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Wood County GOP readies town hall events

Wood County GOP readies town hall events

PARKERSBURG — The Wood County Republican Party Executive Committee will hold five town hall meetings for the public to hear and question Republican candidates in Wood County.

The first meeting will be held 6:30-8 p.m. Sept. 13 at the Mineral Wells Community Building, GOP Chairman Roger Conley said.

Republican candidates will speak and residents can participate in a question and answer session, Conley said.

Other meetings will be held:

* Sept. 22: Woman’s Club in Williamstown.

* Oct. 4: community building in Washington Bottom.

* Oct. 18: Parkersburg City Council Chambers.

* Oct. 27: Vienna Community Building.

For more information contact Conley at 304 991-8899, Scot Heckert at 304 424-7000, Warren Bigley at 304 588-1556, Gladys Lemley at 304 482-1162 or Terri Goodnow at 304 615-2020.

The general election is Nov. 8. Early voting is from Oct. 26 to Nov. 5.

Among offices in Wood County in the election are the U.S. House of Representatives District 2, state Senate District 3, House of Delegates Districts 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14, county and circuit clerks and county commission.




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Province outlines notification plans for summer heat events; Kamloops readies Voyent! Alert app

Province outlines notification plans for summer heat events; Kamloops readies Voyent! Alert app

During the heat event last year, B.C.’s ambulance system was run off its feet responding to 9-1-1 calls. To limit wait times, Health Minister Adrian Dix says more paramedics and dispatchers have been hired and additional ambulances have been brought in.

“For instance, staff may be reassigned to support areas experiencing higher call volumes and we may take measures to reduce turnaround time at hospitals.”

For heat waves, fires, floods, train derailments or any other urgent emergency, Kamloops brought in the Voyent! Alert app, which Mayor Ken Christian says will allow the city to send immediate notifications out to users.

“I would encourage residents to download the Voyent! app if they haven’t already and we’re going to have a test of that system at 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday (June 8),” adds Christian.

The app will be used in addition to other measures the City enacts each year during prolonged heat, such as opening cooling centres. Christian notes that there’s also a certain level of community thoughtfulness that needs to be part of the response.

“I think we learned a lesson last year. We lost six lives in Kamloops because of heat exposure and I think many of them were in un-air-conditioned apartment buildings and they just were left alone. And what we really need to focus on is wellness checks,” reiterates Christian. “Know your neighbour, know your family members, check on them during periods of extreme heat.”

Extreme heat emergencies such as the heat dome of 2021 are expected once or twice a decade, according to the province. But it’s anticipated heat warnings could be issued as often as two or three times each summer.

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Seven-day Vancouver International Wine festival readies for launch

Seven-day Vancouver International Wine festival readies for launch

With five of 27 events sold out, and tickets for large evening public tastings selling fast, the Vancouver International Wine Festival is readying to launch its 43rd incarnation starting May 16.

The seven-day extravaganza will be the city’s largest food and wine event to take place since the COVID-19 pandemic descended in spring 2020.

Organizers expect representatives from 100 wineries, based in 14 countries, to travel to Vancouver to pour at least four wines each. Most wineries will pour five wines, the festival’s executive director, Harry Hertscheg, told BIV.

Tickets will not be available for purchase at the events, and sales are likely to be cut off on May 13, he added.

The sold-out events this year include dinners at restaurants such as Five Sails Restaurant, Vij’s, Glowbal Restaurant and Cin Cin. A lunch at the Pacific Institute of Culinary Arts has also sold out.

The festival’s marquee event is the May 17 Bacchanalia Gala at the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver, where tickets are priced at $575 each. In addition to a silent auction at the gala, there will be an online auction leading up to the dinner.

All proceeds from this event and the rest of the festival go to the William Shakespeare festival Bard on the Beach, which is set to launch its 2022 season on June 8.

Capacity for the main public tastings at the Vancouver Convention Centre May 19, 20, and 21 has been chopped to between 1,000 and 1,250 people per night to allow more social distancing. Pre-pandemic, those events were usually capped at 2,500 people per night.

The festival itself has been scaled down, as pre-pandemic it had around 54 events. 

“Just having the festival is a great thing to bring back to the community,” Hertscheg said.

He explained that he and his team decided to move the wine festival’s regular February timetable to May this year in part because of his hope that spring weather would help reduce COVID-19’s spread, leading to a more likely chance that governments would lift pandemic restrictions.

Dates for next year’s festival are similarly to be in the spring – April 24 through 30.

“We’re not quite ready to dive back into the wintertime,” Hertscheg said.

“Pandemic conditions tend to be more acute in the wintertime than in the spring.”

He added that supply-chain constraints that have arisen during the pandemic are more acute in the winter.

Wineries around the world earmark as much of their supplies as they can for lucrative holiday-season sales, and owners can find it a challenge to also ship sufficient product in the December-January time period to be set aside for a February wine festival, Hertscheg said.

There is no theme region this year, but the country with the most wineries is Canada. That includes a strong contingent of B.C. wineries.

The theme region next year is likely to be Argentina and Chile, Hertscheg said.

gkorstrom@biv.com

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