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RICHMONDREVIEW.COM
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 2014
20 PAGES
Richmond grad rates well above B.C. average
Homeowner stabbed in heart during violent home invasion Jonathan Leblanc, 30, arrested after crime spree included robbery and carjacking
Aboriginal student grad rates are trending upward
by Martin van den Hemel
by Martin van den Hemel
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The owner of a Deerfield Crescent home was stabbed in the heart during a violent home invasion involving a carjacker near the start of his multi-city crime spree Sunday night. A resident of the two-storey house told The Richmond Review Monday morning he first heard a commotion around 6:45 p.m. Sunday, with screaming and yelling coming from the front of the house. He later learned the owner of the house had answered the door, and was overpowered by the man standing outside, who forced his way into the house and demanded keys to the vehicle. The wife of the homeowner screamed, and her son was kept at bay by the suspect, who held a screw driver to the homeowner’s neck, and repeatedly stabbed him in the upper chest until someone handed over the keys to a Honda Accord parked outside. The homeowner was rushed to hospital for life-saving surgery, with multiple stab wounds in the upper chest, including one that pierced his heart. The resident said as he heard the ruckus in the entryway to the
When it comes to graduation rates, the Richmond School District stacks up well against the provincial average. And according to a report presented to the Board of Education at Monday’s board meeting, while male and female student grad rates in Richmond have remained relatively steady over the past five years, Aboriginal grad rates have risen significantly in that period from 62.8 per cent in 2008/09 to 73.8 per cent in 2012/13. “It’s definitely something to celebrate,” board chair Donna Sargent said Tuesday. The district signed an Aboriginal enhancement agreement three years ago, she said, and the district added staff members to deal with grad rates among the Aboriginal community. Using an integrated approach, and working with Aboriginal leaders in the community, Sargent said: “I think we made progress and it shows in those numbers. But we still have a long way to go.” Overall, 90.3 per cent of all students in Richmond graduated last year. See Page 5
Martin van den Hemel photo A carjacker forced his way into this two-storey house on Deerfield Crescent Sunday night, and stabbed the homeowner in the heart before fleeing with the family’s Honda Accord.
house, he called out if help was needed even as he was dialing 911. He heard someone reply “No”, but believes it was the suspect who answered. A pitbull that lives in the backyard happened to be locked up at the time of the home invasion, the resident said. The resident, who was downstairs, finally got into the house, and saw the injured homeowner lying on the floor. He and his wife applied first-aid, putting pressure on his wounds until the ambulance arrived.
“He had open heart surgery at VGH last night. From all intents and purposes, everybody thinks he’s going to pull through and be fine but he’s definitely stabbed up.” The resident said that the homeowner’s son tried to intervene. “Every time his son went to try to stop him, he stabbed the dad again until he finally got some keys because he just wanted a car. He wanted to get out of here.” According to Vancouver Police Sgt. Randy Fincham, Richmond Mounties responded to a crash on Highway 99, near the backyard to
the Deerfield Crescent home. The driver of one of the vehicles in that collision had to climb over a fence to get to the Deerfield Crescent house, which backs directly onto Highway 99. After stealing the Honda Accord, the carjacker allegedly attacked a man as he was withdrawing money from an ATM machine at the TD Canada Trust at Kingsway and Victoria Drive. Fincham said the victim was stabbed several times, and had his money taken. See Page 5
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Page 2 路 Richmond Review
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Richmond Review · Page 3
City wants dogs destroyed after bite incident Victim, who has no scar from thigh injury, agrees dogs shouldn’t be euthanized by Martin van den Hemel Staff Reporter The owners of two Rottweilers are appealing for City of Richmond officials to do the right thing, and cease efforts to destroy both of their beloved pets for a minor October biting incident that only involved one of them. Prabjot Nijjer and her son Nav have hired a lawyer in an attempt to fight the destruction order after Axle and his smaller sister Paris escaped their Alberta Road home’s backyard on Oct. 25, 2013. The dogs wandered onto a townhouse construction site directly across the street from their home around 8 a.m. that Friday, where Dustin Wang was working. Startled by the dogs’ appearance as they came around a corner, Wang said he got up from his crouching position when one of the dogs turned toward him and began to approach. Wang quickly retreated through the townhouse’s front door. Wang immediately phoned his site supervisor, and only after explaining the situation, did Wang notice a slight pain coming from his upper thigh, just below his left buttock. The larger of the two dogs had apparently nipped him on the leg, causing an injury that didn’t tear his jeans or draw blood, but left a dime-sized contusion on his skin. Wang told The Richmond Review this week that the injury has completely healed, and didn’t even leave a scar. When his colleagues told him the city wants to destroy both dogs, he was shocked. “I don’t really want them to do that,” Wang said. “It’s not the dog’s fault, it was the owner’s fault.” Wang’s worksite colleagues agreed. “Those two dogs are very nice. I don’t understand why they want to put them down,” said Alder Vista
Dustin Wang photo Two Rottweilers escaped a nearby backyard and wandered onto a townhouse construction site in late October, and one bit a construction worker.
Martin van den Hemel photo Though construction worker Dustin Wang suffered a minor injury when he was nipped by a Rottweiler on Oct. 25 at a townhouse construction site across from Henry Anderson Elementary School (at right), he doesn’t believe the two escaped dogs involved in the incident should be destroyed by the City of Richmond.
site supervisor William Dong. Construction worker Geoff Kalsbeek, who owns a Rottweiler, managed to help coax the dogs into an animal control vehicle with a sandwich. Worried about the students who might be in harm’s way as they walked to Henry Anderson Elementary School, which is just across the street, the gate to the fenced-in construction site was quickly closed to prevent the dogs from escaping. Kalsbeek said the bigger of the two dogs, which he estimated weighed about 130 pounds, barked at him as he approached, a reaction he considered normal. “I would definitely not want the dogs destroyed,” he said. The City of Richmond declined to comment on the case, because it is currently before the courts. Prabjot Nijjer said that since the incident more than two months ago, she hasn’t even been permitted to see her dogs, which are currently being cared for by the Rich-
mond Animal Protection Society. And her family has received no assurances from the city that Paris, who had surgery on its right hind leg in August, has been receiving the required medical attention— including regular injections every few weeks—for its six-to-sevenmonth recovery period. “I love my dogs so much. I’m concerned about them,” Nijjer said from the office of Joe Peschisolido, whose law firm has been hired by the Nijjers. A trial to determine the dogs’ fate will be held in April. Nijjer said she was horrified to learn that her dogs had bitten somebody. The family was initially told there was a serious biting incident, and at that point they were willing to concede that the guilty dog be put
“I would definitely not want the dogs destroyed.” — Geoff Kalsbeek
down. But it was only afterward, when they learned the biting incident was extremely minor, that they hired a lawyer to try to save their pets. Nijjer said her dogs have a good temperament, and friends and family regularly come over, including young children, with no prior serious problems. The Nijjer family can’t understand why the city wants both dogs destroyed, considering only one did the biting. Had the biting incident resulted in a serious or severe injury, and the two dogs were acting in concert, that would be an entirely different matter. Immediately after the October incident, the Nijjers had a two-metre high chain-link fence installed around their backyard. They also presented a plan in December to the City of Richmond, detailing steps the family would take to ensure the Rottweilers aren’t involved in an incident like
Fees proposed for city hall tours Basic tours would cost $500, but non-profit groups exempt from fees by Matthew Hoekstra Staff Reporter Groups visiting Richmond City Hall could soon face fees of over $2,000 to allow budget-balancing bureaucrats to recover staff and facility costs. Proposed Monday, the new fee schedule would only apply to corporate and other for-profit groups—tours for nonprofit groups such as school groups, government and sister city delegations would remain free. Drafting a formal fee-filled policy “is
not seeking to expand this program but rather to manage these requests more efficiently and to allow for some cost recovery of staff and facility expenses associated with providing these services,” noted Amarjeet Rattan, director of the city’s intergovernmental relations unit, in a report to a council committee. In 2013, Richmond entertained 23 formal requests for city hall visits. In 2012, 39 groups made requests. Today, for-profit groups are only charged for room rentals, plus $50 per hour for each staff presenter. Under the new proposal, basic city hall tours—which include a presentation in council chambers—would cost $500, plus room rental fees. For more timeintensive delegations and study tours— such as corporations seeking information on best practices—fees are higher:
Richmond City Hall visitors in 2013 •9 tours for Richmond school groups •1 tour for Japan school group •4 tours for other non-profit groups •7 non-profit delegations •2 for-profit delegations
$500 for up to two hours, $1,000 for up to four hours and $2,000 for longer periods. The change could result in modest revenue for the city—$5,000 annually, according to Rattan. Those rates are, however, expected to drop. On Monday council directed staff to reduce some of the fees before the new policy goes to a final vote Jan. 13.
this again. They’ve agreed to have the dogs trained by a professional animal behaviourist and trainer, keep them muzzled in steel muzzles at all times, and keep them in a professionally-built kennel enclosure. The Nijjers would write a letter of apology to Dustin Wang, agree to pay a $3,000 fine if they breach any of the conditions, and consent to the destruction of the dogs if they bite a person during their lifetime But the offer was rejected by the City of Richmond, and plans are going ahead for a trial. The Nijjers said there has only been one minor incident involving their dogs, which they’ve owned since they were eight-week-old puppies seven years ago. A few years ago, the dogs somehow got loose and went into the nearby elementary school area. The family was alerted by someone, and the animals were brought back. As a family member retrieved the dogs, a small dog on a leash that was being walked got nipped by Axle, but it was not a serious injury, and the victimized dog’s owner never followed up with the family to complain or seek damages for veterinarian costs. “They don’t deserve to die,” Peschisolido said.
BC Hydro rate hike will be costly for school district BC Hydro rates are going up, and that will impact more than just local residents. The Richmond School District anticipates that the increase will result in an additional cost of $30,000 for the period of April to June of 2014, and for the next fiscal year, an impact of between $120,000 to $150,000. Though that figure might sound like a lot, things could have been a whole lot worse, according to minutes from the December meeting of the Richmond Board of Education. Secretary treasurer Mark De Mello noted that the “district had invested time, effort and money over the past eight to 10 years in various energy initiatives and advised that this is the reason why the hydro cost increases are not as dramatic as they could have been.” In November, B.C. Energy minister Bill Bennett and BC Hydro CEO Charles Reid announced a 28-percent electricity rate hike over five years, including a nine-per-cent increase starting this April. —Martin van den Hemel
Page 4 · Richmond Review
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
City Page Community news covering January 8 to January 21, 2014 2. 6511 Buswell Street - DP 13-634111 - Integra Architecture Inc. - To (1) permit the construction of a 15-storey mixed use (residential/commercial) tower on a site zoned “Downtown Commercial (CDT1)”; and (2) vary the provisions of Richmond Zoning Bylaw 8500 to reduce the residential parking rate from the standard City-wide parking rate to the City Centre Zone 1 parking rate.
13 Regular Council Meeting Monday, January 13, 2014 Council Chambers, City Hall 7:00 p.m. (open meeting) Anderson Room, City Hall 4:00 p.m. (closed meeting)
Community Safety
14 Committee
Tuesday, January 14, 2014 Anderson Room, City Hall 4:00 p.m.
15 Development Permit Panel Wednesday, January 15, 2014 Council Chambers, City Hall 3:30 p.m.
Purposes 20 General Committee Monday, January 20, 2014 Anderson Room, City Hall 4:00 p.m.
20
Public Hearing Monday, January 20, 2014 Anderson Room, City Hall Following General Purposes Committee meeting
21 Planning Committee
Tuesday, January 21, 2014 Anderson Room, City Hall 4:00 p.m.
Public Works &
22 Transportation Committee Wednesday, January 22, 2014 Anderson Room, City Hall 4:00 p.m.
Development Permit Panel Meeting Wednesday, January 15, 3:30 p.m. in Council Chambers Agenda Items: 1. 6511 No. 2 Road (formerly 6471, 6491 and 6511 No. 2 Road) - DP 12-617455 - Matthew Cheng Architect Inc. - To permit the construction of 15 townhouses on a site zoned “Low Density Townhouses (RTL4)”.
3. 10820 No. 5 Road - DP 13-641796 - Townline Gardens Inc. - To (1) permit the construction of a 5-storey, mixed-use commercial and residential building (Building D – ‘The Camellia’) on a site zoned “Commercial Mixed Use (ZMU18) – The Gardens (Shellmont)”; and (2) vary the provisions of the Richmond Zoning Bylaw 8500 to reduce the parking rate for rental housing units from 1.7 spaces per residential unit (1.5 spaces for residents plus 0.2 spaces for visitors) to 1.2 spaces per residential unit (1.0 spaces for residents plus 0.2 spaces for visitors). 4. 8888 Patterson Road - DP 13642725 - Amela Brudar - GBL Architects - To (1) permit the construction of the second phase of a five-phase, residential development on a site zoned “High Rise Apartment and Artist Residential Tenancy Studio Units (ZHR10) – Capstan Village (City Centre)” for a high-rise building containing 246 market dwellings and 17 affordable housing units (to be secured via a Housing Agreement), together with publiclyaccessible open space and park; and (2) vary the provisions of Richmond Zoning Bylaw 8500 to: (i) reduce the minimum allowable setback from a lot line abutting Garden City Road for portions of the building having a height greater than 28.0 m, for the purpose of permitting a cantilevered roof and balconies, from 50.0 m to 48.6 m; and (ii) increase the maximum allowable building height for portions of the building located less than 50.0 m from a lot line abutting Garden City Road, for the purpose of permitting enclosed stair staffs, an elevator penthouse, and an indoor residential amenity space, from 28.0 m to 33.4 m. Please call the Planning Department at 604-276-4395 for further information.
Celebrate Lunar New Year in Richmond 2014 Year of the Horse From flower markets to lion dancers to live musical entertainment, experience a variety of local and exciting events that honour the rich traditions and customs of the lunar new year. Find a listing of celebrations and details at www.richmond.ca/lunarnewyear.
2014 Environmental Sustainability Workshops January environmental sustainability workshops Register for free classes. These workshops will show you ways to reduce pesticide use and create a more sustainable community. There are two ways to register: • Online at www.richmond.ca/ register • By phoning the registration call centre from Monday to Friday, 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. at 604-276-4300 (press “2” at the prompt) If you register but cannot attend, please contact the registration call centre to make your space available for someone else.
January Workshops DIY Stationery (NEW) Richmond Cultural Centre, 13+yrs 7700 Minoru Gate January 18, Saturday, 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Free, 481910 Repurpose Old Clothing (NEW) Richmond Cultural Centre, 13+yrs 7700 Minoru Gate January 18, Saturday, 1:00-3:00 p.m. Free, 482008 For more information on the workshops, please email ESOutreach@richmond.ca or call 604-233-3318.
Drivers and pedestrians must exercise caution During the darker winter conditions, the Richmond RCMP would like to remind
City of Richmond | 6911 No. 3 Rd. Richmond BC V6Y 2C1 | Tel: 604-276-4000
www.richmond.ca
Register for free Environmental Sustainability workshops. everyone to exercise caution. Pedestrians: stop and think before crossing a street and wear reflective/bright clothing to be more visible to others. Drivers: slow down and pay attention to the traffic. For more information on pedestrian safety please visit: www.richmond. ca/safety/police/personal/pedestrians
Wanted: Videos of Richmond’s sporting history Get your footage in the Richmond Olympic Experience Do you have a video footage of elite sporting heroes that represents Richmond’s sporting history? The public’s help is needed as the Richmond Olympic Oval is gathering audio visual materials to help tell the story of the “History of Sport in Richmond.” Audio visual footage could focus on Richmond’s elite sporting heroes celebrating their achievement in sport, stories of city leagues, community race tracks and more. Contact Jennifer Luce at 778-296-1422 or email jluce@richmondoval.ca before Friday, February 21, 2014. Curatorial Staff will be in touch with you to schedule a meeting and review your media. For more details about the upcoming Richmond Olympic Experience, sneak peek images, and frequently asked questions please visit www.richmondolympicexperience.ca.
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
More female students graduate than males From Page 1 That’s a higher figure than in three of the past four years, topped only by the 90.5 per cent in 2008/09, according to the report written by Kathleen Champion, director of instruction and learning services. In a trend that has remained consistent, more female students graduate than males, though the gap has narrowed from a high of 9.6 per cent during the 2010/2011 school year (when 94.8 per cent of girls graduated to just 85.2 per cent of boys) down to five per cent in the 2012/13 year (when 92.9 per cent of girls and 87.9 per cent of boys graduated). Meanwhile, the provincial grade rate for all students has risen from 79.2 per cent in 2008/09 to 83.6 per cent in 2012/13. Between 82.1 per cent of female B.C. students and 85.4 per cent graduate with a Dogwood Diploma, granted to students who meet the province’s secondary school grad requirements. The graduation rate in B.C. for males ranged from 76.5 per cent in 2008/09 to 81.9 per cent last year. Notably, Richmond graduation rates for Aboriginal and Special Needs students far exceeded the provincial average. Last year, 59.4 per cent of B.C. Aboriginal student graduated, compared to the 73.8 per cent in Richmond. And among special needs students, 58.7 per cent from B.C. graduated last year, compared to the 67.6 per cent in Richmond. Sargent said the district has long had a sharp focus on putting extra money toward children with special needs. But at Monday night’s board meeting, trustees also noted that some 10 per cent of students aren’t graduating each year. “We want to get even better.” Sargent said considering that 62 per cent of students speak a language other than English as their native tongue, Richmond’s English Language Learners graduating rate is also something work celebrating, with the figure at 93.5 per cent this past school year, well above the provincial average of 86.1 per cent.
Richmond Review · Page 5
Couple with kids in car attacked From Page 1 Later, a car travelling south on Victoria Drive was involved in a head-on collision involving the car stolen from Richmond. The driver of the stolen Honda Accord tried to steal another car that had stopped to help. Both the driver and front passenger in that car, a husband and wife, received slash wounds as the suspect hacked at them through an open driver’s window, while their two children, ages 7 and 10, were in the back seat. The victims were able to drive away, and the couple was treated in hospital. The carjacker then went to a nearby gas station, and used force to take a
City of Richmond
Better Grades Happier Kids
Honda Civic. He was eventually arrested around 11 p.m. in Surrey, after police there located the stolen Honda. After a lengthy search involving police dogs, police were able to track down the man in a heavily-wooded raving. The suspect, 30-year-old Delta resident Jonathan Leblanc, is facing numerous criminal charges, and is known to police. He made his first appearance in Vancouver provincial court on Tuesday morning, and is charged with robbery and assault with a weapon in connection with the robbery that took place at the TD Bank on Victoria Drive in Vancouver.
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Get Ready Richmond Personal Preparedness Workshops Register for free workshops The Personal Preparedness workshops will teach you the risks, how to make an emergency plan and what to do in an emergency or disaster. There are two ways to register for these workshops: • Online at www.richmond.ca/register • By phoning the registration call centre from Monday to Friday, 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. at 604-276-4300 (press “2” at the prompt) If you register but cannot attend, please contact the registration call centre to make your space available for someone else. January 14
6:30-8:30 p.m.
West Richmond Community Centre
483908
January 22
6:30-8:30 p.m.
Cambie Community Centre
502958
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6:30-8:30 p.m.
Steveston Community Centre
418474
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506358
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Steveston Community Centre
479959
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Get Ready Richmond Fire/Life Safety Workshops Register for free workshops Learn about fire chemistry, ways to prevent fires, suppression options and how to use a fire extinguisher to reduce the risk of loss and injury due to fires. January 15
6:30-8:30 p.m.
South Arm Community Centre
506608
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6:30-8:30 p.m.
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511658
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6:30-8:30 p.m.
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503659
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503809
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There are two ways to register for these workshops: • Online at www.richmond.ca/register • By phoning the registration call centre from Monday to Friday, 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. at 604-276-4300 (press “2” at the prompt)
City of Richmond | 6911 No. 3 Rd. Richmond BC V6Y 2C1 | Tel: 604-276-4000
www.richmond.ca
City of Richmond | 6911 No. 3 Rd. Richmond BC V6Y 2C1 | Tel: 604-276-4000
www.richmond.ca
Page 6 · Richmond Review
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
opinion the richmond
REVIEW #1 - 3671 VIKING WAY, RICHMOND, B.C. V6V 2J5 • 604-247-3700 • FAX: 604-247-3739 • RICHMONDREVIEW.COM
PUBLISHER MARY KEMMIS, 604-247-3702 publisher@richmondreview.com
EDITOR BHREANDÁIN CLUGSTON, 604-247-3730 editor@richmondreview.com STAFF REPORTERS MATTHEW HOEKSTRA, 604-247-3732 mhoekstra@richmondreview.com MARTIN VAN DEN HEMEL, 604-247-3733 martin@richmondreview.com DON FENNELL, 604-247-3731 sports@richmondreview.com
ASSISTANT ADVERTISING MANAGER ELANA GOLD, 604-247-3704 admanager@richmondreview.com ADVERTISING LESLEY SMITH, 604-247-3705 lesley@richmondreview.com TORRIE WATTERS, 604-247-3707 torrie@richmondreview.com COLLIN NEAL, 604-247-3719 collinn@richmondreview.com MARSHALL MACKINDER, 604-247-3714 marshall@richmondreview.com RENIT BAINS 604-247-3708 renit@richmondreview.com KIMBERLEY LIM, 604-247-3709 kimberley@richmondreview.com AD CONTROL KRISTENE MURRAY, 604-247-3729 adcontrol@richmondreview.com
EDITORIAL: Postal protest is past due Residents across the country have been exercised recently by the fact that Canada Post intends to phase out door-to-door delivery of mail to urban addresses in favour of mailboxes—already a fact of life for many, particularly those who live in apartment and townhouse complexes. Unfortunately for all those of us who would prefer time to stand still on such issues, the writing has been on the wall—if not on our personalized stationery—for years. The fact is, the convenience and prevalence of email (including ebills, ebanking and ecommerce) effectively spelled the end of “snail mail”—as the major mode of communication – many years ago. No, it’s not gone entirely, and it likely never will be. There will still be those who prefer hard-copy mail, both for esthetic and, for some transactions, practical reasons. And it seems that new media never completely edge out old formats – which sometimes survive (like the vinyl record) to become trendy again. And handling of parcels, of course, is still going to be a stock-intrade for Canada Post, until someone figures out a safe and reliable way of teleporting goods. But it can’t come as a surprise that the loss of significant mail volumes to digital communication would have an inevitable impact on Canada Post’s bottom line. Though we may argue about the corporation’s management decisions and strategies, that bottom line is also our bottom line, as taxpayers. Present-day critics may wish to ponder that the time to protest the shift toward mail boxes—and raise quite legitimate concerns about their security, and inaccessibility for those facing physical challenges—was years ago, when they became the norm for rural and suburban routes. It’s sad that those unaffected at that time could not envision that someone else’s problem would eventually become their own—but how many times has that happened in human history? Like it or not, that battle has been lost, as have the working positions Canada Post means to eliminate through attrition. If there was a time to save or transition those jobs, the strategies also needed to be launched by union leaders long ago. If we feel there is something that still needs to be protested, try the new $1 individual stamp (85 cents if bought in a pack) that Canada Post will introduce come March 31. That’s a new wrinkle—and one we could legitimately contest, as a hardship to the country’s already besieged and inconvenienced taxpayers. Black Press photo —Black Press Community mailboxes have been the standard for new housing development for decades.
Another year of enviro-wars begins
CIRCULATION MANAGER RACHAEL FINKELSTEIN, 604-247-3710 circulation@richmondreview.com CIRCULATION LITO TUAZON, ROYA SARWARY 604-247-3710 circulation@richmondreview.com
B.C. Views Tom Fletcher CREATIVE SERVICES MANAGER JAANA BJöRK, 604-247-3716 jaana@richmondreview.com CREATIVE SERVICES GABE MUNDSTOCK, 604-247-3718 gabe@richmondreview.com PETER PALMER, 604-247-3706 peter@richmondreview.com JAMES MARSHALL, 604-247-3701 james@richmondreview.com The Richmond Review is a member of the B.C. Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the council. Write (include documentation) within 45 days to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org Published every Wednesday and Friday by Black Press Ltd.
T
he new year lurched to life with a round of shouting about the environment, as our post-industrial, post-literate urban society grapples with conflicting claims of impending doom. The release of a group of Greenpeace protesters from a Russian prison was welcomed by TV news networks desperate to fill the holiday dead zone. Our intrepid Canadian pair got to describe over and over their bid to hang a strongly worded banner from a Rus-
sian offshore oil platform, and their horror when security forces boarded their vessel from helicopters and seized it. In all the fawning interviews, I kept waiting for two questions to be asked. What did they think Vladimir Putin’s regime would do? And what was the point? How is disrupting one oil platform for an hour going to save the planet? The Greenpeace “activists” claimed this was the first oil platform to operate above the Arctic Circle. So it was a line in the snow, which I’m sure impressed Putin as he ramps up his territorial claim to include the North Pole. Meanwhile at the South Pole, TV anchors remained carefully sombre as they reported numerous bids to rescue a scientific vessel trapped in thick ice. No quips about the predictive abilities of climate scientists please! In fact this ill-fated voyage was a re-enactment of Sir Douglas Mawson’s 1913 expedition, with pro-global warming news outlets BBC
and The Guardian aboard to capture the melting wrought by a century of industrial expansion. The rescue efforts (from a Russian ship by Chinese helicopters) also disrupted an Australian icebreaker’s supply trip for one of the real scientific expeditions working in Antarctica. Skeptics had great fun with the Antarctic debacle, as they did earlier with the resurgence of Arctic ice that trapped climate tourists. As is normal in the Internet age, the climate debate has split into two fanatical factions, each of which promotes the most extreme examples it can find to prop up its version of truth. They call each other “warmists” and “deniers” among other pithy names. Greenpeace is now known in B.C. as part of our Team America anti-tar sands brigade. They got off to a good start in 2014 by selectively seizing on reports of a new study of mercury contamination in northern Alberta. A “bullseye” of this dreaded neurotoxin has been
Skeptics had great fun with the Antarctic debacle, as they did earlier with the resurgence of Arctic ice that trapped climate tourists.
drawn around oilsands operations by measuring traces in snow. The study by Environment Canada scientists isn’t published yet, but Postmedia News reported on a presentation in November by the researchers. “The federal scientists stress the mercury loadings around the oilsands are low compared to the contamination seen in many parts of North America including southern Ontario and southern Quebec,” the news report states. This is like the study of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) pollu-
tion in northern Alberta lakes that was twisted into propaganda and fed to the news media last year. This is another group of neurotoxins that are far more concentrated in urban areas than around remote industry. Consumption, rather than production of coal, diesel and other fuels produces the vast majority of these emissions. I look forward to the study of their effects around Lost Lagoon and Burnaby Lake. Of course safe levels of these materials have been set by Health Canada. You’re more likely to get significant exposure to mercury from a broken fluorescent lamp or the mercury amalgam in your old tooth fillings than you are from feeding ducks at the lake, although you might get a whiff of PAH when you gas up the car or board the bus. Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press and BCLocalNews.com Twitter:@ tomfletcherbc E-mail: tfletcher@blackpress.ca
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
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Richmond Review · Page 7
letters Farewell to Alexandra Road Editor: We have had the privilege to live on Alexandra Road between Garden City and No. 4 Road for almost seven years. Our former landlord sold our rental property to Polygon and we were able to continue renting from Polygon. But we have now gotten notice and need to move by the end of January. Thus it is with mixed feelings we are preparing to leave this unique street in Richmond. We and our next door neighbours (whose house is also being torn down) have had the privilege of having the most amazing “backyard.” From our kitchen windows it was hard to believe we live in the city, with the nothing between us and Odlin except the old pasture that we were told our former landlord used to have cattle on and the most amazing strand of trees where eagles, hawks and occasionally owls would roost. It was like living in the country in the middle of the city. Then there was the actual narrow street with all the trees and wild growth, so that when you walk down the street you feel like you left the city for a brief time. As I walked down the street, I got to know all my neighbours and we all got know each other, even the homeless who squatted in the empty properties. A real sense of community developed as we all watched the gradual erosion of all that made this street so unique. One by one, we have watched neighbours leaving and their houses being torn down, while those of us left have gotten closer together and this informal community is an integral part of helping each other out. With all the controversy re the Walmart development, we watched with, I’m sad to say, cynicism because we have seen what development has already done to this street. I think we knew that development would always triumph over a few strand of trees and that it would be a losing battle. The irony of this is that before the development begins the city marks trees which must be saved. Then a company spends
From our kitchen windows it was hard to believe we live in the city, with the nothing between us and Odlin except the old pasture that we were told our former landlord used to have cattle on ... several days fencing the trees. What a farce, for example, where all the new townhouses were built by No. 4 Road, all the trees that were fenced are gone. They saved only one tree in the complex; it reminds me of a museum where future generations will be able to come and see what an old growth tree looked like in Richmond. The wonderful strand of trees in our backyard and a tree in our front yard is now all fenced but if I would be a betting person, I would bet that in sixmonths they will no longer exist, so why put all this effort into a losing cause?
The sad result of all the development is that all the good parts of living on this street as mentioned above will be gone and only the negative parts will remain. The cargo planes that roar over the house at night, the constant traffic noise, which is somewhat muffled now by the trees and but will only intensify with the high density development of the apartments and the Walmart shopping center, the air pollution from the planes and cars will also increase with no trees to absorb it. And the sad part is another community in Richmond that will not
know their neighbours. So we are looking for another place to rent, which is daunting given the cost of renting in Richmond, (if you know an affordable place, please let us know). But we are not the only ones who are looking for a new home; I wonder where the barn swallows that have a nest on our porch and have raised a family there for the past four years will go when they return this year. It was a privilege to be allowed to be part of watching them at such a close range, from the egg laying to the feeding of the young, to the first tentative flights from the nest and when they finally all leave we feel blessed to have watched this little microcosm of nature unfold so close to us. Donna Danyluk Richmond
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Page 8 · Richmond Review
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
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Local Christmas Bird Count loses title Participants in Richmond’s counts are bested by eagleeyed Victoria birders by Matthew Hoekstra Staff Reporter In the annual wintertime birder battle that splits north and south Richmond, the south has won again—but it wasn’t able to fend off another longtime rival. Avian enthusiasts participating in the Ladner Christmas bird count, which includes South Richmond, counted 140 species during the recent day-long count. The Vancouver count, which includes north Richmond, recorded 128 species. But longtime rival Victoria won the species count race. Eagleeyed birders there counted 144 different birds, according to information posted on the B.C. Field Ornithologists’ website. Hundreds of bird counts take place across North America every year from Dec. 14 to Jan 5. Data collected by birders helps scientists track winter bird populations and identify species in need of conservation. In recent years the Ladner count has claimed top spot in
Viveka Ohman photo Christmas Bird Count participants scan a field during a local Dec. 22 count.
the country, including last year when its 146 species handily beat Victoria’s 136. (Vancouver finished with 133 that year.) The 100 participants in this season’s Ladner count, held Dec. 22, faced fog, showers, snow-covered ground and optics-blurring drizzle all day. Despite the weather, organizer Jude Grass said the count was a success. “Although counting white swans or snow geese standing in a snowy field surrounded by fog did make counting birds some-
what more difficult,” she noted. Birders nonetheless spotted a few rare or otherwise interesting species: Pacific goldenplover, red-naped sapsucker, house wren, mountain bluebird, Harris’s sparrow, swamp sparrow and a white-throated sparrow. The Vancouver count, held a week earlier on Dec. 15, also recorded a number of notable species. Spotted from the Iona Island and Terra Nova areas: Brandt’s cormorant, horned lark, bohemian waxwing and a swamp sparrow.
2014 COLLECTION CALENDAR COMING SOON! Watch for your 2014 Recycling & Garbage Collection Calendar arriving in the mail this January for use all year.
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Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Richmond Review ¡ Page 9
news Big year for building in Richmond High-rises fueled rapid pace of development by Matthew Hoekstra Staff Reporter Richmond City Hall issued $697 million in building permits in 2013, a year second only to the record-setting Olympic year. City officials granted developers 1,732 permits worth $696,757,922 last year, according to data compiled by The Richmond Review. That’s far more than the previous year’s total of $463 million, and near the stratosphere of 2010 when permit values totalled $813 million. Entering the fall, the city was on pace for an average year. But developers pushed the city’s total into much higher territory in the final two months, which combined for 41 per cent of building permit values for the year. Leading the way were residential towers planned in the master planned neighbourhood of Capstan Village, along with high-rises in the Minoru Park and Richmond Olympic Oval neighbourhoods. In November Pinnacle received permits for its first two buildings in Capstan Village—at 8633 and 8677 Capstan Way—worth $35 million. Concord Pacific also moved ahead with two towers in the area, worth a total of $60 million. Elsewhere that month, in City Centre, Royal Grand Plaza Development Inc. secured a permit for a $17.5-million 14-storey residential tower at 6333 Cooney Rd. In December, activity on a long vacant site along Minoru Boulevard and across from Richmond Centre finally moved ahead. Building permits worth $42 million were issued for two towers for the new addresses of 7333 and 7399 Murdoch Ave. Dubbed Park Residences at Minoru, the project comes from Hong Kong-based developer Yue Hwa. Another major highrise project on the same block also took root— Polygon’s Carrera. Polygon is redeveloping the Kiwanis Court lands, building new towers for seniors, along with market housing. Its permits
totalled $55 million in December. Nearby, in the Oval Village, the city issued a permit worth $13.5 million for River Park Place at River Road and Hollybridge Way, a development from Intracorp Projects Ltd. and Mo Yeung International Enterprise Ltd. Other major permits included one worth $19.6 million for Townline’s 16-storey Harmony project at 8288 Granville Ave., and a $9.2 million permit for Oris Consulting to construct another building at Parc Riviera on the North Arm, at 10155 River Dr. Although building permit values jumped 50 per cent in Richmond year over year, the same can’t be said for the region. Total values for the first 10 months of 2013—$5.9 billion—are 10 per cent lower the same period the previous year. Those figures prompted the Vancouver Regional Construction Association last month to project a “modest decline� in permits led by fewer residential and
The 2014 test fees are set at a level where motorists see a reduction, while maintaining the program’s regulatory requirement to operate on a revenueneutral basis by the end of the program. The table below shows what the test fees will be month-by-month in 2014.
Matthew Hoekstra photo Residential towers planned by Concord Pacific for the Capstan Village neighbourhood helped propel building permit values to near record territory in 2013.
government permits. “Commercial and industrial permits may provide some offset, with prospects for 2013 set for a modest gain,� the association said in a
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news release. Municipal governments require building permits for construction, change of use, additions or alterations to structures.
Building permit values in 2013 •January: $20,965,511 (138 permits) •February: $11,119,165 (118 permits) •March: $42,709,514 (129) •April: $115,528,538 (146 permits) •May: $33,199,908 (189 permits) •June: $23,647,287 (151 permits) •July: $24,496,447 (155 permits) •August: $48,764,479 (125 permits) •September: $66,571,177 (143 permits) •October: $23,080,140 (172 permits) •November: $131,830,127 (131 permits) •December: $154,845,629 (135 permits)
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Page 10 · Richmond Review
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
business | PROFILE
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e h t m o r f r a e Y w e Happy N o d n o w k e a T s e e K staff at 2014 holds the promise of being an amazing New Year and the staff at Kees Taekwondo wish local residents one that’s abundant in joy, health and prosperity. The Chinese New Year is also around the corner, and with this being the year of the Horse,
there are many traits martial artists share with this popular Chinese Zodiac symbol. The Horse is known for its power and kicks, something Master Nick Cheng, who speaks Cantonese, teaches all his students.
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Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Richmond Review · Page 11
business | PROFILE
Kees Taekwondo But horses are also known for their precision and composure, and in much the same vein, it’s discipline and respect that students at Kees are taught.
Cheng said 2013 was an excellent year for Kees, which has now been in business for a year, and has seen its business steadily grow and gain in reputation, with people regularly dropping in to take a look. A recently-minted sixth degree black belt, Cheng holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology, and specializes in working with children as young as three. Classes for three-to-12 year olds are held between 4 and 6:30 p.m., right after school is out for the day.
But horses are also known for their precision and composure, and in much the same vein, it’s discipline and respect that students at Kees are taught.
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Classes for teens are held starting at 6:45 p.m. Kees Taekwondo is located at 111-5560 Minoru Boulevard. For more information about classes, e-mail richmond@kees.ca or call them directly at 604-2845425.
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One of the Students at Kees druring a kicking drill.
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deals to be had at Richmond Wholesale Appliance. Purchase that fridge with its matching oven, and Claudia said you’ll save even more. Another great deal: $1,699 for a stainless steel matching set including refrigerator, stove and dishwasher.
Sales manager Claudia Kolar has been helping customers save thousands of dollars by supplying them with deeply discounted, new, overstocked, scratched and/or dented appliances.
And how about the half-price deal on an eye-catching washing machine, regularly $1,399, for just $699.
In many cases the imperfection is on the back or the side of the appliance so depending on the design of one’s kitchen it would be completely invisible to the discerning eye of friends and family.
In addition to name brand refrigerators and ranges, Richmond Wholesale Appliance offers a wide selection of washing machines, dryers, microwave ovens, dishwashers, range hood-fans, and even mattresses, among other things.
Refresh a rental suite, spruce up a home slated for sale, or complete your dream kitchen, simply by contacting Richmond Wholesale and their design team. A name brand fridge, with a suggested retail price of $4,000, currently sells for only $2,495, a great example of the
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Page 12 ¡ Richmond Review
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
seniors
Advice for aging athletes Q U A L I T Y
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On March 31, the Wills, Estates and Succession Act (WESA) will come into effect. Designed to modernize the very old law in this area, the Act will change most aspects of the legal environment around Estate planning, Will making, and handling of Estates. The Act will not invalidate existing Wills, but the new law will apply to them. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s therefore useful to look at some highlights of the new legislation and examine our changing situation. Terms The Act uses more plain English. The Testator is replaced by â&#x20AC;&#x153;Will maker,â&#x20AC;? and the Executor is now the â&#x20AC;&#x153;Personal Representative.â&#x20AC;? A separate person can be appointed to handle a personâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s digital assets, such as a Facebook account. The term â&#x20AC;&#x153;Descendantâ&#x20AC;? replaces the old term â&#x20AC;&#x153;Issueâ&#x20AC;? (referring to someoneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s children and other lineal descendants born after her/him). This term will be significant in distributing intestate Estates, where there is no Will. The term â&#x20AC;&#x153;Spouseâ&#x20AC;? is also important. It will now be defined as two people who were married, or in a marriage-like relationship for two or more years. They cease to be Spouses if they live separately and apart for two years, with at least one of them intending the separation to be permanent. In a marriage-like situation, one of them simply ends the relationship. Wills WESA defines a Will as â&#x20AC;&#x153;a Will, Codicil, Testamentâ&#x20AC;? or other document deemed by a Court Order to be effective as a Will. This definition is very broad, much more so than under the old law. If a guardian of minor children is appointed in a Will, the Family Law Act, including any relevant Court Orders, must be taken into account. The mandatory five-day survivorship rule (Sec. 10) is a radical change. If a couple (married or married-like) jointly own an asset and die within five days of each other, the asset is deemed to be owned half by each person, severing the joint tenancy. Each member of the couple is deemed to survive the other, and their half-interest in the asset will be distributed under their Will. This new rule may cause the couple to reconsider transferring an asset from one of them to both, as sometimes happens in a subsequent relationship. And of course, both Wills need to be probated. Reproductive technology If a person has donated or stored reproductive material, posthumous children may be born. Under WESA (Sec. 8.1), such a child inherits as if born conventionally. There are, however, conditions that may delay the distribution of the deceasedâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Estate. Intestacy The distribution rules for intestate Estates have dramatically changed. The system will now be â&#x20AC;&#x153;Parentelic,â&#x20AC;? and based on Consanguinity. This shift will be noticeable when a person is not survived by a spouse or children. They will inherit if they do survive, but the spouse, instead of receiving the first $65,000 of the Estate, will now get the first $300,000. If there are children from the deceasedâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s previous relationship, they will receive $150,000. The remainder of the Estate will be divided half to the spouse and half to the children. It is possible for a person to be survived by two â&#x20AC;&#x153;Spouses.â&#x20AC;? Here, if the Spouses cannot agree on a division, a Court hearing will be set. The spousal home is also treated differently. A surviving Spouse no longer has a life interest in the home. Instead, the Spouse has the opportunity to buy the house, and must make that decision within 180 days of a grant of Probate. If the surviving Spouse and the Personal Representative cannot agree on a valuation, a Court hearing will be set. If a Spouse is unable to buy the house, but wants to live in it (especially where there are children), the Spouse can apply to Court. The Court can order that the interests of the inheriting people be a charge on title to the property, while the Spouse lives in it. Summary WESA will apply to deaths occurring after March 31, 2014. Since so many things will change, you should (without panic!) review your Will, and perhaps your Estate plan. Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t assume that your Will automatically has to change, but assume that it might. More important, if you have not yet made a Will, you should if you have a Spouse and/or assets (unless you donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t mind the new distribution rules). In my opinion, anyone in a subsequent relationship, particularly homeowners, should make a Will. Generally, everyone should take time to learn a little about this new legislation.
Visit our website (www.WillPowerLaw.com) or call us at (604)233-7001 to discuss your Jack Micner Wills, Estates and Seniorsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; questions.
SPRY HAWKINS MICNER LAWYER Suite 440-5900 No. 3 Road (Vancity Tower) Email: jack@willpowerlaw.com Twitter: @WillPowerLaw Blog: willpowerlaw.wordpress.com
other athletic equipment as they approach senior citizen status, there are steps aging athletes can take to ensure they aren't pushing their bodies too far as they grow older. â&#x20AC;˘Recognize your new recovery time. Veteran athletes tend to have a sixth sense about their bodies, knowing how long they need to recover from common ailments like ankle sprains, knee pain, back pain and shin splints. Despite the body's remarkable ability for recovery, it's not immune to aging, and that recovery time will increase as the body ages. Whereas a sprained ankle might once have been as good as new after a few days or rest, aging athletes must recognize that the same ankle sprain now might require more recovery time. Returning too quickly from an injury can only make things worse for aging athletes, so don't push yourself. See Next Page
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Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Richmond Review · Page 13
active seniors
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Focus on flexibility From Page 12 •Take more time to warm up. As the body ages, its response time to exercise increases. This means the body needs more time to prepare itself for cardiovascular and strength training exercises. Increase your warmup time as you age, gradually increasing the intensity of your warmup exercises until your body feels ready for more strenuous exercise. •Focus on flexibility. The more flexible you are, the more capable the body is of absorbing shock, including the shock that results from repetitive activities. But as the body ages, it becomes less flexible, which makes it less capable of successfully handling the repetitive movements common to exercise. Aging athletes should focus on their flexibility, stretching their muscles before and after a workout. In addition, activities such as yoga can work wonders on improving flexibility for young and aging athletes alike. •Don’t stop strength training. Some aging athletes mistakenly feel they should stop strength training as they get older. No longer concerned about building muscle, aging athletes might feel as if they have nothing to gain by lifting weights and continuing to perform other muscle strengthening exercises. But the body gradually loses muscle mass as it ages, and that loss puts the joints under greater stress when aging athletes perform other exercises. That stress can put people at greater risk for arthritis, tendinitis and ligament sprains. While you no longer need to max out on the bench press or challenge yourself on the biceps curl, it is important to continue to make strength training a part of your fitness regimen as you age. Aging athletes need not associate aging with ceasing their athletic pursuits. But recognizing your limitations and the changes your body is going through is an important element of staying healthy as your approach older adulthood.
Enjoy Independent Living in Steveston The Maple Residences is a vibrant Seniors Residence offering an all inclusive lifestyle. Located in the waterfront village of Steveston you can easily explore the lovely walks and many amenities on your door step. Daily Tours 7 days a week 10am - 4pm
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As the body ages, its response time to exercise increases.
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Wednesday, January 8, 2014
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Not valid with senior discount, stamp cards and daily specials. Not valid with any other discount offers.
Richmond Public Library is offering a free family literacy program starting later this month. Learning Together is a seven-week program in which parents and children ages three to five use the alphabet, numbers, stories and play to learn literacy
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skills aimed at developing a love of reading. The program takes place at the Brighouse branch Wednesday mornings starting Jan. 15, and at the Cambie branch Fridays starting Jan. 17. Space is limited; register by visiting any branch of Richmond Public Library, calling 604-231-6412 or visiting yourlibary.ca/progs.
Islam explored at free community event For the third consecutive year, youth from the Az-Zahraa Islamic Centre on No. 5 Road will host an evening of conversation, education and food. â&#x20AC;&#x153;A Journey Into Islamâ&#x20AC;? is set for Saturday, Jan. 25 from 5:30 to 10 p.m. This annual event promises informative talks
and a delectable ethnic dinner, followed by interactive exhibitions and guided tours of the Islamic centre. The exhibitions will address various aspects of Islam, from basic prayer practices and the holy book, to misconceptions about Muslims and their faith. Additionally, guests who arrive at 5:30 p.m. will be given an opportunity to observe the daily evening congrega-
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tional prayers, accompanied by an interpretive presentation with the translation of the Arabic recitations. A Journey Into Islam was started by students who wanted to create a platform to accurately and effectively present their religion to the community. Their goal is to create a comfortable environment for open dialogue and relationship building with members of the diverse communities of the Lower Mainland. In addition to the standard topics, this yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s event will explore the theme of science in Islam. Organizers hope to draw 300 guests. Admission is free, but registration is required. Visit ajourneyintoislam. azzahraa.org to register.
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Richmond Public Library will be offering a free workshop on the benefits of tax free savings accounts and registered savings plans on Jan. 22 from 1 to 2 p.m. and 7 to 8 p.m. at the Cambie branch (11590 Cambie Rd.). To register, visit any library branch or at www.yourlibrary.ca.
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Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Richmond Review · Page 15
books
A Dog’s Journey will appeal to dog lovers and others alike choice did I have? This book is the sequel to A Dog’s Purpose, but can be read on its own. Written from the dog’s perspective and subtitled “Another novel for humans”, this charming little book focuses on the many lives and incarnations of a dog whose ultimate purpose is to love humans, and in particular, Clarity, or CJ as she prefers to be called. It’s about the dog’s journey through his/her lives and the different roles he/she is destined by fate to play. We first meet Buddy as a big dog, who saves baby Clarity from
Book Club Shelley Civkin
A
sucker for dog books, a friend recommended A Dog’s Journey by W. Bruce Cameron, so what
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drowning, when her selfish mother Gloria neglects the toddler at the beach. With each incarnation, we learn more and more about the dog and his humans, and piece together the story through the dog’s eyes. We see CJ grow up, Gloria become more intolerable, love bloom, and people die. When Buddy passes on, he becomes Molly, who has a special talent for sniffing out cancer, then he’s Max, a tiny but fierce dog, and finally Toby, who works as a hospice dog. Each dog has a unique purpose and job to do as they
make their way through their new lives, but they never forget their most important role—to take care of and protect CJ from danger. Although the plot moves along slowly, the book is a joy to read anyway because of its simplicity, and of course, doggy humor. As all dogs would, Molly has a very limited understanding of human language. So when she and CJ go to the park one day she describes the other animal that’s there, this way: “We were mostly by ourselves except for a woman with a small black dog named Get
Aesthetics & Aromatherapy School
Shelley Civkin is communications officer for Richmond Public Library. For other reading suggestions see yourlibrary. ca/goodbooks.
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Back Here Milo.” The story really is as much about CJ as it is about the dogs, and we get to see her transition from emotionally abused child, to troubled teen, to confused young adult, to senior, and all through the dogs’ eyes. A Dog’s Journey is a touching little
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Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Page 16 - Richmond Review
Community Worship
ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA
REFORMED CHURCH (RCA)
St. Alban
Fujian Evangelical Church
UNITED STEVESTON UNITED CHURCH 3720 Broadway Street (at 2nd Ave.) Please join us at 10am Sunday, Jan. 12, 2014 for Worship Service and Sunday School 604-277-0508 • www.stevestonunitedchurch.ca A caring and friendly village church
welcomes you to Sunday Worship Services
an Anglican parish in the heart of Richmond Services at 8:30 and 10:00 am Sunday School 10:00 am The Reverend Margaret Cornish 7260 St. Albans Road, Richmond 604-278-2770 • www.stalbansrichmond.org
St. Anne’s - Steveston Anglican Church 4071 Francis Road, Richmond, BC
• • •
English Services: 9:00 & 10:45 a.m. Mandarin Service: 9:00 a.m. Minnanese Service: 10:45 a.m.
12200 Blundell Road, Richmond, B.C., V6W 1B3 Phone 604-273-2757 • www.fujianevangelical.org
The Rev. Brian Vickers, Rector • 604-277-9626
Richmond United Church 8711 Cambie Rd. (near Garden City Rd.) 604-278-5622 Come for 10am Sunday Worship and Children’s Sunday School and after-service coffee and fellowship.
BAPTIST
Sunday 8:30 a.m. - Contemplative Eucharist 10:00 a.m. Family Eucharist with Church School Wednesday 10:00am. Eucharist, 11:00am Bible Study, 7pm Eucharist • www.stannessteveston.ca
Broadmoor Baptist Church
Rev. Dr. Warren McKinnon
A safe place to connect with God and fellow travellers on your spiritual journey
CHRISTIAN REFORMED
Founded 1888. Richmond’s Oldest Church
8140 Saunders Road, Richmond, BC 604-277-8012 www.bbchurch.ca Dr. Tim Colborne - Lead Pastor.
GILMORE PARK UNITED CHURCH 8060 No. 1 Road (corner of No. 1 & Blundell) 604.277.5377 www.gilmoreparkunited.ca Rev. Maggie Watts-Hammond, Min. of Word, Sacrament & Pastoral Care Rev. Yoko Kihara – Min. of Christian Development & Outreach
Worship Service - 10:30 a.m. Sonshine Adventures for Kids
INTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH CHRIST-CENTERED CHRISTIAN CHURCH www.cccc-richmondbc.com COME AND JOIN US IN OUR CELEBRATION OF REDEMPTION! Worship Service 12:20 p.m. Sunday School 2:00 p.m.
Worship and Children’s Program Sundays 10:30 am For more information, please check our website or call the office Everyone is welcome!
BRIGHOUSE UNITED CHURCH an evangelical congregation
8151 Bennett Road, Richmond, 604-278-7188 www.brighouseunitedchurch.org
Sunday, 10 am – Worship & Sunday School
Minister: Rev. Stuart W. Appenheimer, B.A., M.Div. Brighouse Pre-school:604-272-2480 • Brighouse UC Day Care: 604-278-8469
8151 Bennett Road, Richmond tel: 604-271-6491
TO ADVERTISE IN THE COMMUNITY WORSHIP PAGE CALL GEETU AT 604-575-5304 OR ARMIN AT 604-575-5303
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...............1-8
7
OBITUARIES
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 33
INFORMATION
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...9-57
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EDUCATION
LEARN FROM HOME. EARN FROM HOME. Huge is a demand for Medical Transcriptionists. Start your online learning today with CanScribe Career College. w w w . c a n s c r i b e . c o m 1.800.466.1535 info@canscribe.com.
114
DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING
111
CARETAKERS/ RESIDENTIAL MANAGERS
MOTEL ASST Manager Team to run small Motel in Parksville BC. Non-Smoking, no Pets, good Health, fulltime live-in position. Call 250-586-1633 or email: kjjr27@hotmail.com
115
EDUCATION
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 115
EDUCATION
125
FOSTER/SOCIAL CARE
HIGHWAY OWNER OPERATORS & COMPANY DRIVERS Van Kam’s group of companies req. Highway linehaul owner operators & company drivers based in our Surrey terminal for runs throughout BC and Alberta. Applicants must have winter and mountain driving experience/training.
HEALTH CARE ASSISTANT
We offer above average rates and an excellent employee benefits package. $3500 Signing BONUS for Owner Operators To join our team of professional drivers, email a detailed resume, current driver’s abstract and details of your truck to: careers@vankam.com or Call Bev, 604-968-5488 or Fax: 604-587-9889 Only those of interest will be contacted. Van Kam is committed to Employment Equity and Environmental Responsibility.
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EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
ADULT NEWSPAPER CARRIER FLOATER POSITION • Permanent on call door-to-door delivery routes that require a substitute. • Must have a reliable vehicle and valid drivers license. • Must be willing to deliver to all areas of Richmond each Wednesday and Friday. • Newspaper delivery experience is an asset.
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CALL RICHMOND: 604.270.8867 OR VISIT SPROTTSHAW.COM
If interested please call 604-247-3711 or email circulation@richmondreview.com the richmond
REVIEW
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130
HELP WANTED
Richmond Review - Page 17
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130
HELP WANTED
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
Back in Motion Rehab Inc. seeks a full-time temporary Administrative Assistant for our busy Richmond office, to provide administrative support to Back in Motion programs and services.
FLAGGERS NEEDED. No Certification? Get Certified, 604-575-3944
James Western Star Truck & Trailer Ltd. in Williams Lake has an immediate opening for an experienced parts person. Full Time, competitive wages, benefits & signing bonus. Fax resume to: 250-398-6367 or email: nwejr@jamesws.com There is a CRITICAL need for Medical Transcriptionists across Canada. Work from Home. CanScribe graduates welcome and encouraged to apply. Apply through MTR at www.hds-mt.com/jobs
134
HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES
2 Food & beverage servers req’d. Sal: $10.50/hr. 40hr/wk. no exp. Pmt. Duties: Greet customers. Present menus. Answer questions regarding food & beverages. Take orders & relay to kitchen & bar staff. Serve food & beverages. Order & maintain inventory. Lang: English. Punjabi as asset. Contact: Manvinder from Ginger Indian Cuisine Restaurant in Richmond, BC. Apply at gingerindiancuisine@yahoo.ca CHEESE MAKER, SHIPPER, AND PACKER REQUIRED; Verka Food Products Ltd. in Richmond is hiring 1 F/T Cheese Maker, 1 F/T Shipper and 1 F/T packer. For Cheese Maker no exp. required and duties include production of cheese, setting up and adjusting processing machines, and checking quality of cheese, making adjustments to process variables etc. Salary would be $16/hr. For Shipper 1 year experience required and duties include shipping & receiving goods, counting or weighing goods, preparing invoices, affixing labels, inspecting and verifing invoices against incoming material, etc. Salary would be $16/hr. For Packer no experience required and duties include packing & unpacking material, moving products in warehouse and packaging material, checking products and packaging for basic defects, etc. Salary would be $11.50/hr. All jobs are full-time with 40 hrs/week. Interested applicants can email resumes to verkafoods@outlook.com
DUTIES INCLUDE: - General reception; greeting visitors - Answering & directing calls - Booking appointments, office space and interpreters - Setting up files and updating databases - Assisting staff with administrative requests & back up support - Maintaining office equip. and general cleanliness of facilities - Distributing mail, filing & faxing - Providing admin support for programs - Liaising with staff members and clients - Other duties, as required REQUIREMENTS: Top notch computer skills in: - Microsoft Office programs and database systems. - Post secondary clerical training with excellent interpersonal and communication skills, incl prof. and polite phone manner. - Flexible team player with strong organizational skills and ability to focus, multitask and prioritize in a busy environment. - Positive attitude, strong initiative, solution-focused and detail oriented. - Outstanding customer service a must! - Minimum 1 year admin exp. To apply, please forward resume and cover letter to: hr@backinmotion.com or fax to 778-728-0241 by Jan 17th, 2014. Please state “Richmond Admin Assistant” in the subject line and where you saw this posting in your cover letter. Only successful candidates will be contacted.
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 160
TRADES, TECHNICAL
JOURNEYMAN AUTOMOTIVE Service Technician(s) in Hanna Alberta. Hanna Chrysler Ltd. offers competitive wages, relocation allowance, negotiable depending on experience. Bright, modern shop. Full-time permanent with benefits. Friendly town just 2 hours from major urban centres. More info at: hannachrysler.ca. Fax 403-854-2845; Email: chrysler@telusplanet.net.
PERSONAL SERVICES 182
FINANCIAL SERVICES
GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
GUTTER/Window Cleaning, Power Washing, 30 yrs exp., For Prompt Service Call Simon 604-230-0627
283A
• Steel Fabricator (afternoon) • Saw Operator • Estimator • Drafter & more. Global ORIGINAL Waterpark & Attractions Company is HIRING! www.WhiteWaterWest.com/ careers.html
338
PLUMBING
www.paintspecial.com 604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley
HANDYPERSONS
Running this ad for 8yrs
PAINT SPECIAL
EXPERIENCED HANDYMAN for all your home fix up chores including expert interior painting, minor renovations, small electrical and plumbing jobs - give me your to-do list! No job too big or small. 25 years experience, meticulous and reliable with references on request. Serving the lower mainland. Reasonable rates and on time service 7 days a week Call Dave at 604-318-1046
Need CA$H Today? Own a vehicle? Borrow up to $25,000 Snapcarcash.com 604-777-5046
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
MIN. EXPRESS PAGING SYSTEM Reasonable Rates 604-270-6338
3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour (Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint. NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring & Maid Services.
#1 IN RATES & SERVICE. Lic’d/Ins. LOCAL Plumber. Plugged drains, renos etc. Chad 1-877-861-2423
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS
311 MASONRY & BRICKWORK BRICK, BLOCK, STONE WORK FREE ESTIMATE! GREAT RATES! Ph. (604)816-8086
188
LEGAL SERVICES
CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certification, adoption property rental opportunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 260 PERSONAL SERVICES 182
FINANCIAL SERVICES
DROWNING IN DEBT? Cut debts more than 60% & DEBT FREE in half the time! AVOID BANKRUPTCY! Free Consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1-877-556-3500 BBB Rated A+ If you own a home or real estate, ALPINE CREDITS can lend you money: It’s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is NOT an issue. 1.800.587.2161
ELECTRICAL
YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call Lic #89402 Same day guarn’td We love small jobs! 604-568-1899 Lic. Electrician A+, BBB member Expert trouble shooter, All types of Electrical work 24/7 604-617-1774
283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS GUTTER CLEANING SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE
Call Ian 604-724-6373
130
HELP WANTED
320
MOVING & STORAGE 332
AFFORDABLE MOVING www.affordablemoversbc.com
ASPHALT PAVING • Brick Driveways • Retaining Walls • Foundation Repairs • Sealcoating 604-618-2304
$45/Hr
From 1, 3, 5, 7 & 10 Ton Trucks Licensed ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 Men Free Estimate/Senior Discount Residential~Commercial~Pianos
338
LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE
604-537-4140
130
HELP WANTED
PLUMBING
CRESCENT Plumbing & Heating Licensed Residential 24hr. Service
1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Across the street - across the world Real Professionals, Reas. Rates. Best in every way! 604-721-4555. MOUNTAIN MOVERS- Your trusted choice for residential moving services. (778)378-6683
PAVING/SEAL COATING
• Hot water tanks • Furnaces • Broilers • Plugged Drains 778-862-0560
PATTAR ROOFING LTD. All types of Roofing. Over 35 years in business. 604.588.0833
10% DISCOUNT. MG Roofing & Siding. CA. Re-roofing, New Roof Gutters.
604-812-9721
FIVE STAR ROOFING All kinds of re-roofing & repairs. Free est. Reasonable rates. (604)961-7505, 278-0375
10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fitter. Aman: 778-895-2005
130
HELP WANTED
130
HELP WANTED
Get Paid to Exercise!
WOW!! The perfect job for a health-conscious mind!
NEWSPAPER
MANUFACTURING SUPERVISOR: Verka Food Products Ltd. in Richmond is hiring 1 full-time Dairy Products Manufacturing Supervisor Must have 3 years related experience, and be able to establish production methods, maintain quality & quantity control, resolve production problems and improve productivity, post secondary grad in dairy/food production technology, and fluent English is required. Salary would be $23/hr with 40 hrs/week. Interested applicants please email resumes to: verkafoods@outlook.com
CARRIERS WANTED
to deliver Richmond’s #1 Community Newspaper
GREAT FOR ADULTS • SENIORS • KIDS
CALL TODAY 604.247.3710 or email circulation@richmondreview.com
130
HELP WANTED
130
HELP WANTED
130
HELP WANTED
Top Employers Now Hiring. Start Today!
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Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Page 18 - Richmond Review
HOME SERVICE GUIDE
the richmond
REVIEW
CONCRETE SERVICE
PLUMBING & HEATING • Plumbing Service & Repairs • Boilers & Furnaces • Gas Work Heating System Service Special
PLUMBING
WEST CONCRETE
RJ’S PLUMBING & HOME SERVICE
We specialize in driveway, sidewalk, patio, foundation and retaining wall, all kinds of concrete jobs. We also do fencing jobs.
5 MINUTE EXPRESS PAGING SYSTEM PLUMBING SERVICES AT REASONABLE RATES
Only $89 including free hot water tank service!
604-868-7062
Free estimate and d ffree design.
Licensed, Insured & Bonded Local Plumbers www.1stcallplumbing.ca
CALL WEST:
RENOVATIONS
RENOVATIONS
M.S. MAINTENANCE & RENOVATIONS Insured / WCB
and I’m a Nice Guy!
604-272-2809 or cell: 604-841-2479 To
advertise
156
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
SALES
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS
The ideal candidate will have experience, be a strong communicator, well organized, self motivated and enjoy working in a fast-paced environment. A car and a valid driver’s license is required.
Jim Mihaly publisher@surreyleader.com The Surrey Leader #200-5450 152nd Street, Surrey, BC V3S 5J9
PETS
GERMAN SHEPHERD Pups & young adults. Quality German & Czech bloodlines. 604-856-8161.
356
LABRADINGER (Lab/Springer X) pups, ready to go now, $500/each. Call or text (604)845-3972
RUBBISH REMOVAL
bradsjunkremoval.com
Hauling Anything.. But Dead Bodies!! 20 YARD BINS AVAILABLE We Load or You Load !
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 Yorkshire Terrier, 9 wks old female Shots & dewormed. Vet checked Black & tan. $900. 604-828-2806
604.220.JUNK(5865)
551
GARAGE SALES
MOVING SALE - 7631 Glacier Cres. Free, almost free and cheap. Good variety. Sat. Jan 4, 9-3 & Sun Jan 5, 1-3. Rain or shine.
560
MISC. FOR SALE
Restless Leg Syndrome & Leg Cramps? Fast Relief In One Hour. Sleep At Night. Proven For Over 32 Years. www.allcalm.com Mon-Fri 8-4 EST 1-800-765-8660.
Brad’s Bin Service 604.220.5865
STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca STEEL BUILDING...”THE BIG YEAR END CLEAR OUT!” 20X22 $4,259. 25X24 $4,684. 30X34 $6,895. 35X36 $9,190. 40X48 $12,526. 47X70 $17,200. One End wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422. www.pioneersteel.ca
367C
SNOWCLEARING
REAL ESTATE
PLOW & SALTING Strata & Commercial. 24/7.
John
604-802-9033
625
FOR SALE BY OWNER
LADYSMITH HANDYMAN Special. 3bdrms up, 1bdrm suite down. Owner carries $1200 month (250)753-0160.
627
REVIEW
HOMES WANTED
810
AUTO FINANCING
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
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Difficulty Making Payments? No Equity? Penalty? Expired Listing? We Buy Homes! No Fees! No Risk! www.GVCPS.ca / 604-786-4663
RENTALS Need A Vehicle! Guaranteed Auto Loan. Apply Now, 1.877.680.1231 www.UapplyUdrive.ca
Auto Financing 1.800.910.6402
736
HOMES FOR RENT
SOUTH SURREY Sold Your House? Downsizing? Renovating? Just bring Your Clothes. Fully Furnished & Equipped Like New Townhouse. Only 3 years old. Immaculate Deluxe, 2 bdrm. + Rec. Room/Office + 2 Full Bath T/House. Flr. to ceiling storage + storage rm. in garage. 6 s/s appli. d/w, w/d, Garburator. Crown Mouldings, 9ft. ceilings, H/W laminate flooring and slate tile. Gas F/P & Alarm. 1 car garage parking. Covered patio lower & outdoor patio upper. Amenities room incls. full gym, outdoor hot tub & pool. Walk to Morgan Heights shopping. NO Smoking inside & NO Pets! $2350/month. Available March 1.
OF PET THE WEEK
750
SUITES, LOWER
RICHMOND. Reno’d 1 bdrm bsmt ste, w/d, own entry, lrg liv rm/kitchen, incl cable/utils, gas f/p, NS NP, $900/mo. Avail now. (604)275-9652 RICHMOND. Spacious priv 1 bdrm. w/w, 4 appl, lndy, stg, patio, fenced. N/P, $850. Feb 1. 604-833-2103 RICHMOND. Sparkling priv. 2 bdrm F/P, 4 appls, lndry, carport, fnced, N/P. $1095. Feb 1. 604-833-2103
SUITES, UPPER
RICHMOND: 3 Bdrm upper flr duplex, 1.5 bths, f/p. fenced backyard. $1200/m. (604)214-2957
752
TO ADOPT CALL 604-277-3100
SPCA Thriftmart 5400 MINORU BLVD • 604.276.2477
TOWNHOUSES
RICHMOND
Ernie is a beautiful cat with an affectionate nature. He enjoys really long naps, playing with toys once encouraged, and getting plenty of scratches on his back. He is friendly with people and will make a great playful buddy to have around the house. Come meet Ernie soon!
QUEENSGATE GARDENS Conveniently Located Close to schools & public transportation. Spacious 2 & 3 bdrm townhouses. 6 Appl’s., balcony, 2 car garage, 2 full baths, gas f/p. 1 Year lease required. No Pets. 5431 NO. 3 RD 604.276.2254 & 10151 NO. 3 RD Richlea Square 604.241.7586
PROUD TO SUPPORT THE LOCAL SPCA
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL #1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME 604.683.2200
WEST RICHMOND. Spac. 4 bdrm upper w/priv 1 bdrm ste down. W/W, 6 appls, garage, fenced. Avail Nov 1. N/P. $1795. 604-833-2103
“ERNIE” NEEDS A GOOD HOME WITH YOU!
ERNIE, ID# 315066, DOMESTIC SHORT HAIR, MALE, 3 YEARS 1 MONTHS 3 WEEKS
845
604.488.9161
751 the richmond
TRANSPORTATION
REAL ESTATE
Short Term or Long term
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
Serving Metro Vancouver Since 1988
The Leader is part of Black Press, Canada’s largest private independent newspaper company with more than 100 community, daily and urban newspapers in B.C., Alberta, Washington State, Ohio and Hawaii. Send your resume with cover letter by January 10th, 2014.
477
CATS OF ALL DESCRIPTION in need of caring homes! All cats are spayed, neutered, vaccinated and dewormed. Visit us at fraservalleyhumanesociety.com or call 1 (604)820-2977
The Surrey Leader has an opening for an experienced Advertising Sales Representative. By joining the number one community newspaper serving Surrey/North Delta, you can realize your full potential while contributing to one of the fastest growing communities in Canada. The team environment at The Leader will inspire you to the highest level of customer partnership and reward your motivated approach to excellence.
PETS
CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866
Advertising Sales Representative
www.blackpress.ca
in the
email: admin@richmondreview.com
Call Darryn 604-339-5532 SALES
604-833-2103
•Backfilling/trenching •Asphalt/concrete removal •Drainage •Retaining walls •Install concrete driveways/sidewalks
Call 604-247-370 0
Free estimates (fully insured)
156
•Backhoes •Mini excavator (rubber track) •Bobcats (forks/buckets) •Dump trucks
Home Service Guide
stevestonhomeservices.com SALES
COMMERCIAL ~ RESIDENTIAL
** COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL ** KITCHEN & BATHROOM SPECIALIST PLUS TIDDLEY THINGS
New fence installation Gates & repair • Odd jobs Roofing repairs • Powerwashing Renos • Gutters • etc. Painting interior & exterior
156
SSL ENTERPRISES INC
CONSTRUCTION • RENOVATIONS
RENOVATIONS / ANY HOME REPAIRS • • • • •
EXCAVATION
BILL GILLESPIE
Plumbing • Electrical • Woodwork • Drywall • Bathrooms • Painting • Handyman • Textured Ceilings • FREE Quotes Door Repairs: Patio • Pocket • Bi-folds • Shower
Mike Favel • 604-341-2681
CALL 604-270-6338
778-895-0968 RMD
Professionally Managed by Colliers International Call (604) 841-2665
TOP CA$H PAID TODAY For SCRAP VEHICLES! 2 hr. Service www.a1casper.com (604)209-2026
AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673 The Scrapper
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Richmond Review · Page 19
Running Room’s annual Brita Resolution Run
C A L L F O R N O M I N AT I O N S
Runners resolve to start 2014 right
Around Town Amanda Oye
C
lose to 100 people, determined to start 2014 off right, gathered together outside of the Running Room at Ironwood and ran five-kilometers for the Running Room’s annual Brita Resolution Run, last Thursday.
George and Danielle Berry, Janet and Scott Phelps, Megan Berry and Sadie and Logan Phelps.
“It is a good way to start 2014,” said Tara Ichiiwa, manager of the Ironwood Running Room location. The run is held each year “to promote health and fitness,” she said. It was attended by people of all ages and skill levels. The morning started off with a quick warm up, followed by a five-kilometer run down No. 5 Road, along the dike and then back to the Running Room. The run was designed to simply be for fun and to encourage people to get moving.There was no winner and no times were given out. As such, it was perfect for families who wanted to start the New Year running together. “It’s really for promoting great health and community,” said Ichiiwa.
Janelle Bal and Donelle Gillis.
Vanessa Suttorp and Andrea Bolina.
Amanda Oye covers the social scene for The Richmond Review. Reach her at amanda.oye@telus.net.
neighbour friend teacher teammate mentor coach sister volunteer student entrepreneur NOMINATION DEADLINE January 17 Award Categories:
ARTS BUSINESS COMMUNITY SPORTS YOUTH
awards Celebrating the contributions and success of women who live/work in Richmond
To submit a nomination visit: www.tinyurl.com/2014Ethel or call 604-247-3733
Norman Chiu and Shawn Butterworth.
Lena Francis and Sandra Reeves.
RICHMOND SOCKEYES HOCKEY! PJHL CHAMPIONS E V E RY T H U R S D AY N I G H T MINORU ARENA • 7:00 PM
GET HOOKED ON THE SOCKEYES! GET HOOKED ON THE SOCKEYES!
$
Students
6
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Seniors
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Adults RichmondNews
the richmond
REVIEW
CYCLONE TAYLOR CUP CHAMPIONS WESTERN CANADA CHAMPIONS
13
SAVE THE DATE! 99
Awards Event Friday, March 14, 2014 Radisson Vancouver Airport Hotel
COPPERSMITH PLAZA (across from Canadian Tire) 11380 Steveston Hwy, Richmond
(604) 204-0511
Happy togetherr
FRANCIS RD @ GILBERT #120 - 7020 Francis Rd. Richmond, BC V6Y 1A2
LOOK FOR OUR FLYER IN TODAY’S PAPER!
(604) 204-0707
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Hydro rates hit school district hard 3 / 2013 was a big year for building 9
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REVIEW
RICHMONDREVIEW.COM
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 2014
20 PAGES
Richmond grad rates well above B.C. average
Homeowner stabbed in heart during violent home invasion Jonathan Leblanc, 30, arrested after crime spree included robbery and carjacking
Aboriginal student grad rates are trending upward
by Martin van den Hemel
by Martin van den Hemel
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The owner of a Deerfield Crescent home was stabbed in the heart during a violent home invasion involving a carjacker near the start of his multi-city crime spree Sunday night. A resident of the two-storey house told The Richmond Review Monday morning he first heard a commotion around 6:45 p.m. Sunday, with screaming and yelling coming from the front of the house. He later learned the owner of the house had answered the door, and was overpowered by the man standing outside, who forced his way into the house and demanded keys to the vehicle. The wife of the homeowner screamed, and her son was kept at bay by the suspect, who held a screw driver to the homeowner’s neck, and repeatedly stabbed him in the upper chest until someone handed over the keys to a Honda Accord parked outside. The homeowner was rushed to hospital for life-saving surgery, with multiple stab wounds in the upper chest, including one that pierced his heart. The resident said as he heard the ruckus in the entryway to the
When it comes to graduation rates, the Richmond School District stacks up well against the provincial average. And according to a report presented to the Board of Education at Monday’s board meeting, while male and female student grad rates in Richmond have remained relatively steady over the past five years, Aboriginal grad rates have risen significantly in that period from 62.8 per cent in 2008/09 to 73.8 per cent in 2012/13. “It’s definitely something to celebrate,” board chair Donna Sargent said Tuesday. The district signed an Aboriginal enhancement agreement three years ago, she said, and the district added staff members to deal with grad rates among the Aboriginal community. Using an integrated approach, and working with Aboriginal leaders in the community, Sargent said: “I think we made progress and it shows in those numbers. But we still have a long way to go.” Overall, 90.3 per cent of all students in Richmond graduated last year. See Page 5
Martin van den Hemel photo A carjacker forced his way into this two-storey house on Deerfield Crescent Sunday night, and stabbed the homeowner in the heart before fleeing with the family’s Honda Accord.
house, he called out if help was needed even as he was dialing 911. He heard someone reply “No”, but believes it was the suspect who answered. A pitbull that lives in the backyard happened to be locked up at the time of the home invasion, the resident said. The resident, who was downstairs, finally got into the house, and saw the injured homeowner lying on the floor. He and his wife applied first-aid, putting pressure on his wounds until the ambulance arrived.
“He had open heart surgery at VGH last night. From all intents and purposes, everybody thinks he’s going to pull through and be fine but he’s definitely stabbed up.” The resident said that the homeowner’s son tried to intervene. “Every time his son went to try to stop him, he stabbed the dad again until he finally got some keys because he just wanted a car. He wanted to get out of here.” According to Vancouver Police Sgt. Randy Fincham, Richmond Mounties responded to a crash on Highway 99, near the backyard to
the Deerfield Crescent home. The driver of one of the vehicles in that collision had to climb over a fence to get to the Deerfield Crescent house, which backs directly onto Highway 99. After stealing the Honda Accord, the carjacker allegedly attacked a man as he was withdrawing money from an ATM machine at the TD Canada Trust at Kingsway and Victoria Drive. Fincham said the victim was stabbed several times, and had his money taken. See Page 5
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Page 20 · Richmond Review
Welcome at locations below. Price plus tax. No cash value. Not valid with any other promotional offer. VALID UNTIL Feb. 7, 2014. CODE #0108
regionalrecycling.ca
BRIDGEPORT ROAD 3080 St. Edwards Dr.
NEWS@RICHMONDREVIEW.COM
SEAFAIR CENTRE No. 1 Road & Francis
OFFICE: 604-247-3700
VANCOUVER INTL AIRPORT (2 locations)
DELIVERY: 604-247-3710
21
Welcome at locations below. Price plus tax. No cash value. Not valid with any other promotional offer. VALID UNTIL Feb. 7, 2014. CODE #0108
BRIDGEPORT ROAD 3080 St. Edwards Dr.
SEAFAIR CENTRE No. 1 Road & Francis
CLASSIFIED: 604-575-5555
VANCOUVER INTL AIRPORT (2 locations)
NEWSROOM: 604-247-3730