Nelson Star, April 18, 2012

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NELSSON STAR Bre a k i ng n e w s at n e l s on s t a r. c om

FREE

Now Open April Green Fees Special $40 for 18 holes $20 for 9 holes

Wednesday, April 18 • 2012

Vol. 4 • Issue 83

Selkirk celebrates residence project See Page 3

Granite Pointe tees up for opening on Thursday See Page 19

Community Touched by the legacy groups net cash from city council Rick Hansen Many in Motion Tour in Nelson Thursday

250-229-5655 www.golfbalfour.com

BOOMTOWN SPORTS INC. April Specials

Ullr touring skis $420 Nirvana snowboard $240 All ski poles $25pair All snowshoes 59-99 Must mention this ad. Deposits taken on bikes and scooters. Claim yours while selection is good. Sports trades still welcome Let’s cycle and recycle more this year

510 Hall St 250-505-5055

Columbia Basin Trust funds make for difficult night of decision making at city hall

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OPEN YEAR ROUND

Lessons • Retail

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Tues. - Sat. 9:00 - 4:00 601-D Front St. Emporium

Beautiful flooring begins with us

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GREG NESTEROFF Nelson Star Reporter

After two hours and much horse-trading, Nelson city council finally split its 2012 Columbia Basin Trust community initiative funding between 27 projects Monday. Some grants — including $37,000 to the Nelson and District Chamber of Commerce for ongoing renovations to the old CPR station — received broad support. Others — such as Kidsport, the Oxygen Art Centre, and Kootenay Lake Outdoor Skatepark Society — were debated at length. The skatepark society ultimately received $10,000 of the $30,000 it was seeking, Kidsport $4,000 of the $5,000 it wanted, and the Oxygen Art Centre $1,000 of its requested $10,000. Twenty-three other groups received funds ranging from $250 to $14,000, while another 23 received nothing. Tradeoffs were inevitable, because the program was oversubscribed by more than double: the total amount available was $126,400, Story continues to ‘Decisions’ on Page 4

L.V. Rogers biology teacher Jeremy McComb suffered a serious spinal cord injury and now uses his experience of recovery and Rick Hansen’s legacy as teaching tools. Bob Hall photo BOB HALL Nelson Star Editor

J

eremy McComb understands exactly how fragile a spinal cord can be. “I never thought it would happen,” McComb says of his terrible mountain bike accident six years ago at Whistler. “It happened so fast… it’s

not very forgiving when you are mountain biking and you land on hard ground.” An enthusiastic outdoor adventure seeker, McComb and a group of friends were enjoying a fantastic summer trip to the coast and took in the mountain bike trails at the world famous resort community. It was there his life

changed forever. “I took a jump and got way too much air,” he explains. “I landed on my backside and had a compression fracture of the L1.” McComb was rushed to Vancouver General Hospital Story continues to ‘Helping’ on Page 5

GET OUT THERE. We’re ready! Are you? Ride Now. Pay Later. Purchase your new bike in three equal payments! 702 baker st

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