NOVEmbER 1 - NOVEmbER 7, 2012 www.northshoreoutlook.com
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pAgES
» WEST VANCOUVER
NORTh ShORE JOEy Before he became Burnaby Joe, Joe Sakic had North Shore roots
»8
ART pARTy Douglas Coupland celebrated at home
TImE TRAVEL
» 14
The Outlook gets an exclusive behind-the-scenes look into the North Vancouver museum and Archives’ past and future » 10
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22 Thursday, Thursday,November November1,1,2012 2012
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2013 ProPoseD BuDget
Community Open Houses
The District of West Vancouver is working to respond to increasing cost pressures facing our community, while also focusing on Council’s priorities and protecting our shared future. The 2013 Proposed Budget will not change the property tax rate from last year, but does explore new funding to protect and invest in our infrastructure. To get a clear picture of how the proposed municipal budget directly affects you and the services you value, as well as how property assessments and other taxing authorities affect your tax bill, come to an Open House. We’ll explain it in detail, provide an overview of the features of the 2013 Proposed Budget, and answer your questions.
TWo opeN HoUSeS Wednesday, November 14 6–8 p.m. Gleneagles Community Centre Seaview Room, 6262 Marine Drive Date:
time: Place:
Wednesday, November 21 6–8 p.m. Seniors’ Activity Centre Marine Room, 695-21st Street
Date: time: Place:
The draft proposed budget will be available November 6 at we stva n co u ve r.c a / b u d ge t .
CityView
IN STUDIO - Ballet Bloch Canada students (left to right) Madeleine Hill, Angelica Goode, Sophie Sedlacek, Emily Hogan and Stephanie Lowe practise at the school’s new North Vancouver studio. Artistic director Tracy-Lea Bloch teaches girls and boys pure ballet in preparation for professional ballet companies. In just two months, three students (Angelica Goode, Stephanie Lowe and Sophie Sedlacek) have joined the production Swan Lake by Toronto-based Ballet Jörgen Canada after auditioning in Vancouver. Swan Lake will be performed at Centennial Theatre in North Van on Feb. 19, 2013. The three girls have also been accepted into summer school at Canada’s Royal Winnipeg Ballet. The next chance to see Ballet Bloch perform will be at the Live, Love, Dance fundraiser, an event to support Chelsea Steyns, the owner of North Shore Dance Academy who has a rare form of brain cancer. For more information visit balletbloch.com. Michaela Garstin photo
Find the City on Facebook | www.cnv.org/Facebook
Spirit Trail Open House: Lonsdale Quay Area Wednesday, November 7 from 5pm-7pm, John Braithwaite Community Centre Join City staff for an Open House on the preliminary design of the City's Lonsdale Quay waterfront section of the Spirit Trail. This section includes Forbes Avenue to Lonsdale Quay, and continues to the Foot of Lonsdale along Carrie Cates. The Spirit Trail is a waterfront oriented, multi-use greenway that will provide access across the North Shore. The Spirit Trail through this area will enhance local connections between Lonsdale Quay and existing cycling routes and parks. More information at www.cnv.org/SpiritTrail.
Central Lonsdale Open for Business DON'T LET A LITTLE ROADWORK GET IN YOUR WAY All businesses in Central Lonsdale remain open. Some construction is underway at Lonsdale & 16th Street for the next few weeks that will deliver a new streetscape, enhancing the neighbourhood. Impact on local businesses and visitors to the area will be kept to a minimum. Central Lonsdale’s vibrant business core continues to offer unique shopping and dining experiences. For all City roadwork information, visit www.cnv.org/Construction.
Curbside Food Scraps Collection is Here With the Green Can Program, you can recycle your food scraps in 3 easy steps: 1. Collect food scraps in a kitchen container of your choice 2. Empty your kitchen container into your green can 3. In the morning on collection day, place your green can curbside Rather than going to the landfill, your food scraps will now be composted. Learn more at www.cnv.org/GreenCan. 141 West 14th Street, North Vancouver BC V7M 1H9 | Tel: 604.985.7761 | Fax: 604.985.9417 | info@cnv.org
Can You Make One Less Car Trip Per Week? With Bike to Work Week in full swing, it’s a good time to remember that cycling can be an easy way to get around, stay in shape and feel great about reducing your carbon footprint. Whether you’re cycling, walking or taking transit, don’t let the weather put a damper on things. Make sure you have rain gear to help keep the elements out. Remember, there’s no such thing as bad weather, just bad gear! Take the TravelSmart Pledge at travelsmart. ca/northshore, and be entered to win a prize pack valued at $500.
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Thursday, November 1, 2012 3
44 Thursday, Thursday,November November1,1,2012 2012
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West Vancouver Board of Education
Taking Action
NoV/2012
Board Chair Cindy Dekker meets with the new executive slate of the West Vancouver District Student Council. From L to R: Laura Luo, Adam Mitha, Patricia Neijens, Cindy Dekker, Shakiel Mahjouri, Jessica Lai, Kenny Wu, Richie Warke. Absent: Molly Tod-Tims
Make a Difference The West Vancouver Board of Education trustees all come from different professional backgrounds but we share the same desire to “make a difference” in the education of children in our community. We want every child attending school in West Vancouver, Bowen Island and Lions Bay to develop a lifelong love of learning, to be socially responsible and to be globally aware. We have been impressed this fall by the number of students and staff in the district engaging in leadership opportunities that demonstrate all of these important traits. For example, more than 40 students from our three secondary schools have joined this year’s West Vancouver School District Student Council. They are busy planning various initiatives aimed at “making a difference” for their fellow students and the broader community. We look forward to seeing their ideas develop into reality. Rockridge Secondary School’s leadership class has also forged a new community connection by organizing its’ first-ever “family of schools” Terry Fox Run. Students from Caulfeild, West Bay and Eagle Harbour Montessori joined together for a fantastic morning of fundraising and exercise. The West Vancouver School District has also continued its strong tradition of participation at Free the Children’s “We Day Vancouver” celebration with hundreds of teachers and students listening and learning from inspiring speakers and musicians. Last week, Sentinel Secondary staff and students thoughtfully made a contribution to Sir Admiral Seymour Elementary in Vancouver by donating and delivering hoodies to the entire school. Trustee David Stevenson recently noted that the health of our community depends on the health of our schools. We believe that students in the West Vancouver School District are developing into citizens who “will make a difference” and will help build strong communities today and in the future. Sincerely, Cindy Dekker, Board Chair
WHAT’S NEW WVSS Environmental Protection Club Wins Award
The District of West Vancouver has honoured the WVSS Environmental Protection Network Club with a Community Contribution Award. Club members “make a difference” by volunteering with the West Vancouver Streamkeeper Society and the National Shoreline Cleanup as well as the Coho Festival. They also collect and sort the container, electronic and paper recycling at the school. Grade 12 student Howard Lee is pictured here volunteering at a “mini-fair” the group recently organized at Park Royal to educate the public about e-waste.
A Community Conversation about the Future of Graduation Requirements
The West Vancouver School District invites you to participate in a special community forum that will help shape the development of future graduation requirements. The BC Ministry of Education is seeking input from students, parents, educators, post-secondary partners and civic groups. The dialogue session, one of many being held around the province, will take place on Wednesday, November 21 at Sentinel School Library. Please see our website at www.sd45.bc.ca for more information and to register on-line.
Svenga Forstrom, an 18-year-old PKU sufferer from North Vancouver, with foods from his strict low-protein diet. Todd Coyne photo
B.C. denies drug funding for brain-damaging disease TODD COYNE S TA F F R E P O RT E R
W
hen last month the B.C. government declined medical-plan coverage for a new drug treating a rare, brain-damaging disorder, families like the Forstroms of North Vancouver were devastated. Their 18-year-old son Svenga is one of only 150 British Columbians who suffers from phenylketonuria, a genetic metabolic disorder commonly referred to as PKU. The disorder occurs when the body is unable to process phenylalanine, or “Phe,” an essential amino acid found in the protein of most foods. Without a special protein-restricted diet, that excess “Phe” can build up in the brain over time, causing mild impairment to severe retardation and brain damage. But in 2010, Health Canada approved a brand new drug called Kuvan (sapropterin) which helps roughly one-fifth to one-half of PKU patients loosen those protein restrictions without suffering the amino-acid build-up. For a growing teenager on proteinrestricted diet, it was a breakthrough. “I started the trial for Kuvan last September,” Svenga told The Outlook from the living room of his family home. “It’s doubled my tolerance for protein now.” Where he used to be allowed only one bowl of Raisin Bran before maxing out his daily protein limit, now that same bowl only puts him at 50 per cent. Likewise, two cubes of cheese or one cup of rice used to push his protein levels right up into the danger zone, but continued, PAGE 6
Did you know – National Financial Planning Week is November 19-25, 2012. Financial Planning Standards Council Only 50% of Canadians, aged 46-64, have a written financial plan. Horizons Retirement Report Jan 2012 At RGF, we believe that comprehensive financial planning is the foundation for managing your investment portfolio. Call and ask for your complimentary information kit.
West Vancouver Board of Education Board Chair Cindy Dekker Vice-Chair Jane Kellett Trustee Carolyn Broady Trustee Reema Faris Trustee David Stevenson
Teresa Black Hughes, CFP R.F.P. CLU FMA CIM www.rogersgroup.com/teresablackhughes 604.732.6551 tbh@rogersgroup.com
Rogers Group Financial Advisors | Rogers Group Investment Advisors, Member CIPF ©2012
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Thursday, November 1, 2012 5
Working Together to Manage
Snow and Ice in Your Municipality
Snow season is upon us. Your municipality monitors road and weather conditions throughout the winter months. When snow and icy conditions are forecast, crews and equipment are dispatched to clear roads on a priority basis. The first priority for municipal crews, during and after a snowfall, is to attempt to clear the major arterial streets, as well as bus routes, bus stops, and access to emergency services (e.g. fire halls, ambulance stations and hospital). The second priority is to attempt to clear collector streets and routes leading to schools. Once conditions have stabilized on first and second priority routes, crews will begin to clear local streets. Local streets are not ploughed immediately during a snow event. In the event of continual snowfall, it may take longer than normal for ploughs to reach local streets as first and second priority streets will require additional attention. Thank you for your cooperation and patience during a snow event as municipal crews work to keep your streets clear and safe. For more information on your municipality’s snow and ice removal policy and how you can prepare for winter storms, please contact your local municipality.
You Can Help Before a snowfall: • Prepare for an emergency. Keep an emergency kit and supplies in your home, office
and car. During an emergency, such as a large-scale power outage, residents may be without services or assistance for up to 72 hours. Visit the North Shore Emergency Management Office website at www.nsemo.org, or call 604-969-7000 to find out more about personal emergency preparedness and for information on free emergency preparedness workshops. • Stock up on food supplies and ensure that your prescriptions are filled. • Note the locations of fire hydrants and catch basins around your property. • Purchase and install quality snow tires. Tune up your vehicle for winter driving. • Keep a shovel and supply of salt handy for sidewalks and driveways. • Make alternate arrangements (such as taking public transit) to commute to work, school, or medical appointments when it snows. • Monitor local weather reports.
When it snows: • Drive only if necessary. Public transit is a good alternative. • Park in your driveway, not on the street. This will allow snow ploughs and salt spreaders the room required to safely clear the street. This is particularly important on cul-desacs and narrow roadways. Please note that lanes/alleys are not ploughed during a snow event. • Observe posted signs that may restrict on-street parking in some areas during periods of heavy snow. • Do not abandon your car if it gets stuck. Illegally parked cars that hamper snow clearing or emergency vehicles may be ticketed and/or towed. • Remove snow from your sidewalk. The owner or occupier of an industrial, commercial or multi-family property is required to remove any accumulation of snow or ice from the sidewalks and footpaths bordering the real property as soon as practicable after the cessation of any snow or ice accumulation. Residents of single-family properties are also asked to clear snow and ice from sidewalks in front of their home in order to ensure the safety of pedestrians. (Note: the City of North Vancouver bylaw also requires removal of snow from sidewalks fronting residential properties). Please visit your municipal website to learn more about snow clearing bylaws in your community: District of North Vancouver Street and Traffic Bylaw 7125 City of North Vancouver Street and Traffic Bylaw 6234 District of West Vancouver Traffic and Parking Bylaw 4370 • Check your municipality’s website for snow shovelling tips and the latest updates. • Clear snow away from fire hydrants. This will make it easier for the fire department to locate the hydrant in the event of an emergency.
• Clear snow and ice from the catch basins in front of your home or business. This will allow for proper drainage and will reduce the chance of flooding on the street and on property. • Check on neighbours and family members who may need some extra assistance. • Stay away from rivers and creeks. With heavy rainfall or melting snowpack comes increased risk, due to elevated water levels, swift moving currents, and bank erosion. • Report downed power lines. Stay clear and contact BC Hydro at 1-888-POWERON. Go to BC Hydro’s website for further information about power outages at www.bchydro.com/outages.
Collection Services During a Snow Event In the event of hazardous road conditions due to snow and ice, it may be necessary to suspend garbage, recycling, green can, and yard trimmings collection in some or all parts of the North Shore. Garbage/Green Can Collection (North Van District): If your garbage and green can collection (single family or multi-family) is missed, then collection will not occur until the next scheduled collection day and the container limit will be increased to accommodate the missed pick-up. Please remove your garbage containers from the curb and store until the next scheduled collection day. Garbage/Green Can Collection (North Van City and West Van): If your garbage and green can collection is missed, then crews will attempt to make the collection the following day. Please ensure that your containers are not buried in snow. If crews do not collect your material the next day, then it will be collected on your next scheduled collection day and the container limit will be increased to accommodate the missed pickup. Recycling Collection (North and West Vancouver): If recycling collection is missed, crews will attempt service the following day. If crews do not collect your material the next day, please remove it from the curb until your next scheduled collection day. Visit www.northshorerecycling.ca for up-to-date information on recycling collection. Note for all North Shore residences: If your garbage/recycling is normally collected from the street: Do not place your garbage cans and recycling containers on the road. Keep them on the sidewalk or boulevard and remove them as soon as possible after they have been emptied. Schools can also be affected by heavy snowfall: In the event of a major snowfall, local area schools may be closed. Please check the following websites during a snow event for more information. North Vancouver School District: www.nvsd44.bc.ca West Vancouver School District: www.sd45.bc.ca or (604) 981-1234 (24 hours) Independent/Private Schools: Please contact the school directly.
City of North Vancouver
District of North Vancouver
District of West Vancouver
City Hall: 604-985-7761 Engineering: 604-983-7333 To report a public works problem: Operations: 604-987-7155, eng@cnv.org 8:00 am – 4:30 pm (Monday to Friday) After hours public works emergency line: 604-988-2212 For more information visit: www.cnv.org/snowready
Main Reception: 604-990-2311 8:00 am – 4:30 pm (Monday to Friday) Email: snowcommand@dnv.org For more information visit: www.dnv.org/snow, or www.twitter.com/DNV_snow, or call 604-990-2255 (for a recorded message) After-hours public works emergency calls: 604-990-3666
Public Works Dispatch: Call 604-925-7100 for snow removal and flooding issues Municipal Hall: Call 925-7000 for other non-emergency issues 8:30 am – 4:30 pm (Monday to Friday) For more information visit: www.westvancouver.ca/snowremoval
66 Thursday, Thursday,November November1,1,2012 2012
www.northshoreoutlook.com continued from, PAGE 4
today he can double those portions. Svenga’s free trial of the drug, however, ended in March. And at a cost of $18,000-per-month for a 16-pills-per-day regimen, the Forstroms, like many others in B.C., couldn’t afford the drug if the family didn’t have private insurance to pick up 80 per cent of the tab. When Svenga turns 25, however, health coverage under his parents’ plan stops. Without private insurance of his own, he could be out of pocket $216k a year for his prescription. That’s in addition to his already expensive diet of synthetic-protein foods which are on average priced at a tenfold mark-up over their non-synthetic counterparts. “When that runs out, I really don’t know how I’m going to pay for it,” Svenga said. Over the summer, B.C.’s Ministry of Health was in talks with the Californiabased drug manufacturer, BioMarin, trying to hash out a deal by which B.C.’s PharmaCare program would pay for Kuvan treatment for those estimated 20 to 50 per cent of PKU sufferers the drug can help. But in a statement to The Outlook Thursday, the health ministry said it declined to cover the drug “because of unclear benefits and high drug costs.” While the statement claimed that no other Canadian province’s drug plan covers Kuvan, Quebec’s drug plan does reimburse the cost of Kuvan treatment for women who are pregnant or may become pregnant. Eugenia Shen, spokeswoman for BioMarin said the California drug-maker is currently in talks with more than one other Canadian province to discuss providing the drug through their respective taxpayer programs. So far, B.C. is the only province to outright reject it. “The price we offered [B.C.] is pretty much consistent with that of the US,” Shen said in a phone interview with The Outlook
Friday. “It’s weight-based therapy, so the average cost would be $80,000 per patient per year.” B.C. and the rest of Canada have been carrying out mandatory screening for PKU on all newborn babies since the 1960s. Like other PKU parents, Svenga’s mother, Sally Broadbent, hadn’t heard of those initials until her son was diagnosed with them at birth. At the time, there was no known treatment for the disease aside from the restricted-protein diet. But today, Broadbent says she’s “shocked” the province can on the one hand require all newborns get screened for PKU, and yet throw its hands up when asked for help because the disease was found. John Adams is the president of Ontariobased PKU patient-support group, Canadian PKU and Associated Disorders, and the father of a 21-year-old PKU sufferer. “This is about the B.C. Minister of Health being unreasonable in the extreme,” Adams told The Outlook in a phone interview last week. “In Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, the low-protein [food] is paid for by the public health program. But B.C. is really the only province that doesn’t do anything for PKU sufferers in terms of providing the low-protein medical food.” While the B.C. health ministry declined The Outlook’s request for an interview with Minister Margaret MacDiarmid, the ministry said in a statement that it does provide, free of charge, a metabolic formula that helps PKU patients develop properly. “The ministry does not fund food purchases as this is considered a personal responsibility,” the statement said, adding, “PKU patients who are on income assistance may also be eligible for a $40 monthly diet supplement from the Ministry of Social Development.” tcoyne@northshoreoutlook.com twitter.com/toddcoyne
Waiting for the puck to drop Prolonged NHL strike could deliver a bodycheck to the bottom line of sports-friendly pubs and restaurants JUSTIN BEDDALL EdITor
T
onight the Vancouver Canucks should be playing the Dallas Stars. Normally, that would mean some extra jersey-clad patrons at North Vancouver’s Hurricane Grill, a restaurant known for good food, friendly service and its puckfriendly atmosphere — hockey memorabilia decorating the walls and 13 large flat screens to watch games on. continued, PAGE 13
Ash Ranjbar, owner of Hurricane Grill. Justin Beddall photo
St Alcuin College
Bringing a Liberal Arts Education to the North Shore
Kindergarten Open House Tues. Nov. 6th Wed. Nov. 7th
10 am - 11 am 7 pm - 8 pm
Enrol now for 2013/2014* Early learning lays the foundation for success in the later years. At St Alcuin, we provide an educational environment that nurtures creative, physical, social and cognitive growth. Grades offered: kindergarten to grade 12. *Spaces are limited. 604-360-8656 1044 St. Georges Ave., North Vancouver
info@stalcuincollege.com www.stalcuincollege.com
Thursday, November 1, 2012 7 Thursday, November 1, 2012 7
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Strata Living Join us for a Free presentation by
Tony Gioventu
on “Depreciation Reports”
Wednesday, november 14th at 6:00 pm St. anthony’s Church Hall, 2337 Inglewood ave, West Vancouver Tony Gioventu – Executive Director of the Condominium Home Owners Association of BC & Columnist for The Vancouver Province.
Hosted by Judi Whyte RI & Robbi-Layne Robertson Getting the right help is important. We offer experience, education & great service!
ReGISTRaTIon RequIReD, PLeaSe ConTaCT JuDI oR RoBBI-LaYne
Judi Whyte RI Robbi-Layne Robertson 604.868.9812 604.351.9417
AboriginAl fusion - Chef Andrew George cooks up elk medallions with his signature Three Sisters Salsa. Michaela Garstin photo
judiwhyte@telus.net robbilaynerobertson@gmail.com
Traditional cooking with flare
Nation is able to hunt Roosevelt elk in the Indian River Watershed, part of the Nation’s traditional territory at the end of Indian Arm. Elk had nearly disappeared from B.C. by the 1880s due to overhunting, but 20 were reintroduced by the nation and the provinMICHAELA gArsTin cial government to the watershed in 2006. Since then, the population has grown to 50, S TA f f R E p o RT E R allowing a few to be hunted sustainably in “It’s not as gamey as people think,” says mid-October. chef Andrew George as he prepares elk Chef George uses the harvested meat to medallions in the Tsleil-Waututh Nation’s teach his students traditional cooking combustling community kitchen. bined with added influences, like French He briskly mixes yellow, orange and red and African cuisine. squash together for his Three Sisters Salsa He’s leading the first class of the Tsleiland carefully places the tender elk meat Waututh culinary arts program, a 28-week around it. program that emphasizes aboriginal cookElk isn’t difficult to cook, he says, so his ing and gives students their Professional culinary students catch on quickly. He adds Cook Level 1 certificate. a few more medallions to the plate then instantreplay Today, along with two of his students, hops over to the stove, where one of his stu- he’s preparing lunch to present to the comLEN CORBEN » COLUMNIST .NORTHSHOREOUTLOOK.COM dents is intensely cooking. munity to celebrate the inaugural class’s “That we’re able to cook elk brings more graduation. meaning to the course,” he says, flipping George, who has been a chef for 25 years, a pan of salsa as it grills over the stove’s has worked at the Chateau Whistler and twocents flame. Vancouver’s Four Seasons hotel, EAN KOLENKO » STAFF REPORTER “It’s done medium-rare,” he as well as running a restaurant adds, cutting a thin slice to and catering in the 1990s. sample. For the first time in a cenWWW.NORTHSHOREOUTLOOK.COM ffeewith continued, PAGE 15 tury, the Tsleil-Waututh
New Tsleil-Waututh Professional Cooks program focused on aboriginal cuisine and preparing for culinary careers
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» “Burnaby Joe” was once viewpoint “North Shore Joey” Sakic
the JAPANeSe CAR SPeCIALISt
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The early days of a hockey legend
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twitter.com/seankolenko ong before Joe Sakic was “Burnaby Joe,” the blue-collar NHL hall-offamer; he was “North Shore Joey” Sakic of the North Shore Winter SEAN Club. KOLENKO » STAFF REPORTER Oh sure, little Joey did live in Burnaby. Yet – despite residing right beside the arena where the Burnaby Minor Hockey Association was located – theskolenko@northshoreoutlook.com reputation twitter.com/seankolenko of the North Shore Winter Club was all the incentive the Sakic family needed in order to take the seemingly almostSEAN KOLENKO » STAFF REPORTER daily trek across the Second Narrows Bridge so that Joey and younger brother Brian could play for NSWC teams and so younger sister Rosemarie could figure skate on the ice where Karen Magnussen learned to create her magic.editor@northshoreoutlook.com twitter.com/justinbeddall While it was Joey – it was never Joe back then – who became the no-questionabout-it Hockey Hall of Fame selection in BEDDALL » EDITOR his first year of eligibility, all the JUSTIN Sakic kids were gifted athletes. In fact Brian played seven years of pro hockey and Rosie became an accomplished skater under coach Linda Brauckmann and eventually became a figure skating coach herself. Beginning at age seven, Joey played for the Barons in the NSWC’s Peanut (now Novice) house league and the following year with the White Lightning. There WWW.NORTHSHOREOUTLOOK.COM were no rep teams at that level. John Bartok, who coached Joey for the next four years (two NSWC Atom-division rep teams and two in Peewee), recalled
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ou might remember him best from his role in St. Elsewhere or from his comedy roles in Christopher Guest movies like This is Spinal Tap, but actor Ed Begley Jr. is also a lean, green, environmental machine who says that his biggest responsibility is helping out Mother Nature. Speaking at the Real Estate Foundation of BC’s 2012 Land Awards last week, the Hollywood star was the toast of the night. Award winners, guests and VIPs enjoyed a gala dinner night which ended with a book signing, a live dance band and great memories. Also last week, at the Westin Bayshore, the Canucks Place Children’s Hospice’s Gift of Time Gala saw lots of North Shore faces mixing and mingling in their black tie best. Decorated to look like a magical wonderland, this premiere gala event always attracts a great crowd for a very worthwhile cause. 1 Real Estate Foundation of BC’s chief executive officer Jack Wong, left, welcomes movie star and environmental activist Ed Begley Jr. to the Land Awards gala. 2 PR pros Shawn Poole and Jill Batie, from Hill + Knowlton, help put on the ritz for the Land Awards gala. 3 Squamish Nation cultural ambassador Chief Ian Campbell, left, sits with Globe and Mail editor Matt O’Grady at the Land Awards gala head table. 4 Actor Ed Begley Jr. receives thanks for delivering
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the evening’s keynote speech from Real Estate Foundation of BC’s board chair Kelly Lerigny. 5 West Vancouver dentist Geoff Gillespire is the envy of all with the stunning Ashley Morris, the new 2013 face of Guess, on his arm at the Gift of Time gala. 6 West Van’s John and Karen MacPhail are long-time generous supporters of many Vancouver charities. 7 Gift of Time committee member and West Van girl, Mirjana Popescu looks beautiful in an electric blue, off-the-
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shoulder gown. 8 Canucks Place galas wouldn’t be complete without at least some Canucks faces in the crowd. From left: Sportsnet’s Dan Murphy, former Canucks goalie “Captain” Kirk McLean and voice of the Canucks John Shorthouse. 9 North Vancouver guests Jerome Atherton, left, and Shala and Karim Chandani enjoy pre-dinner conversation at Gift of Time gala.
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istory is being made in a secret warehouse on North Vancouver’s industrial waterfront. The site has for decades been a storehouse of priceless cultural artifacts — war memorabilia, artworks, inventions and pioneer-era tools — all 20,000 of them milestones in the North Shore creation story. Or so we thought. Some of these dust-covered items — hoarded away by long-ago collectioneers with the North Vancouver Museum and Archives into countless, label-less boxes crammed with all manner of brica-brac of dubious origin — bear little to no connection with the North Shore at all. “How many wood planes do you really need?” asks museum director Nancy Kirkpatrick, referring to the boxes of antiquated hand tools the museum has collected and stored over the years. Likewise, one could ask how many 11-tonne tugboat engines from Powell River does a North Vancouver museum need? The machine is apparently still in peak running order. Yet, the answer is still none. The relics were all collected, it seems, with the vague idea that one day museum staff would sift through and appraise it all, deciding then what to catalogue and keep for a grand heritage village, complete with a schoolhouse and a general store. Well, that day has come. But plans for the heritage village have gone the way of history. Instead, a more focused, themed museum near the Lonsdale Quay and former Shipyards is likely to be built. With that new mandate in mind, the NVMA is now culling their more-than-20,000-piece collection down to just 12,000 items in preparation for the big move by May 2015. So it seems, this day has just begun.
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n a recent tour of the hush-hush location, museum collections manager Magdalena Moore and NVMA commission chair Bob Heywood navigate through row-upon-row of collected curiosa, pointing out where a small expeditionary army of museum staff and volunteers have made inroads into the stacks. “The museum’s changed its philosophy and now we’re looking at major themes that properly illustrate the North Shore,” Heywood says, pointing to some old wooden ski poles, leather skates and a piece of Mount Seymour’s old Mystery Peak chairlift. Sports and recreation is just one of seven major new themes, evocative of the North Shore’s natural history and geography. The other six include First Nations history, industry and economic activity, transportation and infrastructure, notable achievers, immigration and settlement, and community development. “In the future the museum will be much more interactive and program-oriented around these themes and in bringing in speakers, guests and exhibits for them,” Heywood adds. “The new museum is going to be a lot different from the old one.” And while the waterfront siting of the new museum is still little more than a promise on paper from city politicians so far, the closure of the “old” museum at Presentation House is already set for the end of the year. At least, that’s when the Chesterfield Avenue museum will be appointment-only viewing, no longer open to the public for rainy day walk-ins starting in January. The reason for the closure is to focus the museum’s staff and resources on the task of paring down of the museum’s
Made
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permanent collection before the 2015 deadline. “Downsizing is not as simple as one might think,” Heywood says. “You can’t just have a garage sale and get rid of it, because it was given to you in trust that you ensure you deal with it in an appropriate way.” And it’s not cheap either. Begun in June, the whole downsizing process, known as “deaccessioning,” comes at a cost of about $350,000, shared between the two North Vancouver municipalities. That covers not only the few museum staff currently dedicated to identifying, cleaning and cataloguing what’s found in the warehouse, but also any efforts to try to return any unnecessary items to their rightful owners or to perhaps place them at more appropriate museums. “To some extent, you’ve got to look at the value of the item,” Heywood says, “because a lot of stuff isn’t worth much and you’re going to spend a lot of time trying to track down the owner of a tobacco can.” And, Moore adds, “there’s a lot of legal complications in giving it to somebody who wasn’t the original owner, like a descendent — how do you figure out which of the siblings to give it to? And since people gave it to keep it in the public realm, we’re trying to keep things in the public realm by offering them to another museum.” Any final decision on the fate of those thousands of misfit artifacts, she adds, will fall on the councils of the city and district. continued, NEXT PAGE
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historical hardware - Clockwise from top, North Vancouver Museum and Archives’ collections manager Magdalena Moore shows off some beekeeping equipment, stored in the NVMA warehouse, which she estimates is likely from the 1930s. Forged wrenches, crude hammers and mallets are inspected on a warehouse table in an effort to determine their place and time of origin. The original seal of the Corporation of the City of North Vancouver sports an anchor, wheel and beehive to symbolize maritime industriousness. The crest formerly hung in front of North Vancouver city hall. Rob Newell photos
TRANS MOUNTAIN EXPANSION PROJECT Public Information Sessions
NORTH VANCOUVER Sat. November 3, 2012 4 pm to 7 pm
North Shore Neighbourhood House 225 East 2nd Street
We invite you to find out more and join the conversation about the proposed expansion of the Trans Mountain Pipeline. Talk with project staff and give us your feedback.
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Wed. November 7, 2012 4 pm to 7 pm Kay Meek Centre 1700 Mathers Avenue
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While Hurricane Grill isn’t a sports bar, owner Ash Ranjbar explains “we’ve made a name for ourselves as a place to come and watch hockey.” But on this Thursday evening, with the NHL schedule frozen by a lockout, there will only be football and baseball on the TVs. With no NHL, Ranjbar estimates business is off by about 6 per cent compared to same time last year at his North Vancouver restaurant. While he doesn’t attribute that dip solely to the lockout — there are other possible contributing factors: weather or the economy, for instance, he explains — Ranjbar concludes “hockey is definitely part of that percentage.” The numbers are likely worse at his second Hurricane Grill location opened four years ago in Yaletown, just blocks from Rogers Arena, where 42 regular season home games bring in fans for preand post-game meals and drinks. Still, the young restaurateur isn’t sweating it, yet.
iven the seven new museum themes and the 7,000 square feet of new exhibit space planned for the waterfront, the new NVMA location is all but guaranteed to feature prominently artifacts of the North Shore’s shipbuilding history. Acquired largely in the 1990s, the NVMA warehouse has whole areas dedicated to maritime manufacturing, which include not only relics of Burrard Dry Dock’s wartime output, but also an early submersible prototype from North Vancouver deep-sea explorer and inventor, Phil Nuytten. And with the recent return of shipbuilding to the North Shore with Seaspan Marine’s successful bid for the federal naval and coast guard SETUP: Aug 15/2010 contracts, there may no better theme to tie together so many different NOTE: Proofing is theberesponsibility of the advertiser. Please email approval or aspects of the North Shore’s past, present and future — economically, geo- REV 1: AUG 25/2010 changes to bcparent@shaw.ca – Thank you for your cooperation. graphically, personally and politically. SETUP: Aug 15/2010 NOTE: Proofing is the responsibility of the advertiser. or REVPlease 2: email AUGapproval 26/2010 REV 1: AUG 25/2010 “We are really seeing that with some of these ideas, they’re coming back,” URGENT changes to bcparent@shaw.ca – Thank you for your cooperation. SETUP: Tel: Aug 15/2010 SETUP: Aug 15/2010 (604) 221-0366 SETUP: Aug 15/2010 ase OTE: email Proofing approval is the orresponsibility of theProofing advertiser. Please email or REV 2: AUG 26/2010 Moore says, discussing an early two-wheeled relic of what may have NOTE: is the responsibility of theapproval advertiser. Please email approval or been REV 3: REV 1: AUG 25/2010 REV 1: (604) AUG 221-0366 25/2010 PROOF! Tel: REV 1: AUG 25/2010 r cooperation. to URGENT bcparent@shaw.ca – Thank you for your cooperation. changes to bcparent@shaw.ca – Thank you forDry your cooperation. REV 3: the changes region’s first ever bike-share program at Burrard Dock, proving REV 2: AUG 26/2010 REV 2: AUG 26/2010 REV 2: AUG 26/2010 Tel:soon (604) that what’s old may be221-0366 new again.Tel: (604) 221-0366 PROOF! REV 3: REV 3: REV 3: tcoyne@northshoreoutlook.com Fall 2010 uncovering the past - Some kitchen appliance artifacts hidden away in the twitter.com/toddcoyne NVMA’s waterfront warehouse. Rob Newell photo l 2010
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“It hasn’t been too bad,” says Ranjbar, sitting inside the North Van Hurricane Grill. Fortunately, there’s NFL, soccer and until recently the World Series. And typically, early in the hockey season, there isn’t as much interest in watching games as fans get warmed up, he explains. “Right now the pinch isn’t that hard.” But, if the entire NHL season was lost, he expects his bottom line will be off by 10 to 15 per cent. As an entrepreneur, he understands the owners’ stance; having spoken to several NHLers — many Canucks frequent his Yaletown location — he also empathizes with their position in the CBA stalemate. But he’s also a fan. “As a fan, I’m starting to get disappointed,” says Ranjbar, who just finished talking hockey with a customer from Winnipeg seated at the end of the bar. “The fans get hurt and the little guys get hurt,” Ranjbar says.
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Colin Denton, GM of the Village Taphouse in West Vancouver, says the only noticeable difference without hockey so far has been during the slower nights, Sunday to Wednesday, when games might bring in some fans. If, however, the lockout heads into January he figures sales will slide, noting that it’s during the second half of the season and playoffs when fans really start going out to pubs and restaurants to watch games. In the meantime, with no Hockey Night in Canada on TV last Saturday night, Ranjbar instead brought in popular local musician Adam Woodall to play and he plans to continue with live music from 7 to 10 p.m. on Saturday nights in North Van to give “people another reason to come out.” Ranjbar, who weathered the complete cancellation of the 2004-05 NHL season, is hopeful there will be hockey this year. “I’d like to think that it will come back in the New Year,” he says. twitter.com/justinbeddall
With eight out of 10 Canadians having back pain at some time in their lives, it is no wonder Dr. Ali Akhavan, D.C., has people interested in a non-surgical lower back pain treatment. “The people who walk into our office suffer from chronic debilitating pain caused by herniated or bulging disc, degenerative disc disease, and sciatica," says Dr. Akhavan. “Many come to us as last option as the vast majority are stuck between surgery or suffering.” When they do come to him, most get better thanks to his non-surgical Spinal Decompression Technology, according to Dr. Akhavan. In 2006, Dr. Akhavan brought on board a Spinal Decompression Unit and today, much of his practice consists of the patients he once had to turn away. “I have experienced wonderful relief from my left sciatic pain and significant pain relief in my lower back. Thanks to the DRX9000 therapy, I am able to sleep most of the night with very little pain,” says Doug Hughes of Surrey. Rose Jones-Evans, also from Surrey, says: “My results have been excellent. The reduction of pain
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After being fitted with upper and lower harnesses, patients are slowly lowered to the horizontal position where they are lying on their backs with a leg support wedge that fits under their knees. During Spinal Decompression Therapy, a negative pressure is created inside the targeted disc which allows for increased blood, water and nutrient flow into the disc. Patients describe the treatment as a slow, painless, intermittent pulling of their backs which can be so relaxing; many patients actually fall asleep during treatment. The core strengthening and stabilization component of the therapy is the key to long- term success, according to Dr. Akhavan.
During the treatment program, the patients are prescribed back strengthening exercises and nutrition guidelines to support their care and afterwards they are encouraged to change their lifestyle and ergonomics or face a visit with the surgeon. “We encourage patients to explore where the problem came from in the first place,” says Dr. Akhavan. “The spine doesn’t tend to degenerate on its own; it needs external circumstances, lifestyle circumstances.” For more information, contact Vancouver Spinal Decompression Center at 604-984-4601 or visit Cell. 604.815.1921 www.vanspinaldecompression.com .
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G
While Hurricane Grill isn’t a sports bar, owner Ash Ranjbar explains “we’ve made a name for ourselves as a place to come and watch hockey.” But on this Thursday evening, with the NHL schedule frozen by a lockout, there will only be football and baseball on the TVs. With no NHL, Ranjbar estimates business is off by about 6 per cent compared to same time last year at his North Vancouver restaurant. While he doesn’t attribute that dip solely to the lockout — there are other possible contributing factors: weather or the economy, for instance, he explains — Ranjbar concludes “hockey is definitely part of that percentage.” The numbers are likely worse at his second Hurricane Grill location opened four years ago in Yaletown, just blocks from Rogers Arena, where 42 regular season home games bring in fans for preand post-game meals and drinks. Still, the young restaurateur isn’t sweating it, yet.
iven the seven new museum themes and the 7,000 square feet of new exhibit space planned for the waterfront, the new NVMA location is all but guaranteed to feature prominently artifacts of the North Shore’s shipbuilding history. Acquired largely in the 1990s, the NVMA warehouse has whole areas dedicated to maritime manufacturing, which include not only relics of Burrard Dry Dock’s wartime output, but also an early submersible prototype from North Vancouver deep-sea explorer and inventor, Phil Nuytten. And with the recent return of shipbuilding to the North Shore with Seaspan Marine’s successful bid for the federal naval and coast guard SETUP: Aug 15/2010 contracts, there may no better theme to tie together so many different NOTE: Proofing is theberesponsibility of the advertiser. Please email approval or aspects of the North Shore’s past, present and future — economically, geo- REV 1: AUG 25/2010 changes to bcparent@shaw.ca – Thank you for your cooperation. graphically, personally and politically. SETUP: Aug 15/2010 NOTE: Proofing is the responsibility of the advertiser. or REVPlease 2: email AUGapproval 26/2010 REV 1: AUG 25/2010 “We are really seeing that with some of these ideas, they’re coming back,” URGENT changes to bcparent@shaw.ca – Thank you for your cooperation. SETUP: Tel: Aug 15/2010 SETUP: Aug 15/2010 (604) 221-0366 SETUP: Aug 15/2010 ase OTE: email Proofing approval is the orresponsibility of theProofing advertiser. Please email or REV 2: AUG 26/2010 Moore says, discussing an early two-wheeled relic of what may have NOTE: is the responsibility of theapproval advertiser. Please email approval or been REV 3: REV 1: AUG 25/2010 REV 1: (604) AUG 221-0366 25/2010 PROOF! Tel: REV 1: AUG 25/2010 r cooperation. to URGENT bcparent@shaw.ca – Thank you for your cooperation. changes to bcparent@shaw.ca – Thank you forDry your cooperation. REV 3: the changes region’s first ever bike-share program at Burrard Dock, proving REV 2: AUG 26/2010 REV 2: AUG 26/2010 REV 2: AUG 26/2010 Tel:soon (604) that what’s old may be221-0366 new again.Tel: (604) 221-0366 PROOF! REV 3: REV 3: REV 3: tcoyne@northshoreoutlook.com Fall 2010 uncovering the past - Some kitchen appliance artifacts hidden away in the twitter.com/toddcoyne NVMA’s waterfront warehouse. Rob Newell photo l 2010
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“It hasn’t been too bad,” says Ranjbar, sitting inside the North Van Hurricane Grill. Fortunately, there’s NFL, soccer and until recently the World Series. And typically, early in the hockey season, there isn’t as much interest in watching games as fans get warmed up, he explains. “Right now the pinch isn’t that hard.” But, if the entire NHL season was lost, he expects his bottom line will be off by 10 to 15 per cent. As an entrepreneur, he understands the owners’ stance; having spoken to several NHLers — many Canucks frequent his Yaletown location — he also empathizes with their position in the CBA stalemate. But he’s also a fan. “As a fan, I’m starting to get disappointed,” says Ranjbar, who just finished talking hockey with a customer from Winnipeg seated at the end of the bar. “The fans get hurt and the little guys get hurt,” Ranjbar says.
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Colin Denton, GM of the Village Taphouse in West Vancouver, says the only noticeable difference without hockey so far has been during the slower nights, Sunday to Wednesday, when games might bring in some fans. If, however, the lockout heads into January he figures sales will slide, noting that it’s during the second half of the season and playoffs when fans really start going out to pubs and restaurants to watch games. In the meantime, with no Hockey Night in Canada on TV last Saturday night, Ranjbar instead brought in popular local musician Adam Woodall to play and he plans to continue with live music from 7 to 10 p.m. on Saturday nights in North Van to give “people another reason to come out.” Ranjbar, who weathered the complete cancellation of the 2004-05 NHL season, is hopeful there will be hockey this year. “I’d like to think that it will come back in the New Year,” he says. twitter.com/justinbeddall
With eight out of 10 Canadians having back pain at some time in their lives, it is no wonder Dr. Ali Akhavan, D.C., has people interested in a non-surgical lower back pain treatment. “The people who walk into our office suffer from chronic debilitating pain caused by herniated or bulging disc, degenerative disc disease, and sciatica," says Dr. Akhavan. “Many come to us as last option as the vast majority are stuck between surgery or suffering.” When they do come to him, most get better thanks to his non-surgical Spinal Decompression Technology, according to Dr. Akhavan. In 2006, Dr. Akhavan brought on board a Spinal Decompression Unit and today, much of his practice consists of the patients he once had to turn away. “I have experienced wonderful relief from my left sciatic pain and significant pain relief in my lower back. Thanks to the DRX9000 therapy, I am able to sleep most of the night with very little pain,” says Doug Hughes of Surrey. Rose Jones-Evans, also from Surrey, says: “My results have been excellent. The reduction of pain
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After being fitted with upper and lower harnesses, patients are slowly lowered to the horizontal position where they are lying on their backs with a leg support wedge that fits under their knees. During Spinal Decompression Therapy, a negative pressure is created inside the targeted disc which allows for increased blood, water and nutrient flow into the disc. Patients describe the treatment as a slow, painless, intermittent pulling of their backs which can be so relaxing; many patients actually fall asleep during treatment. The core strengthening and stabilization component of the therapy is the key to long- term success, according to Dr. Akhavan.
During the treatment program, the patients are prescribed back strengthening exercises and nutrition guidelines to support their care and afterwards they are encouraged to change their lifestyle and ergonomics or face a visit with the surgeon. “We encourage patients to explore where the problem came from in the first place,” says Dr. Akhavan. “The spine doesn’t tend to degenerate on its own; it needs external circumstances, lifestyle circumstances.” For more information, contact Vancouver Spinal Decompression Center at 604-984-4601 or visit Cell. 604.815.1921 www.vanspinaldecompression.com .
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14 14Thursday, Thursday,November November1,1,2012 2012
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Douglas Coupland ‘distinguished’ with 2012 award
Experience West Vancouver like never before
kay meek centre
The North Shore author and artist was celebrated at the Gordon Smith Gallery of Canadian Art for his life of achievements in art and literature
like actors Jay Brazeau and Nicola Cavendish, and musician Bryan Adams. “This is right in my backyard, so it’s different than doing it in New York or MEEK MAINSTAGE Europe,” Coupland, dressed in white jeans and a navy blazer, told The Outlook. “The modern history of North Van… it’s only been here basically a hundred years. I grew up in a house that was built on what used to be a logging road. So TODD COYNE given how young we are, how S Ta f f R e p O RT e R small we are, we actually o stranger to international have a very disproportionate accolades, North Shore novcreative output and that’s elist, artist and chronicler of not an accident.” Canadiana, Douglas Coupland is in Gordon Smith Gallery a reflective mood when feted here director Bill MacDonald at home. credited that local creative “I grew up in a place that wasn’t tendency to “something in a place and then suddenly, boom, the water behind Cleveland it’s the 21st century and we’re actu- Dam” in his introduction of ally something that people can Coupland, but privately, the ART PARTY - Douglas Coupland stands locate on the map,” the 50-yearartist-author put the onus in front of his Green Soldier No. 1 sculpture, old native of West Vancouver’s on organizations like FANS, Oct. 25. Todd Coyne photo Glenmore neighbourhood and Artists For Kids and the MENAKA THAKKAR author of Generation X: Tales of an Gordon Smith Gallery. Accelerated Culture told a roomful DANCE COMPANY the cultural landscape left wanting “Why should we fund arts of supporters at North Vancouver’s FRI NOV 2, 7:30 pm lencorben@yahoo.ca as a result. education?” Coupland asked The twitter.com/nsoutlook Gordon Smith Gallery of Canadian And so, returning from abroad Outlook, rhetorically. “Because if Canada’s oldest Indian dance Art. instantreplaywe don’t, we might as well live in a to find his hometown still firmly The Oct. 25 celebration saw company presents the stunning ‘on the map,’ remains a comforting LEN CORBEN » COLUMNIST parking lot.” WWW.NORTHSHOREOUTLOOK.COM Coupland handed the 2012 thrill for Coupland. beauty of traditional Indian dance In his brief acceptance speech, Distinguished Artist “It’s kind of weird that there’s Coupland cited the fused with contemporary dance Award from the actually a really, really good museUnited States as a styles from around theskolenko@northshoreoutlook.com world. twitter.com/seankolenko Fund for the Arts um on Lonsdale [Avenue].” place where funding on the North Shore tcoyne@northshoreoutlook.com for arts education Society (FANS), jointwitter.com/toddcoyne has been “savaged” SEAN KOLENKO » STAFF REPORTER ing past luminaries WWW.NORTHSHOREOUTLOOK.COM over the years and 1700 Mathers, West Vancouver
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To advertise in this highreadership series, contact your sales representative today:
on A six week series the Spirit of Giving
The Driving Force
Red Nose d Operation Meet the dedicate that aims the program road volunteers behind drivers off the to keep impaired season T H U R S D AY D E C E M B E R 2 2 2 0 1 1during the holiday party Watch for breaking news at: W W W. N O R T H S
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HOREOUTLOOK.COM
»
» NORTH VANCOUV ER A chance meeting of a private spawned the creation drugs. In combat member’s bill to put to use July, that bill was
pages
Pages 10-12
TS AFTER EFFEC on a local ferry
L F A LOCA sO C SCENE of Artists of British
6
RE NORTH SHO
Real Estate
Third installment now available at Columbia art book Gallery the Ferry Building
Weekly
» PAGE 18
» PAGE 4
» INSIDE
STARTS ON PAGE
28
A six week series on the Spirit of Giving
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I’ll be home for Christmas... only in my dreams For many North Shore emergency workers, Dec. 25th shifts are just part of the job
» SLEEPLESS IN NORTH VAN
Instead of hibernating, black bears are prowling local neighbourhoods for food
northshoreoutlook.com
The Spirit of Giving begins on Thursday, November 15, 2012 and continues for six consecutive Thursdays until December 20, 2012.
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Toronto’s Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra presents a multimedia programme developed to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Galileo’s astronomical telescope with a mix of music, WWW.NORTHSHOREOUTLOOK.COM words and high-definition images of space that converge in a mesmerizing treat for the eyes, ears and heart!
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For the holiday season, The Outlook brings you our 2nd annual Spirit of Giving series. Each week we will profile the people, organizations and charitable societies that, while they may work yearround, come to mean so much at Christmas time. The stories are inspiring and bring to light the community spirit that exists on the North Shore
» PAGE 6
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North Van independent video shop Schlockbuster Alternative Flicks closing its doors Jan. 1
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His long resumé also includes membership in the Canadian Native Haute Cuisine team that participated in the Culinary Olympics in Germany and writing an aboriginal cookbook. He attended Vancouver Community College, earning his Red Seal in the late 1980s, after leaving Smithers, B.C., where he was raised as hereditary wing chief for the Bear Clan in the traditional system of the Wet’suwet’en people. To prepare for the course, George toured the United States, examining culinary schools in New York, San Francisco, New Orleans and California. “Aboriginal people are hard workers and good with their hands. Not only that, they’re artistic,” he says, which gives his students the ideal skill set for careers in the food industry. Over the seven-month course, he teaches his students a fusion style of cooking to add to traditional techniques. “We have an exotic treat today,” he announces, holding a plate of ostrich meat. Ethiopian spice is used to give the dish “true African flavour.” On the other side of the kitchen, student Eugene Crane squeezes salmon
Thursday, November 1, 2012 15
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mousse onto baguettes to be served as appetizers. The mousse is made with fresh salmon, sour cream, cream cheese and dill, he says. “There will be a shortage of cooks in Vancouver by 2020,” George says, “so this is an industry with a lot of potential for our people.” And this is exactly what the Tsleil-Waututh Nation hopes will happen. Many of the students have had challenging lives, says TsleilWaututh councillor Carleen Thomas, adding the pro-
gram will prepare them for rewarding careers in the food industry, both on and off-reserve. “Aboriginal food is about the healthiest food you can get. It’s natural, has no preservatives and a lot of omega-3s and vitamins,” says George, adding his students are already putting their skills to the test by cooking healthy meals for their families at home. mgarstin@northshoreoutlook.com
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Independent Retirement Living on the North Shore
16 Thursday, November 1, 2012
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>>Business Opportunities Start Here Why Join the West Vancouver Chamber of Commerce? Your membership with the West Vancouver Chamber of Commerce includes the following programs, services and benefits that help you succeed in business ADVOCACY • Small business representation at municipal, provincial and federal levels of government • Participate in general or sector-specific member input sessions, share what’s affecting business at the grassroots, identify how the Chamber can support • Meet your local Mayor, Council, MP and MLA’s BUSINESS SUPPORT • Attend a free Member Orientation session and learn how to access the features of your membership • Display your business cards and or marketing brochures in the Chamber office and at every Chamber event • Make valuable business connections through Chamber networking events • Business referrals exclusively for members SAVE MONEY ON • Insurance premiums via the Chambers of Commerce Group Insurance Plan • Credit and debit card processing fees with TD Merchant Services or First Data • Member to Member Discounts • Fuel – $0.035 per litre with Esso • 24/7 access to human resources specialists through Hotline to HR • Email marketing to over 1300 business owners and managers every Tuesday in our e-update newsletter • Website advertising opportunities at a members discount CHAMBER NETWORKING EVENTS • Breakfast Meetings with Guest Speakers • Business After 5 Socials • Business Excellence Awards and Presidents Dinner • Christmas Party and Auction
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Third Annual “Speed Networking” Event Thursday, Nov 15, 2012 5:00pm to 7:00pm Members: $25 Non Members: $35 Location: Presto Cucina Restaurant, 1746 Marine Drive Sponsored by: Presto Cucina & Loren, Nancke & Co.
Mark your calendars for the annual Chamber Christmas Party! Members: $135 Non Members: $145
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PROFILE OF THE MONTH
Teresa De Cotiis An original North Shore resident, born and raised here! Speciality, long time real estate professional with Re/Max Masters Realty at 1453 Bellevue Avenue West Vancouver. I have in depth local knowledge and can provide you with the information you need on home buying, home selling, financing and owning real estate in West Vancouver.
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Teresa is a long time member of the West Vancouver Chamber of Commerce and Hollyburn Country Club. Enjoys sports and meeting people. Teresa currently listed a spacious Waterfront Penthouse for sale at 2280 Bellevue Ave West Van mls#V974363 or call/text Teresa 604 649-4215 or visit her website at www. tdecotiis.com
Teresa De Cotiis 604.649.4215 1408 MARINE DRIVE, WEST VANCOUVER, BC V7T 1B7 l T: 604.926.6614 l F: 604.926.6647 l WWW.WESTVANCHAMBER.COM l INFO@WESTVANCHAMBER.COM
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Thursday,November November1,1,2012 2012 17 17 Thursday,
www.northshoreoutlook.com www.northshoreoutlook.com continued from, PAGE 8
those years the other day as the Hockey Hall of Fame prepares for the induction ceremony of Sakic, Pavel Bure, Adam Oates and Mats Sundin coming up Nov. 12. “Joey was just a wonderful young guy,” he remembers, “He was just a tremendous skater. Hugely gifted. Yep. Just like Dave Tomlinson [who went on to play 15 years of pro hockey in the NHL and Europe and is now the colour commentator on Canuck broadcasts]. They had it right from day one. You couldn’t teach that stuff. It was just there. There were a lot of outstanding players on that team. So I was really lucky to be associated with all those kids. “Because he [Joey] was such a great skater, I got him to shoot from either foot. Joey could let that thing go from either side. He didn’t have to plant his foot or anything. That was the greatest thing he could do in my opinion.” Sakic – in case you’ve been asleep for 25 years or don’t have a clue about hockey – has done everything possible in the game: 20 NHL seasons, captain of the Quebec Nordiques and Colorado Avalanche for 17 years, two Stanley Cups, three Olympics including MVP in 2002 in Salt Lake, 625 goals, 1641 points (9th most all-time), jersey number retired… Pat Schmidt, who played on those house and Atom rep teams with Sakic more than 30 years ago now, recalls, “He had a ton of natural skills and was able to maneuver with the puck very fluently. He was very agile with the puck. When you’re that age, you’re often chasing the puck. He wasn’t. The puck was with him and he was moving with it. “When he first started playing in the NHL, he was Joe Sakic,” says Pat. “No,” he laughs at the recollection, “he was Joey.” Wade Bartok – like many of those who played at the NSWC back then – still plays the game on a regular basis and his hockey connections are endless. While we chat in the office at his Elite Xpress auto body shop, he clicks on his computer and presto, up come the statistics (games, goals, assists, penalties, right down to plus/minus stats) as of Jan. 9, 1979, for the 1978-79 Atom rep team pictured on Page 8. Joey, one of two “underage” players on the team is listed with 33 goals and 53 points, both ranked third behind Gary Knight (40 goals, 66 points) and Pat Bugos (36 and 60). Tomlinson – in 36 games, six fewer than the others – had 30 goals and 49 points. “Joey was pretty quick,” Wade acknowledges when asked what he remembers about Sakic. “But it has always been his shot, his quick release. I spoke to Dave Tomlinson about Joe; he says he
Craft fairs on the North Shore!
remembers he was small, didn’t like to pass too much but had a great shot. Pretty much what I remember.” Then Wade points to a thin white line on the front of his chin. You see, Wade just has to look in the mirror to remember Sakic. It was in a Bantam rep game, Wade explains, after Sakic left the NSWC to play with the Burnaby Minor Hockey Association. “Joey was my check. He cross checked me and I got cut right here. He got a five-minute penalty. Today he would have been out of the game. Then he scored the gamewinning goal in overtime.” Wow. Some people have Sakic’s autograph on a stick. Wade has a chin autographed by Sakic’s stick. After six-plus seasons of hockey and figure skating at the NSWC, the Sakic kids had left the club in 1982. It seems their dad was unhappy that Joey was put on the Bantam rep “B” team, rather than the “A” team, after pre-season tryouts. Mark Humphrey, then just 21, who was brought onto the coaching staff as a defensive specialist and was involved in the decision as to which team Joey would start the season with, has endured plenty of good-natured ribbing over the years about that decision. “It was a long time ago,” he offers, “but if I vaguely recall correctly, it wasn’t really for a lack of talent, it was more for lack of effort. I hate to say that because that’s not going to put him in all that great a light.” Of course, one of Sakic’s fortes while playing in the NHL was his work ethic. Sakic himself was once quoted as saying, “We never had it easy growing up. Dad worked for everything we had. He never let me off the hook. In hockey it was the same thing: ‘Get out there and work.’” So Mark and the rest of the coaching staff were just trying to reinforce that. “That,” agrees Mark, “would be my side of the story because you can only imagine the ribbing I’ve taken over the years. Friends and
family have been giving me the gears for years about that. As the hall-of-fame ceremony draws closer, someone in the media is sure to refer to Sakic as Burnaby Joe. Burnaby Joe? Nah, around the NSWC he was Joey. So let’s call him North Shore Joey. This is episode 469 from Len Corben’s treasure chest of stories – the great events and the quirky – that bring to life the North Shore’s rich sports history.
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Thursday, November 1, 2012 19 Thursday, November 1, 2012 19
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Mid-century high fashion in North Van MICHAELA GArStIN S tA f f R E p o Rt E R
B
Street Style - Frank Horvat’s first fashion photo, 1951, Florence.
lifestyle
efore Italian photographer Frank Horvat came to the scene in the 1950s, models were posed inside brightly lit rooms, their clothing carefully arranged to show off the designers’ intentions. But on the streets of Paris, Horvat asked his models to act more natural; sitting on cement steps, standing at the back of a trolley, walking kids to school. He was also the first fashion photographer to use a 35mm camera to create his unique style by meshing spontaneous photojournalism with staged photography. Now North Shore residents have the chance to examine Horvat’s work up close. His mostly blackand-white photos are on display at Presentation
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House Gallery in North Vancouver until Dec. 23. “Frank is a photographer that hasn’t necessarily had the exposure here the way he has in Europe,” says Jonah Gray from the gallery. “He photographed high-fashion, not necessarily the clothes you’d see every day.” Contracted by major magazines including ELLE, Glamour, VOGUE and Harper’s Bazaar, Horvat influenced a generation of fashion photographers by letting French streets play a part in showcasing cutting edge design. Many of his photos spanning the last half of the 20th century are hung at Presentation House Gallery. In total, North Van is temporarily home to nine vintage prints, 57 reportage and fashion photographs and 16 magazine spreads done by Horvat.
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Tech career opportunities booming in B.C.
N
orth Vancouver-based work-oriented. Nuytco Research is “British Columbia has a ready world-renowned for its source of great jobs and careers pioneering underwater technolin technology,” says John Leech, ogy — from manned submersexecutive director of the Applied ibles to deep-water Exosuits Science Technologists and and remotely operated vehicles. Technicians of BC. “Our educaAmong its clients: tion programs need NASA, the Canadian to keep up with that Space Agency, the US demand.” navy and National Adds Leech, “Every Geographic, to name system we rely on a few. The company’s – water, roads and founder and president, transportation, teleDr. Phil Nuytten, also communications and regularly collaborates Internet, hydro and with Hollywood director natural gas, environJames Cameron. ment, health, forIn other words, it’s an John Leech estry, and many more exciting and innovative – utilizes engineering place to work. and applied science The company employs technology professionals workaround 16 people. Among ing in the background. B.C.’s them are some graduates of telecom and IT, animation and British Columbia Institute of many other sectors produce Technology’s engineering technew careers every month.” nology diploma programs. ASTTBC has more than “We are certainly growing,” 10,000 members currently says Jeff Heaton, operations working in thousands of supervisor at Nuytco Research. careers available to graduates “We haven’t started a big hirof two-year diploma programs ing program at the moment available at BCIT and other although with our current B.C. colleges and institutes. workload we’re heading down “Our members enjoy rewardthat road.” ing, well-paid and often recesAnd, as Heaton explains, sion-proof careers in public a vast majority of the people service and the private sector who come through their doors alike,” Leech states. are BCIT or trade school grads “For huge numbers of young because the training and backcontinued, NEXT PAGE ground they’ve received is very
Thursday, November November 1, 1, 2012 2012 21 21 Thursday,
www.northshoreoutlook.com www.northshoreoutlook.com continued from, PAGE 19
continued from, PREVIOUS PAGE
men and women, technology is the answer. In B.C. and across Canada, technology permeates every workplace and job. We need to get capable students involved and engaged in applied sciences and head off workforce shortages by building a B.C. ‘Science and Technology Culture’.” Leech calls on government for renewed efforts to build student skills and confidence in math and science programming. “We especially need to interest young students in science and how things work,” Leech says. “Young students use technology every day – smart phones, iPads and computers. They play video games, even build robots.” Leech lauds the recent “Year of Science” program that encouraged students toward so-called “STEM” subjects – science, technology, engineering and math. Citing the recent $6-million B.C. campaign to encourage careers in trades, Leech urges a similar effort to build awareness of engineering technology education and careers. BC Technology Industries Association employers like Telus and BC Hydro and many smaller technology-rich companies say the single most important position they now
struggle to fill is specialty technician/technologist. Even the Canadian Council of Chief Executives expressed concern that only 37 per cent of 16- to 18-year-olds were interested in taking even one post-secondary course in sciences, according to a recent Angus Reid survey. Leech says the opportunities for those seeking work in the technology field are considerable given a wave of retirements of present-generation B.C. technology professionals that is already underway. “Half of our membership is now middle-aged at 45-plus, and 22 per cent are over age 55,” he says. “Every region of B.C. shows growing demand,” Leech concludes. “New two-year technology diploma programs are still needed in the north and central B.C. However, young people are investing to travel so they can earn the necessary tech qualifications.” It would appear their investment is a smart move, as it will result in a broad range of career opportunities. Industries in all regions of B.C. support programs for local trainees to fill engineering and applied science technologist, technician and technical specialist positions.
“He was a pioneer, taking photos in the street,” says Gray, who had the chance to meet Horvat when he came to see the exhibit. Now in his 80s, he is still taking photos and was on an airplane back to France as Gray spoke with The Outlook. He now does personal projects, documenting his country retreat and working on “Trip to Carrara,” a series of collages taken in Italian marble quarries. He was one of the first of his generation to
embrace digital technology, says Gray, helping develop an iPhone app called “Horvatland” that features 2,000 photos. Before leading the way for today’s fashion photographers, Horvat freelanced from Pakistan and India and had gigs at Life magazine and Picture Post in London. After moving to Paris, he worked with top designers including Coco Chanel and Givenchy. Presentation House Gallery is open from noon to 5 p.m. Wednesday to Sunday. For more information call 604-986-1351.
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22 Thursday, November 1, 2012
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS 7
OBITUARIES
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EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES LIVE & WORK in the Tropics. Become a Professional Scuba Instructor. Government Accredited Student Financing Available. Professional Diver Training (PDT). www.professionaldivertraining.ca. Training Professional Divers Since 1987. LEARN FROM HOME. EARN FROM HOME. Medical Transcriptionists are in demand. Lots of jobs! Enrol today for less than $95 a month. 1-800-466-1535 www.canscribe.com admissions@canscribe.com
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 21
COMING EVENTS
THE Best Experts on Child and Adolescent ADHD - FREE! November 25: 1 pm - 5 pm 1:00 Derryck Smith: What is ADHD? 2:00 Dr. Veena Jokhani: Medication 3:30 Susan Siklos: ADHD and Learning 4:00 Margaret Weiss: The Healthy ADHD Child Registration: www.copemanhealthcare.com/adhd. We’ll send you the slides!
MEAT MANAGER, Jasper Super A. Jasper Super A is looking for an experienced Retail Meat Manager. As Meat Manager you will be responsible for all aspects of the managing the department, including cutting meat. You must have working knowledge of gross margins, expense controls and human resources management. The successful candidate must have Grade 12 (or equivalent) and be able to provide a “clear” security clearance. If you have the skills and abilities please forward your resume to our Head Office, The Grocery People Ltd. (TGP) in confidence to: Human Resources Officer, The Grocery People Ltd., 14505 Yellowhead Trail, Edmonton, AB, T5L 3C4. Fax 780-447-5781. Email: humanresources@tgp.ca.
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 125
FOSTER/SOCIAL CARE
Some great kids aged 12 to 18 who need a stable, caring home for a few months. Are you looking for the opportunity to do meaningful, fulfilling work? PLEA Community Services is looking for qualified applicants who can provide care for youth in their home on a full-time basis or on weekends for respite. Training, support and remuneration are provided. Funding is available for modifications to better equip your home. A child at risk is waiting for an open door.
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TIMESHARE 130
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108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
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HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 257
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THE LEMARE GROUP is accepting resumes for the following positions: •Coastal Certified Hand Fallers -Camp Positions Avail. •Coastal Certified Bull Buckers (Falling)-Includes vehicle/accommodations •Road Grader Operator (Excavator experience an asset) •Off Highway Logging Truck Drivers (Pacific) •Grapple Yarder Operators •Hooktenders •Chasers •Line Machine Operator •Heavy Duty Mechanics Fulltime camp with union rates/benefits. Please send resumes by fax to 250-9564888 or email to office@lemare.ca.
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PERSONAL SERVICES 173E
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FIND YOUR BEST FIT Before embarking on a sucessful career, you need to know what industry and general position you are interested in. Speaking with one of our career advisors will help you outline your career goals and what fields are best suited to you. You can even tour the campus, speak with current students, and find out where our graduates are now. A new career and life path is only a meeting away.
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www.northshoreoutlook.com HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
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283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
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RUBBISH REMOVAL
Thursday, November 1, 2012 23
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 372
SUNDECKS
RENTALS 706
TRANSPORTATION
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604.587.5865 www.recycleitcanada.ca FLEETWOOD WASTE Bin Rentals 10-30 Yards. Call Ken at 604-294-1393 GUARANTEED
220.JUNK(5865)
374
SUNDECKS
MOVING & STORAGE
1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Real Professionals, Reasonable. Rates. Different From the Rest. 604-721-4555.
$45/Hr
From 1, 3, 5, 7 & 10 Ton Trucks Licenced ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 Men Free Estimate/Senior Discount Residential~Commercial~Pianos
apply
at:
www.
greatcanadianautocredit.com
AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673 #1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME 604.683.2200
TRANSPORTATION AUTO FINANCING
Tree removal done RIGHT! • Tree & Stump Removal • CertiďŹ ed Arborists • 20 yrs exp. • 60’ Bucket Truck • Crown Reduction • Spiral Pruning • Land Clearing • Selective Logging ~ Fully Insured • Best Rates ~
604-787-5915, 604-291-7778 www.treeworksonline.ca treeworkes@yahoo.ca 10% OFF with this AD 10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fitter. Aman: 778-895-2005
Aluminum patio cover, sunroom, railing and vinyl. 604-782-9108 www.PatioCoverVancouver.com
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS
PETS 477
PETS
CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866
Canuck Roofing All Roof Repairs Any job big or small. Free Est. *WCB *Insured *BBB 778-772-1969
GOLDENDOODLE puppies for sale. Vet checked, de-wormed. Call Amanda at 778-888-9132
604-537-4140
LAB PUPS yellow / black, m/f, CKC reg. papers, all shots, dew claws removed,tatooed $850 (604)820-7714
SPARTAN Moving Ltd. Fast & Reliable. Insured Competitive rates. Wknd Specials. Call Frank: (604) 435-8240
NEED A GOOD HOME for a good dog or a good dog for a good home? We adopt dogs! Call 604856-3647 or www.856-dogs.com
329 PAINTING & DECORATING AFFORDABLE INT/EXT painting. 30 yrs exp. Refs. Free est. Keith 604-433-2279 or 604-777-1223.
or
TREE SERVICES 810
Local & Long Distance
1-888-229-0744
But Dead Bodies!!
PLUMBING
372
AFFORDABLE MOVING
Loans
Haul Anything... Serving The Lower Mainland Since 1988
ABBA MOVERS & DEL Res/comm 1-4 ton truck, 1 man $35/hr, 2 men from $45. Honest, bsmt clean up. 25yrs Exp. 24hrs/7days 604-506-7576
Auto
bradsjunkremoval.com
604.
320
2 hr. Service www.a1casper.com (604)209-2026
GL ROOFING. Cedar shakes, asphalt shingles, flat roofs, WCB/BBB. Cln Gutters-$80. Senior disc. 10%. 604-240-5362. www.glroofing.ca
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POMERANIAN - 2 weeks old, black w/ a touch of white. 1st shot, vet checked. $550 (604)941-2959
DreamCatcher Auto Loans “0� Down, Bankruptcy OK Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals
1-800-910-6402
www.PreApproval.cc DL# 7557 Are you trying to rent your residential or commercial property? Contact our friendly & informative BCCLASSIFIED.COM Classified Representatives at...
604-575-5555 toll-free 1-866-575-5777
818
CARS - DOMESTIC
2011 Ford Fiesta SEL 4dr sedan auto fully loaded only 22K local $9,500 obo. 604-218-9795
Swiss Mountain pups, short-hair, family raised, gentle, vet ✔ dewormed. $850. 604-795-7662
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE 545
FUEL
1YR Seasoned Alder Birch Maple Clean, Split, DRY & Delivered. Family Operated for 20 yrs. (604)726-3024
548
FURNITURE
MATTRESSES starting at $99 • Twins • Fulls • Queens • Kings 100’s in stock! www.Direct Liquidation.ca (604)294-2331 *NEW QUEEN MATTRESS SET* Pillow Top in Plastic. Mfr. Warranty Must Sell $200 ~ 604-484-0379
560
MISC. FOR SALE
HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper? STEEL BUILDINGS - CANADIAN MADE! - REDUCED PRICES NOW! 20X22 $4,455. 25X26 $4,995. 30X38 $7,275. 32X50 $9,800. 40X54 $13,995. 47X80 $19,600. One end wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422. www.pioneersteel.ca.
REAL ESTATE 627
HOMES WANTED
WE BUY HOUSES! Older House • Damaged House Moving • Estate Sale • Just Want Out • Behind on Payments Quick Cash! • Flexible Terms! CALL US FIRST! 604-657-9422
Straight talk for shoppers on the North Shore Who supports our children’s minor sports teams? Which commercial taxpayers contribute to city improvements? Who offers critical employment to our children and others? Who is most often asked to fund our community events? Which business people form many of our local service clubs? Who advocates for a more vibrant city? Which business leaders volunteer on boards and capital campaigns? Who supports the arts in our community? Who donates and raises funds for the disadvantaged in our community? Who is likely to be your neighbour, a friend, a parent, a tax-payer? It is not the U.S. retailers across the border! Please consider the true price of shopping ‘across the line’.
24 Thursday, November 1, 2012
www.northshoreoutlook.com
GRAND OPENING
Introducing futureshop.ca North Vancouver, an exciting new way to shop that combines in-person and online shopping.
1076 Marine Drive Corner of McKay and Marine Drive. Phone: 604-981-4300
Experience a new way to shop, get a gift card. Bonus!
SALE STARTS FRIDAY, NOV 2, 10 AM
Be the first in Canada to shop our new concept store. When you place an online order in-store and have it shipped to the store or your home, you’ll get a FREE gift card!
1il5able.
47"
ava
LED
Fri-Sat, Nov 2 & 3 from 10 am – 9 pm Sunday, Nov 4 from 11 am – 6 pm
25
32"
SAVE $300 899ªª
per day.
LCD
20
15.6"
per day.
47" ET5 Series Smart 3D LED TV TCL47ET5 WebID: 10198417
Requires an HD source, such as an HD satellite or cable box. 3D glasses and 3D source required to experience 3D. 120Hz
1080p
SAVE $100
199ªª
449ªª
Wi-Fi integrated 32" C5 Series LCD TV
Eco Mode turns power off and adjusts brightness, depending on screen, reducing power consumption.
Laptop Featuring 3rd Generation Intel® Core™ i5-3210M Processor
TCL32C5 WebID: 10198950
Requires an HD source, such as an HD satellite or cable box. 720p
60Hz
2x HDMI
PC port lets you connect a laptop or desktop so you can turn the TV into a computer monitor.
20
per day.
15
per day.
FREE
V3-571-6443 WebID: 10223557
8GB RAM
500GB HDD
A basic laptop to enjoy your media network, enabling video, music and photo sharing.
15
10
per day.
per day.
$150 gift card with purchase.
0ºº
ON THE TAB
Samsung Galaxy Ace • 5MP camera • 800 MHz processor • Android 2.3 Gingerbread OS S5830 WebID: 10180119
SAVE $250
699ªª
SAVE $50
199ªª
SAVE $200
149ªª
T4i 18.0MP DSLR Camera • EF-S-18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS II lens included • High-precision 9 point AF system
PlayStation Vita Madden NFL 13 Bundle • PlayStation Vita Wi-Fi system • Madden NFL 13 Game
Wearable HD Camera/Camcorder • 170° super-wide angle lens in 1080p • Extra mounting accessories included
T4i WebID: 10195080
22145 WebID: 10207431
HD HERO2 WebID: 10183302
Prices and products in effect November 2 - November 4, 2012 at the North Vancouver (#007) location only. References to savings or sale prices are comparisons to Future Shop regular prices. One bonus offer per customer. No dealers. Not valid with any other promotional offer. Not applicable to previous purchases. See in-store for details. No rainchecks. One per family. ADVERTISING POLICY: Some products in this ad may be slightly different from illustrations. Not all products are available in all stores. Future Shop is committed to accurate pricing. Website prices, products, and promotions may differ from our retail store offerings. Future Shop reserves the right to correct errors. Special offers cannot be combined or applied to previous purchases. We reserve the right to limit quantities. Terms and conditions subject to change without notice. First 200 customers. North Vancouver location, Nov 2-4 only. Gift cards good toward future in-store or online purchases only. With up to $150 off the Koodo Tab. Tab reduced through phone usage. Some conditions apply. See in-store for details.