Peninsula News Review, April 26, 2013

Page 1

PENINSULA

NEWS REVIEW

Conway returns to Victoria

Brentwood Bay’s Cory Conway has been picked up by the Victoria Shamrocks in a recent trade with Nanaimo, page 15

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Stelly’s joins dry grad society

Stelly’s Secondary joins Parkland in the Peninsula Dry Grad Society, which helps run the annual events, page 5

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Vision for downtown Sidney challenged

Patients love pets Regional animal therapy group celebrates 25 years SIDNEY — Twenty-five years ago, Sadey Guy, a retired nurse, founded the Pacific Animal Therapy Society (P.A.T.S.). A quarter century later, the program is still going strong. Sadey Guy, founder and leader of P.A.T.S., grew up in a healthcare facility run by her parents in England, where she noticed the wonderful effect of animals on the patients. When she retired from nursing, she created the foundation for P.A.T.S. by researching information about pet therapy, gathering a small group of volunteers, asking veterinarians to do testing, contacting facilities to visit, setting up the paperwork and recruiting new members with their pets. Sadey, who is now in her 80s, is totally devoted to her mission. She still manages the office, answering phone calls, mail, faxes and emails. She interviews and does orientation with new members and their pets, co-ordinates facilities and their visitors, does P.A.T.S. visits with her own Yorkshire terrier, Emma, and attends P.A.T.S. group visits and functions.

Innovation needs a champion, says U.S. developer Steven Heywood News staff

Sidney will need a champion — someone outside of local politics — to foster real innovation in its downtown core and help lead the community into a new era of prosperity. So said Mark Edlen, CEO of Gerding Edlen a Portland-Oregon-based development firm in a presentation at Sidney’s Mary Winspear Centre April 16. The talk was attended by local “You need to politicians, business find somebody who owners and community members, eager is here, a leader to hear about Edlen’s who has a sense of success in sociallyresponsible and innoresponsibility.” vative real estate investment. – Mark edlen While the talk did not give specific advice on how Sidney can change or grow, Edlen did outline what it takes to develop green buildings and help create vibrant communities, built around such structures. He spoke about what his firm calls 20-minute living, or having communities where residents live within 20 minutes of where they work and play. That involves incorporating housing, transit and employment options in relatively close proximity. PleaSe See: Local sites ideal, page 2

Steven Heywood/News staff

Becky Kyle scoops up some trash from a ditch in Sidney’s industrial park on Wednesday. She and Seastar Chemicals Inc. co-worker Shar Bhattacharya joined others from the company for a one-hour cleanup of their neighbourhood.

PleaSe See: Quarter century event, page 2


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