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Cranbrook moving to Phase 2 Water Restrictions | Cranbrook, East Kootenay

Posted: July 26, 2021 Cranbrook moving to Phase 2 Water Restrictions With the continued lack of rainfall and the ongoing hot summer days, the City of Cranbrook is asking water users to be aware of and follow all outdoor watering practices. The city is implementing Phase 2 of its Outdoor Water Management Policy for all water users on the city’s water system. Even numbered properties may water on Thursday, and Sunday. Odd numbered properties may water on Tuesday, and Saturday. There will be no watering on Mondays, Wednesday, and Fridays. Outdoor water use is only allowed from 4 to 11:00 a.m. and 7 to 11 p.m. on your watering day.

Resident care suffering at B C long-term care home because of staff shortages

  VANCOUVER From the outside, Cranbrook’s Joseph Creek Care Village appears to be a well-maintained facility. But inside, pictures seem to show a place in need of repairs and paint, with damaged and stained furniture. “The chairs downstairs … when you get within a foot, two feet of them you’re overwhelmed with the smell of urine,” said long-term care resident Dianna Green. But Green, 58, says it’s not the upkeep that most concerns her. It’s the staffing shortages, which she says are pushing the home into a “crisis.” “It’s the worst I’ve ever seen it,” she told CTV News Vancouver.

No relief in sight from torrid temperatures | Columbia Valley, Cranbrook, East Kootenay, Elk Valley, Kimberley

Posted: July 18, 2021 “Perceptions,” by Gerry Warner Op-Ed Commentary There are three situations it’s dangerous to experience in B.C. this torrid summer – to be a senior, to be a senior living alone and to be a senior living in an apartment without air conditioning. Sad to say – tragic even – if these three conditions apply to your situation you may be departing this mortal coil sooner than you planned. According to the latest figures issued by the BC Coroner’s Office July 2, some 719 British Columbians died suddenly for no apparent reason in the period June 25 to July 1 about three times the normal total expected over a typical summer week. Of course, that particular week was anything but “normal” with the province experiencing a searing heat wave that broke records from the normally mild Lower Mainland to the sagebrush benches of the Fraser Canyon and the arid hills surrounding Kamloops.

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