Peninsula News Review, February 11, 2015

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PENINSULA

NEWS REVIEW

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Servicing all other makes & models as well!

Healthy Lifestyles feature

Tour of Industry series

The benefits of touch to one’s health start as early as infancy and last a lifetime, page 14

Central Saanich’s JSF Technologies reeling in new business, page 5

7865 East Saanich Rd. located across from Thrifty’s

250.544.8899 BMW & DoMestic Vehicles Locally Owned Community Auto Repair Shop

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Wednesday, February 11, 2015

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1913 map to go on display Old map most likely a one-of-a-kind says Brad Morrison of the Sidney Archives Steven Heywood News staff

A symbol of Sidney’s fight to become a municipality in the early 1900s has been rediscovered and soon it will be available for all to see. But it’s not as though this piece of Sidney’s history was lost altogether. Brad Morrison of the Sidney Archives heard about a map dating from 1913, hanging in the Town’s public works building. He found it there, a tall frame with glass encasing the map — hanging on a wall behind a working wood lathe in the carpenters’ shop. Morrison said he immediately knew it was the real thing and it needed to get a bigger audience. PleaSe See: Sidney map is a one-of-a-kind page 13

Steven Heywood/News staff

North Saanich senior building inspector John Post shows a section of the north wall of the municipal building where water and mould have contributed to the rotting of structural wood.

Rot, mould at North Saanich hall District hires project manager to provide firm estimate of replacement cost

Steven Heywood News staff

Steven Heywood/News staff

Dan Loveridge, left, and Joe Iverson point to the 1913 map of Sidney that has been hanging in the Public Works shop for years.

Instead of continuing to patch up North Saanich’s patchwork municipal building, the District will explore the cost of replacing most of it. Senior building inspector John Post says

water leaks into the building and behind the stucco have rotted portions of the structure. Doors, window sills and flooring have been replaced in recent years, while supporting beams have been installed in places like exterior staircases to ensure safety. It’s this piecemeal approach to maintain-

ing what is clearly a building in need of repairs or replacement that the District hopes to end, says Mayor Alice Finall. “We’ve known for quite a while that this is an issue,” she said. PleaSe See: Cost estimate expected soon, page 4


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