web version - West Shore Voice News
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web version - West Shore Voice News
Subscription Alert! S VN As of Sept 5, the colour PDF online version of this weekly Sooke Voice News print edition requires an online subscription. 250-642-7729 $28+GST for 18 weeks subscriptions@sookevoicenews.com Colour print edition $1.50 at Shoppers Drug Mart Sooke Subscribe to view the colour PDF print edition: www.sookevoicenews.com Sooke Voice News The News and views for attentive, inquisitive readers ~ 4 pages this issue Subscriptions: Print, ENews & Online 250.642.7729 www.sookevoicenews.com/subscriptions.htm www.sookevoicenews.com/subscriptions.htm Strike pressure on parents: taking care of BC families? [editorial] .... BC Electoral boundaries up fo r revi sion, with publ ic input .. . BC Legislative Committee seeks public input on youth mental health ... Fire Danger Level down to Moderate if you’re near the ocean .......... What is flotsam & jetsam (pg3)? Create art with it! Beach Art Sept7 ... Sooke, BC W E B V E RAll S those ION No longer just you, your car, and the wilderness SOOKE VOICE NEWS on the Beat 101st Sooke Fall Fair Sat Sept 6 & Sun Sept 7 Sooke Community Hall Vol.4 No.33 This is the COLOUR PRINT EDITION Sooke Voice News Friday, September 5, 2014 v1 2 2 3 3 4 ISSN 1925-2722 Regional & national: @SookeVoiceNews Local: @SVNLocalNews Tweets re-posted live at www.sookevoicenews.com Community newspaper published weekly on Fridays (print & online) by Brookeline Publishing House Inc. empties get turned into cash for cancer-research Photo: Sooke Voice News Photo: DriveBC website A local bottle collection drive to support Tour de Rock (and their Cops for Cancer fundraising) was held all << This is how last week with a truck accepting dothe Hwy 14 nations of bottles and cans outside the www.sookefallfair.ca surveillance Sooke RCMP detachment on Church camera image Road and then on is presented Saturday August online, 30 in the parking updated lot at Sooke Elapproximately ementary. every 15 The truck at minutes. t he det ac hment gleaned $680 in donations, with a Well, now you can smile for the camera! A new traffic surveillance cam- total count at the era on a very tall pole on the south side of Highway 14 (Sooke Road) was reend of Saturday cently installed, viewing the highway looking east from near Suyer Road. Images coming to $2,165, catch traffic travelling both east and west. said coordinator Tour de Rock rider Steve Wright chats with volunteer Dave The monitoring is of course to catch speeders and other traffic offend- MimMacDonald of Bennett at the Aug 30 bottle drive to support Cops for Cancer. ers, but now you can also know if someone is close to being home for dinner! It the Sooke Bottle may also be handy to observe weather conditions or traffic backups before headDepot. ing out for your commute from Sooke to Victoria. Sooke's representative Tour de Rock rider The direct link to the webcam images (which are updated about every 15 this year is former Sooke RCMP Detachment Comminutes, 24/7) is at: http://drivebc.ca/mobile/pub/webcams/id/568.html SVN mander S/Sgt Steve Wright who still lives in Sooke but now works at the West Shore detachment in SookeSooke News NewsLangford. About 15 volunteers were helping out at the Attention Readers: As of Sept 5, the PDF online school parking lot on August 30 for about four hours colour version of this weekly print edition – receiving bottles and cans, packaging them in requires a subscription. 250-642-7729 large bags, and loading the trucks. The day was www.sookevoicenews.com/subscriptions.htm warm and bright. Helping out with the bottles toAs of Sept 5, the PDFday was S/Sgt Wright as well as Sooke Fine Arts BC Teachers Federation: www.bctf.ca Society president Dave Bennett, and Sooke Lecolour version of BC Publiconline School Employers' Assoc: gion manager Paul McTavish. www.bcpsea.bc.ca this weekly print edition An RCMP cruiser with lights flashing at the Mim MacDonald of the Sooke Strike Updates & Refund to Parents from Bottle Depot keeps track of roadside in front of the school attracted the attenrequires a subscription, BC Govt: www.bcparentinfo.ca bottles and cans being tion of bottle donors and others passing by. Sooke School District:: www.sd62.bc.ca loaded into a truck. SOOKE which would be sent Funds raised by the Tour de Rock’s Cops Edward Milne Community School (Gr.9VOICE NEWS on the Beat 12, Sooke): www.emcs.sd62.bc.ca directly to your emailfor Cancer efforts – including of course their pri- To ur de Ro ck rai se d mary effort which is their 1,000 km cycle over 14 $1,175,000. address. 250-642-7729 Breaking News on Twitter: @SookeVoiceNews @SVNLocalNews @VancIsVOICENews days around Vancouver Island – are donated to The 24 riders (21 of Breaking News stories: www.sookevoicenews.com/breakingnews.htm www.sookevoicenews.com/subscriptions.htm the Canadian Cancer Society to help with cancer them RCMP) will be riding research aimed at children with cancer. In 2013, through Sooke on Oct 1. SVN As of September 4, the BC Teachers Federation strike saw your teachers walk To that request subscription: out of classrooms on June 13 was still in effect,subscriptions@sookevoicenews.com despite the BC Government dropping their lockout on August 27 and asking teachers to be back in the class250-642-7729 rooms while negotiations might continue. As time drags on, parents are becoming more entrenched in routines with temporary child care and activity providers. The strike impact affects family schedules and budgets, employers who may be finding employees staying home or altering schedules to deal with child care issues, and many services in the community that have ramped up programs to provide activities for children and some relief for parents. Even the BC Transit system has noticed the pinch, with lower ridership numbers in wha would have been a back-to-school week this past week. The provincial government has invited parents of children under age 13 to register for a $40/child/day supplement, to cover expenses for every day that children are not in the public school system. This has inflamed the BCTF who the same problem for a few short years. The cycle of strike and legislated consay that money should be spent on teachers, not child care. tract has to end.” On Sept 1, Opposition Leader John Horgan urged the premier Apparently the government is communicating with public school adminto directly involve herself in the negotiations, in support of the same request istrators (principals and vice-principals who are left holding the ship in each school made by BC Teachers Federation president Jim Iker last past weekend. On without any office staff or other support staff) about supporting Grade 12 stuSept 3, calling the current education system‘dysfunctional’, Premier Christy Clark dents in particular, so that their final year of high school toward post-secondary addressed the media and suggested that BCTF “get past these wage issues”. is not jeopardized by the teachers strike. “We want to be talking about class composition at the table. That’s the single BC Education Minister Peter Fassbender in email on Aug 31 said: “It most important issue for me as the premier,” said Premier Clark, adding: “This would be irresponsible to legislate teachers back to work; we would be shelving should be settled at the bargaining table... I don’t believe this is insoluble. I COPY-FAX-SPIRAL BIND 250-642-7729 believe we can get there.” On Sept 5, BCTF President Jim Iker said teachers Mon-Fri 1904 Maple Ave. S. Twitter: @maplelinebiz would go for binding arbitration, if the government agrees; teachers need to get back to work for financial reasons and want children back in classrooms. SVN Ah, the peaceful delight of a few minutes of road travel ‘in the middle of nowhere’ between Sooke and Langford... that 2-lane stretch that feels open and free. Photo: Sooke Voice News WEB VERSION VoiceVoice BC education labour dispute drags on WEB VERSION WEB VERSION WEB VERSION Page 2 of 4 ::: Sooke lens on BC & NATIONAL NEWS ON TWITTER: @SookeVoiceNews Breaking news at: www.sookevoicenews.com Friday, September 5, 2014 ::: SOOKE VOICE NEWS EDITORIAL Strike pressure on parents: is this really the way to take care of BC families? SVN editorials aim to explore broader issues of concern to the local community, economy and society as a whole. The whole idea of a labour strike is to ately focussed on their children to become bring pressure to bear on the party deemed actively political. In sheer numbers, there just to be doing the oppressing. aren’t enough parents of school-age children In the case of the BC Teachers Fed- to beat the drums loudly enough – gone are eration strike, their leadership (initially with the days of baby-boomer flareups that would a 87%+ strike mandate of their member get things promptly changed. teachers) has a bone or two to pick with the Families are expecting – and need – BC Government – as we all well know from elected leaders and the teachers (who say repetitive BCTF talking points about wages, they care about children, and they are beclass size & composition, and adequate lieved) to now demonstrate some leadership funding for specialist teachers. and get back to the bargaining table with some In response, the BC Government workable ideas and a willingness to co-crepushed back with a lockout (resulting in re- ate. duced pay to teachers – lifted as of Aug 27 Both sides to the argument have valid if teachers suspend their strike) and a re- points. Teachers want a wage hike, and they fusal to relax their policy of expecting all la- clearly care about the conditions in classrooms bour unions in the province to accept the which they interpret as resolvable with more same level of wage increase. On top of that, money for the existing setup. The provincial funds are now earmarked for a payout to government (the teachers’ employer) wants families, to the tune of $40/day/child (up to to maintain what they call fiscal stability, though & including age 12). one can question where they spend and save The strike has been in full force their dollars (getting into issues of privatizasince June 13 (with a numbing lull during tion would be a start). They only briefly this Sooke News July and August where virtually no progress week touched on a hint of wanting a system was made). Dirty little truth ... almost every- much different than the one we’ve known in one was probably appreciating the summer BC for 30 years. downtime as a de-stressing period. Teachers seem to want to fix the curBut parents are no longer just rent system in which an increasing number of As of needs Sept 5, the PDF ‘caught in the middle’. It’s becomeBC painfully Teachers Federation: www.bctf.ca special students are overloading the BC Public School Employers' Assoc: apparent that the current standoff is to pres-online available time of well-intentioned colour version ofteachers and www.bcpsea.bc.ca sure parents, so that parents will eventually putting ‘typical kids’ as Premier Christy Clark this printfor edition Strike Updates &weekly Refund to Parents feel squeezed enough to speak out in procalls them, at a deficit from time with their teachBC Govt: www.bcparentinfo.ca test (which we saw with a moderately largerequires a subscription, ers. Sooke School District:: www.sd62.bc.ca protest on the front lawn of the BCEdward LegislaTo would give some credit Milne Community School (Gr.9which be sentwhere due, the ture on what would have been the first day BC Government seems 12, Sooke): www.emcs.sd62.bc.cato have a vision that directly to your email of public school classes for 2014-2015. they’re not quite ready to widely articulate. Do Parents may not have been the di- address. they feel they must first play hardball with the 250-642-7729 rect target of this strike from the very begin- teachers union? Why use a hammer when www.sookevoicenews.com/subscriptions.htm ning, but they are now. But most parents are honey would be the sweeter pill? too overworked, over-stressed and appropri- To request subscription: If theyour government has some ideas subscriptions@sookevoicenews.com More news stories online: 250-642-7729 for a 21st century educational system in BC that could be the envy of the global community, then let those ideas loose! Any new vision really should be now put out to the public, rather than be held back for the negotiating table where warring viewpoints have become entrenched. Getting parents on side with something fresh would be a smart political move, and would be the only conscientious way to further involve parents in this labour dispute. Both sides are obviously hoping that pressure will mount on parents. It’s all about politics, and when the squeeze becomes too great, the squeezed will usually squawk. But parents and are in a sense disabled by their onerous load in a post-recession economy, are not demo graphi ca lly co pi ous enough i n number, and are therefore not the appropriate chalkboard for this script. The job of moving education forward in BC falls to the bargaining table (as Premier Clark said to media, Sept 3) and the work of skillful mediator/negotiators. And a topic more fully for another day – is why no one is yet broadly questioning why there are so many special needs children. Could it have to do with chemicals in our environment (not just in their own diets but even prenatally), abundant electro-magnetic frequencies, and/or visual/social distraction overload? Kudos to sustainability consultant Guy Dauncey who bravely broached this subject “The BC Teachers Strike Toxic Teachers, Toxic Government, or Toxic Chemicals?” in his EcoNews e-newsletter this week. If special needs children need additional help, would they not be better supported in a customized environment where they are the center of their teacher’s world (some school programs of this nature have been operating for years in Ottawa, for example), and allow ‘typical’ and bright kids to flourish in a creatively inspiring classroom environment? This is not discrimination or intolerance, it’s a practical, logical and practical way to provide quality learning to every student at a level and intensity that each deserves. Bright students in particular have been failed by the BC education system in the past 12 years; some teachers have been heard to say that the ‘bright kids manage anyhow’ which is of course folly WEB VERSION Voice MUNICIPAL http://www.sookevoicenews.com/SOOKE-LOCALbreakingnews.htm On September 5, Maja Tait officially announced her candidacy for mayor of Sooke, saying she sees “a bright future for Sooke”. “We’re a young, diverse municipality with a rich heritage and incredible potential,” she said in a news release. She claims pride in her role with the new Hope Centre, bike skills park, and recently-adopted Town Centre Illustrative Design Handbook. SVN WEB VERSION REGIONAL & BC More news stories online: www.sookevoicenews.com/breakingnews.htm BC Electoral boundaries up for revision The independent and non-partisan BC Electoral Boundaries Commission is seeking public input on the on the area and boundaries of provincial electoral districts. Any person may make a submission to the commission before 11:59 pm on Sunday, November 16, 2014, by: online submission form at www.bc-ebc.ca/speak or by email to info@bc-ebc.ca or in person at a public hearing (pre-registration is not required) which on Vancouver Island and the Sunshine Coast will be held Nov 3 to 7.There will be an opportunity to provide public input following the publication of the commission’s Preliminary Report (in spring 2015). View the public input as it is received at www.bc-ebc.ca/ inputReceived . More information, including maps of the current electoral area boundaries, is available online at www.bc-ebc.ca . SVN WEB VERSION Sooke Voice News WEB VERSION Teachers on picket line at EMCS Sept 3. The Sooke Voice News Published by Brookeline Publishing House Inc., Sooke, BC, Canada Mailing: PO Box851,Sooke, BC, Canada V9Z 1H8 Phone: 250-642-7729 Fax: 250-642-7785 | Text: 250-217-5821 Email:news@sookevoicenews.com advertising@sookevoicenews.com letters@sookevoicenews.com subscriptions@sookevoicenews.com Web: www.sookevoicenews.com Twitter: @SookeVoiceNews (regional / national); @SVNLocalNews (Sooke local); @VancIsVoiceNews (island/BC) Publisher, Editor, Writer, Layout, & Ad Sales: Mary P. Brooke, B.Sc., Cert PR Contributors this issue: Dr Crystal Hadikin, CJ Homer, Chad Levesque, Elida Peers. Contributions welcom e from the full c om m unity. Webserver: Les Oberg. Printing: MapleLine Business Centre. Deliveries: Bulkdrop to various coffee shops, hotels, banks, co mm un ity area s; to so me res id en ti al a ddresses, som e weekends. Readership: Base of 3,500 print & online; includes print deliverydirect to selected businesses weekly. Retail: Colour print edition $1.50 at Shoppers Drug Mart (Sooke). Online: PDF colour version at www.sookevoicenews.com PDF subscription: $28+GST for 18 weeks by email. Print subscription weekly by 1st class postal mail: $33+GST for 18 issues in greyscale or 10 in colour. National Library Registration: ISSN 1925-2722 RIGHT of REFUSAL: While we make every effort to maintain accuracy, sometimes oversights, errors or omissions occur. Corrections will be published as required. We reserve the right to not publish material or contributions (letters, ads or otherwise) that are unsuitable for a general audience or possibly libelous or slanderous, or which maybe deleterious to the best interest of the Publisher. Letters may be edited for brevity. Current edition (PDF), archives, breaking news: www.sookevoicenews.com Copy deadline: 5 pm Mon. Ad deadline: 5 pm Wed. advertising@sookevoicenews.com (that’s like operating a power boat without a rudder). The brightest youth in some ways need the most skillful guidance and leadership, otherwise their intellect can go under-utilized or even astray, which is a loss for both the individual and for society. The political process in a democracy exists to help support ‘bloodless revolution’; it’s deemed acceptable in our society to seek the political support of individuals and groups toward a justifiable end goal. But in the case of this education dispute of 2014, government and the teachers union may wish to spare parents the agony of the political trench, and now start leading with fewer games, greater vision, and faster action. MPB Health minister applauds health-care professionals on accident response Opinion-Editorial: by BC Health Minister Terry Lake Last Thursday afternoon [Aug 28 2014], British Columbia's health-care professionals, and the overall health-care system, showed world-class skills, co-ordination, professionalism and compassion after a terrible accident on the Coquihalla Highway. The men and women of our health-care system worked exceptionally hard to provide life-saving services for those injured in the crash. From all accounts, the speed and skill of those who responded and provided ongoing care has certainly saved lives. A bus full of tourists enjoying BC's mountains flipped over, injurHelp Save the Lighthouse ing all 56 people on Please join us for the SPLHPS b o a r d . Annual General Meeting. S e v e n Sunday, Sept 14 p e o p l e at 2 pm were critically inSooke Region Museum Community Room j u r e d , while six Please visit had seriwww.sheringhamlighthouse.org ous injuto contribute and join. ries. Within minutes of the crash, health professionals who happened to be on the Coquihalla, including two emergency doctors, were at the scene. Ordinary British Columbians rushed out of their cars too, to help in any way they could. BC Emergency Health Services dispatched the first ambulance to the scene within minutes; in the end 19 ambulances and six air ambulances arrived at the crash, whisking people to the help they needed as quickly as possible. Local fire departments also sent first responders to support paramedics in their work. Meanwhile, six hospitals throughout southern BC, from Merritt to Kelowna and Kamloops, and all the way to New Westminster, sprung into action to receive the injured. Three hospitals, including those in Kelowna and Kamloops, declared a Code Orange, which prepares a hospital to receive mass casualties. The most seriously injured arrived in Royal Inland Hospital in Kamloops, Kelowna General Hospital, and Royal Columbian Hospital in New Westminster via air ambulance, where emergency doctors, nurses, surgeons and other health professionals were ready, with about eight operating rooms prepared for immediate surgery. Other bus passengers arrived at hospitals throughout the afternoon and evening, including the eight-bed Nicola Valley Hospital in Merritt, to receive quick and efficient care. The level of co-ordination throughout the system during this event was astonishing. BC Emergency Health Services and hospitals worked closely to make sure patients received excellent care. Even while treating this many casualties, not a single scheduled surgery was cancelled that day at any of the hospitals involved. The health professionals also were deeply aware of meeting the social and emotional needs of the patients. Many of the passengers on the bus spoke Chinese dialects; hospitals made sure translators were available to explain procedures and answer questions. Hospital staff helped reconnect family members and update them on how their loved ones were doing, and where they could be found. Today, many of the passengers have been released from hospital; those 30 or so still admitted continue to receive world-class care. They are in my thoughts daily, and I sincerely hope they all have a full recovery. As Minister of Health, and a British Columbian, I want to thank all the health professionals, first responders and citizens who responded to this terrible accident and its aftermath. We are all very proud of your efforts. WEB VERSION WEB VERSION West Coast Lifestyle www.sookevoicenews.com ::: Page 3 of 4 LOCAL NEWS ON TWITTER: @SVNLocalNews LOCAL NEWS Sooke, BC BC invites public input on youth mental health Submissions due Sept.19 by Mary P. Brooke, B.Sc. Daily news updates - LOCAL: www.sookevoicenews.com/SOOKE-LOCALbreakingnews.htm Principals are at the high school Photo: Sooke Voice News SOOKE VOICE NEWS ::: Friday,September 5, 2014 Get your SVN print subscription by mail or direct delivery. Across Canada in the past few years, there has been a continuing and broadCOLOUR PRINT EDITION: $33+GST ening discussion about youth and mental wellness, from forms of anxiety to the for 10 weeks by postal mail or in-town delivery extreme of suicide resulting from bullying. GREYSCALE PRINT EDITION: $33+GST for 18 weeks by postal mail or delivery Counselling to provide strategies for coping with stress is available, if not increasingly prevalent. In more extreme cases, some doctors will take the step All print subscriptions include a link to the online colour PDF edition and other enews. to prescribe medications (at times without parental knowledge or consent, if the teen is 16 or older). Sooke News Natural approaches to handling stress include the tried and true ‘eat well, Sc h o o l e n t r y : no students or Subscriptions: sleep well, and get exercise’, which is important for the W es t Shore Fami ly teachers are at EMCS this week. Print, ENews & Online Naturopathic Ltd clinic that is operated by two ND practitioners – Dr Janine Fraser 250.642.7729 "All students have schedules, and Dr Crystal Hadikin. But they go deeper, too: so we are ready enough to start www.sookevoicenews.com/subscriptions.htm “I’ve been researching specifically about neurotransmitter health and we’ve as soon as we get the word," been running genetic tests on some of our patients,” says Dr Hadikin. There is a said local Edward Milne Comrelatively new science called ‘nutrigenomics’ that is investigating genetic mutamuni ty Schoo l se co ndary tions and nutrition. The biggest issues that this naturopathic physician sees with s choo l Princi pa l Pa t genetics and mental health are: Swinburnson one afternoon this 1. Methylation – someone can have the defect in this gene and it affects week. Though he says that "the levels of certain B vitamins and SAMe (made in the body from a reaction beschool is not in its usual state of tween methionine, which is an essential amino acid, and adenosine triphosphate, readiness for the start of the a molecule that carries energy) which are known to have impacts on mood. Or school year" due to the teachsomeone can have poor nutrition, not necessarily the gene, and it will mimic this ers strike as no office or supcondition. This is more simple to treat than a neurotransmitter issue. port staff re on site -- just he and 2. Neurotransmitter issue. This is more difficult to assess and treat as his vice-principals. there is not a lot of good testing for neurotransmitters although running some "Principals are in the preliminary genetic work can let us know if there is predisposition for certain building each weekday, so if neurotransmitters to not be processed or broken down properly. This is where parents or students have quesmedications such as SSRI’s (selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors) can be tions or concerns, they are more useful, if we know it is a serotonin issue, but it may not be and medications (as than welcome to contact us," Mr well as nutrient therapies) can have side effects. Swinburnson said. “Parents can The world-renowned Mayo Clinic says the side effects of SSRIs may inSooke News reach us by phone or email, or clude nausea, nervousness and agitation, reduced sexual desire, dizziness, drowHISTORY they may come to the school if siness, insomnia, weight gain/loss, headache, dry mouth, vomiting and diarrhea. on Display they are okay about possibly An article in Macleans Magazine earlier this year gave evidence to conhaving to cross a picket line,” clude that prescribing mood-altering SSRI’s to youth may end up proven to be he said. one of the latest ‘fads’ in psychology, once new approaches are found to dealing "He re 's hoping fo r a with anxiety that is – in many cases – precipitated by the pressures of a complex speedy resolution," he added. society and can be addressed by more natural means. It’s easy to of wantSept a quick5, the PDF As The hi gh s choo l’ s fix to issues that require more attention to detail and application of common online colour version of website www.emcs.sd62.bc.ca sense and critical inquiry. has school information and the thisbutweekly edition Of course there is a proper use for intelligent counselling, if there isprint a office phone number is 250neurochemical problem it may not be enough. “Mental health is about correct requires a subscription, 642-5211. SVN diagnosis, and health maintenance which is why prevention through proper diet, which would be sent exercise and counselling is important,” says Dr Hadikin. Meanwhile, this summer there has been a call for submissions on youth directly to your email mental health in BC. At first the deadline was July 25, but that was extended to address. 250-642-7729 September 19, as mentioned by SD62 School Board Trustee Denise Riley at the Various raffles have been organThe mammoth undertaking of constructboard’s August 26 meeting. She provided information www.sookevoicenews.com/subscriptions.htm about the BC Governized at St Rose of Lima Catholic ing a water pipe flowline to carry water from ment’s Select Standing Committee on Children and Youth undertaking a special Church, with some great prizes. Toaccepting request your Sooke Lake to supply Victoria (1911-1915) project examining youth mental health in BC. The committee is writ-subscription: Some raffles took place over the was one of the most remarkable feats of ten submissions from stakeholders and citizens thatsubscriptions@sookevoicenews.com address the following summer, with jmore coming up this engineering on Vancouver Island. Adetailed questions: * What are the main challenges around youth mental health250-642-7729 in BC? fall, right up to December. display in pictures and artifacts by Elida * Are there current gaps in service delivery? * What are best practices for treatRight now for $2 you can purPeers and volunteers continues daily 10aming and preventing youth mental health issues? * How should resources be tarchase a raffle ticket to win a custom4pm at the Charters River Salmon Interpregeted in the future? made quilt with a landscape motif tive Centre at 2895 Sooke River Rd to The goal of the study is to find ways to better meet the needs of youth with (draw date Sept.28). The quilt is on Sept.28; co-sponsored by Sooke Region mental health challenges. They especially want to hear from families and display in the church entry. SVN Museum. Info 250-642-6351 or 250-642-4200. SVN individuals and to receive suggestions for improving the current system. The committee has released a reading list https://www.leg.bc.ca/cmt/ cay/docs/ReadingList-YouthMentalHealth-9June2014.pdf containing learnINFRASTRUCTURE ing resources and additional information on youth mental health. Visit https://www.leg.bc.ca/cmt/cay/submission.asp for more information and to make a submission. Full name and current contact information are required. Submissions may also be sent by fax to 250-356-8172 or by postal mail to: Select Standing Committee on Children and Youth, Room 224, Parliament Buildings, Victoria, BC V8V 1X4. The deadline for submissions is Friday, September 19, 2014. SVN Voice WEB VERSION Voice Photo: courtesy of Charters River Salmon Interpretive Centre Water pipeline exhibit runs to Sept 28 WEB VERSION Raising funds at St Rose of Lima Photo: Sooke Voice News WEB VERSION West Coast Natural Foods Open daily 5-6716 West Coast Rd EVE Superior Women's Multi 90 tablets $26.50 With Cranberry, Alpha Lipoic Acid & CoQ10 Plus Superfruits Pomegranate, Acai & Mangosteen GMP Quality Assured Improved Formula Dietary Supplement Vegetarian/Vegan Drop in to learn more! 250.642.4011 @VancIsVOICENews Tweet of the Week (Sept.2): "Serious #journalists are one of the mainstays of a free society." ~ Marianne Williamson @marwilliamson #socialchange #bcpoli #journalism This weekend: Moderate fire danger level As of Sept 4, the Fire Danger Level in Sooke was Moderate in areas close to the ocean but still High in areas farther from the water, says Soo ke Fi re Chi ef St eve Sorensen. The campfire ban has been lifted. SVN WEB VERSION Progress continues toward the completion of Waddams Way (connector road between Church Road and Otter Point Road). Directional lines have been painted on the fresh pavement (photo: August 30). SVN Salty talk: flotsam & jetsam Flotsam and jetsam are terms that describe marine debris associated with vessels. Flotsam is debris in the water that was not deliberately thrown overboard, often as a result from a shipwreck or accident. Jetsam describes debris that was deliberately thrown overboard by a crew of a ship in distress, most often to lighten the ship's load. The word flotsam derives from the French word floter, to float. Jetsam is a shortened word for jettison. Source: National Ocean Service (USA) SVN AK Cathy’s Corner Cafe Try our homemade hashbrowns! Catering for local events 250-642-1460 6697 Sooke Rd At Otter Point (Murray) Rd All-Day Breakfast Starting at $7.95 6 am to 4 pm Open 7 days a week WEB VERSION EVENTS: www.sookevoicenews.com/Sooke-area-events.htm Page 4 of 4 ::: www.sookevoicenews.com WHAT’S GOING ON Grand Opening at Mel O Hair Salon. Fri.Sept.5. 2-6631 Sooke Rd. Back to School Pool Party. Fri.Sept.5. All ages.7-9pm. www.seaparc.ca Soo ke C ountry M arke t. Sat. Sept.6, 10am-2pm, on Saturdays til Oct. Eustace Rd at Otter Pt Rd. 101st annual Sooke Fall Fair. Sat.Sept.6: includes BC Fruit Testers (bring garden/farm fruit for identification) 1:302:30pm, hay rides 2-4pm, ice cream demo 2:30-3:30pm, sheep shearing demo 3pm, Daisy the Cow 3:30-4:30pm. Sun. Sept. 7: See event catalog: www.sookefallfair.ca Friday, September 5, 2014 ::: SOOKE SVN VOICE NEWS www.prepareyourself.ca ART EXHIBITS / FAIRS Sooke Harbour House: Everyday... walk through the halls... art for sale, 1528 Whiffin Spit Rd, Sooke Water Pipeline Exhibit. Daily 10-4, to Sept.28. Charters River Interpretive Centre, 2895 Sooke River Rd. $3 Week 19 Tip: Add items like toilet paper, handiwipes, soap, toothbrush, toothpaste, comb, sanitary supplies, etc to your emergency kit. Twitter: #26weeks #emergencypreparedness Food ArtApple Fest, SunSept 28. Sunriver Community Garden. 1-5pm. Art exhibit, food for sale. Pie auction. By donation. Sooke Food CHI & Sooke Community Arts Council. As of Sept 5, the PDF Nomination packages for 2014 Local Government Election available online colour version of at District of Sooke municipal office (since this weekly printRd. edition Aug.22), 2205 OtterPoint Completed nomination documents accepted from requires a subscription, 9am on Tues. Sept 30 to 4pm Fri Oct 10. which Municipal would & Trustee be sent Candidates Discount Ad Package Deadline ~ Sooke directly to your email Voice News. Book 5 ads by Sept.30 (in these print editions: Oct.24 & 31, Nov.7, address. 250-642-7729 14, 21) to get discount. 250-642-7729 Followus on Twitter: @jdfemerg Taste of SEAPARC. Continues Fri Sept.5 through Mon Sept 8. Free programs. Register. 250-642-8000 Beach Art. Sun. Sept.7. Create art from flotsam & jetsam (marine debris) from the beach. 12-3pm. Whiffin Spit. Prizes! www.sookecommunityarts.com Kemp Lake Music Cafe. Sun. Sept.7, Open mic 2-5 pm, 7875 W Coast Rd (5 min west of Sooke). 250-642-7875 District of Sooke meetings: Committee of the Whole 6 pm, Regular Council 7 pm. Mon.Sept.8. In Council chambers. View online: www.sooke.ca West Coast Grill “Locals Night”. Wed. Sept.10 at the Prestige Hotel. Buy 1 entree, get 2nd one half price. Kids menu for $5. Drink specials $5 (wine,draft beer, highballs, caesar). 778-425-0888 Sooke Voice News Free event postings courtesy as space permits. PRIORITY TO ADVERTISERS Hoc key Day in S ooke . Sat. Sept.13. Victoria Grizzlies host Cowichan Valley Capitals (final exhibition game). Cosponsored by Sooke Rotary & Sooke Minor Hockey. BBQ 2pm, game 4pm at SEAPARC. Tx at SEAPARC or 250-6428000: reserve $12, regular $10, youth $5. Sheringham Point Lighthouse Preservation Society AGM. Sun Sept 14 at Sooke Region Museum, 2070 Phillips Rd, 2pm. www.sheringhamlighthouse.org Pro-D Day in SD62 (if teachers strike is over). Mon Sept 15. www.sookevoicenews.com/subscriptions.htm advertising@sookevoicenews.com Golf Tournament. Thurs. Sept.18. Sooke Region Chamber of Commerce. To request subscription: SOOKEyour BUSINESSES & Canadian Blood Services clinic. subscriptions@sookevoicenews.com ORGANIZATIONS! Get your local marketing250-642-7729 lined up for the fall season! Wed. Sept 24 [10-3] & Thurs Sept 25 Print in SOOKE VOICE NEWS & online on [12:30-5:30pm]. Holy Trinity, 1962 Murray our high-traffic website! 250-642-7729 Rd. Appointments: 1-888-236-6283 Sooke Fall Fair: Year 101 Now in its 101st year, the Sooke Fall Fair is a co mmunity event that gives people an opportunity to congregate in the spirit of the "Rural Fair" philosophy: • Pri de in lo ca l natural resources • Pride and focus on individual and family endeavours • The integration of young and elderly, able and disabled, participator and spectator. • The s pi rit o f volunteerism in which our c ommuni ty has long prided itself. This year’s fair is on the weekend of September 6 and 7. On the Saturday, the event lineup includes a sheep-shearing demo, ice cream making demo (and tasting!), and fruit identification. See www.sookefallfair.ca This year’s Sooke Fall Fair president is Ellen Treasures for every occasion Giftware Jewelry Plants Flowers A Sea of Bloom 2052 Otter Point Road Open Daily! 250-642-3952 Ask a Doctor of Optometry on Facebook GRAND OPENING! Friday, September 5 Dr. Joslin, Dr. Morin & Associates: Doctors of Optometry Photo: Sooke Voice News Sooke Fall Fair display at Peoples Drug Mart in Sooke this week. WEB VERSION Lewers who is excited about the range of activities including large animals including cows, pony cart rides, hay-tractor rides, chicken bingo, pie eating contest, butter turning, and the fair auction. SVN Hair Salon Lots of parking ! #2-6631 Sooke Road Providing comprehensive eye health and optical services to the growing community of Sooke for over 20 years. #5-6726 West Coast Rd Phone: 250-642-4311 Email:sookeod@shaw.ca www.sookeoptometrists.ca Drop in for cake and to see our spacious bright new salon! New hair salon in town centre Upcoming Public Meetings Drop in or call ahead. Cut, colour, perm, feathers 778-350-6356 & more! melohairsalon@gmail.com The grand opening of Mel O Hair Salon on Friday, September 5 will be only the beginning of success for the bright, spacious town centre salon, if owner Melissa Robinson can take good advantage of her high-profile location. She has the corner spot at 6631 Sooke Road, right across the street from Home Hardware. Customers of all ages are welcome at the new salon for cut, colour and perm as well as fun things like hair feathers. At the grand opening there will be free cake! Everyone welcome. SVN Sat Sept 13 Photo: Sooke Voice News SEAPARC Arena Stylist and salon owner Melissa Robinson enjoys her work in her bright new salon! >> 4pm Victoria Grizzlies vs Cowichan Capitals Sponsored bySooke Minor Hockey and Sooke Rotary All Benefits to Sooke Youth BBQ & Tailgate Party 1 pm Adults $12 / $10 Youth (age 3-12) $5 Kids (2 & under) free Committee of the Whole Public Information Meeting – Subdivision and Development Standards Bylaw Monday, September 8, 2014 at 6:00 pm Tickets at SEAPARC 250-642-8000 Regular Council Meeting Monday, September 8, 2014 at 7:00 pm Mayor’s Public Advisory Panel meetings ~ Prestige Resort Meeting Room ~ Economic Development 3rd Thursday of each month at 7pm Arts and Beautification 4th Thursday of each month at 7 pm Schedule subject to change. Call 250-642-1634 to confirm meetings. Agendas: www.sooke.ca In the Prestige Oceanfront Resort, 6929 West Coast Rd, Sooke Join us on Wednesdays! Order 1 entree, get 2nd one half-price $5 for house white/red, single Caesars, single house high balls, & islander draft Kids dinner $5 (special menu) LOCAL WEDNESDAY 778-425-0888 New convention Sooke Voice News & sales manager at the Prestige As of Sept 5,to view Time to jump on board! the colour PDF online version of this weekly print edition you will need a subscription: w w w. s o o k e v o i c e n e w s . c o m / subscriptions.htm | 250-642-7729 PDF subscription includes midweek “In the Know” email bulletins. $28+GST for 18 weeks A recent change of staff at the Best Western Premier Prestige Oceanfront Resort and Convention Center sees Nicky Warner now as Convention and Sales Manager, filling the shoes of Krista Clarke who had held the position since the hotel opened in 2011. Clarke has moved on to a government job. SVN New to Sooke? New mom? Bride to be? Sooke: 250-642-2268 www.sookeyoga.com Now at 6750 West Coast Rd We’ve moved! Workshops & classes WEB VERSION Now Opening Sept 8 Tel: 250.642.9642