Letters

Letter to Interior Health from Castlegar resident

Letter to Interior Health from Castlegar resident

 Hello. I am hoping you will extend enough respect to me to actually read and respond to this email.
 

 

I am very disappointed in your decision to move the ultrasound machine from Castlegar to Trail. I don’t think you realize the inconvenience this will cause for the citizens of Castlegar and area. I had an ultrasound in June of this year and I was able to book it during my lunch hour. My appointment was at 12:10 p.m. and I was in and back to work by 12:30 p.m.

Doc decries loss of Castlegar ultrasound

Doc decries loss of Castlegar ultrasound

The Castlegar and District Hospital Foundation purchased an ultrasound unit for the Castlegar & District Hospital in 1997. Money was raised by the Castlegar community during the “Light Up” campaign. This unit was replaced by a new ultrasound machine in about 2005. It was noted that 60 per cent of the cost was funded by I.H. and 40 per cent by the Regional Hospital District.


 

The CDH Foundation was informed on Oct. 4 that the I.H.A.

Mir Lecture explores foundation for peace with David Cory

Mir Lecture explores foundation for peace with David Cory

Selkirk College’s Mir Centre for Peace Lecture Series invites you to explore the foundation for peace on the planet with Vancouver-based Emotional Intelligence Specialist David Cory.

As a specialist in the Emotional Intelligence field for the past 12 years, David Cory will share stories and review humankind’s ability to evaluate, manage and control emotions which are related to forming the foundation for peace in our world.

Kootenay/Boundary not the only locale for nutty wildlife stories: Drunken man surprised crocodile bit him

Kootenay/Boundary not the  only locale for nutty wildlife stories:  Drunken man surprised crocodile bit him

A 36 year-old man is recovering from surgery after his leg was seriously injured as a result of a bite from a five metre long crocodile named 'Fatso.' Michal Newman, who was intoxicated, climbed into its pen, claiming he wanted to play with it.

POLICE: RCMP request assistance in locating missing person

POLICE: RCMP request assistance in locating missing person

A backpack on a picnic table is all the RCMP have to go on in locating 24-year-old Australian Owen Kiernan Rooney. Rooney was last seen at the Boundary Hospital at 7649 - 22 St. in Grand Forks on  Aug. 14 at about 8 p.m.

Rooney left the hospital, leaving behind his backpack on a picnic table on the west side of the building. Rooney currently resides in Kelowna, B.C. and may have been heading in that direction.

Shambhala 2010 sees almost double the arrests/charges compared to 2009

Shambhala 2010 sees almost double the arrests/charges compared to 2009

 Photo courtesy the Kootenay Boundary Regional RCMP: Const. Derek Hall displays some of the drugs seized at this year's Shambhala Music Rave.

Almost twice as many people were arrested and charged last weekend as there were in 2009 as they came to, or left from, the Shambhala Music Rave event.
“Charges are being pursued against 27 people (as compared to 14 in 2009).

STATEMENT: John Fulton's family responds to verdict in Noyes trial

John Fulton
Open Letter:
 
To begin, our family would like to thank the community of Grand Forks, Constable Bell and our Victim Service Worker Catherine Riddle for their overwhelming support and kindness. Words cannot express the loss our family has suffered, nor the horror of having to do it in such a public way.
 
We have heard repeatedly that the mental health system has let Ms. Noyes down.

LETTER: Allegations of police abuse at G20

See video

Dear editor,

My name is Lesley Tarasoff and I grew up in the Slocan Valley, BC but now I live in Toronto, ON. This weekend, as you are aware, the G8 and G20 summits took place in Huntsville and Toronto. I am sure you saw the mainstream media's interpretation of the summits and what was happening on the streets. However, a lot was not reported and needs to be made public.

LETTER: The human touch still has value

LETTER: The human touch still has value

Dear editor:

By now, most of us who shop at Safeway have been exposed to the self checkout aisle, whether by choice or with the helpful assistance of one of the staff. Not wanting to assist in the downsizing of the human element I have chosen not to be “trained ”on this cold impersonal device !

I quite enjoy the warm friendly interaction with “real live people”, people who smile and ask “how is your day going” and how was your weekend , vacation,  or did you see the hockey game last night?

LETTER: We cannot let this issue die

LETTER: We cannot let this issue die

Dear editor,

Death is not an option.  It is an experience each of us will face one day.  How we, or our loved ones, are cared for during that experience has taken a significant turn for the worse as local administrators once again reduce service levels while trying to convince us that adequate care is still available. Nurses and physicians in both hospital and home care settings will continue to give care to the dying as they can while caring for many other clients at the same time, but they will have to do that without support from a hospice palliative care coordinator.

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