Showing newest posts with label Ladysmith. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label Ladysmith. Show older posts

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Stephanie Lang - Vancouver Island Star


You'd hardly believe Stephanie Lang was just past her teen years. Her confidence and talent on-stage is comparable to someone far beyond her years. She knew as early as 5 years old she wanted to be a performer. She appeared along side Jamie-Lynn Spears in an E-Kara commercial. Stephanie started writing her own music at 12. Amazingly she recorded and released her first cd at 15. The evidence shows she was passionate and knew where she wanted to go with her life from a very early start.

Stephanie is from the small town of Ladysmith, here on Vancouver Island. She performed extensively on Vancouver Island and Vancouver, notably given the title of Vancouver Island Idol Champion in 2005.

In 2006 she won a 4 song contract through HipJoint Records

for winning the 94.5 The Beat Music Award Contest.

I recently went to see Stef play at The Roxy in Vancouver, I was absolutely amazed at her talent. This is a girl who can sing, play guitar AND writes her own music. She will be playing soon at the following locations:

28 Feb 2009 20:00
The Main
5 Mar 2009 20:00
Beans On Lonsdale
12 Mar 2009 20:00
The Railway Club
2 Apr 2009 20:00
Beans On Lonsdale
5 Apr 2009 20:00
The Railway Club
10 Apr 2009 20:00
The Bourbon
17 Apr 2009 20:00
The Main
23 Aug 2009 20:00
Concerts in the Park

Stephanie's Links:

Myspace
YouTube Channel
CTV Article

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Monday, February 16, 2009

Top Vancouver Island Trades and Technology Jobs.


Picks in Trades and Technology:

Trades
Technologies

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Friday, February 6, 2009

The Forest Industry on Vancouver Island

Western Forest Products had told about 650 employees and contract workers across Vancouver Island their seasonal layoffs will continue “indefinitely.”

Forest workers in the North Island will continue because of the continued market for hemlock in Asia.

Last month, Western Forest Products shut down its downtown Nanaimo and Duke Point sawmills for a month. The mills were expected to reopen Jan. 19, but Duncan Kerr, WFP’s chief operating officer, announced the extended shutdown due to a waning market.

“We’ve come to the conclusion we’re going to have to do that for a while,” Kerr says. “The lumber markets continue to be poor. If you don’t have customers for your products, then it doesn’t make sense to keep producing.”

Western’s Ladysmith mill was shut down last year.The two Nanaimo mills will remain idle indefinitely and WFP’s five remaining Island mills will run at reduced shifts.

Kerr said the shutdown will affect about 250 Nanaimo workers at both mills, which had already been running reduced shifts for several months. He said the Mid-Island remanufacturing operation at Duke Point will remain open for now, employing about 40 workers.

Kerr said the move is due to a slump in demand for the cedar and fir the Nanaimo mills focused on. The downtown mill produces products for the Japanese market and Duke Point’s products relied on a strong U.S. housing market.

“That market has deteriorated along with the drop in U.S. housing starts. We’re obviously only curtailing as a last resort,” he said, adding that through the first three quarters, WFP’s losses were around $60 million.

Western is also indefinitely closing logging operations on the mainland coast, Port Alberni and the Queen Charlotte Islands, affecting about 450 contract employees.

“Those operations tend to produce more of the logs we’re having trouble selling right now,” says Kerr.

Bill Routley, president of United Steelworkers local 1-80, says Nanaimo workers will have to apply for Employment Insurance and look for other work.

“It’s an extremely difficult time for the workers and their families,” Routley says. “Everyone was counting on going back to work.”

Rick Jeffrey, president and CEO of the Coast Forest Products Association, says the association expects the situation to get worse before it gets better.

“Our view is that 2009 is probably going to be worse than 2008,” he says. “And 2008 was our worst year on record.”

Jeffrey says the coastal industry is hoping for a turnaround at the end of 2010.

He adds that B.C. has closed fewer facilities than other places in the world and as the demand for sustainable, energy-efficient products increases as the world struggles with global warming, demand for wood products will rise. Kerr says the forest industry relies on consumer confidence and the availability of credit.

He adds that, due to market instability, it is impossible to predict when the mills will go up again. “That requires a crystal ball that I just don’t have at the moment.”

 But Kerr says North Island logging operations were not on the chopping block because Asia and China want what North Island loggers cut down: hemlock.

And hemlock is also sold to the Neucel speciality cellulose mill in Port Alice. Moreover, cedar is less plentiful in North Island forests than it is to the south.

“Those three areas [that were shutdown] produce a higher percentage of cedar and the market for cedar has become really soft,” says Kerr, noting some areas cut 30 to 50 per cent cedar.

“On a relative scale there is much less cedar coming from Northern Vancouver Island.”

As well, says Kerr, “Northern Vancouver Island logging operations are very efficient. “They run well, they run safely...they are cost- effective. In a competitive market they run a competitive operation.”

But Kerr warns that no one should feel confident about the future their job in the current market.

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Wednesday, October 8, 2008

4th Annual Fall Multi Media Fine Arts Exhibition

http://www.ladysmithwaterfrontgallery.com/

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008 - Saturday, October 25th, 2008
Opening Night TBA 7 days/wk noon- 4:00pm

The Ladysmith and District Arts Council proudly presents the 4th Annual Fall Multi Media Fine Arts Exhibition. This juried exhibit attracts artists and artisans from all over Vancouver Island. The exhibit will feature the finest selected works of painters, sculptors, photographers, potters, glassblowers and others. Prizes include $1,000.00 for first place and $500.00 for second place in both two and three dimensional categories. Ten honourariums of $50.00 each will also be awarded. Check it out in lovely Ladysmith!

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Friday, August 29, 2008

Vancouver Island Labour Day Events!

With Labour Day weekend here in our faces, there will be plenty of fun events going on this weekend. First off, in Ladysmith

LABOUR DAY PICNIC IN LADYSMITH
Sept. 1
11am – 3pm
Transfer Beach Park, Ladysmith
250-753-0201
Nanaimo, Duncan & District Labour Council host their 18th annual Labour Day Picnic at Transfer Beach Park in Ladysmith on Monday September 1st. It runs from 11 to 3 and is free for all.

VANCOUVER ISLAND BLUES BASH
Aug 29 – Sept 1
12:30pm free concerts
7pm evening ticketed concerts
Ship Point, Victoria’s Inner Harbour
www.jazzvictoria.ca
Victoria’s Inner Harbour will be rockin’ and groovin’ with live R&B all Labour Day weekend long. The Vancouver Island Blues Bash features groups like Jim Byrnes, the Lloyd Jones Struggle plus lots of free daytime concerts.

Have a good one!

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