ALLEN ANNOUNCED | Vernon Community Expo to feature local talent Andrew Allen Oct. 19 [A7]
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Sunday, April 15, 2012
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Agencies lose web funding RICHARD ROLKE Morning Star Staff
The information highway may become a dead-end for some North Okanagan residents. Many groups arenât sure if they will be able to continue public access to the Internet after the federal government eliminated funding to the Community Access Program. âIt will be quite a loss,â said Gay Jewitt, with the Whitevalley Community Resource Centre in Lumby. There are about 15 locations in the North Okanagan that receive CAP funding. âThere are a lot of people who canât afford a phone with Internet capability or a computer,â said Lisa Froom, with Vernonâs Upper Room Mission, adding many of her clients canât afford food. About 10 people a day use the computer station at the mission. âThey are using it for job searches or looking for housing,â said Froom. âThey may use the computer to connect with their family for the first time in years. Our goal is to move people forward.â The mission has received $3,600 a year from CAP. The Junction Literacy and Youth Centre assists disadvantaged teens and it has received $3,960 a year from CAP for four computers. âIf we donât find a way to replace the funds, we would have to remove the computers and our youth would no longer have access to computers,â said Debbie Schiller, executive director. âThrough Facebook, our staff often support kids who are struggling with a variety of issues because that is there main form of communication. Some kids get help from our staff to develop and print resumes, do job searches and send e-mails to potential employers.â Schiller insists Ottawaâs cuts are short-sighted. âThere are youth who donât have home computers, espe-
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Donna Robicheau, Computer Access Program site supervisor at the Upper Room Mission, is concerned about the loss of Internet funding. cially if they are couch-surfing, living in poverty or not in schoolâ she said. Internet use at the Whitevalley Community Resource Centre is similar to that other sites. âPeople are accessing government forms and applying for school,â said Jewitt. Computer training has been provided to seniors who want contact family through social media. âIt helps reduce the isolation,â said Jewitt. âThe need for providing sites hasnât gone away â connecting people.â Twenty-one Okanagan Regional Library branches have CAP computers, and the funding cut means an $80,000 hit for the agency. But while she isnât sure where the money may come from
for 2013, executive director Lesley Dieno doesnât expect public access will cease. âOur mandate is to provide education and information and one of the main ways we do that is through computers.â Colin Mayes, Okanagan-Shuswap MP, defends the government trying to bring spending under control. âIn 1995, when the program was started, access to computers wasnât what it is today.â Mayes says there are options for people to access computers including Service Canada offices. âThere are Internet cafes, itâs not that expensive (to get Internet capability). You have to set priorities with the limited dollars you have.â
Foord fondly remembered for his local legacy RICHARD ROLKE Morning Star Staff
Vernon has lost a legend. Tom Foord, founder of Kal Tire and a passionate philanthropist, died Thursday, one month short of his 90th birthday. âHe has strong family values and came from a small town,â said Archie Stroh, a former Kal Tire senior vice-president, of Foordâs giving nature. A native of Instow, Sask., Foord came to Vernon in 1945,
the hometown of his wife Norah. They met while they were both in the military in Newfoundland during the Second World War. In 1953, he founded Kal Tire and through hard work and perseverance, the company expanded. It is now Canadaâs largest independent tire dealership, with 4,600 employees in 20 countries. âHe was a huge long-term thinker,â said Stroh. Tom Foord âHe believed in customer service and he was a team builder.â
Foord always insisted there was a specific reason for Kal Tireâs success. âItâs as simple as the people here. I have done a good job of selecting people to work with me and thatâs got us where we are today,â he said in 2005. Foordâs roles shifted from Kal Tire president to chairman in 2005, with son-in-law Ken Finch taking on the presidency. In 2009, Finch became chairman and Foordâs son Robert was promoted to president. While he was always focused on the business, Foordâs influence in the community flourished.
âVernon has always had a special place in my heart. The least I can do is pay it back for some of the things the community did for me,â he said in a 2007 interview. He played a critical role in developing the People Place, which provides nonprofit agencies with affordable space. He also rallied behind the North Okanagan Neurological Associationâs plans for a new child development centre. âHe guided us and opened doors to a lot of people for us,â said Janice Foster, NONA president.
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