Bill Clay
Diana Johnston, President of the 2007 BC Seniors Games, describes Bill Clay, Seniors Games Board Member and Instructor in MalaspinaÕs Culinary Arts Program, as a, "highly organized, action oriented team player who always delivers as promised."..

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Joanne Pearce
When Joanne Pearce and her husband moved to Nanaimo to retire, she finally had time for herself. For most of her life, as most mothers experience these days, her family and employers came first. There was precious little time for her...

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Tara McNeil
Tara McNeil was a 'heavy' child, a 'chunky' child. So she was put on her first diet when she was just ten years old and, like most people on diets, she would lose weight, reach her goal and then a few weeks or months later, go back up again-plus a little...

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Lelaina Jules
Lelaina Jules’ journey of a thousand miles began with one Adult Basic Education course at Malaspina University-College...

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Christmas Spirit
A few weeks ago, I wrote about Marilyn Assaf’s 2006 Christmas. She had been going through some particularly challenging life experiences last fall and it was difficult for her to keep a smile on her face, but her friend Joy Brown found a way to make that happen...

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Blake Hunter
If we could look back over our lives with a focused, “in the moment” awareness that most of us don’t have much or even most of the time, I think we’d notice that our lives have tended to offer us a series of bumps or nudges, things that happened either to us or people around us, things that weren’t planned, things that could have taken us on all kinds of interesting rides if we had been more flexible and open to change...

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Katie Marocci
When I last wrote about Katie Marocci, she was a recent high school graduate who was working at a small Ghanaian school on a six month volunteer opportunity...

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Rick Rembolt
As time goes by and the working world becomes more complex, more and more people are thinking about going back to school to complete their high school diploma and enter trades training, college or university.

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Delores Gottenberg
More and more people today are focusing on healthier eating, and a growing number are making an effort to follow the One Hundred Mile diet. Dolores Gottenberg was one of those people but she’s taken it a step further, she’s become a SPIN (Small Plot Intensive) urban farmer -- Check out www.spinfarming.com.

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Paul and Catherine Bezooyen
Scene one: you’re in a rut. Life has lost its shine. You tell yourself (and anyone else who will listen) that you’ve got to do something about it and soon...

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Kristi Dobson
Recently Money Magazine placed Port Alberni 123rd on their list of the 123 Worst Cities to Live in Canada. What they didn’t mention is that Port Alberni is a city full of Hidden Heroes...

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Chris Everett
How many of us have come up with a really good idea that we’ve thought about, talked about but never got around to doing? Chris Everett isn’t one of those people...

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Robin & Sylvia Campbell
Hidden Heroes are people who know that small things can make a big difference. They also know if you want to change your life for the better, it’s difficult, if not impossible, to do it in one giant leap. You have to do it one small step at a time...

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Nanaimo Blues Society
Three years ago, days after they moved to town, former Hidden Heroes Bill Lucas and his wife, Val, had a dream. They dreamed of creating a thriving Blues scene in Nanaimo focused around an annual Summer Blues Festival...

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Shannon Price
As I sat down to write today’s column, I opened an email that changed my topic for today. The email announced that the Ontario Association of the Canadian Cystic Fibrosis Foundation had recently presented Shannon Price with the Michelle Breakwell Award for exemplary support of the CF cause...

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AIDS Orphans in Zimbabwe
Thanks in large part to the privilege I have of writing this column and to the support of Rotary Clubs in this area, I have been able to draw attention to the needs of AIDS orphans at Sihlengeni High School and Pelandaba Primary School in Zimbabwe...

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Annie Watters
Thanks to the efforts of Annie Waters, the Nanaimo District Regional Hospital Foundation will soon be receiving a much larger annual donation from the hospital auxiliary each year. Annie is the person most responsible for launching the hospital auxiliary’s North Ridge Village thrift store...

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Bill Hicks and Joelle Rabeau
Some Hidden Heroes aren’t so hidden. Joelle Rabu and Bill Hicks are two of those people. Both are well known in the entertainment community on Vancouver Island and beyond but quietly, without fanfare and without recompense, they do much to make our community a better place to live...

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VI Raiders
I was at the game in Montreal when Ronnie Stewart broke the CFL rushing record (287 yards) on October 10, 1960, a record that still stands today. However, ever since then, little by little, my interested in football all but disappeared. Then the VI Raiders came to town...

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Jeff Solomon
Twenty years ago when Jeff Solomon moved from Montreal to Nanaimo, he began looking for a way to get involved, to make a difference. It didn’t take long for him to find his answer … ball hockey...

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Cystic Fibrosis Fun Night
Through snow, sleet or hail -- rain would be no challenge at all -- the Cystic Fibrosis Fun Night, a family affair, will always prevail. For the fifth year in a row, I had the honour of being asked to be the auctioneer at this event where, in spite of the snow, the vast majority of the close to 300 people who bought tickets turned up and had a great time raising much needed funds for Cystic Fibrosis research...

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Give a Dollar, Share a Dream
Hidden Heroes are people who quietly set about doing the right thing; doing whatever they can to make a positive difference in the world around them. This week I want to acknowledge seven individual Hidden Heroes and a corporate one...

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Bruce Erikson
Today I am acknowledging one coach, Bruce Erikson, who has been coaching soccer in our community for more than 30 years; however, with this column I am also acknowledging approximately 340 local volunteer soccer coaches who work with house, rep and metro teams … and that doesn’t include team managers and parent helpers; Hidden Heroes all...

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Heather Porteous
We all have Hidden Heroes in our lives but most of us have been trained to spend more energy looking for, and remembering, hidden crooks rather than Hidden Heroes. As a result I tend to get very few people emailing me to nominate someone they know as a Hidden Hero...

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Jerry Paquette
Some Hidden Heroes are better known than others. Jerry Paquette, singer, sound engineer, producer, and manager is one of the better known ones...

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Alan Lomax
Can one person make a significant difference in this world? The answer of course is a resounding “yes”. That’s what Hidden Heroes do all the time and sometimes, through what we call the ripple affect, that difference can affect an entire country or even the entire world...

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Stephanie McDowell
Most of us have a number of people in our lives that would qualify as Hidden Heroes, but it's only occasionally that someone takes the time to tell me about them, and I can only assume that they aren't telling anyone else either...

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Nanaimo Foodshare
There are many employees and volunteers in not-for-profit organizations who qualify as Hidden Heroes. They quietly do small things that make a big difference and sadly much of what they do goes unnoticed by most of us. One of these not-for-profits is Nanaimo Foodshare...

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Mount Benson Legacy Group Campaign
The Mount Benson Legacy Group campaign to raise $500,000 towards the purchase of 500 acres on top of Mount Benson is on, and it's hundreds of Hidden Heroes, people like you and me, that will see this 500 acres turned into public parkland...

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Phil Ashbee
I first met Phil Ashbee, when he created trophies for the 1999 Van Isle 360 race. Phil, an artist with Aboriginal ancestry, is just one more Hidden Hero in our Mid Island arts world...

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Dover Bay Donation
Recently Dover Bay Physical Education students raised $750 for charity and chose to donate it to the Hidden Heroes Education Society to support the development of new Hidden Heroes programs for other students...

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Runners of Compassion Nanaimo
The Nanaimo Chapter of Runners of Compassion is a group of people who have stopped running for time and started running for others, specifically for women and children in need...

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Constance Hansey
Do you remember Constance Hansey? I wrote about her five years ago.

Constance was an exceptional volunteer at Georgia Avenue Community School. She helped gather and distribute used computers to families in need, she volunteered in the school computer lab, and she and her family raised over $2,000 for the school through paper drives...

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Katie Marocchi
Last year when Katie Marocchi graduated from Dover Bay Secondary School, she was living a very comfortable life here in Nanaimo. Today, with $7,500 saved from a summer job plus financial gifts from her family to cover her costs, she's working as a volunteer at Nazareth School in Ghana and her lifestyle has changed more than a little...

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Joanna Dunn and Steve Transfield
Early in 2002 at a Tourism Nanaimo Board of Directors meeting, Kerry Manton and I had an idea for an event we wanted to call the Adventure Games...

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Neighbourhood Heroes Celebrates Five Years
We have just passed the fifth anniversary of the Neighbourhood Heroes column, now a collection of 261 columns about more than 300 Neighbourhood Heroes...

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Boys and Girls Club of Nanaimo
I define Neighbourhood Heroes as people who have done small things - things that any ordinary person could do -- that has made a positive difference either in their own lives or the lives of people around them...

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Michele Hillier
Michele Hillier has connected a group of women here in Nanaimo with women in a small village in Sri Lanka who have been working hard to making a difference in their community - Neighbourhood Heroes all...

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Neighbourhood Heroes Meet and Greet Party
Wasn’t that a party, an old time country barn dance kind of party with little kids and great grandparents enjoying each other and kicking up their heels...

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Lessons I've Learned From Neighbourhood Heros
As another year passes into history, I want to review just a few of the lessons I have learned from our Neighbourhood Heroes...

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Carol Harding
This is another of our “SURPRISE!” columns. So SURPRISE! Carol Harding, you are a Neighbourhood Hero...

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Joy Hunter
When I started writing this column almost three years ago, my hope was that, as well as everyone enjoying the stories, at least a few readers would learn something from each of the people written about that they could apply to their own lives...

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Gold Wing Road Riders
Last Saturday I discovered that this column does achieve its primary goal at least some of the time.

One of our goals is to encourage more readers to notice and acknowledge the Neighbourhood Heroes around them but our primary goal is to motive you and others to notice what our Neighbourhood Heroes are doing and to take similar positive action in your own lives...

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Blake Erickson
Neighbourhood Heroes tend to notice when others need help and they are usually first in line to see what they can do and, when something needs doing and it seems like it can't be done, Neighbourhood Heroes often find a way to make it happen...

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Mike Reeves
It's the people of Nanaimo that makes this such a special place to live. We really are a city filled Neighbourhood Heroes...

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Neighbourhood Heros Always Wear A Bike Helmet
I'm in pain today as I write this column. Every time I move my right shoulder, it hurts, especially when I reach for the mouse. Each time I do that it hurts a lot. But apparently I wouldn't be writing at all this morning (Sunday) if I hadn't been wearing a bicycle helmet early yesterday afternoon. In fact, I probably wouldn't be alive...

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Steve Littley
Twenty years ago Steve Littley was a sixteen-year-old high school drop out. Today he is an extraordinary student who will soon have both a masters' degree in anthropology from SFU and a law degree from UBC...

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Larry Cooper
Larry Cooper wasn't nominated as today's Neighbourhood Hero because he has organized a four team mighty mites flag football league for kids 6 to 12, a peewee tackle football team for kids 8 to 11 and a bantam team for kids 11 to 13 ... but that certainly would have been enough to qualify him for the honour...

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Stephanie Walker - Walker's Animal Rescue Centre
When Stephanie Walker of Walker's Animal Shelter was six years old, her family adopted Oscar, a baby crow that had fallen out of a tree. Without their help, Oscar would have died. Without Oscar, Stephanie's passion for rescuing animals in need may not have begun...

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Two "Heroes" Seek Others
Shortly after John Mulrooney retired as principal of Chase River Primary School, he and his wife, Mary, a nurse, spent a month working as volunteers on a rural school project in Zimbabwe - You may recall that I worked on the same project and wrote five columns from there...

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Lynne Simpson
The Children's Miracle Network Telethon has had another record-breaking year and Lynne Simpson is one of the people that can take credit for that success...

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Lieutenant G. B. Meynell
Today's column will acknowledge over 100 heroes, heroes as defined in the dictionary -- People distinguished for exceptional courage, fortitude or bold enterprise, especially in times of war or danger...

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Len Daynes
Hey Len Daynes ... surprise! Ruth Merner, one of your neighbours, has nominated you as today's Neighbourhood Hero and your wife, Wendy, has known about it for weeks. She keeps good secrets doesn't she?

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Dale Dawes
Are there people in your past you never really got to know very well but they still had a positive impact on your life? Although she is now a teacher and a mother of two, Trina Wilcox still remembers Dale Dawes, her school bus driver when she was a student at Cedar Junior Secondary. Last week, all these years later, she nominated him as a Neighbourhood Hero...

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George Colussi
I've got to know George Colussi quite well over the past year and a half. He's the Executive Director of the Boys and Girls Club of Nanaimo. During that time, I've come to admire him both as individual and as a manager with a unique leadership style...

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Dan Lay
This column is about one Neighbourhood Hero who joined forces with a second Neighbourhood Hero. Then, over the next few weeks, working with their partners, they found and began to organize 30 more Neighbourhood Heroes ... and they've only just begun...

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David Foerter
If it's possible to give too much of yourself to helping others, today's Neighbourhood Hero is guilty. Dave Foerter is totally, and I mean totally committed to refurbishing used computers and then giving them away, free of charge, to kids whose families can't afford one...

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Linda Brandmeier and Julie Foster
How many times since September 11th have you heard someone say, "Man, are we ever lucky to live on this Island?" Most of us agreed whole-heartedly each time we heard that said. In fact, most of us said the same thing, over and over again with deeply felt emotion...

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Bryun Ashlie
This week, I set out to identify one of our own firefighters, Ambulance Paramedics or police officers as a Neighbourhood Hero. I wanted to acknowledge one of our own, and in so doing, pay homage to the hundreds of New York firefighters, police officers and others that lost their lives on Tuesday September 11...

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Ian Patterson
"Ian Patterson is the kind of guy that proves the old saying, 'You can't judge a book by its cover'". That's what the nomination form from Nanaimo Youth Services said about him...

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Asset Builders are Neighbourhood Heroes Too
Two and a half years ago Keith Pattinson began to introduce the Developmental Asset Building Philosophy here in British Columbia. This philosophy is based on a list of 40 positive experiences and characteristics that any one of us can help to provide for young people, simple things that have a tremendous impact on their chances for success in life...

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Marshall Cooper
Neighbourhood Heroes are average people who have done things that other overage people could also do, things that have made a difference in their own life or the lives of others. Sometimes Neighbourhood Heroes are well known "average people"...

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Brenda Newhart
She could have ignored the pleading eyes she saw in her rear-view mirror - thousands would have - but she didn't and that's why she is a Neighbourhood Hero...

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Peggy Lake
Don't mess with Peggy Lake. She's a woman on a mission. Peggy is committed to empowering people who are living in poverty -- people like her. She is also committed to empowering people who are living with mental illness -- people like her...

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