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Yoga a hot idea at Sa-Hali secondary

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As they worked through their poses and breathing, it may have seemed like just another yoga class.

But, for instructor Charlie Bruce, watching the Sahali secondary students move from working on their own to partner poses was a major step.

“They couldn’t have done this at the start,” Bruce said of the yoga program for grades 9 and 10 students at the school.

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Yoga instructor Charlie Bruce leads a recent class of
Grade 9 and 10 students at Sahali secondary school.
Dave Eagles photo/KTW

“Partner poses collectedly are built on trust and communication,” something not present when the program began as many of the students were in groups with others they didn’t know well at all.

“So, not only has this been good for them with the exercise and the poses, it’s helped them get to know each other — and I hope it has opened a door to another friendship, perhaps.”

There are more goals to the program, introduced at the school in response to a student survey. Counsellor Joanne Simpson said many students in the two grades expressed issues about stress and worries about school, particularly in terms of workload and having to do provincial exams.

Once the decision was made last spring to offer yoga, a location at the school had to be found.

“The gym doesn’t work. It’s too busy and noisy,” Simpson said, so a seldom-used portable was converted, with the desks and chairs hauled out and yoga mats, calming posters and quiet music added to create the right environment.

Simpson said some of the students weren’t comfortable with the program at first — no cellphones, smartphones, iPads, MP3 players or other things that can bleep, ring or make other distracting noises were allowed.

“Kids are inundated with a lot of stimulation, with their social-media toys,” Bruce said. “It’s all hurry, hurry, hurry but, in the Sahali yoga studio, we bring in a sense of calmness.”

Bruce took it up about 13 years ago; intrigued by the physical component, he soon embraced the spiritual aspect, as well.

He teaches the students the physicality, breathing exercises and other strategies they can take out of the studio and into their everyday lives.

Each group has five one-hour classes with 50 classes planned for the 2013-2014 school year.

But, said Bruce, that might be changing.

“Word has got around,” he said, “and there are some Grade 12 classes interested now, too, so who knows?”

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International students bring in $1.5 million to school district

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During one of his trips to China, Terry Sullivan met a young adult woman who spoke almost perfect English.

The School District 73 superintendent asked her where she had learned the language, expecting to hear about a school somewhere.

He was wrong.

Instead, she told him her family did not have the money to send her to a school that would help her with her goal to learn English, so she turned to the Internet, using an economics site — with no interest in the topic itself — and later other sites to teach herself.

“That was how determined she was,” Sullivan said.

It’s why many of the 110 international students now studying in Kamloops schools are here, he said, to learn to speak the language that dominates not only the Internet but the international world of business.

District surveys have shown almost all — 96 per cent — of these students aren’t planning to become doctors or lawyers or teachers, Sullivan said.

They want to go into business.

Their presence has its own business benefit in many ways.

All are attending secondary schools, the educational sector that has continued to experience an enrolment decline.  Without them this year, the final number that not only dictates funding from the government but all the academic aspects that roll out from it would have been 185 rather than the 75 fewer students recorded in the final enrolment report.

The immediate economic impact is the $1.5 million the international-student body has brought to the district, plus another $200,000 that comes from SD73’s offshore courses offered throughout the world.

Apply basic economic spinoff principles and the impact on the local community is more like $2.5 million, he said.

Students come from almost every part of the world.

There’s a large contingent from China, Sullivan said, but there’s a growing interest from South American countries — in particular, Brazil, where the country’s president Dilma Rousseff has put an emphasis on education and learning English.

Students can take advantage of the district’s home-stay program while in Kamloops. Some take just a semester of school, Sullivan said, while others might stay for a year or up to three years of education.

There’s a challenge for teachers sometimes, he said, particularly if the student’s English skills are poor.

But, the district uses some of the money generated from the international program on English as a second language courses.

Each school with an international student also gets $4,000 per student to assist it with any of the teaching challenges that might crop up.

“We give as much support as we can,” Sullivan said.

“And, we don’t blow our own horn but I think it’s fair to say our education system is highly regarded.”

A study done a few years ago on an optimal number of international students pegged the target number at between 200 and 300, Sullivan said. Factors used in determining the figure include the number of home-stay families involved, domestic enrolment numbers and what the basic infrastructure that keeps all the schools humming can handle.

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‘Turning young minds onto science’

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Don Bouffard, a retired geologist, visits Kamloops-area schools teaching kids about his passion — cool rocks. Dave Eagles photo/KTW

Science World is celebrating a special anniversary next year — thanks to Don Bouffard and about 200 others just like him.

It will mark the 25th anniversary of the creation of the Scientists and Innovators in the Schools (SIS) program, something created with the simple goal of “turning young minds onto science,” said Friderike Moon, the Vancouver institution’s program director and the person who oversees SIS.

Bouffard is one of the volunteers who keep the program running, Moon said, and, since joining the group of volunteers in 1994, has interacted with upwards of 50,000 school children, sharing his love of rocks, gems and minerals with them.

The retired geologist takes some of his massive collection to classrooms and lets them touch, examine and simply experience wonders like a piece of a dinosaur egg, a fossil teeming with quartz crystals that has an estimated age of 100-million years.

Volunteers represent all walks of science, Moon said, from engineering through geology, biology and most of the other -ologies. Her own background, sparked by a high-school science teacher, is in biology and neuroscience, she said, and she’s been with Science World for four years, two as program director.

Volunteers living in the Lower Mainland can take workshops to get the basic template for their presentations, with webinars provided throughout the rest of the province.

The suggested format is simple: It has to be hands-on, with things kids can do during the presentation, perhaps with little projects they can make and take home, something that gets the conversation about science out of the classroom and around the dining-room table, Moon said.

Volunteers stick to their own specialties not only because they know the subjects well but because they have a passion for it, “and that spark jumps over to the students,” Moon said.

Bouffard ignites that spark. He talks with his students, not at them, and is as likely to be found sitting down on a small chair explaining to them in terms they’ll understand what it is they’re looking at.

Even just a visit to KTW becomes a learning experience, as he produces a large rock — or, at least, it appears to be not much more.

“Come out here into the sun and see what happens,” Bouffard said, standing by the window with that look of someone who knows what’s about to happen but still can’t wait for it.

Then, it comes.

“Wow. What is that?”

And he’s off on an explanation of the unique mineral crystals embedded in the rock, elements that can only be seen when sunlight strikes them.

It’s volunteers like Bouffard who have kept the program alive, especially since the provincial Liberal government cut funding to Science World’s B.C, Program for the Awareness and Learning of Science in 2012.

At the time of the cut, the government said it had provided money — $6 million — because money was available but, in tough times, it was essential to prioritize where to invest, with the priority being to fund classrooms.

Moon said the cut meant volunteers would be encouraged to stay within their own regions, that scientists from UBC could no longer be flown out to regions to do workshops, and that the only expenses volunteers can now be paid are for travel.

They get $40 per presentation to buy items to enhance it, Moon said, which can include buying a science book to leave in the school library or materials for a take-home project.

SIS runs from September to June. People can sign up to be a volunteer by going online to scienceworld.ca/sis-volunteer, calling 1-800-363-1611 or emailing sisinfo@scienceworld.ca.

Teachers can ask for a scientist visit through the same toll-free phone number or email or online at scienceworld.ca/ontheroad.

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Kamloops is on Florida Georgia Line in April

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Brian Kelley and Tyler Hubbard will be cruising into Kamloops on April 11 as Florida Georgia Line performs at Interior Savings Centre.

Opening acts are Dallas Smith and Chris Lane.

The duo — with help from Nelly — won single of the year recently from the American Music Awards for its song Cruise, a single that sold more than six-million downloads in the U.S. and is ranked as the second best-selling country single ever.

Tickets range from $39 to $59, plus taxes and service charges, and go on sale on Friday, Dec. 13, at the ISC box office, at ticketmaster.ca or by calling 1-855-985-5000.

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Testostertone levels soar on CBC Radio air waves

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Westsyde Secondary men’s vocal group, The Testostertones dropped by CBC Daybreak Studio on Friday, Dec. 6, to sing and chat with radio host Shelley Joyce during food bank day at the popular morning show. From front row left: Cooper Jordan, Braeden Stanyer, Ben Aubrey, Liam Befurt, Julien Ferrigan and Connor Hrycewich chat live on-air.

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Musing about this Affair

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With three jagged teeth, a single giant green eye and curling gold horns, Solange Belleforte’s small sculpture is a strange combination of monstrous and sweet.

Literally sweet — when Belleforte tips the creature’s head backwards, a small pink tab pops out of its mouth.

“Pez?” she offers.

The pez dispenser, Sarah to her friends, is one of of nearly a dozen epoxy clay figures Belleforte will have at the almost-annual Muse Affair Sale, which will take place on Saturday, Dec. 7, at St. Andrew’s on the Square, at Seymour Street and Second Avenue.

“She started out to be a cloud princess,” Belleforte says of one-eyed Sarah. “But, she insisted on having horns. It’s like writing — sometimes it takes its own form with you. So, she is a very fierce warrior.”

All the figurines began life as Pez dispensers, though some have kept more of their original shape than others. Another figure shares its impressively sized nose with the plastic Goofy head that forms its base, for instance.

Besides Belleforte’s “altered Pez dispensers,” the 13 artists of the Kamloops Muse Guild will also offer furniture in eye-popping colours, photography and fine art, mosaics and more.

The members of the guild, who work in a variety of media, met through creative coach Janet Whitehead, explains organizer Vicki Nygaard.

The guild meets about once a month for coffee and inspiration.

While their works are diverse — both Nygaard and Belleforte describe the show as “eclectic” about a dozen times — they tend to share an offbeat sensibility.

“Most craft shows have lots of hats, lots of gloves, lots of jewelry, lots of things that are practical. And ours are not necessarily practical,” says Nygaard, who transforms old furniture with brightly coloured paint and unusual fabrics.

Nygaard isn’t usually a fan of craft sales, but when she ended up at the first Muse Affair in 2010 because of road closures, she was instantly charmed by both the works for sale and the spirit of community between the artists in the room.

“I was really struck by how different it was,” she says.

The show will also feature a charity component, with guild members raffling off some of their wares in gift baskets. Raffle proceeds will go to InspireHealth Integrative Cancer Care in honour of Whitehead, who underwent treatment for cancer last year.

The Muse Affair runs from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 7, at 159 Seymour St.

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MP’s Reform Act bill the talk of politics

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As Kamloops-Thompson-Cariboo MP Cathy McLeod decides whether to support a bill aimed at rebalancing the power of MPs and their party leaders, she’s looking for input from what might not seem the most likely source: the riding’s card-carrying members of the federal Liberals and NDP.

The Reform Act, a private member’s bill introduced by Ontario Conservative MP Michael Chong, would give sitting MPs more power to depose a party leader and change what influence party brass have on local candidate selections.

Among the proposals are some McLeod likes, such as having members of a party caucus vote on whether or not to expel members for bad behaviour, rather than leaving the job to their leader.

But, there are others she said she’s not so sure about, such as a provision in which 15 per cent of a party’s sitting MPs can trigger a review of their leader.

“The most recent example would be the Liberal government,” McLeod said.

THE REFORM ACT 2103

• Read Michael Chong’s Reform Act right now by going online here:
• Tell MP Cathy McLeod what you think by completing her survey.
To get a copy, call 250-851-4991 or email cathy.mcleod.c1@parl.gc.ca.

“They had over 100,000 people who had recently elected their leader and the way that this is written is 15 per cent of the current sitting Liberal MPs, which would be about five or six people, could trigger a vote by the current 32 people, who’d make the ultimate decision on replacing the leader.”

Reform Act supporters have argued that because MPs can only select an interim leader, party members outside of Ottawa still get the final say over who leads the party.

But, those critical of the bill have suggested it could lead to permanent leadership contests and in-fighting, particularly in parties with lower seat counts.

McLeod tweeted on Dec. 3 that she worries about the “loss of grassroots membership input,” across party lines should the 15 per cent challenge become law.

“This impacts Liberals, NDPs, all party members, Green,” McLeod said. “It would be interesting to know what people who currently elect a leader feel about the change that’s proposed.”

McLeod said she is getting a lot of input on the bill — 100 letters and emails in the first week after the bill was introduced in the House of Commons — and is conducting a survey for constituents to get more feedback.

“I’ve broken the bill down into what I feel are the areas that are most critical and I’m asking how people feel about those different areas,” she said. “Do they support the individual changes?”

McLeod said there does appear to be a desire for reforms in Parliament among voters and Chong’s bill taps into that.

“I think there’s a hunger for those kinds of conversations,” she said.

“But, I also think it’s important to look at the many different elements of the bill. This is not one change. There’s a number of different pieces.”

For a copy of the survey, email McLeod’s constituency office at cathy.mcleod.c1@parl.gc.ca or call 250-851-4991.

 

 

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Brock honours its students

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Brocklehurst Middle School Honour Roll

Term 1, 2012-2013

 

First-class Achievement & Effort

Grade 7

SydneyBailey

Eric Bertuzzi

Preston Bodo

Kaylyn Brulotte

Rachel Bush

Brooke Butcher

Same Carne

Jordane Cave

Keiran Clark-Humphrey

Adison Davies

Erin Dombrosky

Jordyn Ferber

Cassie Ferguson

Thea Flundra

Ashley Fraser

Sophie Hunter

Sydney Irwi

Brady Jackson

Rhese Johnson

Julia Johnston-Brew

Lucas Jorgensen

Tristin Kicia

Chloe MacLean

Arman Mattu

Birch Mierau

Laura Noble

Gurneet Padda

Nathan Paille

Sara Prachnau

Kinberly Rexin

Cale Rhone

Brady Ross

Jayden Schmunk

Hayley Smith

Ty Steffler

Strider Williams

Lexis Woitas

Mykaela Woods

Waylen Zhou

 

Grade 8

Caelen Afamanchuk

Chase Androlick

Lauren Arnett

Tristan Arychyk

Brittany Bond

Denae Branchflower

Ria Cameron

Julia Cantin

Tayana Church

Alexis Dupuis

Bailey English

Madelyn Gammel

Ainsley Grether

Carter Grice

Cassidy Hanna

Cat Hartt-Towle

Brayden Hay

Kelsey Henderson

Kaila Hindle

Kameron Indoe

Montanna Janke

Erica Kabotoff

Sukhbir Kang

Acacia Kanning

Janatvir Khabra

Dilraj Khunkhun

Kally King

Johanna Klimmer

Christa Lester

Sheldon Long

Athena Lourros

Ali MacMillian

Emeril Macus

Branden Malbeuf

Deanna Martin

Audrey May

Julye-Anne McKenny

Duncan McPhea

Derek Panter

Aysia Patjas

Rhea Proctor

Christian Ryder

Makayla Rytes

Adam Wielgoz

 

Grade 9

Maddie Avery

Katreena Abernathy

Holly Antifay

Chance Austinson

Maya Baker

Sara Blagborne

Preslie Coburn

Ronin Copley

Mackenzie Creasser

Manpreet Dhaliwal

Kacey Dhillon

Skyla Foidart

Dylan Forbes

Diara Hindle

Trudy Hollander

Bennett Hunter

Taylor Killoran

Hennessy Kluss

Carson Lord

Aiden MacAlister

Mitchell Mathieson

Cole McLeod

Elijah Meixner

Sebrina More

Anna Morrish

Owen O’Brien

Lynette Joy Pascua

McKenzie Povoas

Soleil Prachnau

Cassandra Roberge

Kyle Robertson

Chessa Ryan

Kelsey Saborio

Allissa Savage

Alexia Stone

Adrien Tonge

Brooke Tonkin

Trevor Vadnais

Delray Willis

 

First-class Achievement 

 Grade 8

Taylor Gyger

Justin Rokosh

Carl Zazulak

 

Grade 9

Jaiden Vlodder

 

Achievement & Effort 

Grade 7

Sami Ardiles

Kalen Aujla

Liam Barber

Amanda Batke

Hannah Baynes

Christian Bennett

D.J. Boyarski

Jaiden Brownlee

Shane Calhoon

Tatyana Cansdale

Victor Church

Mya Copley

Jessica Coyle

Emma DeCraene

Jourdan Friesen

Austin Gallagher

William Goodburn

Cameron Harmsen

Peter Helgason

Steven Heppner-Jackson

Kaitlynn Jenkins

Jared Lammi

Brie Larson

James Leighton

Isabella Little

Makena Long

Ashia Mackenzie

M.J. Makulowich-Jones

Connor Menghini

Justin Mitchell

Kelsi Mott

Zackery Needham

Chyna Poss

Kelcie Power

Sierra Prince

Ethan Reese

Kealee Rode

Harjot Singh

Alexi Smith

Logan Studer

Jordan Swoboda

 

Grade 8

Patrick Depew

Ryan Firman

Caelen Williams

Cameron Allan

Bryden Hammond

Jorgen Haney

Bradley Ermet

Brendan Manion

D’Artagnan McDermid

Travis Paille

Taylor Russell

Ethan Smith

Jade Caufield

George Donald

Melody Hunter

Aidan Mackenzie

Zachary Milne

Leanna Sek

Kaz Carson

Devin Halcrow

Conan Poss

Max Rokosh

Anthony Schooling

Taylor Wood

Katie Rowe

Mason Suppanz

Eden Leslie

Paige Capostinsky

Talon Tremblay

Madison Oullette

Grace Penner

Gurjeevay Randhawa

 

Grade 9

Alexandra Leblanc

Jenn Pierson

Alisa Adamson

Joven Atwal

Colton Mathga

Samantha McCordell

Riley Jadeson

Teagan Leslie

Kyleigh Stewart

Koby Studer

Natasha Hobbs

Daylin Levin

Taylor Walker

Makayla Alexander

Tristin Arnold

Gina Burgess

Jeremy Strachan

Sheldon Baitz

Joe Dufresne

Mitchell Halvorson

Rhys McKenzie

 

Achievement 

Grade 7

Nikolas Davis

Keaton Dell

Marcus Gleis

Beckett Hooton

Ethan Leggatt

Logan Morris

Chris Nguyen

Shay Ouchi

Issac Raeside

Manraj Shekhon

Alex Tonge

Ryan Zamudio

 

Grade 8

Mathew Braga

Bryanna Dower

Shyla Fryer

Hailey Godfroid

Emily Gumon

Isaiah Haller

Kurtis Hardin

Elijah Hunt

Jayden Johnson

Taralyn Kalelest

Paige Lepine

Kenneth MacKenzie

Christopher Penner

Hannah Riley

Terri Teite

Tyrel Thomas-Peters

Paige Westhaver

 

Grade 9

Anthony Cave

Selena Cote

Ali Davis

Dakoda DeWolf

Jarod  Donayer

Wyatt Foley

Jessika John

Ashlee Joseph

Tim Lapierre

Adrien Leslie

Jamal Mahmood

Christian McCauley

Alex McLennan

Caleb Ransome

Dillon Rice

Brianna Roy

Katia Sampsel

Alex Thompson

Nevada Woods

Stephanie Wouters

 

Effort

Grade 7

Kayla Acoby

Rylee Bull

Alana Dick

Abby Farnsworth

Colin Forbes

Zack Gero

Priya Gill

Paige Heighton

Kaitlyn Hennings

Mackenzie Loucks

Vincent Martinson

Jordon Massicotte

Victoria McKenzie

Riley Moccia

Gabrielle Morris

Rorik Munson

Rhys Norman

Desiree Pottinger

Sara Priestley

Logan Quast

Regan Shultz

Les Ufland-Allieres

Rebecca Wallin

 

Grade 8

Dawson Baitz

Madison Barclay

Bailey Brickwood

Saffron Brown

Kaitlyn Bynoe

Gavin Coxon

Tyrus Delpopolo

Payge Dyer

Sehler Hik

Austin Kovacs Dellow

Kelsey Ann Lee

Alex Little

Carly Nitchie

Cameron Ramsey

Keanna Savage

Evan Schmidt

Aurora Smith

Giana Thomas

Taylor Walker

Rayelle Zacharuk

 

Grade 9

Brayden Flodstrom

Jacob Henderson

Cory Kuch

Preston  McNair

Soren Munson

Sara Nisbet

Jayden Prince

Rosemary Reyes

Breanne Skelly

Ashton Stephens

Brianne Yeaman

 

 

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Zack Attack: Saved by the harp

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Second year Thompson Rivers University arts student Zachary Morris plays the harp he built in a sculpture couse on Friday, Dec. 6, in the Old Main Visual Arts Gallery. Morris, a skilled woodworker, constructed the harp as a performance-art project — melding the ideas around both tradition and craft  into a singular piece.

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Bozon lights up Blazers, brushes off three-stars snub

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Tim Bozon, now a member of the Kootenay Ice, shares a few words with former teammate before puck-drop at Interior Savings Centre on Friday, Dec. 6. Allen Douglas/KTW

Tim Bozon, now a member of the Kootenay Ice, shares a few words with former teammate before puck-drop at Interior Savings Centre on Friday, Dec. 6. Allen Douglas/KTW

The manner in which Tim Bozon left the Tournament Capital has been called into question, but there is no doubt he took the high road out of Interior Savings Centre on Friday, Dec. 6.
The former Kamloops forward requested a trade earlier this season and was dealt to the Kootenay Ice on Oct. 22, leaving some in Blazer nation wondering if he had given up on his teammates.
He scorched the Blazers on Friday, recording two goals and four points in his squad’s 7-3 victory over the Blue and Orange.
Amazingly, he was left out of the three stars. Bozon, a plus-3 on the night, was asked about the snub after the game.
“I can’t control that,” he said.
“It’s up to whoever picks. For sure, I wanted to have a chance to thank the fans for everything they did over the last two seasons and, unfortunately, I couldn’t do it.
“I just want to make sure they know that I always love them.”
The three stars really don’t mean much, especially in Kamloops where the selections are often baffling, but it can be argued they meant something on Friday.
Either the mystery man or woman who picks them genuinely thought Bozon did not deserve a star for his play, or it could seem like a statement from the Blazers, whose brass was none too pleased with Bozon’s decision to jump ship.
(To date, KTW has been unable to nail down exactly who is in charge of the star picking.)
“That’s the team that drafted me,” said Bozon, who has six goals and 19 points in 19 games since the trade.
“I went through a lot with the Blazers and, like we say, “Once a Blazer always a Blazer.”
Kamloops, which drops to 6-19-2-2 with the loss, is hosting the Everett Silvertips at ISC on Saturday, Dec. 7.
Kootenay forward Jaedon Descheneau, who was named the game’s first star, opened the scoring on Friday about halfway through the first period. He finished the tilt with two goals and an assist.
Bozon bagged his first of the game less than two minutes later to wrap the first-period scoring.
Smooth-skating D-man Josh Connolly brought the Blazers within one on the power-play early in the second stanza, then Descheneau restored the Ice’s two goal cushion.
Blazer left-winger Cole Ully tallied for the home team, again bringing it within one goal of the Ice, but Kootenay took over from there.
The visitors racked up four unanswered goals, with Bozon, Luke Philp, Matt Alfaro and Zak Zborosky doing the damage.
In one of the few bright spots for Kamloops, Eric Krienke notched his first WHL goal late in the third period.
The Blazers started Taran Kozun between the pipes, but he was pulled after the Ice’s fifth goal in favour of 15-year-old netminder Cole Kehler.
Kozun made 15 saves on 20 shots. Kehler allowed two goals on six shots. Wyatt Hoflin went the distance for the road team, making 30 saves in the victory.
Ice D-man Jagger Dirk notched two assists and was named the game’s first star.
Dirk and Sam Reinhart assisted on Bozon’s second goal. Each member of that trio has a father who played in the NHL — Philippe Bozon, Paul Reinhart and Robert Dirk.
Reinhart, a forward, had a pair of assists and was named the game’s second star.
Defenceman Landon Cross was also shipped to Kootenay from Kamloops in the deal headlined by Bozon.
Cross registered an assist and was plus-3 on Friday.
Forward Collin Shirley and blue-liner Matt Thomas, both of whom were acquired by the Blazers in the blockbuster deal, were held off the scoresheet.
Bozon was often honest and outspoken with the media during his time in Kamloops.
After the game on Friday, he was soft-spoken and seemed eager to make sure the ISC faithful knew how he felt about his time in the River City.
“I knew it was my last time playing here ever,” Bozon said. “Obviously, I wanted to make it special.
“Lots of emotions right now. I’m sure it’s going to be the last time. It feels good. It was always fun to play for the Blazers.”

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Chong’s private-member’s bill would give MPs a voice

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Editor:

This week, Conservative MP Michael Chong introduced a private member’s bill in Ottawa that could be an important step toward democratizing the Canadian government in the future, regardless of what party is in power.

It would give individual MPs more freedom to represent their constituents and reduce the centralized power of the governing party.

It would give MPs, not party leaders, the power to remove an MP from the party’s caucus, as well as to remove a prime minister or party leader if caucus found he/she was abusing his/her powers.

This would allow MPs to speak and vote their conscience much more often.

It would also let the local riding associations, not the party leader, decide on the candidate for each party in each riding.

This bill certainly won’t fix everything about our government, but it is a common-sense first step.

It would allow our MPs to actually have a say in what happens in Ottawa.

It would be nice to see MPs of all stripes who care about democracy support this bill.

Eli Pivnick

Kamloops

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Debate over Ajax mine anything but ‘tiresome and old’

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Editor:

Re: Dale Bass’s column of Dec. 5 (‘The little boy opposing Ajax must be hoarse by now’):

Why would Bass suggest we might be tired of hearing about the most important issue facing our city?

Freedom of information and the ability to research existing mining operations, the effects to health and environment and what remains after mining is finished should be available to, and sharable with, everyone.

I think Bass has it wrong.

Instead, the little boy would be the Little Dutch Boy who poked his finger in the dyke to stop the flow of water and saved the town.

Acting quickly and in time could avert disaster as a small leak soon becomes a stream, then a raging river, then a flood — metaphorically speaking.

Please don’t stifle the conversation. It is not “tiresome and old.”

The proposed Ajax copper and gold mine is too close to 90,000 people.

In this case, it is not responsible mining.

M.K. Claydon

Kamloops

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Yes, I can imagine Kamloops without a mine

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Editor: 

Imagine a town without a mine was a well-attended and well-delivered presentation at TRU’s Clocktower Theatre on Nov. 24.

I saw a great number of concerned, knowledgeable, learned people there, the kind of people who occupy roles of prevalence in our society, the kind of people we rely upon for our general well-being.

The presentation centered on one issue: Does the proposed KGHM Ajax mining project fit in with the long-term vision for our city?

It is a worthy topic and perhaps the only truly significant discussion we should be having in Kamloops.

The Weyerhaeuser (now Domtar) pulp mill does set a precedent.

It did provide certain economic benefits to the city for a number of years.

However, it can be argued its malodorous nature has hijacked and compromised the image, perception and reputation of Kamloops.

It has definitely lowered the quality of living for almost everyone to the benefit of comparatively few.

It has unquestionably altered and negatively skewed the business/investment landscape of our city.

Businesses will take advantage of the proximity to existing infrastructure.

However, even if the corporate identity is laudable, its only reason for being is to generate profits.

On the other hand, the well-being of the entire community (which includes its image, perception and reputation) is above and beyond any narrow set of interests.

Corporate profitability and the political mandate to see it realized are, without a doubt, a narrow set of interests.

We can study the obvious and not-so-obvious impacts of the proposed Ajax mine all we want.

A few parameters are already known and are not favourable.

Ajax will be a high-cost, low-grade deposit. The ore body cannot be changed, but the cost structure can.

Will KGHM Ajax’s profitability ultimately be leveraged on the back of our community?

Really, there is no need for a discussion.

Imagine a town without a mine?

Absolutely!

Pierre Filisetti

Kamloops

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Ord Road mobile-home parks to be rezoned

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Ord Road’s mobile-home parks will likely get a belated blessing from the City of Kamloops when several zoning changes for the corridor head to public hearing.

Council has agreed to put a number of zoning changes out for comment, including rezoning several mobile-home parks so they are no longer improperly classified as future development lands.

The changes would also add more light-industrial properties to the area between Singh and McLean streets and rezone the Ord Road dog park for public and park use.

Director of development services Marvin Kwiatkowski said the city wants to eventually shift its dangerous-goods route to Ord Road from Tranquille Road, noting putting more industrial land on the city’s edge will encourage that move.

Because there are residences in the area, the city wants to prohibit some types of industrial development, however.

That includes crematoriums and asphalt-storage facilities.

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Despite plea, parking meters will not move

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Parking meters are staying put in the 100-block of St. Paul Street in downtown Kamloops, despite a plea from a resident who said the city should be covering the cost of tickets and towing she has incurred parking in front of her home.

Sheila Zilinsky told city council she wants the meter removed in front of her building at 130 St. Paul St. because she doesn’t think it’s fair that the building’s residents should have to pay to “park in their residence driveway.”

While she has an underground parking spot, Zilinsky said it’s not always easy to access because the alley leading to the garage can be blocked by events, ambulances and work trucks.

She said she has had issues with her garage-door remote and has been deterred from using the spot by drunk and disorderly people hanging out in the alley.

Zilinsky also asked the city to reimburse her for more than $500 in fees she has accrued from getting towed from the meters, claiming she had been targeted by bylaw officers who would loiter near her car to give her tickets.

“I have a history of contentiousness with the city over this deal,” she said, noting a city worker had called the police on her during a previous attempt to resolve the situation at city hall.

“I think it’s a real encroachment,” she said.

Community safety manager Jon Wilson said he has heard of a staffer hanging around Zilinsky’s car for up to 25 minutes, but said it was because a bylaw officer was waiting for a tow truck to take it away, as is standard practice.

Coun. Arjun Singh said he thought the issue would be better handled by the owner of Zilinsky’s building than by city council.

“If one can’t get into the parking space one has and is on the street 30 per cent of the time, that’s an issue with the landlord,” he said

Coun. Tina Lange said removing parking meters on a street so close to the city’s commercial core likely wouldn’t improve building access for residents.

“I know that if we took the meters off of that downtown block, employees in Kamloops would be pretty excited and they’d park there all day,” she said.

Lange did suggest staff review photos and video submitted by Zilinsky to determine if she was being blocked from her garage on days when she was towed, with an eye to reimbursing her if that was the case.

Council rejected the idea, but did pass a motion for Wilson and Zilinksy to work together to come up with a plan to pay her outstanding parking tickets by instalment, as long as she doesn’t rack up any more parking violations.

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Mental Health Matters: The best gifts simply cannot be wrapped

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Earlier in the season, we asked our readers to send us their Christmas stories and we received several requests to reprint one from a few years back.

At first we declined, but more requests have come in.

Here it is in full:

Today we bring you a true story to illustrate you can not only reduce your stress, but a Christmas done well can relieve stress in others, too.

This is how the story was told to us:

“When I was a kid, my family was poor.

“Being poor as a child meant Christmas had more feelings of dread than anticipation but, in our family, my dad would not let us dwell on money.  Every year, we came up with a new way to give something to neighbours or another poor family in an anonymous way.

“When I was 10, Christmas fell on Sunday, so we got dressed, grabbed shovels and cleared snow from steps and sidewalks of houses and the church long before daylight.

“We laughed and threw shovelfuls of powdery snow at each other and were long gone before anyone knew we were there.

“At that time, I had never been in a church in my life, but I knew our work would be appreciated!

“I was not looking forward to going back to school after the holidays because, on the first school day after the holidays, we had to stand up and tell the class what we got for Christmas.

“I made up imaginary presents to prevent laughter I was sure would come my way if I said I got socks or second-hand skates.

“The dreaded day arrived and I contemplated pretending to be sick — just to avoid that first morning of that first day back.

“I knew it would be hard to fool my dad and, when the time came, I chickened out and headed off to school.

“My teacher, Miss Beaman, was there as usual to greet us when we came into class.

“I loved her. She had a smile that could light up the room and, when she praised our efforts, it was like music that played in our minds through the whole day — and, for some of us, our whole life.

“On that day, when I needed it most, she smiled at my greeting even more warmly than I had ever seen before.

“We waited impatiently and, in my case, with dread, for our Christmas treasures to be revealed, only to have Miss Beaman announce we were not going to tell the class what we got for Christmas. We were going to tell what we did or gave to someone else because, after all, Christmas means giving and not receiving.

“We were all dumbfounded and many protested, but Miss Beaman was firm: What did we give to, or do for, others this Christmas?

“One by one, my classmates stammered and struggled to say or even think of something.

“She called my name last and I told the class my family shovelled sidewalks on Christmas morning so others could rest and spend time with their families.

“Miss Beaman moved behind me, gently rested her hands on my shoulders and said, ‘This is what Christmas is really all about. We get something more when we give of ourselves than we ever hope to get in a present.’

“For the first time in my life, I felt like I belonged in a group as an equal and my eyes welled.

“Years later, I was walking down the street in front of that same church and happened to glance across the street at the big old house that stood on the opposite corner — and then it struck me.

“That house was where Miss Beaman paid for room and board during the school months. She must have seen my family shovelling snow so early on that Christmas morning all those years ago.

“It was only then that I fully understood the gifts she had anonymously given to me that Christmas: Dignity, compassion and elevation from the depths I was so wrong to feel.

“And with realization came her last gift, the understanding that my worth as a person derived not from what I got or had, but from what I gave.

“Even if Miss Beaman was alive, how can you thank a teacher for the gift of these lessons? I guess all you can ever do is help others find their true worth, too.”

Thanks for reading our column and you can still tell us about your gifts of mental health or your own magical holiday stories related to mental health via email to kamloops@cmha.bc.ca.

You can also follow us on Twitter @CMHAKamloops.

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Lighting up Christmas season in Kamloops

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CP Holiday Train arrives on weekend

Every year, CP officials call Bernadette Siracky and ask her the same question: How do you get so many people out for our Holiday Train stop?

And, every year, the executive director of the Kamloops Food Bank tells whichever CP person she is dealing with the same answer: It’s Kamloops.

It’s a city that fuels the perpetual smile on Siracky’s face these days — and most other days of the year — as it always steps up to help out.

The Holiday Train is a highlight, Siracky said, one that will bring together the Valleyview Overlanders Lions Club to staff the barbecue — flipping burgers and hotdogs — with Van Houtte Cafe, whose volunteers will be pouring hot chocolate on Saturday, Dec. 14, as everyone waits for the decorated train to arrive behind Interior Savings Centre.

Interior Tents and Display Services will be there as well, providing assistance, as will all the volunteers and supporters who “are always there,” Siracky said, ready to accept any food or monetary donations from the public.

Monique Blanchet will again be singing.

Estimated arrival time, according to CP, is 5:30 p.m., when the 1,000 feet of rail cars, engine and boxcar will chug into place.

It will be seen long before it arrives, courtesy of the LED lights and decorations.

There are two trains in the program, one that heads into the U.S. and one that crosses Canada.

The first train left Quebec on Nov. 25, with the second leaving Scranton, Penn., on Nov. 26.

By the time the trips are done on Dec. 19, more than 150 stops will have been  made.

The boxcar has been renovated to become a stage, where a variety of entertainers will perform.

Entertainers on the Canadian route include Melanie Doane and Matt Dusk.

Since the CP Holiday Train program began in 1999, it has raised $7.4 million and three-million pounds of food for agencies.

 

Wildlights start shining  on Dec. 13

 The 16th annual Wildlights Festival at the B.C. Wildlife Park begins on Friday, Dec. 13, and will continue through Jan. 5.

What to do?

Head for the wolf feeding first or grab a chilly seat for the laser-light show?

Wildlights4Maybe hop onto the Wildlife Express miniature train to scope out the scenery?

The choices will be plentiful when the sun goes down and the switches are flipped to shine on the festival that lights up the night sky abive Dallas.

The 23-day event runs non-stop beginning on Friday, Dec. 13, with the exception of Christmas Day,  from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Don’t ask how many lights illuminate the trees, the walkways and the hills —  pretty much anywhere you look.

Highlights include the laser show, which runs every half hour, with the final show at 8:30 p.m., the wolf feeding at 6:30 p.m., the maze and nightly shows with Uncle Chris the Clown.

He is there all days except for Dec. 17, Dec. 24, Dec. 26 and Jan. 1.

Santa will be at the park again this year from Dec. 14 until Dec. 24, when he has much more pressing work to get done.

The highlight of this year’s event will once again be the Symphony of Lights Show, which will feature a spectacular laser light show, with lights synchronized to music, with shows each night in the award-winning outdoor Highland Valley Copper Amphitheatre.

In addition, visitors will be treated to viewing a nightly wolf and elk feedings.

There is also the Home Hardware Family Farm and the Charlie Brown Christmas and 3D life-size horse and stagecoach displays to be enjoyed.

Admission is $12 for adults, $10 for seniors, $8 for children three to 17 and free for the toddlers.

Park pass-holders are charged half-price admission for the festival.

The festival dates back to 1998, and, since then, more than 330,000 guests have marvelled at the dazzling show.

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Cuisine: We wish you a Merry Swissmas

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Beer, wine, bread, cheese. Beer, wine, bread, cheese.

In Basel, Switzerland, for a team of British Columbian chefs who’d just competed in an international competition that only comes around every six years, it was beginning to look a lot like Christmas.

Besides the traditional fondue party they had just begun to dip into, it was Nov. 28, the last Thursday before December, and the day when Basel turns on its Advent lights.

It was also the day when Switzerland’s largest Christmas market transforms the city’s atmosphere into a place more fairy-tale than metropolis.

Among the traders and artisans and their wares, shoppers warmed up with mulled wine, waffles, Basel Läckerli biscuits and grilled sausages.

Nestled in the historic Old Town, next to the Cathedral, was a Christmas tree, decorated by Christmas savant Johann Wanner.

In all the year, there probably isn’t a better time to visit the city.

At home, however, during what had to be the greyest two weeks of the year, and on a day when I nearly got run over by a Christmas parade in the mall, I was ready to pack my trunk.

Meanwhile, back at the fondue party, and having begun with a little salad to prepare their digestive tracts for the cheese to come, the chefs readied their fondue forks.

This was beginning of the best part of their trip, after all — the part that came after the year of planning and practise.

After the fundraising, after the packing, after the travel, after the competition and after the critiquing.

After all the tear down and clean up of the borrowed kitchen they’d occupied for most of a week.

After each of the competition judges were awarded a genuine one-legged milking stool that, strapped onto the milker’s waist, would make efficient the job of visiting each a multitude of ladies in their stanchions.

Having placed among the top three in the world in their category, this was their reward.

Now, with beer beginning to go to their heads, was also when the team’s coach and leader (a respected gentleman lately inaugurated into the Order of British Columbia) declared the next person to lose their bread in the pot must buy the next round.

So, as one chef triple-skewered his cube of baguette onto his fondue fork, another lost theirs.

A round of beer was bought.

The next day, the chefs roamed the Christmas market, soaking up the country’s culture while, back at home, I drove upstream against a tide of rush-hour mall shoppers, trying to get downtown before the shops closed for the evening.

Within a few days, the chefs returned to Canada and Chefhusband arrived home with packages of Swiss cookies from a bakery established in 1753.

There was also an edelweiss letter opener, a snazzy pencil set for the writer in the family and the secret to keeping fondue from splitting in the pot.

Turns out it’s the cornstarch and Kirsch, along with a way of whisking that stabilizes and binds the cheese before it can break.

So, while Chefhusband began to grate the cheese, I took out my pencil set, along with a new moleskin notebook (a present to myself) and began to write a few thoughts about Christmas.

Darcie Friesen Hossack is a food columnist and author of Mennonites Don’t Dance, Thistledown Press Sept. 2010, shortlisted for the Commonwealth Prize (first book, Canada and Caribbean) Danuta Gleed Award runner-up. She can be reached by email at onepotatotwopotato@shaw.ca.

Traditional Swiss Fondue

2 oz. Raclette cheese, grated

8 oz. Swiss cheese, grated

8 oz. Gruyere cheese, grated

1 clove garlic

1 cup dry white wine

1 tbs fresh lemon juice

3 tbs. kirsch

1 tbs. cornstarch

Pinch white pepper

Pinch nutmeg

Peel and slice garlic clove in half, then rub pieces into the inside of a medium-large pot. Discard garlic. Add wine and lemon juice and bring to a simmer over medium heat. Reduce to medium-low.

Combine the three cheeses. Add mixture to pot in small amounts, whisking constantly, in a figure-8 pattern, after each addition until cheese is melted. (Note: figure-8 whisking is very important!).

In a small bowl, whisk together kirsch and cornstarch until smooth. Whisk into melted cheese until smooth. Season with white pepper and nutmeg. Transfer to a warm fondue pot and serve immediately with cubes of baguette.

 

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DYER: Iran and the U.S.: Neither blind nor stupid

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“We are not blind and I don’t think we are stupid,” said U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry in response to fierce Israeli criticism after the first round of talks about Iran’s nuclear program last month failed to reach a deal.

Now the deal is done and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is even harsher in his condemnation of Kerry’s handiwork.

“Israel has many friends and allies,”  Netanyahu said.

“But, when they’re mistaken, it’s my duty to speak out . . .

“What was achieved last night [Nov. 24] in Geneva is not a historic agreement. It was a historic mistake.

“Today the world has become a much more dangerous place because the most dangerous regime in the world took a significant step towards obtaining the world’s most dangerous weapon.”

What he meant was the interim agreement implicitly recognizes Iran’s right to enrich uranium for peaceful uses.

However, that right is already enshrined in the Non-Proliferation Treaty, which Iran has signed, and nobody ever thought Iran was really going to renounce it.

What was at issue was whether Iran would enrich its uranium to “weapons grade” — 90 percent pure — and make nuclear bombs.

The “Plan of Action” signed by Iran, the United States, Russia, Britain, France, Germany and the European Union ensures it will not, at least for the next six months.

All uranium enrichment above five per cent is to be halted and Iran’s entire stockpile of 20 per cent enriched material — the potential feedstock for a dash to weapons-grade material — is to be diluted or converted to a form not suitable for further enrichment.

Iran is not to install any more centrifuges (the machines used to enrich material) and large numbers of the existing banks of centrifuges are to be left inoperable.

Even Iran’s stockpile of 3.5 per cent enriched uranium (for use in nuclear power reactors) is to remain the same between now and the end of the six-month period.

And there will be no further work done on the Arak reactor, which might give Iran plutonium and thus a second route to a nuclear bomb.

Iran will also allow more intrusive inspections by International Atomic Energy Agency officials, including daily access to the key enrichment sites at Natanz and Fordow.

All it gets in return is $7 billion worth of relief (about $100 per Iranian) on the sanctions that are crippling its economy.

All main sanctions will stay in place until a final agreement has been signed — if it is — six months from now.

Iran can, therefore, make no further progress toward nuclear weapons while the detailed negotiations continue, if that is actually what Tehran ever had in mind. Yet Israeli officials are talking as if the United States has been both blind and stupid.

Israeli Intelligence Minister Yuval Steinitz said “Israel cannot participate in the international celebration, which is based on Iranian deception and the world’s self-delusion.”

And Naftali Bennett, Israel’s minister of trade and industry, warned: “If, in five years, a nuclear suitcase explodes in New York or Madrid, it will be because of the agreement that was signed this morning.”

This is so far over the top that you wonder whether the speakers even believe it themselves.

Israel has talked itself into this obsession with Iran’s alleged nuclear-weapons project.

Israeli sources have been warning Iran is two years away from a bomb at regular intervals for the past 20 years, but the constant talk about it has also served to draw attention away from Israel’s settlement policy in the Palestinian territories.

Israel’s basic position is that the Iranian regime is entirely composed of evil terrorist fanatics who should never be allowed to have refined uranium of any sort.

The only recourse is, therefore, to tighten the sanctions more and more until Iran’s entire economy and government crumble and a completely different sort of people emerge from somewhere to take over the country.

No deal can be a good deal.

Israel’s leaders are dismayed they can no longer keep their allies and friends pinned in this extreme position, but endlessly quoting the ravings of former Iranian prime minister Mahmoud Ahmedinejad is not enough.

They would have to demonstrate Iran actually intends to attack Israel — and they cannot. So, eventually, their allies just moved without them.

As Israel’s Finance Minister Yair Lapid told Time magazine: “We’ve lost the world’s ear. We have six months, at the end of which we need to be in a situation in which the Americans listen to us the way they used to listen to us in the past.”

But, the game is not over yet.

Israel’s influence in the U.S. Congress is still immense and its congressional allies are already talking about heaping more sanctions on Iran (in order to kill the deal, though they don’t admit that).

U.S. President Barack Obama could veto those new sanctions, of course, but he will find it a lot harder to get Congress to revoke the existing sanctions if the final deal is done six months from now.

That’s why Iran gets so little relief from sanctions now in return for its concessions: Obama needs more time to work on Congress.

But, Israel may still win this tug-of-war.

Gwynne Dyer’s columns appear in publications in 45 countries. His website can be found here.

 

 

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EDITORIAL: Canada Post knows it’s simple: Times continue to change

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It is disappointing to those who continue to use Canada Post to send and receive mail.

However, the Crown corporation’s decision this week to do away with door-to-door delivery in urban areas is anything but a surprise.

Canada Post is only the latest in a long line of institutions caught in the technological revolution that is the Internet.

As publishers of this newspaper, we know better than most the challenges the technology has presented.

However, the Internet is not going anywhere, so we adapt or die — and that includes Canada Post.

While the postal-workers’ union continues to point to the 2012 profit realized by Canada Post, it often neglects to add the fine print found in Canada Post’s 2012 annual report.

Yes, Canada Post’s annual report notes a $127 million profit — but it points out clearly that profit would have been a $25-million loss had reductions in sick leave and post-retirement health benefits not been agreed to in the latest collection agreement with its union.

And, it adds, those reductions were one-time realizations, not recurring.

In fact, the future looks bleak for the venerable institution, with the Conference Board of Canada predicting Canada Post will lose $1 billion each year by 2020.

Even with this week’s dramatic decision, the Conference Board estimates annual losses of about $500 million per year by 2020.

Mail delivery is not a growth industry and the continual decrease in revenue and pieces of mail sent and received highlights that fact.

If this is indeed “an opportunity for the Conservatives to take a leadership role in the extinguishing of union jobs,” as claimed by Kamloops and District Labour Council president Peter Kerek, and if there is indeed money to be made on the existing Canada Post model, surely a private company will step into the breach and realize the profit.

As we do with that long-lost letter from afar, we suspect we will all be waiting in vain for such a company to fill the door-to-door role being vacated by the Crown corporation.

 

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