Safeway's Fresh PORK SALE PORK LOIN ROAST Whole or Half 4.37/ kg Fresh. Pure. Regular or Maple 5.05/ kg CRAGMONT SOFT DRINKS et «G 355 mL tins FOR APlus deposit. GROUND COFFEE Edwards. Regular, Fine or Extra Fine Grind. 300 g. ea ’STEINFELD PICKLES Selected Varieties. 1 Litre jar. Limit 2. Over limit price 1.98 ea. WHY CARRY CASH????? Safeway is proud to introduce a new and convenient meth ing for your groceries You can now take advantage of our Interac* Direct ache stem, with any of our a cords. The procedure is oe sl be simple. Upon tallying up your total, your cashier will scan your card, and you wi eed | to enter your own security code. The amount will the be directly deducted from your account. It's that simple! ELIGIBLE CARDS! No card bearing a credit of charge symbol may be used to make an INTERAC" direct payment transaction, 8SE.; Grown. ) 1. S2/kg. Wednesday, October 21, 1992 @ EMPEROR GRAPES .69 DELICIOUS APPLES 49 PRICES IN EFFECT...OCT./ 1992 |_FRI | Advertised prices in effect at your Castlegar Safeway. Quantity rights reserved. Some items may not be exactly as shown. fom Scale. Medium Size. we —— — sheet manana LC TI NewsFLASH j@WEATHER i4, “ Uj fz4,\ VEY, Unsettled conditions through- out the weekend, with a chance of showers. @ OUR PEOPLE West Kootenay Power's Neil Austin has been off the job for 14 weeks now. Although he may not be hurting as much as some of his co-workers, Austin is angry with people’s “I don’t care” attitude. page 9 @ LOCAL SPORTS Rallying for four third period goals, the Castlegar Rebels won their first road game of the season in Beaver Valley Wednesday, 7-6. But that doesn’t mean coach Garry Sauer is doing cartwheels. page 13 @ WORK PLACE Small Business Week is up- on us. A host of activities have been planned in Castlegar, as local merchants get set to cel- ebrate the entrepreneurial spir- it and take in a few seminars along the way. Farside Norman Letters Our People Crossword Local Sports Work Place Action Ads Wheels '92 CASTLEGAR Saturday October 24, 1992 Sa 75¢ News photo by Jonathan Green City worker Alf Ambrosone was busy at the Lorne Zinio tennis courts early serie repairing a door to the maintenance shed damaged by a pipe bomb. Local RCMP are investigating. Chernoff backs board, regrets report Corinne Jackson NEWS REPORTER The ramifications of a council-endorsed report to the provincial government’s education funding review panel has school trustees and some city councillors concerned. The report given by Coun. Doreen Smecher on Oct. 8 in Cranbrook suggests that school boards should be an elected body with an advisory role , teacher salary bargaining should be a provincial matter, as should the hiring of school super- intendents. “The remarks that were made could be very damaging to the education system,” Evelyn Voykin said. The School District No.9 trustee said that the report’s rec- ommendation of centralized control on education issues is not only dangerous but also could not work. “How would you work this properly and effectively when the provincial government changes every four years,” Voykin said. According to the report, the changes were requested be- cause trustees have their own political agendas, and, because the superintendent is hired by the board, the report states “cthe) must satisfy the political needs of the board if he wish- es to manintain his position.” But Coun.Lawrence Chernoff says that a problem does not exist with the way things work at the school board. And even ifa problem did exist, the report’s recommendations would not be a solution, he said. Speaking to the report’s ideas on superintendent hiring, Chernoff said the process used to hire current superintendent Everette Surgenor “was done well because it had parent in- put. “If the government did the a who says that wouldn't be politically motivated,” he argued. According to Chernoff, Smecher did not give council mem- bers enough time to give any feedback to the report. I - (the report) hours before Doreen left (for Cranbrook),” he said. Both Chernoff and Coun. Bob Pakula said they did not know what the possible repercussions of the report. would be. “There must be some though, otherwise there wouldn’t be the commotion,” Pakula said. “At the time of my reading it there was nothing to under- stand. There was nothing I could say for it, or against it. “T’ve never been to a school board meeting so I don’t know how it functions,” Pakula said. “Until I do hear something to the contrary, I will endorse (the report).” However, now that he has read the brief a few times, Cher- noff said he does not endorse it and will be “a lot more careful” about supporting briefs presented on behalf of council again. “I never want this to happen again.”