Arrow Lakes News, February 27, 2013

Page 1

Since 1923

Arrow Lakes News Page 5

Page 7

50 0 1 6

club race to fun

78195

Page 6

read a book of brothers

7

Old times pictured

1

Vol. 90 Issue 09 • Wednesday, February 27, 2013 • www.arrowlakesnews.com • 250-265-3823 • $1.25 •

PM40036531

Burton Community Learning Centre and SD 10 making space for students Claire paradis Arrow Lakes News

Although it hasn’t been in the papers much, the Burton Community Learning Centre (BCLC) is moving ahead in a big way. The Burton school which no longer holds regular school classes is still being used every day. The BCLC is working on a partnership agreement with School District 10, hammering out who is responsible for what, and getting more classes running in the building. Superintendent/Treasurer Denise Perry is very excited about the facility, and sees the collaboration as an opportunity to offer specialized academic courses to students. At the moment, Nakusp Secondary School uses the building for its Outdoor Education classes, and plans are still in the works for a Search and Rescue training course to be offered to both students over 16 as well as adults and distributed learning students. Burton students are already taking advantage of the opportunities available at the BCLC. The reading centre has local kids volunteering Tuesday evenings, and Burton youngsters have the chance to get out and exercise as part of the frequent athletic events going on in the gym. The collaboration is very supported by the community, Liz Gillis from the BCLC told the Arrow Lakes News. At the moment, com-

munity members pay $2 as a drop in fee or $40 for the year to keep the centre running. Many local groups such as the Arrow Lakes Environmental Stewardship Society also use the space for meetings, making the centre a valuable community resource in Burton. Having community organizations and students both use the space make it a central resource that is welcoming and inclusive, bringing people together and shaping community. Recently, a two-hour wellness workshop given by Petra Allen for cats and dogs brought people together, and they’re sticking together. Thanks to the class and Allen, each Saturday there is now a group of dog walkers that start out from the school in a bunch, talking and walking through the area. It’s made a big difference in town, said Gillis. “There have been dog issues in Burton,” Gillis said. She sees the group as a positive way to influence dog behaviour both through owners trading tips and tricks as well as getting humans and dogs to socialize in a fun atmosphere. The one thing that could be useful to the BCLC board, said Gillis, is a paid coordinator. Right now, volunteers are running the show, but having someone who could dedicate time on a regular basis would be great, she told the Arrow Lakes News.

The Saturday morning Burton dog walking group is just one of the positive byproducts coming out of the Learning Centre. Photo courtesy of Liz Gillis Gillis and Perry are both keen to work together to get students using the space as much as possible. Their two boards will be coming together in March to finalize the agreement, and Gillis sees it as a chance to come up with new and fresh ideas to get students to come to Burton and use the space. Perry agrees, and would like to bring in spe-

cial academy classes which will allow students to earn credits and learn great new skills. “It’s a great space, we don’t want to lose it,” she said. With the momentum the BCLC has, it’s looking like students and community are already using the revamped school, not losing it.

Regional stats reveal slow but steady growth in RDCK By Kyle Kusch

Special to the Arrow Lakes News

New Denver was one of the province’s fastest-growing towns last year, according to BC Stats – even though the increase was very modest. Claire Paradis

BC Stats, the provincial government’s statistical agency, has released its annual population estimates for regional districts and municipalities, and the results show another year of slow-but-steady growth across the Regional District of Central Kootenay. According to BC Stats, the Village of Nakusp recorded an estimated net gain of eleven residents in 2012, bringing the village’s population to 1,544. Indeed, every municipality in the RDCK except Nelson and Creston experienced some measure of growth last year, led by its smallest villages. Leading the way not just in the district but in the entire province was Slocan, which experienced a stunning 10 per cent increase in population last year to place the village at 439 residents. Salmo (1,092; +1.8 per cent),

Silverton (206, +1.5per cent), and New Denver (520, +1.0 per cent) also ranked as some of the province’s fastest-growing towns last year with Kaslo (1,194, +0.8 per cent) also showing growth. Of the larger centres in the district, Nelson stayed even at 9,810; Castlegar was up half-a-percent to 7,958; and Creston experienced its first drop in nearly a decade (5,208; -0.4 per cent). The RDCK’s substantial unincorporated areas, making up over half of the district’s total population of 60,896, also showed slight growth. Overall, the RDCK’s population grew by 0.3 per cent last year. Our neighbour to the west, the Regional District of Kootenay-Boundary experienced substantial losses in the Boundary region, but slight gains in Greater Trail. To the north, the Columbia-Shuswap Regional District also suffered across-the-board population losses,

See Stats page 3

Shy and retiring iSn’t your Style. term deposits

TFSAs

profit sharing

RRSPs

You’re not the kind of person who plans to spend retirement in a rocking chair. We understand people like you. You want the most from life and your investments. Talk to the RRSP experts at Kootenay Savings and hit the beach sooner! better. together.

kscu.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.