ag Castlegar News | September 1, 1990 “D-sar-D DINING LOUNGE CELGAR, WESTAR & COMINCO MEAL VOUCHERS ACCEPTED Located | Mil Weight Sca! — LICENCED DINING ROOM South of Ootischenio TENANTS gf... INSURANCE * a "Never Renta Home AMES mn CASTLEGAR SAVINGS INSURANCE AGENCIES For All Your inswrance Needs! . EGAR SLOCAN PARK 601-18th $4,, 365-7232 Hwy. 6, 226-7212 365-3368 Insurance 226-7216 COMMUNITY Bulletin Board ‘WELCOME TO SUNDAY SCHOOL Meet your friends at the Kinnaird Church of God, Sunday morning at 9:45, September 9. Classes for Tiny Tots through Adults at 2400 Columbia Avenue, Castlegar with a skilled friendly statf of teachers ss 2/70 CASTLEGAR SENIOR CITIZENS Business meeting, Thursday, September 6, 2 p.m. 2/70 CASTLEGAR AQUANAUTS BINGO Saturday, September 8 at Castlegar Arena Complex. Early Bird 6 p.m Regular 7 p.m. $1,000 Jackpot; $500 Mini-pot; $500 Bonanza. See you there! 2/70 ST. DAVID'S THRIFT SHOP Bag Sale, August 28 to September 7. 2/69 Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit organizations may be listed here. The first 15 words are $5 ond additional words ore 25¢ each. Bold taced words (which must be used for headings) count as two words. There is no ex tro charge for a second insertion while the third consecutive insertion is half price ond the fourth and fifth consecutive insertions are only hal price for the fwo of them. Minimum chorge is $5 (whether ad is for one, two or three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m. Thursdays tor Sundays paper and 5 p.m. Mon days for Wednesdays paper. Nojices should be brought to the Castlegar News ot 197 Columbia Ave COMMUNITY Bulletin Board Pour Yourself into an Exciting Job with A PROFESSIONAL BARTENDING CERTIFICATE FROM SELKIRK COLLEGE Covering all aspects of frontline bartending, this 60 hour, 10 day course awards a certificate upon completion. DATE: Sept. 17-28, 8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. LOCATION: Nelson Campus, Selkirk College FEE: $90 For further information, register call 352-6601 Kia NELSON CAMPUS leO~e 2001 Silver King Rd., Nelson, B.C. VIL IC8 352-6601 By ED MILLS Staff Writer Call out the welcome wagon, the Castlegar Industrial Park is about to get a pair of new residen- ts. Welders and West Kootenay Carpets are the latest businesses who will call the park home. They join perhaps the park's highest profile establishment, United Buy and Sell Furniture Warehouse, which opened July 29, as the new kids on the block in the park. OK Welders’ building at the northern end of the park is almost complete, a few weeks aliead of a scheduled late September deadline. The company also has outlets in of OK Welders is Kelowna, Forks. “They are already doing a lot of business here,’’ said Russell Moore, ‘who is the foreman for Penticton contractor Greyback Construction which is construc- ting the $250,000 building. “They're over here, oh, three times a week or so with their vans, so they're more or less following their business here.’* Penticton and Grand West Kootenay Carpets, which is currently located in Castlegar, is set to move into its new 8,000- square-foot building in early Oc- tober from its present location on 6th Avenue. The store’s owner-manager said his business is growing and he’s been looking to move into the Cor ion on the ding down at the northernmost end of the Castlegar Industrial Park. The $250,000 building will be ready to be occupied by the middle of September, a few weeks ahead of schedule. — cosnews photo Park gets two new residents park for a couple of years but this seemed the best time for several reasons. “I like the location there, it’s right on the highway and that’s good exposure. And with United Buy and Sell there it’s just a bonus. With them there we'll help them out and they’ll help us out,”” Brian Millar said. Millar wouldn’t say how much he paid the City of Castlegar for the lot but did say the building will cost him about $300,000. Richard Maddocks, economic development officer for ~the Castlegar and District Economic Development Board, sajd the lots sell for about $20,000, but that price fluctuates with the market. Even with the two new residents bringing the total number of businesses in the park to seven, there is still plenty of room in the 26-lot park, most of which is owned by the city. But contractors working in the park say the latest development could just be the start. **Let's face it, the more you get. here, the more that are going to come here,’’ said John Brooks of Skyline Construction of Genelle. Brooks, along with Sal Developments of Castlegar, built the Purnel Distributors building in the park and is currently working on the West Kootenay Carpets building. The two are also constructing a mini-storage facility on the perimeter of the park. Challenge yourself, find employment in the fast growing field of AUTOMATED BUILDING SYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY Install © Calibrate ® Repair Computer controlled heating, ventilation, air conditioning, lighting, irrigating and security systems in commercial buildings Presently there is a shortage of qualified technicians, you could be ready for a career in this industry in only 14 months. To learn more, contact: Sa ord ADMISSIONS OFFICE Nelson Campus 352-6601 NELSON CAMPUS. 2001 Silver King Rd., Nelson, B.C. VIL 1C8 352-6601 Small business confidence low TORONTO (CP) — High interest rates, a looming recession and dread of the proposed goods and services tax have driven small business con- fidence to a new low, a new economic survey says. The Small Business Barometer, released by the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, indicates business confidence has slipped to its Building a home? call at 399-4211. The following courses are offered: COMMERCE 240 — Mondoy structor C. Bowen. Start date: Sept. 5. B-12, Instructor J. Breckenridge. Start Date: Sept. 11 date: September 10. Date: Sept Sept. 10. No free time during the day? Earn college credits at night. Take EVENING CREDIT COURSES At Selkirk College, Castlegar Campus 800-2050, Room 8-1 Wednesday 1800-1950, Room B-17, In- COMPUTING SCIENCE 132 — Tuesday 1800-2050, Room B-16, Wednesday, 1800-1950, Room ENGLISH 110 — Monday and Wednesday, 1600-1750, Room M-21, Instructor G. Turner. Start HISTORY 204 — Tuesday 1900-2150, Room B-17, Instructor W. Sloan. Start Date: Sept. 11. MATH 050 — Mon. & Thurs. 1900-2130, Rm. L-18, Instructor J. Peregrym. Start Date: Sept. 10, POLITICAL SCIENCE 112 — Thursday, 1900-2150, Room M-14/24, Instructor A. Shadrack. Start .6. SPECIAL NEEDS 250 — Monday 1600-1850, Room B-15, Instructor S$. Barker-Kirby. Start date: PHILOSOPHY 100 — Monday 1800-2050, Room M-14, Instructor J. Rowell. Start date: Sept. 10. NEW COURSE: ENGLISH 112 — Introduction to Modern Poet: sterable to UBC, UVIC and SFU, but, is of particular inte students wishing to transfer to Simon Fraser Unive & Drama. This course Tuesdays and Thursdays, 1400-1550, Instructor G. Turner. ‘For further information contact the Admissions Department or the Counselling Department. 3 . Some prerequisites apply. Don't eed register now. For details and registration, contact Selkirk College, Admissions CASTLEGAR CAMPUS Box 1200 Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3J1 365-7292 The cost of lumber needed to build your home is only o small percentage of the total cost, but struc- turally the lumber is.the most important part. Our QUALITY is what your future is built on, and will save you time and money. For QUALITY lumber at competitive prices give us a lowest level since the semi-annual study began in 1988. The survey, which canvassed 1,851 small- and medium-sized firms across Canada, found the business confiden- ce index has slipped from its base level of 100 two years ago to 61 in June. In Ontario, 79 per cent of respon- dents had reduced expectations, 71 per cent in Quebec, 66 per cent in Local Sales Hours: MON. THRU SAT. 8:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M. P.O. Box 3000, Thrums, B.C. VIN 3L4 Alberta and Atlantic Canada, followed by 65 per cent in British Columbia, 61 per cent in Manitoba and 58 per cent in Saskatchewan. Catherine Swift, the federation’s chief economist, said pessimism in the business community is the result of ‘‘a whole bunch of things hitting at the same time... .’" She said three concerns stand out: lower sales expectations, the Bank of Canada’s high interest rate policy and the impact of the GST. While the federal government should not be blamed entirely for the economic slowdown, its monetary and fiscal policies are making it wor- se, she said. Crestbrook to invest $30m in sawmills Crestbrook Forest Products Ltd. said it will invest $30 million in its sawmill operations at Canal Flats, Cranbrook and Elko. The company said it is making the investment in an effort to maintain economically viable operations at the three lumber divisions. The invest- ment program will include the in- Stallation of the best available technology in most machine centres in the sawmills to permit them to cope with the high cost and type of wood currently available, the company said in a news release. The program will start immediately and be completed by December 1991. Crestbrook has to deal with high- cost wood of low quality and small size. This situation is combined with a major contraction of the wood supply NOTICE Local No. 1 of the Pulp, Paper and Wood- workers of Canada has been actively involved in researching various documents to ensure that Celgar Pulp Co., will build one of the cleanest pulp mills possible, one that not only meets but exceeds the present Federal and Provincial pollution standards. We support Celgar’s committment to build and operate the cleanest mill possible and to adopt any new‘fechnology as it becomes avail- able. We feel that Celgar Pul Co. deserves the opportunity to prove this will be the clean mill they say it will be. We sw#pport a thorough review process without unnecessary delays. Signed, P.P.W.C., Local No. 1 Membership as a result of the salvage programs associated with the forest fires of 1985 and a mountain pine beetle in- festation. In making this investment, Cc said it is also izii the shrinking commercial forest land base due to demand for forest land to be set aside as wilderness, parks and other uses which exclude logging. Crestbrook began a comprehensive Strategic business and investment study of its East Kootenay operations in 1989 to define the business and scale of its operations over the next 25 years. This study is a major under- taking and the action plan that flows from it could take five years or more to implement. The company subsequently decided that in view of its shrinking log supply and the high cost it must pay for small-sized wood of relatively low quality, it could not wait the five years if it was to survive in the short term. Consequently, Crestbrook initiated this $30-million investment Program in an effort to strengthen its lumber divisions in the short- and medium-term future. To do otherwise would threaten the jobs of all em- Ployees and jeopardize shareholder investment, the company said. the ever-increasing © CHRISTINA SANDS RESORTS LTD. ae heave expended ond now have 36 more campsites aveil- ble for this summer: * Hot Showers * Swimming * Boot Moorage * Store * Large Sondy * Playground * Sote Secure Storage 00 S40 per ross. Sesh now te ensure the she of Sox 48, Christine Lake, 8.C. Vou 160 Phone (604) 447-6116 NATIONAL NEWS| Business leader, Grit clash over goods and services tax OTTAWA (CP) — The vast majority of Canadians oppose the goods and services tax mainly because they don’t ‘understand it, a leading big-business group said. Most people don’t realize the seven per cent. tax, scheduled to take effect Jan. 1, would replace the existing federal sales tax on manufactured goods, said Tom d’ Aquino, president of the Business Council on National Issues. “The polls continue to show something devastatingly disturbing and that is that the vast majority of Canadians . . . do not understand that this is a replacement tax,’’ d‘Aquino told the Senate banking committee. “One of the sad commentaries about what is going on in this country is that we are debating, making decisions . . . on the basis of largely misinformed or people who do not understand the issues,’’ he added. But Sidney Buckwold, Liberal chairman of the committee, accused big business of trying to tell people what to think about the tax. The business council represents 150 of the largest companies in Canada, which employ about 1.5 million and administer more than $975 billion in assets. Developers high on BANFF, Alta. (CP) — From the pristine waters of Lake Louise to the rolling glaciers of Jasper National Park, ‘developers are investing millions of dollars to upgrade and ex- pand resort properties. They are confident the investment will be more than repaid. Leading the spree is TOM D'AQUINO . »- Canadians ‘misinformed’ ‘*What bothers me most is that you downgrade the great majority of Canadians who you say are misin- formed, as if 150 executives of your organization are the people who know everything,’’ Buckwold told d‘Aquino. “The fact is that is not necessarily the case and I am not prepared to ac- cept that the great majority of Canadians are misinformed on this Petrak won’t talk about it, but there have been reports CP Hotels and Marriott Hotels have filed letters of intent to build a 400-room facility in partnership with Calgary-based Three Sister Resorts, which plans to build three 18-hold golf courses and a hoiel and housing projects outside the Canadian Pacific Hotets and Resorts, with major expansions and facelifts at its mountain properties — the Banff Springs Hotel, Chateau Lake Louise and the newly acquired Jasper Park Lodge. “There is practically no bottom’’ to the Rocky Mountain market, said Ivor Petrak, the chain’s Banff-based senior vice-president for resort development. n “There are more and more pegp! reching the age where they want to see the whole world, and one of the things they want to see is the Canadian Rockies. So they just keep coming.”* The tourist industry in the rest of the country is suffering from one of its poorest summers in years. But CP Hotels is building palatial convention centres to boost off-season traffic and sprucing up buildings with wood and stone work to match the properties’ original grandeur. ““If we take care of this properly we will have a market 1,000 years from now, even more so than today, just like the castles of Europe,’’ Petrak said. of Banff National Park near Canmore, adjacent to the Trans- * Canada Highway. Another Calgary developer is negotiating with both the Hyatt and Westin chains to build a 400- to 500- room hotel in the Benchlands area, north of the Trans-Canada Highway within Canmore town limits. In Banff, a 470-room, $50-million hotel by developer Gary Charlton was approved by the town council in June. CP Hotels hopes the new conven- tion facilities will attract visitors during the traditionally sluggish non- summer months. “We are still limping from October question,’’ the comiilttee chairman added. The business council concluded in its brief that few legislative proposals have been the subject of ‘‘more misin- formed and unfounded criticism than the GST. “This is regrettable, since the GST promises to deliver many important benefits to Canada over the medium and long terms,"’ the council's brief argued. D’Aquino denied he was putting down Canadians for failing to under- stand benefits of the GST. “There have been many issues in this country in which Canadians, not through their fault, have-not been properly informed,”’ he said. Statistics Canada, the gover- nment’s chief scorekeeper on what happens in the economy, said it can only measure what impact’ the GST would have on consumers’ pockets af- ter the tax is introduced. The federal government already takes $6.60 out of every $100 con- sumers spend through indirect taxes, Statistics Canada said in its brief to the Senate committee. The federal’ agency made the calculation based on its consumer price index, which monitors more than 100 goods and services bought regularly, such as bread, milk, gasoline and bus tickets. The existing federal sales tax, to be replaced by the GST, accounts for $3.52 of the $6.60 collected by the federal government. In total, Canadians pay $18.52 out of every $100 through indirect taxes charged by federal, provincial and municipal governments. The-federal governmient has predic- ted that the GST would boost the consumer price index, one of the most common measures of inflation, by 1.25 percentage points. But that prediction is based on the government assumptions and Statistics Canada cannot make such an estimate, said Ivan Fellegi, the federal agency’s chief statistician. “We do not, nor can we, answer the question that is on everyone's mind — what would the price have been if’ the tax is introduced, he said. In making its prediction, the federal government has assumed that companies will pass on to consumers 100 per cent of savings from replacing the existing federal sales tax. And it assumed workers would receive no wage increases to compen- sate for rising prices. mountain resorts “These people who travel on buses to May,’’ Petrak said. ‘If we can break even for the winter weil Be) don’t harm the environment. They laughing all the way to the bank.”” The convention centre in Banff will be big enough for the most lucrative resort conventions that only a handful of other properties in North America are capable of handling, he said. Banff resident Mike Mclvor, a for an i group called the Bow Valley Naturalists, said development doesn’t come without a price. He points to last summer’s sewage spill in the Bow River as a warning of the devastating effects of too much building. Petrak brushes off the concerns, saying environmentalists are misrepresenting the facts and that the parks were created for the enjoyment of people. Park visitors hardly ever step more than a few feet away from their bus, Petrak said. Fully A “ALVA TURE. Serving Castlegar for 15 Years Guaranteed Parts and Labour for 1-Yeor. Fall Installation Savings. Residential And Commercial Sprinkler Sy FREE ESTIMATES Phone 442-3417 Box 787 Grand Forks a PUBLIC | INFORMATION OPEN HOUSE Celgar Pulp Company Modernization Project elgar Pulp Company invites you to attend the last of a series of public information open houses arranged to explain the proposed modemization of its 30-year-old softwood kraft pulpmill at Castlegar. Thursday, September 6 4:00 — 9:00 p.m. Fireside banquet room, Castlegar Celgar managers and independent engineering and environmental consultants who helped to prepare the company’s Stage II environmental assessment report will be on hand to answer your questions, listen to your concems and discuss your views. CELGAR PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE CITY CENTRE SQUARE, CASTLEGAR. PHON Celgar Pulp Company 365-7737. take pictures. Who harms the en- vironment are the people who travel through the woods, throwing away bottles and cans — and those people are not tourists.’’ ECONO SPOTS You can save up to 80% on the cost of this ad! 365-5210 The prudent home owner who spruces up his property betore selling will clean up in more woys thon one In @ recent national pole 80% of real estote brokers said @ good clean up is the most importont short term improvement a home seller con make to maximize his selling price. The survey-tovors cleaning car. . uncluttering closets, utiity @reas ond paint touch uy eal °F state WITH BARRY BROWN CLEAN UP FOR RESALE WHAT YOU CAN EXPECT CHART — New carpeting ($4,000) — 90% ” retur — New shrubs and trees ($2,000) 90% return — New garage ($10,000) — 80% return — Room Addition ($20,000) — 65% return — Bathroom addition ($8,000) — 60% return Fireplace ($5,000) — 50% return Deck or patio ($5,000) — 50% return —~ Remodel Kitchen ($15,000) — 50% return Hf there 1s anything | con. do to help yeu in the held of real estore, please coll of drop in ot NRS NATIONAL REAL ESTATE SERVICE Mountainview Agencies Ltd. 1695 Columbie Ave... Phone 365-211! or 365-2757 SAVE A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS WHEN w18 YOU USE CASTLEGAR NEWS CLASSIFIED CALL 365-2212 CASTLEGAR 601-18th St. 365-7232 IS THERE A NEW CAR» IN YOUR FUTURE? Castlegar Savings Credit Union has the car loan package for you. We offer competitive rates and a payment plan to suit your budget. CASTLEGAR SAVINGS CREDIT UNION “Your Community Financial Centre” © SLOCAN PARK Highway 6 226-7212 © Overwaitea CHAHKO-MIKA MALL + NELSON, B.C. 1.44 DAYS - SEPT. 4 & 5 SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE FROM SEPT. 4 TO SEPT. 5, 1990 (BREAD Freezer Pack. 5.pkg. 454 grams ) i ( COKE CLASSIC, 7 DIET COKE, SPRITE, DIET SPRITE 2 liter Plus Deposit $444 (PINEAPPLE| Dole. 19 oz Limit 4 tins. Over Limit .98 bal sid TUNA Oceans. In Water. 147 grams O44 (ORANGE JUICE Value Price. Frozen. Limit 6. Over Limit 1.18 Our pulp is sold around the world. Our heart, our future, is here in the West Kootenays al | HAM) May Fair. Cooked. 175 grams. 4 Pack POTATOES 10'tb. bag 4... OM CLOSED LABOR DAY, SEPT. 3, 1990