Eagle Valley News, January 15, 2014

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EAGLE VALLEY

NEWS

Mayor focused on projects for years ahead Page 3

Videographer awarded in Bateman contest Page 6

Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2014 PM40008236

Vol. 59 No. 3 Sicamous, B.C., • 1.25 (GST included) • www.eaglevalleynews.com

District named in lawsuit by Sturgis North Legal action: Motorcycle event organizers suing for general damages. By Martha Wickett Eagle Valley News

More conflict swirls around Sturgis North. Ray Sasseville, Joan Hansen and Sturgis North Entertainment Inc. have launched a lawsuit revolving around motorcycle events they were involved in locally. Named in the civil action as defendants are Steve Hammer, the District of Sicamous, Sicamous Chamber of Commerce, Darrell Trouton, Renee Charbonneau aka Belt Drive Betty, Bernie Aubin and Vincent Lewis. Sasseville and Hansen were behind the Sturgis North Motorcycle Rally and Music Festival held in Salmon Arm in July 2011 for which Hammer was site manager. The event was held at two sites: the Salmon Arm Fairgrounds and on Neskonlith band land in Gleneden. As far as I see, In a summary of the 30-page statement of they’re trying to claim filed Dec. 9 in shake bushes and B.C. Supreme Court grasp at straws to in Vancouver, Sassev- make others look bad ille, Hansen and Sturgis to make them look North allege that Ham- good. Steve Hammer mer breached a verbal agreement by failing to organize the event as agreed and so tried to ‘hijack’ the event to their detriment. They allege he also ‘hijacked’ the Sicamous Burn-out event and infringed upon the plaintiffs’ intellectual property by using the plaintiffs’ name and taking over the Sicamous event. They also claim that at the 2012 motorcycle rally arranged by the plaintiffs near Vernon (at the Spallumcheen Motoplex Speedway and Event Park), Hammer interfered with contractual relations between the plaintiffs and third parties. In response, Hammer told the News the allegaSee Plaintiffs on page 2

Bunny buddy: Mr. Bunny provides a warm cushion for Ellie Loftus as she watches the Sicamous Eagles during their Saturday home-game win versus the Columbia Valley Rockies. See more on page 7. Photo by James Murray

Vaccine still available to counter return of H1N1 By Tom Fletcher Black Press

Supplies of influenza vaccine are still available to B.C. residents, despite high demand as the H1N1 strain of the virus has returned, provincial health officials say. Cases since the current flu season began in December have shown a shift towards people aged 20 to 69, rather than the very young and the elderly who are typically most vulnerable. There have been severe cases involving healthy, younger people and two deaths have been confirmed, one in the Okanagan and one on Vancouver Island. The main strain of influenza to emerge this winter is a descendent of the H1N1 that prompted the largest vaccination in Canadian history in

2009-10, when the illness was declared a global pandemic. Provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall said the B.C. health ministry purchased a record 1.4 million doses of the current vaccine, which offers immunity to H1N1 and other strains. Some doctors’ offices and pharmacies have run out as demand has been higher than last year. “We have supplies currently available, but it’s conceivable that if demand continues to be high, we’ll use up all of those 1.4 million doses,” Kendall said Wednesday. “So I wouldn’t call it a vaccine shortage, I’d call it an unusually high demand.” The health ministry has a website for information on influenza and other vaccinations, with a guide to finding

local flu clinics, at www.immunizebc.ca. Since 2009, pharmacies as well as doctors’ offices and dedicated flu clinics have been authorized to administer flu shots. They are free of charge to higher risk groups, including pregnant women, very young or old people, people with other medical conditions and those planning to visit a hospital or long-term care facility. Flu season typically runs from December to April. Kendall said in an average year, between 10 and 20 per cent of B.C. residents contract the virus, with about 2,000 sick enough to be hospitalized and 500 deaths, mostly people with underlying conditions. While severe illness

among younger, healthier people is unusual, so far the current flu season is in the typical range, Kendall said. Seasonal influenza is mainly a respiratory illness, with symptoms of coughing, fever, headache and muscle ache that typically last from seven to 10 days. It can be complicated by pneumonia and worsen underlying conditions such as heart disease. Kendall said confirmation of North America’s first case of H5N1 “bird flu” is not a cause for public concern, because that strain is typically caught from poultry and rarely transmitted from person to person. A traveller returning from China to Edmonton via Vancouver during the Christmas season became ill and died Jan. 3.


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