

A draft copy of the PMP including maps of the proposed treatment areas

may be examined at the CSRD address listed above or by contacting

Cheryl Phippen at the address below. The draft PMP can be viewed online at www.csrd.bc.ca

A person wishing to contribute information about a proposed treatment

site, relevant to the development of the Pest Management Plan, may

send copies of the information to the consultant at the address above within 30 days of the publication of this notice.

BWP Consulting Inc

Attention: Cheryl Phippen

6211 Meadowland Cres S

Kamloops, BC V2C 6X3Email: [email protected]

Phone: 250-819-1750

Ad

Applicant: Columbia-Shuswap Regional District, 555 Harbourfront Dr NE, Box 978, Salmon Arm, BC V1E 4P1 Tel: (250) 833-5942 Attention: Hamish Kassa ([email protected])

Location: The Pest Management Plan covers three distinct programs: 1) Scotch Creek/Lee Creek Fire Suppression Area including parts of Roderick Haig-Brown and Shuswap Provincial Park; 2) City of Revelstoke & immediate surround area of Electoral Area ‘B’; and 3) Town of Golden & surrounding area of Electoral Area ‘A’ extending north to Donald Station & south to Harrogate.

Pesticides: The active ingredients and trade names of the Pesticides (bacterial agents)proposed for use under this plan include: Bacillus thuringiensis var israelensis Strain H-14 (AM65-52) (Vectobac 200G); Bacillus thuringiensis var israelensis Strain H-14 (BMP-144) (Mosquito Dunks & Aquabac 200G); & Bacillus sphaericus (VectoLex WSP & VectoLex CG).

Application Methods: Backpack applicator, granular spreader, & manual placement for Vectobac 200G & Aquabac 200G. Manual placement only for Mosquito Dunks & VectoLex WSP. Helicopter or fixed wing aircraft for Vectobac 200G, Aquabac 200G & VectoLex CG.

The selection of insecticides has been chosen to target mosquito populations in the most environmentally responsible manner and will be applied within the area outlined in the PMP.

The proposed duration of the PMP is from April 10, 2016 to April 10, 2021.

A draft copy of the PMP including maps of the proposed treatment areas may be examined at the CSRD address listed above or by contacting Cheryl Phippen at the address below. The draft PMP can be viewed online at www.csrd.bc.ca

A person wishing to contribute information about a proposed treatment site, relevant to the development of the Pest Management Plan, may send copies of the information to the consultant at the address below within 30 days of the publication of this notice.

BWP Consulting IncAttention: Cheryl Phippen

6211 Meadowland Cres. S., Kamloops, BC V2C 6X3Email: [email protected] Phone: 250-819-1750

DEVELOPMENT OF A PEST MANAGEMENT PLAN

Pest Management Plan Number: CSRD~MOS~PMP~2016-2021

216 Mackenzie Ave., Revelstoke, B.C. V0E 2S0. Tel: 250-837-2161 web: revelstoke.ca

City of Revelstoke216 Mackenzie Ave., Revelstoke, B.C. V0E 2S0. Tel: 250-837-2161 web: revelstoke.ca

City of Revelstoke

revelstoke.ca

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

Please be advised that a Public Hearing will be held in Council Chambers located in Suite 102 – 103 Second Street East, Revelstoke, B.C. on Tuesday, January 13, 2015 at 2:00 p.m. for each of the following three Zoning Amendment Bylaws:

Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 2061The purpose of the Bylaw is to add a High Density Residential Vacation Rental District (R4v) subzone to the existing High Density Residential District (R4) to permit vacation rental use for single family dwellings only. This will permit existing single family dwellings zoned High Density Residential District (R4) to apply to rezone to the subzone to allow for vacation rental use.

Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 2060The purpose of the Bylaw is to rezone the subject property located at 2077 Mountain Gate Road from Single Family Residential District (R1) to Single Family Residential Vacation Rental District (R1v) subzone in order to allow for the Vacation Rental use of an existing single family dwelling.

Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 2062The purpose of the Bylaw is to rezone the subject property located at 412 Fourth Street West from High Density Residential District (R4) to High Density Residential Vacation Rental District (R4v) subzone in order to allow for the Vacation Rental use of an existing single family dwelling.

ADMINISTRATION

PUBLIC WORKS

PARKS, RECREATION & CULTURE

ATTENTION: 2016 SPECIAL EVENT ORGANIZERSApplication for Public Special Event Permits

Local clubs and organizations interested in applying for a Beer Garden License for 2016 are invited to pick up their application forms in person at the Revelstoke Community Centre @ 600 Campbell Avenue or on-line at www.revelstoke.ca under the Parks, Recreation & Culture tab.

Completed forms are to be returned to the Community Centre by February 12th, 2016.

NOTICE TO RESIDENTSResidential Garbage Pickup

Effective February 1, 2016, residential garbage pickup changes: • one 77litre/17gallon garbage container weighing 25kg or less will be permitted per • residential address. • Garbage pick up has changed to a 4 day schedule where your garbage pick up date will • remain the same all year.

For more information please visit the City of Revelstoke Web site and refer to the 2016 garbage calendar or call Public Works Department at 250-837-2001.

NOTICE OF PROPERTY DISPOSITIONIn accordance with the requirements of the Community Charter, Revelstoke City Council hereby gives notice of its intention to lease to Rimcher Investments Ltd. for a two year term at $6,000 per year, plus applicable taxes commencing March 1, 2016 and terminating on February 28, 2018, with a one year renewal option. The civic address of the property is 1151 Powerhouse Road and is leased for the purpose of a storage compound. The property is legally described as that part of Legal Subdivision 15, Section 26, TWP 23, R-2, W6M, Kootenay District except: (1) Plan (DD4181); (2) Parcel 2 (DD869); (3) Parcel 3 (DD2585); (4) part included in RW Plan 633A; (5) parts included in Plans 4474,6262, 9770, 9958, 10022, 10185, 10249 and 11381; (6) part covered by the waters of the Illecillewaet River; and (7) part included in SRW Plan 10547.

Dawn Levesque, Director of Corporate Administration

revelstoke.ca

DEVELOPMENT SERVICES

Earlier this month, Salmon Arm wel-comed its first Syrian refugee. Mustafa Za-kreet, 24, arrived in the Shuswap commu-nity about 10 days — the first of his family, which is one of seven the community is sponsoring.

“They saved my life,” he told the Salmon Arm Observer, when asked what it meant to arrive in Salmon Arm from a refugee camp in Lebanon. “I don’t know how to thank them.”

Salmon Arm has taken the plunge to sponsor Syrian Refugees. They started with 15 people at a meeting in October, and by December, 50 people came out, represent-ing 11 churches, two Rotary Clubs and one secular group who called themselves the pagans.

On Thursday, Revelstoke heard about the Salmon Arm experience during a film night hosted by Revelstoke for Refugees, the group that is trying to sponsore a fam-ily locally.

"It’s been a wonderful collaboration of the entire community," said Brian Ayotte, the co-founder of the Salmon Arm Commu-nity Group. "We now have seven families being sponsored, and possibly two more."

In Salmon Arm, the effort has been a community-wide collaboration. One refu-

gee was sponsored by each Rotary Club, one by each of the United, Lutheran and Catho-lic churches, and three by consortiums.

They've reached out to the community to find job opportunities and set up a website where people can register to donate money, time, clothing and furniture. They have es-tablished committees to look after things like health care, education, language and employ-

ment. “Things have got very well organized and its moving along nicely," said Ayotte.

Shuswap Settlement Services (SSS) has acted to support the efforts by answering questions from the public at their office.

"We found that answering questions and allaying people’s concerns has gone a long way to ease the idea of bringing families into Salmon Arm," said Gudrun Malmqvist,

from SSS.She said a lot of people expressed concern

the refugees would take jobs and housing from local families — both of which are in short supply. They've been trying to allay concerns and do outreach with the commu-nity.

“For us it's been as big a learning curve as it's been for the sponsoring groups," she said. "We’re excited to welcome as many people as we’ve been able to get in Salmon Arm.”

Ayotte said it was important for Revel-stoke for Refugees to keep the community together. “I think keeping the coalition in Salmon Arm together is very important," he said. "That means you have to be com-fortable with people saying things you don’t like or don’t agree with.”

In Revelstoke, more than $20,000 has been raised so far, including $1,791.55 from the film night. Revelstoke for Refu-gees hopes to raise $60,000 to support the first family in order to provide it with a liv-ing wage, but they can start the sponsor-ship process once they have about $30,000 in the bank.

The Alliance Church is acting as the Spon-sorship Agreement Holder for the group.

Donations to Revelstoke For Refugees can be made through the Revelstoke Com-munity Foundation website or at the Revel-stoke Credit Union.

COMMUNITY

Turn to thefor the most reliable local news.

REVELSTOKE

REVIEW

Salmon Arm experience shared at Revelstoke for Refugees film nightALEX COOPER

[email protected]

Amanda Hathorn-Geary, Brian Ayotte and Gudrun Malmqvist lead a panel discussion during the Revelstoke for Refugees film night last Thursday. ~ Photo by Alex Cooper, Revelstoke Review

Page 10: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

10 n Revelstoke Review n Wednesday January 27, 2016

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*Traditional copper wire or copper wire hybrid networks are subject to capacity constraints and environmental stresses that do not affect TELUS fibre optic technology, which is based on light signals. †Not all homes are covered. ‡Offer available until February 29, 2016, to residential customers who have not subscribed to TELUS TV or Internet in the past 90 days. Cannot be combined with other promotional offers. Offer includes Optik TV Essentials and Internet 25. The Essentials is required for all Optik TV subscriptions. A cancellation fee applies to the early termination of the service agreement and will be $10 for the PVR and Wi-Fi modem rental multiplied by the number of months remaining in the term. Regular prices apply at the end of the promotional period. Minimum system requirements apply. Final eligibility for the services will be determined by a TELUS representative. TELUS reserves the right to modify channel lineups and packaging, and regular pricing without notice. HDTV-input-equipped television required to watch HD. TELUS, the TELUS logo, Optik, Optik TV, telus.com and the future is friendly are trademarks of TELUS Corporation, used under licence. All copyrights for images, artwork and trademarks are the property of their respective owners. © 2016 TELUS.

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NEWSParks Canada investigating after snowmobilers get stuck in Glacier National Park

Parks Canada is investigating after four snowmobilers had to be rescued after they entered Glacier National Park and got stuck last Saturday.

"Our Parks Canada wardens went out this morning and flew into the park," said Jacolyn Daniluck, a spokesperson for Glacier National Park, on Tuesday after-noon. "They confirmed there were four snowmobiles stuck within the boundary of the park."

Golden-Field RCMP say that on Sat-urday, Jan. 16, at around 5:30 p.m. they were advised that four snowmobilers were stranded near Quartz Creek, west of Golden, and required a helicopter rescue.

Golden and District Search & Rescue was mobilized and traveled to the area us-

ing snowmobiles. They found the men uninjured at a nearby cabin and escorted them back to their vehicle at the staging area.

“The group is believed to have crossed into Gla-cier National Park, at which time they became stuck and unable to get out,” said Cst. Spencer Lainchbury, a spokesperson for the Golden-Field RCMP.

On Tuesday, Jan. 19, the park wardens flew into the area and confirmed the presence of the snow-mobiles. The snowmobiles were flown out of the area; the men will be charged the cost of rescuing their machines.

"Now that we have the sleds out, there is an in-vestigation happening," said Daniluck. "They will have to make a decision whether or not the snow-mobilers are charged under the National Parks Act."

The Quartz Creek snowmobiling area is located near the northeastern boundary of the park. Dani-luck said the park boundary runs along the height of the land in the area and that snowmobilers of-ten ride near the boundary, following the ridge top. She didn't know how far into the park the snowmobilers went.

"If they cross over down to the other side, it just drops off into the park," she said.

It is illegal to snowmobile in national parks and violators can be fined up to $25,000.

Signs indicating the park boundary are placed along the ridge. New signs saying "no snowmobil-ing or motorized vehicles beyond this point" were erected this summer, said Daniluck.

"Parks Canada has been working with the Gold-en snowmobile Club to enhance the messaging about people knowing where the park boundary is so people don't snowmobile there," she said.

There have been two other instances of snow-mobilers entering the national park, said Dani-luck.

"Snowmobiling is not permitted in Glacier Na-tional Park. Locally, everyone knows that, how-ever the greater Canadian audience may not know that," she said. "We also remind snowmobilers to check maps at provincial trailheads to make sure they're not entering a national park."

ALEX [email protected]

Signs showing the boundary of Glacier National Park, and indicating the snowmobiling prohibi-tion, are located along the park boundary. ~ Photo contributed by Parks Canada

Page 11: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

Revelstoke Review n Wednesday January 27, 2016 n 11

Thanks to the generosity of Black Press, 37 students from across BC will receive $5,000 to study business at the University of Victoria. That’s one student from every community Black Press serves.

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COMMUNITY

Now in its seventh year, the annual Car-ousel of Nations, hosted by the Revelstoke Multicultural Society, will once again fea-ture plenty of cultural delights from around the globe.

As in past years, the Revelstoke Highland-ers will open the event, followed by a First Nations and Revelstoke Multicultural So-ciety welcome. Other acts featured include local musicians Myra Morrison and Denis Severino playing Appalachian fiddle music; Yamabiko Taiko Japanese drumming group out of Kelowna; Wes Mackey playing blues, and; Cori Derickson doing Aboriginal story-telling.

Derickson, who is from Kelowna will be doing a series of First Nations dances. She will be performing the Eagle dance, a spiri-tual dance performed around the world in many cultures. Derickson has travelled and performed in Peru and France.

This year's Carousel of Nations will also include KIDS Around the World, a feature dreamt up by local teacher Gabriella Drab-oczi. This feature for primary/elementary school children features 12 representatives from different cultures who designed 20 minute long interactive games and presen-tations for children to participate in. Each features a different country.

New to the event this year is a partner-ship between the Revelstoke Multicultural Society and the North Columbia Environ-mental Society.

“With the help of the NCES we are trying to make our event more environmentally

friendly,” reads an email from the Multicul-tural Society. “The Multicultural Society has purchased compostable sugar cane plates

and cutlery. Upon entry and purchase of food tickets each person will receive one set of cutlery to be re-used during the event.

Additional cutlery is 50 cents.”Plate-ware and food waste will be com-

posted through Spa Hills Compost, and there will be a water station set up by NCES to encourage the public to bring and use wa-ter bottles.

In addition, the Revelstoke Pottery Guild will be selling handmade pottery plates that can be purchased and used during the event. Proceeds from the pottery sales will go to the local Syrian refugee fundraising group, Revelstoke For Refugees. 

Of course, this weekend's event will also include the amazing food vendor line-up it has become famous for. Vendors include:

Aboriginal, by School District #19 Ab-original Education;

Chinese, by Kevin's Kitchen; French Canadian, by APÉ de l’école des

Glaciers and Groupe culturel francophone de Revelstoke;

Indian/German, by Paramjit’s Kitchen; Japanese, by Harumi's Japanese Food; Jamaican, by Damion's Jamaica's Best; Korean, by Maimi’s Korean Food; Syrian/Middle East, by Revelstoke for

Refugees; Taiwanese, by Sally's Taiwanese Baking; Vietnamese, by Minh Tuyet’s Vietnamese

Bistro; As well, the Revelstoke Fair Trade Soci-

ety will be serving fair trade coffee, and the multicultural society will sell cold bever-ages.

This year's Carousel of Nations takes place at the Revelstoke Community Centre on Saturday, Jan. 30 from 4-7 p.m.

REVELSTOKE REVIEW STAFF

Diversity abounds at Carousel of Nations

Japanese drumming group Yamabiko Taiko are coming from Kelowna to perform at the Carousel of Nations on Saturday, Jan. 30. ~ Photo from Yamabiko Taiko Facebook pages

REACH THE COMMUNITYFor Flyer distribution rates call 250-837-4667

Page 12: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

12 n Revelstoke Review n Wednesday January 27, 2016

AVALANCHE SAFETY

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Shovelling. Working as an avalanche technician in Glacier National Park requires lots of it. Shoveling out the cabin, and digging snow pits.

"We shovel a lot," says Danyelle Magnan as she and her colleague Chris Gooliaff dig a full snow pit on Mount Fidelity. I offer to help, but I don't push the matter when they decline the offer, and take pictures instead. The pit is 1.5 metres deep and two metres wide — big enough so they can get a good read on the developing snowpack.

Their big concern is a weak layer that was buried on January 4. It consists of a mix of surface hoar, crusts and facets, depending on where you are and which way the slops is facing. They were directed to see how it was reacting in advance of the big storm that was forecast to arrive that day.

"The slab above it is just really developing now," said Magnan.I joined Magnan, Gooliaff, Ian Gale and Dean Flick on a visit to Mount

Fidelity last Thursday, Jan. 21. Gooliaff is a visitor safety officer while the others are avalanche technicians. Also with us was Allison Fleischer, the new external relations manager for Mount Revelstoke and Glacier National Parks.

Mount Fidelity is closed to the public all winter. It's been used as a snow monitoring site since the early 1960s, when the Trans-Canada Highway was built through Glacier National Park. For decades, an avalanche technician would live in a cabin on the mountain and would make daily weather and snow observations and radio them down to the forecasters at Rogers Pass.

Now, the avalanche team accesses the site by snow cat on a road that winds its way up the mountain. The cabin still exists, along with some of the histor-ic equipment. In a corner rests a massive saw they once used for snow profiles until someone realized it would be easier to cut the snow with a thin rope.

The snow study site is located at about 1,905 metres elevation and was likely established for the easy access it provides to a variety of elevations and aspects.

Snow fidelityMOUNT FIDELITY HAS BEEN HOME TO SNOW STUD-

IES FOR MORE THAN 50 YEARS. WE VISITED THE SITE, WHICH IS CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC, TO LEARN WHAT

GLACIER NATIONAL PARK AVALANCHE TECHNICIANS DO THERE, AND HOW THAT INFORMATION IS USED

TO PRODUCE THE DAILY AVALANCHE BULLETIN AND TO CONDUCT HIGHWAY AVALANCHE CONTROL.

ALEX [email protected]

Above: The snow collapses under Danyelle Magnan while she conducts a Rutschblock test on Mount Fidelity on Thursday, Jan. 21.

Left: Magnan looks on while visitor safety officer Chris Gooliaff performs a compression test.

~ Photos by Alex Cooper, Revelstoke Review

Page 13: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

REVELSTOKE REVIEW ■ Wednesday January 27, 2016 ■ 13

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"We can get to the treeline and alpine safely in whatever weather, which is pretty key for our teams," said Magnan.

The other benefit is there's a historical snowpack record dating back 50 years, which is a valuable resource for the avalanche forecasters and research-ers.

Significantly, it's unskied, so the snow isn't impacted by skier traffic. "It's becoming increasingly difficult to find areas where we can get snow-

pack information that's safe to access, you can access in a reasonable amount of time, and get that information that hasn't been affected by people schralping everything," said Magnan.

***The typical day for the avalanche team begins at 7 a.m. at the Rogers Pass

Centre. The first one in checks the weather, the second does a safety briefing, and one of them will write that day's avalanche bulletin. They meet to discuss the day's objectives and head out. That could mean a visit to Mount Fidelity, or a trip to somewhere else in the park to get additional snowpack informa-tion. Recently, teams went up to the Dome and to Little Sifton to dig pits and collect data.

I met the team at the base of Mount Fidelity and we drove up the road in a cat to the snow study site. Light flurries fell from the sky and the question on everyone's mind was when the big storm would hit the area. Depending on which forecast you believed, more than 40 centimetres of snow might fall over the course of the next day.

"That's our big concern, is that system coming in," said Magnan. "There's a bunch of different weather forecasts, and if you go by the ones that are most optimistic snow-wise you can get a pretty significant load in the next 24–48 hours and it definitely has the potential to produce some pretty big avalanches and for things to get touchy for skiers."

Upon arrival, they checked the weather data. There are stakes set up that measure 24 hour, 48 hour and storm snow totals; another one keeps track of the height of the snow over the winter. There's three elevated towers with instruments that measure snow and precipitation.

The data is radioed down to the forecaster at Rogers Pass and the teams headed out to do full snow profiles. Flick and Gale strapped on their skis and skinned over to a north facing slope while I joined Magnan and Gooliaff to drive slightly downhill in the cat to dig a pit on an east aspect. We stopped at a spot called Jim Bay's corner; each switchback on the road is named for where someone once got the cat stuck.

***

Continued on next pageThe snow cat makes its way down Mount Fidelity, with the Trans-Canada off in the distance in the valley below. ~ Photo by Alex Cooper, Revelstoke Review

Page 14: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

14 n Revelstoke Review n Wednesday January 27, 2016

DEVELOPMENT OF A PEST MANAGEMENT PLAN

The use of pesticides is intended within the area to which the Pest Management Plan (PMP) applies.

The purpose of the proposed PMP is to control vegetation at BC Hydro facilities to maintain safe and reliable

operations which support the delivery of electricity to our customers. This plan applies to all areas of

British Columbia where BC Hydro has operational or planned facilities such as electrical substations, generation

switchyards, generating sites, communication sites, storage sites, administrative buildings, or land owned

or leased for future facilities.

The proposed duration of the PMP is from April 2016 to April 2021.

Vegetation incompatible with the operation of the power system will be controlled using: physical (manual

brushing, girdling, hand-pulling, hedge trimming, mowing, pruning, weed trimming or tree removal), cultural

(gravel/hard surfacing, planting ground cover), biological (release of parasitic insects to control noxious

and invasive plants) or chemical (herbicide application) techniques, or any combination of these methods.

The active ingredients and trade names of the herbicides proposed for use under this plan include:

○ acetic acid – Ecoclear, Munger’s Hort Vinegar or equivalent,

○ aminocyclopyrachlor and chlorsulfuron – Truvist or equivalent

○ aminocyclopyrachlor and metsulfuron-methyl – Navius or equivalent

○ aminopyralid – Milestone or equivalent

○ aminopyralid and metsulfuron-methyl – ClearView or equivalent

○ aminopyralid, metsulfuron-methyl, and fluroxypyr – Sightline or equivalent

○ aminopyralid, metsulfuron-methyl and triclopyr – Clearview Brush or equivalent

○ Chlorsulfuron – Telar or equivalent

○ Chondrostereum purpureum – Chontrol or equivalent

○ clopyralid – Lontrel, Transline or equivalent or equivalent

○ dicamba – Vanquish, Banvel or equivalent

○ dichlorprop-P and 2,4-D – Estaprop XT or equivalent

○ diflufenzopyr and dicamba – Distinct, Overdrive or equivalent

○ diuron – Karmex, Diurex 80 WDG or equivalent

○ flumioxazin – Payload or equivalent

○ glyphosate – Vantage, Vision or equivalent

○ imazapyr – Arsenal Powerline or equivalent

○ indaziflam – Esplanade or equivalent

○ metsulfuron-methyl – Escort or equivalent

○ picloram – Tordon 22k, Tordon 101 or equivalent

○ picloram and 2,4-D – Aspect or equivalent

○ triclopyr – Garlon products or equivalent

○ Trifluralin – BioBarriere, Treflan or equivalent

○ 2,4-D – LV700 or equivalent

Adjuvant products may also be combined on occasion with a herbicide to improve its effectiveness, such as:

nonylphenoxy polyethoxy ethanol – Agral 90, paraffinic oils – Gateway, octadec-9-enoic acid as methyl

and ethyl esters – Hasten NT, or siloxylated polyether – Xiameter or equivalents.

The proposed methods for applying herbicides include: soil applied techniques (backpack sprayer, powerhose

or fixed boom sprayer), cut surface, basal bark, backpack foliar, mechanized foliar (fixed nozzle, boom directed

nozzle, wick sprayer), and injection (hack and squirt, lance or syringe) techniques.

A draft copy of the proposed PMP is available at bchydro.com/pestplanforfacilities.

Alternatively, it is available in person at 6911 Southpoint Drive, Burnaby; 1401 Kalamalka Lake Road, Vernon;

18475 128 Street, Surrey; 400 Madsen Road, Nanaimo; 3333 22 Avenue, Prince George.

BC Hydro, the applicant for the proposed PMP, is located at 6911 Southpoint Drive, Burnaby, B.C., V3N 4X8.

Please contact Tom Wells, Vegetation Program Manager, at 604 516 8943 or [email protected]

for more information.

A person wishing to contribute information about a proposed treatment site, relevant to the development

of the pest management plan, may send copies of the information to the applicant at the above address

within 30 days of the publication notice.

Pest Management Plan: BC Hydro Facilities 2016-2021

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Publication Insertion dateNorth Island Gazette (BCNG) Jan. 27, Feb 10

Hope Standard (BCNG) Jan. 28, Feb 11

Nanaimo Daily News (BCNG) Jan. 18, 20

Prince Rupert Northern View (BCNG) Jan. 27, Feb 10

Smithers Interior News (BCNG) Jan. 27, Feb 10

Terrace Standard (BCNG) Jan. 27, Feb 10

Quesnel Cariboo Observer (BCNG) Jan. 22, 27

Williams Lake Tribune (BCNG) Jan. 27, Feb 10

Merritt Herald (BCNG) Jan. 19, 26

Vernon Morning Star (BCNG) Jan. 17, 22

Nakusp Arrow Lake News (Nakusp, BCNG) Jan. 28, Feb 11

Castlegar News (BCNG) Jan. 28, Feb 11

Golden Star (BCNG) Jan. 27, Feb 10

Revelstoke Times Review (BCNG) Jan. 27, Feb 10

Cranbrook Daily Townsman (BCNG) Jan. 18, 20

AVALANCHE SAFETY

A full profile usually involves digging to ground, which here is 170 centime-tres below the surface of the snow. However, this winter the mid and lower snowpack has consolidated and lower layers are not a concern so they only dig down 1.5 metres. The January 4 layer, about 40 centimetres down, is what they're looking at.

The profile requires conducting three compression tests, two shovel shear tests and one Rutschblock test. Each tests the weak layers in varying ways. The Rustchblock test is the most involved. In it, a skier will step on an iso-lated block of snow and provide increasing amounts of pressure until it fails.

Gooliaff conducted the compression tests while Magnan examined the lay-ers in the snow pack. She marked them in the snow, measure their depths, looked at the temperature of the snow in each layer, and looked at the density of the snow.

Magnan had the honour of conducting the Rutschblock test. She strapped on her skis and climbed to the top of the slope. She stepped on the block and nothing happened. Then, she bent her knees and the whole block collapsed — the sign a slab had developed and it could propagate. "Last week there was no slab above (the Jan. 4 layer). You might get it to fail, but the snow above was fluff," said Magnan. "What we see today confirms it's turning into a slab."

Slabs are the big danger in the avalanche world and are what causes the re-ally big avalanches that bury people — and roads.

When Gale and Flick radioed in their result, they reported little reactiv-ity. That makes it more challenging when writing the avalanche bulletin, said Magnan. "It makes it harder to communicate, but what we saw was in that realm of skier triggerabilty, the potential to trigger a slab avalanche that could bury a person is there," she said. "We're already thinking about tomor-row's bulletin today, and tomorrow you'll look at what changed and put to-gether the most accurate information."

***The information is also used to decide if highway avalanche control will take

place. That day, after I returned to the office, Parks Canada announced they would be conducting avalanche control in Glacier National Park on Friday.

The goal for highway avalanche control is to bring down snow before there's enough so that huge avalanches that cover the highway can develop. With 40 centimetres overlying a weak layer, and 40 centimetres in the forecast, the decision was made to bring the snow down throughout the highway corridor before it could get any deeper.

"Forecasters think about at what point they can bring down the snow most effectively and efficiently without hitting the highway," said Gooliaff. "You try to eliminate the five or six metre snow up high which at the end of the season can get down to the base and go down to the highway and close it for several days."

And so, on Friday, the Canadian military brought out their howitzer and blasted some of the 130 or so avalanche paths that overlay the highway. It's one of the densest concentrations of avalanche slopes anywhere.

Glacier National Park avalanche technician Ian Gale measures the trace amount of snow that fell the previous night at the Mount Fidelity snow study site on Thursday, Jan. 21. ~ Photo by Alex Cooper, Revelstoke Review

From previous page

Page 15: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

REVELSTOKE REVIEW ■ Wednesday January 27, 2016 ■ 15

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Become a member of Community Connections (Revelstoke) societyFor only $5 per year. For details contact us at

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SPORTS

Grizzlies go winless at home

The Revelstoke Grizzlies went winless at home in three games against division rivals last week, diminishing hopes of climbing out of fourth place in the Doug Birks Division.

The week started last Tuesday, Jan. 19, with the Chase Heat in town. The Heat capitalized on the Grizzlies lack of dis-cipline, scoring four times on six power play opportunities to skate away with a 4-0 win.

On Friday, the 100 Mile House Wran-glers were in town for the first of two games against the Grizzlies at the Forum. The visitors jumped ahead early, with goals 91 seconds apart near the midway point of the first.

Ullar Wiatzka got Revelstoke back within one three minutes into the sec-ond period, only for 100 Mile to restore their two goal lead two minutes later. Revelstoke was given new life when Peter Grimm scored his first KIJHL goal with just under five minutes left in the frame.

The Grizzlies pressed hard for the tie in the third until Wiatza scored on the power play with 6:16 left to go. The game appeared to be headed to overtime when Nicholas Higgs took a tripping penalty to stop a breakaway with 1:36 to go in the game. Michael Lynch scored for the Wranglers only 17 seconds into the pow-erplay to give 100 Mile a 4-3 lead that they would hold until the final buzzer.

On Saturday, the team's were back at it at the Forum in one of the tightest

games of the season. Both teams battled through 60 minutes of regulation and 10 minutes of overtime, but no one could find the back of the net. The game ended as a 0-0 draw.

The Grizzlies continue their homes-

tand with games against the Summerland Steam and Kamloops Storm this Friday and Saturday respectively.

Despite the losses, the Grizzlies only need one point the rest of the season to clinch a playoff spot.

Revelstoke's Steven Fiust is stopped on a breakway against 100 Mile House on Friday. ~ Photo by Alex Cooper, Revelstoke Review

ALEX [email protected]

The Revelstoke Ski Club showed strong form over the weekend, as 18 athletes from the U12, U14 and U16 teams travelled to Sun Peaks to compete in the Okanagan Zone Race Series sponsored by Teck. Podi-um performances from Revelstoke included Reed Kelly’s single gold and three silver medals in the U12 boys, Nora Sidjak with a bronze in slalom for U12 girls and older brother John Sidjak achieving a third place slalom result for U14 boys. Colm Molder, Jenna Knight, Bergen Schmidt, Nolan Gale, Teigan Lenzi, Max Brodkorb and Sydney Musseau also achieved top ten finishes. For the U12 and U14s this was the first race of the winter and their strong showing is due in part to hours of training both on and off their skis since September.

All of the athletes will resume a one-month training block at RMR, as well as weekly dryland sessions, in preparation for the next set of races at the end of February. Thanks to the coaches and parents who helped make this weekend such a success.

REVELSTOKE SKI CLUB

Alpine club in action

John Sidjak races in the slalon at Sun Peaks. ~ Photo contributed

Page 16: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

16 n Revelstoke Review n Wednesday January 27, 2016

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SPORTS

It's take two for the Red Bull Cold Rush at Revelstoke Moun-tain Resort next week.

After being postponed then canceled in 2015, Red Bull is giv-ing their signature freeskiing event another go at RMR from February 2–5.

The four day event will feature 21 skiers competing in four different freeskiing competitions that will determine who is the best all around skier. Here's four things you should know to get you started.

1. WHAT ARE THE EVENTS?

There are four competitions taking place over three days. On Tuesday, Feb. 2, skiers take part in the big mountain skiing com-petition. Skiers will have a start and an end point and it's up to them what they do in between. They'll be judged on speed, fluid-ity, style and difficulty. Day two features the cliff hucking event, where competitors will be judged on airtime, difficulty and style in the air. The final day is the the backcountry slopestyle and the alpine touring. The first will see competitors hit up a course filled with man-made jumps and features. The second is a race up and down the mountain.

2. WHO'S TAKING PART?

Sixteen men and five women were invited, including many of the world's top freeskiers. The athlete list features Mike Hen-tiuk, Dave Treadway, Sean Pettit, Dane Tudor, Sammy Carlson, Alexi Godbout, Callum Pettit, Kye Petersen, Riley Leboe, Wiley Miller, Colston VB, Greg Hope, Johnny Collinson, Stan Rey, Joe Schuster, Josh Bibby, Tatum Monod, Michelle Parker, An-gel Collison, Lexi Dupont and Suz Graham. Tudor is the closest there is to a local. The Rossland, B.C., native now calls Revel-stoke home; he also happens to be the defending champion. "I don't think there's anything I need to do to win," he wrote in an e-mail. "Just have fun riding the terrain that's presented in the venues and if my peers like my style of skiing then that's great!"

3. HOW CAN I WATCH?The big mountain competition will take place on the face

known locally as Spilt Milk. You'll be able to watch from the bot-tom of Greeley Bowl. The slopestyle and ski touring will take place in Montana Bowl, outside the ski resort boundary. You'll be able to watch it from South Bowl with a good pair of binocu-lars, or you can head out of bounds to get closer to the action — just make sure you're prepared with avalanche gear. The cliff hucking event is taking place deep in the resort backcountry and will not be easily accessible to spectators.

4. HOW DO THEY DECIDE WHO WINS?

There are three awards. The first two – King & Queen of Cold Rush – will be determined by the athletes themselves. On Fri-day, Feb. 5, at 7:30 p.m., they'll gather at the Roxy to watch their best runs and judge each other. You can watch too — tickets are $25 and can be purchased at RMR or through the RMR website. The People's Choice Award will be voted on by the public once the runs are posted online on Feb. 8. Fans will have three days to watch the highlights and cast their vote.

Skiers set to take off for Cold Rush next weekALEX COOPER

[email protected] The team works on building the jumps for the slopestyle course in Montana Bowl. ~ Photo by Bryan Ralph, Red Bull

Page 17: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

Revelstoke Review n Wednesday January 27, 2016 n 17

1  Andrew Clark 7932 Sally Scales 7843  Robsten Kibbert 7834  Ron Douglas 7755  Big Dog Kaler 7736  Fia Cameron 7707  Matt Cadden 7698  John Opra 7689  Jeff Jacob 76210  Brent Farrell #1 75911  Charles Simpson 75712  C.B. II 75613  David Roney 75314 Jim Jacob 74814 John Buhler 74816 Matt Cameron 74617  John Grass 74518 Bill Galligano 74219  Brent Farrell #2 74019  Kevin Blakely 74021 Shawn Bracken 73922  Jim Jays 73622  Rylan Cameron 73624  David Kline 73524  Jesse Jacob 73526  Alex Cooper 73427 Don Manson 73328 Roger 73229  Louis Deschamps 73130  Donny Robichaud 73030  Sean Whalen 73032  C.B. I 72932  Gary Krestinsky 72934  Ian Brown 72635  Jeff Bochon 72435 Mervin Grandmond 72437  Reinie Bittner 72337  Seaotter 72339  Kurt Huettmeyer 72139  Maurice Mayall 721

39  Merrit II 72142  Justin Roberge 71943  Biscuit 71844  Janice Roberge 71345  Bob Bellis 70846  Mavis Cann 70547  Jon Dandie 70448  Mike Toma 70349  Brett Alm 70049  Elizabeth Tease 70051  John Alm 69852  Cliff Wolgram 69653  Hunter Bellis 69554  Jeff Farrell 69255  Chell Family 69055  J.W. Opra 69057  Merrit I 68758  Fuke Itspvekin 68559  Carlene Jacob 67960  Johnny C’s A team 67861  Emmey Anderson 67762  Gayle Jacob 67162  Waylon Jacob 67164  S. Knutson 67065  Veronica Cadden 66866  Josie McCulloch 66266  Mavis Cann 66268  C. Blakely 65669  Charlene Buffet 65470  Tammy Kaler 64771  Courtney Kaler 64471  Robert Cameron 64473  Tony Morabito 64274  William Hobgood 63175  Jenn Cadden 62575  L+J. Opra 62577  Sean Cadden 6121ST: $200 2ND: $120 3RD: $65

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Points totals last updated at 8:00 am onFriday January 25th.

1 Brent Farrell #1 1532 Andrew Clark 1473 John Buhler 1464 Sean Whalen 1435 Matt Cameron 1426 Merrit II 1417 Bob Bellis 1378 Janice Roberge 1369 Rylan Cameron 13510 John Grass 13410 Tony Morabito 13410 Waylon Jacob 13413 C.B. I 13314 Sally Scales 13215 Brent Farrell #2 13115 Charles Simpson 13115 John Opra 13118 Bill Galligano 13018 Maurice Mayall 13018 Reinie Bittner 13021 Biscuit 12921 Elizabeth Tease 12923 C.B. II 12724 Jon Dandie 12624 Mervin Grandmond 12626 Jeff Jacob 12527 Jesse Jacob 12427 Kevin Blakely 12429 Charlene Buffet 12329 Don Manson 12329 Fia Cameron 12329 Jeff Farrell 12333 Jeff Bochon 12233 John Alm 12233 Kurt Huettmeyer 12233 Louis Deschamps 12233 Roger 12238 Cliff Wolgram 12138 Mavis Cann 12138 Robsten Kibbert 121

41 S. Knutson 12042 Chell Family 11942 Ian Brown 11942 Veronica Cadden 11945 Emmey Anderson 11845 Johnny C’s A team 11845 Shawn Bracken 11848 Carlene Jacob 11748 David Kline 11748 Fuke Itspvekin 11748 Jenn Cadden 11748 Ron Douglas 11753 Gary Krestinsky 11653 Jim Jays 11655 Courtney Kaler 11556 L+J. Opra 11457 Hunter Bellis 11358 Big Dog Kaler 11258 Gayle Jacob 11260 David Roney 11160 Justin Roberge 11160 Merrit I 11160 Tammy Kaler 11164 C. Blakely 11064 Matt Cadden 11066 Josie McCulloch 10966 Mavis Cann 10966 Sean Cadden 10969 J.W. Opra 10870 William Hobgood 10771 Donny Robichaud 10671 Robert Cameron 10673 Seaotter 10574 Alex Cooper 10475 Brett Alm 10375 Jim Jacob 10375 Mile Joman 103

1ST: $200 2ND: $120 3RD: $65$385 WILL BE DONATED TO

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Points totals last updated at 8:00am onMonday October 26th.

SPORTS

The Revelstoke Kodiaks women's hockey team is hosting their first ever tournament at the Forum in March.

The Kodiaks are set to welcome teams from Whistler, Salmon Arm, Vernon, Ka-mloops and Golden for the first ever Diva Cup tournament on the weekend of March 19–20.

"It's the first ever women's tournament in Revelstoke," said Lauren Barras, one of the team's captains.

"We've been wanting for a couple of years, but we haven't been able to get the ice," add-ed co-captain Whitney Kendrick.

Revelstoke has a long history of women's hockey and used to have a traveling team that played against squads around B.C. Recently, the team has focused on weekly drop-in sessions and heading to tourna-ments.

I met up with a few of the players recently after a practice against a group of men that

served as warm-up for an outdoor tourna-ment they went to in Apex last weekend.

They said about 40 women have come out to drop-in this year, and there's a core group of about 20 regulars. "It's up from the last couple of years," said Sami Lingren.

The group is a mix of experienced play-ers and those just in getting into the sport. They said one Australian girl came out look-ing to try the sport.

The Wednesday night drop-in is open to anyone. They have extra sets of equipment for people to use. "If anyone wants to give it a try, come on out. We'll find you gear," said Barras.

They also get coached by Rostislav Pri-honsky, the Revelstoke Grizzlies assistant coach.

"He's been really good since we've been trying to get a lot of new girls out, and he's got good core skills," said Barras.

Women's drop-in hockey takes place at the Forum every Wednesday 8:15 p.m. The Diva Cup takes place March 19–20. Stay tuned for more details as they become available.

ALEX [email protected]

Revelstoke women's hockey team hosting tournament

The Revelstoke Kodiaks, in black, scrimmage against a group of men at the Forum. ~ Photo by Alex Cooper, Revelstoke Review

Page 18: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

18 n Revelstoke Review n Wednesday January 27, 2016

William Ernest Ottewell

William Ernest Ottewell passed away peacefully at Queen Victoria Hospital on January 20th at the age of 89 years.  Ernie has requested no formal service. A tea will be held in the Spring.  In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may be made to the Revelstoke Railway Museum P.O. Box 3018, Revelstoke, B.C. V0E 2S0.

Thanks to the doctors, nurses and all staff at QVH, also thanks to the Homecare Ladies and Meals on Wheels which enabled our dad to keep his independence.

Ernie was born August 4, 1926 in Edmonton.   He spent most of his life in Revelstoke. Throughout his life he had a thirst for knowledge whether it be garden-ing, volunteering, reading, building his house, or modeling steam engines.

Ernie started his railway career in 1943.  Some of the highlights were having the honour of running the first full train through the Macdonald tunnel in the Rogers Pass.  He was the engineer on the 1201 for the 100th anniversary of the Last Spike. He was heavily involved with the Revelstoke Railway Museum since its inception, bringing out the steam engine 5468 from Montreal.

Ernie was predeceased by his wife Winnifred and sister Marge.  Ernie is survived by Karen (Dave) Bradbury, Bill Ottewell, Janice (Dan) McNutt and grandchil-dren Sam and Jodie, as well his partner Joyce Rasmussen who accompanied him through his later years.

Messages of sympathy may be sent to Ernie’s family by viewing his obituary at www.brandonbowersfuneralhome.com.

Cremation arrangements are in the care of Brandon Bowers Funeral Home, Revelstoke.

Thank You

And finally to each and everyone who took the time out to pay tribute to this

kind, gentle and wonderful man. You will be missed, Martin

Karen & Rick Powers ~ Conversation’s Coffee House …for the use of Conversations and the refreshments and meat trays.

Gary Sulz …for making up the memory cards of Martin, and your comforting words.

Paul Levesque …for the great picture of Martin that you had made up for everyone.

Trevor & Staff @ Red Apple …for the choco-late bars that Martin liked to give out.

Judy Vigue, Maria Stagliano, Edie Schleiss, Ruby Cameron, Mrytle Nichol, Beryl Buckley

…for helping to put the special day together.

Meghann Hutton …for the pictures of Martin.

Fay & Sam Howe …for the bottles of Martin’s wine and the tremendous amount of baking ~ all of Martin’s favorites.

Page 19: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

Revelstoke Review n Wednesday January 27, 2016 n 19

Advertisein this space for

under $30 a weekEmail Mavis at

[email protected] call 250.837.4667

Advertisein this space for

under $30 a weekEmail Mavis at

[email protected] call 250.837.4667

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Page 20: Revelstoke Times Review, January 27, 2016

20 ■ REVELSTOKE REVIEW ■ Wednesday January 27, 2016

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Tons of

LIKE NEW pre-owned vehicles

on sale now!!GT028A ‘12 Ford Focus SE .........$12,888

GT015A ‘11 Chevrolet Impala .....$8,888

FT517B ‘13 Ford Fiesta SE ..........$10,955

0P6632 ‘13 Ford Escape SE ........$20,995

G0P6615 ‘13 Ford Edge LTD ......$29,949

0P6635 ‘13 Ford F-150 XLT ........$20,949

P6585A ‘13 Dodge Grand Caravan ........................$14,967

FC424B ‘08 Toyota Corolla Sport $8,789

0P6640 ‘13 Ford F-150 XLT ........$26,849

0P6641 ‘14 Ford F-150 XLT ........$29,999

FT587A ‘11 BMW 335I ...............$27,985

0Z0207 ‘07 Ford Mustang GT ....$45,845

P6618A ‘11 Ford Fiesta ................$9,9439,943All vehicles may not be exactly as illustrated. All payments E.O.E., OAC. $2,016 down @ 5.99% biweekly - 2010 for 60 months, 2012 for 72 mo. - 2013&14 for 84 mo. & 2015 for 96 mo.

‘14 Ford F-350 XLTCrew Cab, Diesel, Loaded,One Owner.

$41,949

0P6634

4x4

$308BI-WEEKLY

‘12 Ford F-150 XTRSupercrew, Ecoboost, One Owner,clean.

$24,888

FT489A

4x4

$203BI-WEEKLY

‘13 Ford Explorer LTDLimited, V6 3.5L, Sunroof,Navigation.

$34,949

GT114A

4x4

‘15 Ford F-150 LariatSupercrew, Moonroof, Adaptive Cruise,5,200 km.

$56,949

0P6650

4x4

$389BI-WEEKLY

‘15 Ford Flex SELLeather, Navigation, Panoramic Roof.(Not exactly as illustrated)

$37,249

0P6636

AWD

$245BI-WEEKLY

‘13 Ford F-150 XLTSupercab, V8, 1 Owner,Only 36,492 km.

$23,449

0P6648

4x4

$168BI-WEEKLY

‘10 Ford F-150 XTRSupercrew, 1 Owner, Low Kilometres,SYNC.

$23,911

FT559A

4x4

$227BI-WEEKLY

‘11 Hyundai Sonata GLSteering wheel audio controls, only 62,000 kms, air, power windows/mirrors.

$10,980

0P6601

‘15 Ford Fusion TitaniumOnly 19,600 kms, leather heated seats, remote start, NAV.

$28,888

0P6622

AWD

‘13 Ford Escape Titanium2.0L 1.4 cyl. Ecoboost, Panoramic Sunroof, NAV, leather, SYNC.

$25,888

0P6626

4WD

‘14 Ford F-150 FX4Supercrew, Leather, Moonroof,Navigation.

$40,949

FT591A

4x4

$300BI-WEEKLY

‘14 Ford F-150 XLTSupercrew, Long Box, Heavy Duty, Clean Unit.

$30,949

0P6643

4x4

$248BI-WEEKLY

‘14 Ford Edge SEL AWDNAV, Rearview Camera, Leather, Pano-Sunroof.

$31,949

0Z0205

AWD

‘14 Volkswagen Jetta2.0 Trendline, 5 spd. Manual. Great Fuel Economy.

$13,948

0P6633

‘12 Ford Mustang G3California Special, Convertible. Only 8,500 kms, NAV, air, leather, cruise.

$35,949

0Z0201

‘14 Ford Fusion TitaniumSYNC, moonroof, NAV, active park assist.

$23,989

OP6637

AWD

‘14 Ford F-150 XLTSupercrew, One Owner, Ecoboost,Loaded.

$26,949

0P6641

4x4

$218BI-WEEKLY

‘13 Ford Focus SE2.0L 4 cyl. Hatchback, Sips Fuels, SYNC, Air, Cruise.

$12,877

GT083A

‘13 Ford Escape SELEcoboost, Remote Start, NAV, SYNC, Sunroof.

$23,845

GT080A

‘11 Ford Fiesta SESSunroof, SYNC, Heated Leather Seats.

$9,943

FC486A

‘14 Ford Flex SELOnly 22,500 kms, Leather, Sunroof,Rearview Camera, Memory Seats, SYNC.

$29,990

0P6604

4x4

‘14 Ford Escape SENAV, Heated Seats, SYNC, Rearview Camera.

$23,449

FT432A

‘10 Nissan Sentra SLAir, Power Windows/Mirrors/Locks, Great Fuel Economy.

$7,777

GC027A

1321 Victoria roadreVelstoke, B.c.

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