THURSDAY DEC. 30, 2010 VOL. 38, NO. 47
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Happy Hogmanay!
Polar Bear Swim
A mid-winter’s tale
Scotland shares its traditions of welcoming in the new year
Ken Miller’s daughter Kelly will be shouting into the megaphone Jan. 1
Tir-na-nOg theatre school presents two matinees of The Snow Queen
Bowen’s Christmas angel MARTHA PERKINS EDITOR
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s the candles representing peace, hope, joy and love flickered within the warm confines of the Little Red Church on Christmas Eve, the congregation started to sing a peaceful lullaby about a baby born in a manger one silent night two thousand years ago. At the beginning of the service, the Rev. Shelagh MacKinnon had told the crowd that she had hopes for another Christmas Eve miracle the birth of a Bowen Island baby due that night. The mother, Sarah Etherington, and her family were waiting expectantly in one of the front pews. Wouldn’t it be wonderful, MacKinnon said, if Bowen Island could welcome its newest resident on a night that everyone was gathered to celebrate the birth of Christ? Sarah Etherington delivered on that hope. Her labour pains started partway through the service, as if on cue from Rev. MacKinnon’s coaxing. She gave her husband, Dave Updegrove, a look that said, “We’ve got to go now - right now” and they gathered up their children, four-year-old Lucas and two-year-old daughter Hailey. They quickly left the church. continued, PAGE 9
THEY LOVE TO GO A-MUMMERING – Ferry passengers were surprised and delighted when the Black Sheep arrived to spread holiday cheer on the evening of December 22. St. George was on hand to slay a dragon, Father Christmas raised money for the food bank and skeletal doctor made sure there was a happy ending for everyone. More photos page 12. Martha Perkins photo
A look back on 2010; looking forward to 2011
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n Olympic Torch welcomed by hundreds of people on a dark winter morning. The sharing of the spirit of that flame. The cheers of children and adults playing soccer heard at dusk. A cabinet minister’s announcement that Bowen Island was being considered as the site of a national park. One bear on Bowen, then another. Council meetings filled with debates about burning tree stumps, a day of silence, an updated Official Community
This beautiful baby girl, as yet unnamed, was born five seconds after midnight on December 25.
Michael Alexander Mortgage Specialist
604-961-6457 michael.alexander@rbc.com
Plan and ferry marshalling. And of course, the expression of a wide array of strongly held opinions about all of those things. That was the year that was on Bowen Island. In the waning days of 2010, the Undercurrent asked people to reflect on the highlights of 2010 and their hopes for 2011. Murray Atherton, 2010 Citizen of the Year The first highlight of 2010 had to
be that amazing day on February 10 when the Bowen Island Spirit of BC Committee was totally blown away with the reaction to the Olympic Torch being on the island. We had worked for over four years towards this day and our wildest expectation was that 350 people would show up. We all agreed that we’d be ecstatic with 300! When over 1,300 islanders showed up we were literally speechless. continued, PAGE 10
Wishing you & yours a happy, healthy & prosperous New Year.
A DV I C E YO U C A N B A N K O N ™
RBC Royal Bank
All personal lending products and residential mortgages are offered by Royal Bank of Canada and are subject to its standard lending criteria. ®Registered trademarks of Royal Bank of Canada. RBC and Royal Bank are registered trademarks of Royal Bank of Canada. Rates are effective as of August 24, 2010. † Interest Rate compounded half-yearly, not in advance. Rate subject to change without notice.
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Ring in the New Year with a Scottish feast D ecember 31 will find Mariana Holbrook in her kitchen cooking up a feast that will last long into the night. She celebrates her Scottish roots by making traditional Scottish meals (although she no longer tries to tempt guests with the promise of haggis.) Here are a few of her favourite recipes.
Cock-a-leekie Soup 3 lb boiling chicken (giblets removed) 3 slices of streaky bacon 1 lb shin of beef 2 lb leeks 1 large onion 5 fluid ounces single malt 4 pints water 1 level tablespoon dried tarragon Salt and pepper 8 pre-soaked prunes Mix the whisky, tarragon and sugar in the water. Chop up the bacon and place the chicken, bacon and beef in a large bowl and pour over the whisky marinade. Leave to soak overnight. Place the chicken etc in a large soup pot. Chop up the leeks (reserve one) and onion and add to the pot. Salt and pepper to taste. Bring to the boil, cover and simmer for two hours, removing any scum as required. Remove the chicken from the pot, remove skin and bones. Chop the meat into small pieces and return to the pot. Cut up the shin of beef, if required. Add the prunes and the last chopped leek and simmer for 10 to 15 minutes. It will serve up to eight people. Bannock buns (to go with the soup) 4 oz (125g) medium oatmeal 2 teaspoons melted bacon fat or butter 2 pinches of bicarbonate of soda
Pinch of salt 3/4 tablespoons hot water Additional oatmeal for kneading
Mix the oatmeal, salt and bicarbonate and pour in the melted fat into the centre of the mixture. Stir well, using a porridge stick if you have one and add enough water to make into a stiff paste. Cover a surface in oatmeal and turn the mixture onto this. Work quickly as the paste is difficult to work if it cools. Divide into two and roll one half into a ball and knead with hands covered in oatmeal to stop it sticking. Roll out to around quarter inch thick. Put a plate which is slightly smaller than the size of your pan over the flattened mixture and cut round to leave a circular oatcake. Cut into quarters (also called farls) and place in a heated pan which has been lightly greased. Cook for about 3 minutes until the edges curl slightly, turn, and cook the other side. Get ready with another oatcake while the first is being cooked. An alternative method of cooking is to bake them in an oven at Gas5/375F/190C for about 30 minutes or until brown at the edges. The quantities above will be enough for two bannocks about the size of a dessert plate. If you want more, do them in batches rather than making larger quantities of mixture. Store in a tin and reheat in a moderate oven when required. Beef in Claret Trimmings: 5 oz (150g) lean bacon 6 to 8 small, young onions 14oz (400g or two cups) chopped button mushrooms
3 lb (1 1/2 kg or six cups) stewing steak (supposedly this is better if it is from Highland cattle) 4 tablespoons cooking oil 5 cloves of garlic, crushed 2 tablespoons flour 1 bottle of fruity young claret Salt and freshly milled black pepper 1 teaspoon sugar Bunch of fresh herbs
Cook the bacon in a frying pan until it is lightly brown. Add the onions and cook uncovered for roughly ten minutes. Then add the mushrooms, stir, cover and cook gently for a further ten minutes. Preheat the oven to 300.° Cut the stewing steak into cubes roughly 11/2” (4cm) square. Heat the oil in a frying pan and brown the cubes of meat. Place in a casserole dish, add the garlic and sprinkle the flour over the meat. Place in the oven uncovered for 15 minutes to continue the browning process. Stir from time to time. Add wine, light seasoning and herbs. Cover and simmer for 3 hours or until the meat is tender. Remove from the oven and stir in the trimmings. Heat for a further five minutes and serve with boiled potatoes sprinkled with chopped parsley. If you have another bottle of Burgundy or Beaujolais to drink with the meal - so much the better! Black Bun Pastry case 12 oz plain flour (3 cups) 3 oz lard (6 tablespoons) 3 oz butter or margarine (6 tablespoons) If you are making this for vegetarians and so can’t use lard, increase the butter
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to 6 oz (12 tablespoons) Pinch of salt Half teaspoon baking powder Cold water The filling 1 lb seedless raisins (2 3/4 cups) 1 lb cleaned currants (2 3/4 cups 2 oz chopped, blanched almonds (third of a cup) 2 oz chopped mixed peel (1/4 cup) 6 oz plain flour (1 1/2 cups) 3 oz soft brown sugar (Third of a cup) One level teaspoon ground allspice Half level teaspoon each of ground ginger, ground cinnamon, baking powder Generous pinch of black pepper 2 tablespoon single malt One large, beaten egg Milk to moisten
Grease an 8-inch loaf tin. Rub the fats into the flour and salt and then mix in enough cold water to make a stiff dough (remember, it is going to line the tin). Roll out the pastry and cut into six pieces, using the bottom, top and four sides of the tin as a rough guide. Press the bottom and four side pieces into the tin, pressing the overlaps to seal the pastry shell. Mix the raisins, currants, almonds, peel and sugar together. Sift in the flour, all the spices and baking powder and bind them together using the brandy and almost all the egg and add enough milk to moisten. Pack the filling into the lined tin and add the pastry lid, pinching the edges and using milk or egg to seal really well. Lightly prick the surface with a fork and make four holes to the bottom of the tin with a skewer. Depress the centre slightly (it will rise as it cooks). Brush the top with milk or the rest of the egg to create a glaze. Bake in a pre-heated oven at 325 for 2 1/2 to 3 hours. Test with a skewer which should come out clean; if not, continue cooking. An uncooked cake sizzles if you listen closely! Cool in the tin and then turn onto a wire rack. Cool thoroughly before storing until Hogmanay.
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Atholl Brose (as a dessert not as a drink, which requires a different process) 3 rounded tablespoons of medium oatmeal 2 tablespoons heather honey Single malt 2 cups of whipping cream The oatmeal is prepared by: 1) Chopping it up in the blender 2) Putting it into a basin and mixing with cold water until the consistency is that of a thick paste. Leave it over night. When the recipe is about to be finished, add the single malt to the oat mixture. Whip the cream until it forms peaks and mix in the honey and then add the oat carefully mixture. Serve in wine glasses.
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At Hogmanay, the Scots know how to celebrate Hogmanay. Her grandfather, emigrated to Yorkshire from Scotland in 1969 “but he was so concerned by the behaviour of the English that he insisted we were all registered as Scots.” He lived in a large house that was recorded in William the Conqueror’s Doomsday book, which means it was built before 1086. The house had a ballroom with huge fireplaces in each wall and every New Year’s Eve, the entire extended family and friends would get dressed in their most formal attire for the celebration. It was such a big deal that you had to make sure you had a nap in the afternoon because the festivities would last late into the next morning. “The food was interminable - it would go on and on,” she says. When asked to describe the menu, a critical ingredient of every course seems to be whisky, “the water of life.” And whisky was the drink of choice - you arrived with a bottle as well as something to burn for heat and a candle for light. The menu included venison, goose and of course haggis. Dessert was a black bun - a rich fruit cake made with whisky that cooks in pastry for hours and then is cut in half with a small sword called a claymore. You scoop out some cake and pour in even more whisky. If all of this is getting you in the mood for a Scottish New Year, Holbrook has been kind enough to share some of her favourite traditional Scottish recipes with us. They are on page 2.
MARTHA PERKINS EDITOR
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orget their reputation for being dour. On New Year’s Eve, the Scots show the world how to have a good time. Some say they are borrowing a Viking solstice tradition; others say that the compliment should go to the French, who celebrated that “Homme est né” - man is born - with a feast on the last day of the year. Or maybe it could be the Gaelic way of welcoming “oge maiden”, which means new morning. But it’s the Scottish Reformation that gets the bulk of the blame or credit for the Scottish New Year’s Eve celebration called Hogmanay. For 400 years, from the end of the 17th Century to the mid-1950s, Scots were not allowed to celebrate Christmas because it was deemed too much of a Catholic tradition. Many Scots had to work on Christmas and saved up their food and drink for the celebration of solstice on December 31. Mariana, née Hyslop, Holbrook can trace her family’s roots back to the 1500s. On one of the branches sat Covenanter Brown, “a far right Presbyterian who was very powerful in his day and absolutely nasty.” The Covenanters got their name from the covenants they pledged, foremost being to maintain the Presbyterian doctrine as Scotland’s sole religion, abolishing anything that even had a whiff of Catholicism. In northern climes, however, you can’t fight the need to find light in a time of darkness. And in Scotland, where life was hard and starvation was common, especially in the Highlands, who’s to stop people from having at least one day of celebration during the Yuletide? The customs of Hogmanay also have their roots in the Scottish traditions of thrift. You cannot start the new year owing money; all debts must be paid by December 31. Your house must be thoroughly cleaned, including having no ashes in the hearth. You leave your back door open so the evil spirits will depart (egged on by the smoke of the juniper boughs you burn) while through your front door, the first person to walk into your house after midnight should be a tall, dark man - a dhu. You put all your bad thoughts into a sock, tie it in a knot and burn it. “We believed everything,” Holbrook says of her childhood fascination with
Shelagh MacKinnon Bowen Island’s United Church minister grew up in Ottawa but her family kept many Scottish traditions alive, especially such a fun one as Hogmanay. She says that it was very important that the first person to cross the threshold was not fair-haired because the Vikings were fair-haired. Everyone would bang pots and pans while the front and back doors were open. “You made all kinds of noise to swoosh out all the bad,” she says. And everyone would hold hands and sing Robbie Burns’ Auld Lang Syne. “It’s fun because the whole family is involved,” she says. John Green When John Green was a teenager in Glasgow in the early 1960s, he and his
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friends used to go to the pub until 11 o’clock at night on New Year’s Eve. Then they’d go home to be with their family to “spend the bells” - at midnight, all the bells in the city would ring out to let Hogmanay begin in earnest. “Mom usually had a cooked meal for after the bells,” Green remembers. In the days before television, there was no 10, 9, 8... countdown. People listened to radio programming but it was the church bells that rang in the new year. As the chime of the bells faded into the darkness, everyone would sing Auld Lang Syne.
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Mariana Holbrook is getting ready to welcome 2011 with many of her favourite Hogmanay traditions. Martha Perkins photo
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But after that wee bit of nostalgia, the partying resumed. The young folk would set out to meet for a few more drinks. It’s been a few decades since Green and his wife Bernie have lived in Scotland. At four o’clock Bowen time on the afternoon of December 31, which is midnight Glasgow time, they’ll pause and listen for the bells. And although they might not be with family to sing Auld Lang Syne, they’ll make sure that old friends are not forgotten by spending much of January 1 on the phone.
Places of Worship Welcome You BOWEN ISLAND UNITED CHURCH Rev. Shelagh MacKinnon Service and Sunday School: 10:30 a.m. Evensong first Sunday of each month 5:00 p.m. Minister of Music: Lynn Williams
FOOD BANK DROP-OFF
BOWEN ISLAND COMMUNITY CHURCH Pastor Clinton Neal 1070 Miller Road 604-947-0384 Service 10:00 a.m. Sunday School 10:30 a.m.
ST. GERARD’S ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH Mass: 10:30 a.m. Priest: Father James Comey
604-988-6304 + DAILY EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS/ DANGEROUS CARGO, NO PASSENGERS
CATES HILL CHAPEL www.cateshillchapel.com 604-947-4260
(661 Carter Rd.)
10:00 a.m. Worship • Sunday School: Tots to Teens Pastor: Dr. James B. Krohn
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viewpoint The Write Stuff. The Undercurrent encourages reader participation in your community newspaper. You must include your full name and a daytime phone number (for verification only). The editor reserves the right to edit for clarity, legality, brevity and taste. Here’s how. To submit a letter to the editor, fax 604-947-0148 or mail it to #102, 495 Government Rd., PO Box 130, Bowen Island, BC V0N 1G0 or email editor@ bowenislandundercurrent.com. B.C. Press Council. The Undercurrent is a member of the British Columbia 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 B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 1-888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org.
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Everything old is new again This guest editorial was written for the Chamber of Commerce gazette in 1989 by Joan Wood. What’s striking is that many people who have moved to the island in the 21 years since then could be thinking the same things....
I
t was on a rainy day visit in 1974 that I fell in love with Bowen Island with its quiet beaches, winding roads with sudden vistas, the abundance of forest and particularly the friendliness of the residents I came in touch with. Since coming to live here, Bowen has changed. There are still quiet beaches, the roads still wind, the vistas and the forests are still here and the people... the people of Bowen Island are special. Here on Bowen I have a feeling of “family”; of a relationship with every other person I meet - the family of Bowen Island. Just as my family has grown and changed, through marriages and births, so has my Bowen Island “family” and this island home changed to accommodate them. Within families we can always find conflict and differences, fears and ambitions, strengths and weaknesses. Consistently running through the family is the thread of change. In the 15 years that have gone by, I have watched the school population grow from 45
children and three and a half (I was the half) teachers to over 200 children and nine and a half teachers. I have watched the people crowd on the ferry and heard others say, “I don’t know anyone here, I used to know everyone...” Are we bemoaning the growth of the island or resentful of newcomers? I think neither. It is the realization of our growth that affects us. I have watched new business ventures establish themselves in Snug Cove and done my best to support them. I have watched vacant lots become homes to new residents who have participated in our community endeavours and I have welcomed them, their contribution and presence in our community, just as I was welcomed and accepted when I came to Bowen with my family. I look in the mirror and critically notice the changes in myself, the children I once taught and our community. Change is essential to life. How could a child become an adult without change? Change will always be with us. It can be healthy or destructive. A strong and caring community will look at itself without bias, carefully consider the impact of natural growth, reach for the challenge created and thoughtfully plan for the change that this growth
demands. Bowen is in the throes of significant growth much like adolescence, and for some of us, change can feel threatening, even though we know it is inevitable. It is sudden and significant change that is difficult for individuals to deal with. People will draw together for mutual support to deal with it much like the death of a loved one will draw all family members together. Planning for change not only benefits a community as a whole, it allows for individual security, comfort and choice. There must always be an allowance for differences of opinion, and respect for the feelings and opinions of others in any debate. Those that speak on issues of change in a calm, factual manner will always gain respect and be listened to. Emotionalism does not belong in discussions amongst mature individuals. I encourage everyone on Bowen Island to consider carefully all issues affecting Bowen Island that may be brought forward. Read all the material and listen to all speakers. Sift out the facts and evaluate them from your own point of view and values, with due consideration for other opinions, feelings, fears and concerns. Joan Wood, 1989
Let’s solve the real problems on the island first To the Editor: We (Bowen) are wonderful at creating new “action committees” that better address the issue than the last one. Each time a small flame burns brightly, only to be replaced with another bright flame, which is just bright enough to see the previous flame flicker and die, before it too expires in the shadow of the next flame. In the meanwhile absolutely nothing is achieved: Snug Cove Plan, community hall and affordable housing all spring to mind. Affordable housing is a major problem for Bowen Island. It has been identified as such since the 1995 Official Community Plan. The recent update reaffirmed this. To date absolutely nothing has been done. This is a criminal disgrace for an educated, liberal, caring community. And yet here we are discussing a national park to the exclusion of all other issues. The prospect of a national park was only raised after the public input phase of the OCP update was complete. A national park was not discussed during the OCP update. To investigate a NP alongside, yet separate from the OCP update, for my sensibilities is pretty damn close to elitist behaviour. A national park has been on the informal council agenda since fall 2009. Be clear it is
#102–495 Bowen Trunk Road, PO Box 130, Bowen Island BC, V0N 1G0
not the content that matters to me it is the process that does. We have gone through an election and an OCP update where the people stated that affordable housing was an issue they wished and councillors agreed upon action. To my mind this is a small cabal setting an agenda to suit themselves in isolation of the people of Bowen Island. Make no mistake - I firmly believe the people and the environs they live in matter. It is a partnership; each needs to be nurtured together. In 11 years of the municipality, the people have been taken for granted. To me the people who matter are the people who eke out a living on Bowen Island. Not off-island retirees, not the commuter, not the summer visitor and certainly not the off-island worker who uses the island as a rest and recuperation resort. The number of true island people is much higher than publicly recognised. With close to 300 businesses in the Gold Pages, the various schools and unlisted home businesses and their dependents (children and grandparents) I could easily and conservatively estimate the total number of people as being one third of the Bowen population, some 1,300 people. Council is ignoring the real person living on Bowen Island. The green thought process is absolutely in the Neanderthal
age. On Bowen the environment comes first. However, people are part of the environment, Mother Earth, Gaia if you will. So to support the environment and deny the human role as part of and with in the environment is impossible. If the Bowen “green” movement is correct then the only logical conclusion for Bowen is to remove all humans from Bowen Island. And to take it to its illogical
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conclusion there would be no people on the planet. The Bowen green has no intention of doing this. The Bowen green is looking after its own interests just as assuredly as the next person. We simply need to look into a mirror and accept that behaviour (reality) and image are out of alignment. continued, PAGE 8
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Some New Year’s resolution suggestions To the Editor
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Dog’s owner says thanks To the Editor:
I
would like to express my sincere gratitude to Cst. Bryan Mulrooney and his partner of the RCMP, and especially Dr. Alastair Westcott, for their very kind consideration and help with my Cara.Anyone familiar with my little girl knew she was more than just a dog. Especially to me. Thank you to Roger and Bonnie, and to all, for your kind words. Charlie Monks
Generosity appreciated To the Editor: On December 22, I fell down a flight of stairs. My nose and my right arm were broken but I’m glad to say that I’m getting better every day. When I returned to Bowen Island, I learned that money has been collected to pay my rent, for which I am very grateful. I am very much in awe of Bowen Island’s generosity. Thank you so much to everyone who contributed. Best wishes for the new year, Margaret Proudlock
Accident witnesses sought
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What’s in a name? Plenty of island history T
here are colourful stories behind many of the island ferry which became another of the boats taken over by the names. Here are a few: Union Steamship Company from the Burrard Inlet Towing Leonora Road: The Leonora was one of the tugs Company in 1889. There are many more stories about island owned by the Burrard Inlet Towing Company when it was names. taken over by the Union Steamship Company in 1889. • Ten Years Ago in the Undercurrent of January 5, 2001, Robinson Road: Jack and Muriel Robinson came to Barbara Murray was writing for the newspaper. The headBowen in 1946 and set up a cottage industry weaving. line for her excellent lead story on page 1 said “Bowen Visitors who were staying at the Bowen Inn dropped into water system controls being viewed as ‘unorganized ‘. A the Weave Shop to enjoy the handmade items and to full explanation of Bowen’s water systems followed. island have a cup of tea. Councillor Bob Turner, a geo-scientist, said that one of neighbours Bowen’s assets is the large amount of natural landscape Dorman Road: Jacob Dorman was born in Constantinople where his father was an engineer which provides great natural protection. Concern was for the British government. He, his wife and two expressed about the massive Grafton Lake watershed sons came to Canada in 1885 and to Bowen Island which feeds the Cove Bay Water System. Within the in 1886. They moved back to England in 1895 but watershed are potential water quality hazards and there came back to Vancouver in 1900 and to Bowen in is increased activity all around the lake. • Sarah Allen’s 1905. He always hoped to open a hotel on his propBreakfast Café was highlighted with a picture story in erty but never had enough money. the Vancouver Sun’s Restaurant section which said, Cowan Road: George Cowan was a Vancouver “The menu is something to sink your teeth into.” The lawyer who, in 1896, while campaigning for the cozy atmosphere of the café was shared in the evenings federal Conservative Party, was so impressed by the with Blue Eyed Marys. • Realtor Sue Barr announced southwest tip of the island that in 1889 he bought 46 hecther probably permanent sabbatical after 11 years of island ares and by 1917, he had more than 400 hectares on which real estate and passed her clients on to Michelle Taylor. he built cottages for family and friends. • Long time Legion stalwart Jim Clarke passed away on Smugglers Cove Road: During the US Prohibition in the December 24. 1920s, it is rumoured, rum runners frequented the bays of • Birthdays, January 1 through January 15 . Special good Bowen Island. One keeps the name of Smugglers Cove to wishes to the two who have New Year’s Day birthdays: this day. Patrick Holland and Marcus (Slow Lane) Hondro. On Millers Landing Road: Isaac Miller, from Ontario, had a January 2, birthdays are for Jason Davies, Scott Burgess dairy in Vancouver and tried to get a farm going on Bowen; and Elizabeth Anne Bishop. The sole January 3 birthday eventually, he and his wife began to divide the land to share belongs to Eagle Cliffer Heather Carter. Then it’s January 5, with sons, daughters and relatives. Eldest son, George, the natal day of Kate Hartle, Christine Riley and Shawnie. began to subdivide the property in 1909, and went on to Does anyone else remember Shawnie? On January 6, Ryan success in politics from 1929 to 1957 as alderman, mayor of Trethewey will celebrate. On January 7, the birthday folks Vancouver and MLA. include Chris Hurlburt, Conrad Heath, Kamille Gruft Hood Point Road: In 1860, Captain George Henry and Wilson Dives. Then, we move to January 9 when Finn Richards named Hood Point, Mount Gardner, Cape Roger Parker-Vik and Kimberly Brooks will celebrate. Andreas Curtis and Collingwood Channel after naval officers in the Behm has a January 10 birthday followed by the January 11 battle won by Earl Howe and Rear Admiral James Bowen birthday stars: Tammie Meyers, Julie Vik, Shona Campden against the new French republic. and Jaki Benjamin. Far away in Nova Scotia go birthday Humming Bird Lane: Croft and Angus, a Chemainus lum- wishes to Theresa McDonald, Elaine Loree’s mother. Ted ber company, sold out its interest in acreage near Tunstall Duffield has the only January 14 birthday but January 15 Bay to the Victoria Lumber and Manufacturing Company in is the special day for Kelsea Rose, Ella Klein and Rory 1889. The chief owner of the company was J.A. Humbird of MacIntosh. Coming soon: Jan Furst’s 98th birthday! Wisconsin. • The Last Word: If you have a birthday or two to share, Lastly, Senator Road was named for the Moodyville just telephone 947-2440 or e-mail to lbmcarter@shaw.ca) LoisMeyers-Carter
ight New Year resolutions for council to act on: 1. Consolidate jobs and reduce municipal staff by one third. 2. Stop thinking about a new municipal hall. 3. Sell the surplus municipal lands and recoup the mortgage. 4. Forget the idea of a national park. 5. Accept and implement the plan to rejuvenate Snug Cove. 6. Accept and implement the plan for ferry marshalling. 7. Fix the Snug Cove water and sewer problems. 8. Stop dreaming of the Cape Roger Curtis lands and negotiate with the Ho family the acceptance of their revised Neighbourhood Plan. Anthony Gamage
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To the Editor:
B O W E N I S L A N D M U N I C I PA L I T Y Did anyone witness a hit-and-run at the Beer & Wine Store parking lot on Thursday, December 16 between 11 a.m. and 2p.m.? My silver Toyota Yaris was parked in front of the gift store and it looks like someone backed into it, damaging my bumper. It will cost me my $300 deductible plus the time/money/ferry to get it fixed. Thanks, Leah Darling, 604-947-2876
Temporary Part-time Recreation Clerk Bowen Island Municipality seeks a qualified Recreation Clerk. The individual will be required to provide information and assistance in a courteous manner to the public on general matters relating to Recreation programs and services, perform reception, program registration and secretarial duties as well as provide assistance with filing, photocopying, agenda preparation and other administrative tasks. The applicant should have a strong administrative background, be comfortable working in a computerized environment and have the ability to work with limited supervision. This is a temporary part-time position for 21 hours per week until March 31, 2011 (workdays will include weekdays, evenings and weekends). Salary will be based on qualifications and experience. Please submit your covering letter and resume via mail, facsimile or e-mail by Friday, January 14, 2011 at 4:00 p.m. to:
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Second generation takes over the megaphone duties at Polar Bear Swim MARTHA PERKINS EDITOR
F
or 364 days of the year, Ken Miller was a mild-mannered Bowen Islander who didn’t talk a lot. But put a megaphone in his hand on January 1 and something would come over him. He’d yell, he’d cajole, he’d be full of all kinds of New Year bonhomie. He’d make the idea of swimming in the frigid waters of Bowen Bay sound like so much fun that you started to believe that it wouldn’t really be that much different than going for a dip in the middle of July. And then, precisely 14 hours after people across the island had counted down the seconds to the dawn of a new year, he’d put the megaphone next to his mouth and yell, “Ten, nine, eight....” The crowd on the beach would join in and then, buoyed by the energy that Miller had helped to create, people would dash across the beach and into the water as part of the annual Polar Bear Swim. This January 1, it will sadden a lot of people that Ken Miller isn’t there on the beach with
his megaphone. The voice of Bowen’s annual New Year’s Day swim died of pancreatic cancer this past fall. But his legacy will live on. His 22-year-old daughter Kelly will be picking up the megaphone, carrying on a tradition that has been part of Bowen Island for... well, forever. “I don’t know how my year would end up if the Polar Bear Swim didn’t happen,” Kelly says. She’s been going to the Polar Bear Swim ever since she was born. At first, the swim was organized by Harold Fraser and her father would be there to help. Then the torch, or megaphone, was passed on to Ken. Kelly was probably 11 when her parents finally allowed her to take part as a swimmer but she had to go in fully clothed in the hopes she would be warmer. “It happens really fast,” she says of the swim itself. “The less you think about it, the easier it is.” Thinking about it is harder than doing it, she says. You’re in the water for such a short period of time that your body doesn’t have too much time to feel the
For years, Ken Miller was the cajoling voice on the other end of the megaphone as he got swimmers psyched up for their dash into the chilly waters of Bowen Bay. He died this fall and his daughter Kelly, will be picking up the megaphone in his honour. Martha Perkins photo cold before your brain is saying, “Hey, this is pretty invigorating.” It’s one of the fastest and safest ways to experience such an adrenalin rush and you’ll be surprised by how quickly the aftereffects of the previous night’s celebration evaporate. Every year, there are probably about 100 participants of all ages who whoop and holler as they dash for the water. Whether you
swim or not, Kelly invites everyone to come to Bowen Bay beach to enjoy the camaraderie and cheer the swimmers on. She’ll be there by 10 to get everything set up - including the tent where people are encouraged to register so they can get their official Polar Bear Swim certificate - and the countdown begins at 10 seconds before 2 p.m. sharp. There will probably also be a tribute to her
father, with everyone invited to share their memories. The event wraps up with everyone drying off around a bonfire organized by Pat Buchanan. After the crowd of swimmers towels off and heads for home with an infusion of energy, Kelly says she might be tempted to put down the megaphone and dash into the water herself for old time’s sake.
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Students at the Tir-na-nOg Theatre School spent part of the Christmas break in rehearsals for this weekend’s performance of Hans Christian Anderson’s The Snow Queen. Tir-na-nOg photo
A mid-winter’s tale unfolds at Tir-na-nOg Dec. 31 and Jan. 1
C
ome in from the wind, leave the rain behind - come, pull up a seat, toast your toes, warm the cockles of your heart by the ancient, storied hearthside. Let this mixed-aged cast of Tirna-nOg actors, from six to old-enough-notto-tell, take you on a magical journey to the home of The Snow Queen in an original play based upon Hans Christian Anderson’s classic tale. A safe return is assured there and back in an hour - and, as our wise Grandmother guide does say, “When we are at the end of the story we shall know more than we do now.” Two benefit performances for the Tir-nanOg Theatre School Society are being offered: 2 p.m. matinees, December 31 and January 1. Tickets may be acquired at Phoenixon-Bowen (open December 29 to 31, from 11 until 4) for $10/seat or at the door for not much more. The Tir-nanOg box office is at 585 Rivendell Drive, Cates Hill; phone 604 947 9507 or email tirnanog@telus.net.
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“I keep on keeping on because life is beautiful and I love my life.” Clare Boggan As you can see from the photo, I look healthy. And I feel healthy too. However, three years ago, I was diagnosed with metastatic cancer. A ridiculously rare type of cancer (Myxofibrosarcoma...say that 10 times fast!) that came with a label that read “incurable.” Do I believe it? No. I am up for the challenge and so far have managed it well. I eat plants, seeds and nuts – usually raw – and I know they’ve helped enormously in my well-being. Exercise, positive attitude, Acupuncture, etc. have all been valuable tools. I’ve also have had 3 rounds of radiation and 8 operations that have left me with a limp and painful sleepless nights.
I Do...
Now I must make a decision. The cancer is progressing slowly, but surely, and radiation and surgery are no longer options. I’ve spent many hours racking my brains, researching, crying, feeling angry, scared and fed up. The only course of action I have now is to seek treatment out of country, which is looking somewhat promising. This is good. I still have options. But unfortunately the treatment comes at a massively huge price...a whopping $30,000 at least. There isn’t enough money in my close circle to cover the costs, so I will need as much help from you as you can give me to raise funds. I am asking that you follow me on my journey, whether it be in donations of money, ideas, talents or time. A Trust Account has been established for me at Van City Credit Union. You can donate at any branch. Account name: Clare Boggan Trust Account Van City Credit Union Acct. # 644633 Branch # 3 You can also use PayPal to contribute: PayPal Account email address: clareboggan@yahoo.co.uk I will keep you posted on my progress and upcoming events. In the meantime if you’d like to contact me, please do so at clareboggan@gmail.com Thank you all for your continuing love and support!
photo: Claudia Schaefer
Advertise in the Premier Edition of Bowen Island Undercurrent’s Wedding Guide the ultimate source for planning a wedding on Bowen. The Wedding Guide will be available at Wedding Fairs throughout the lower mainland to showcase Bowen Island as the premier Wedding Destination. The Guide will provide listings for: Photographers, Caterers, Accommodations, Churches, Best Bowen Beaches - everything the discriminating bride needs to plan the Perfect Bowen Wedding.
Contact Suzanne at 947-2442 for advertising information.
Happy New Year!
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Do we really need affordable housing? Why don’t we have it? Editor’s note: This is the second in a series of columns focused on housing issues on Bowen. TIM WAKE AFFORDABLE HOUSING C O N S U LTA N T
S
ometimes this column will deal with a single housing issue, but this week it will be in the form of a Q&A. Please send questions you would like answered to: tim@timwake.ca.
How will Bowen be able to cope with higher tides caused by climate change?
Nick Page photo
High tide on the Causeway To the Editor: Bowen Island recently experienced the highest tides of the year. This picture was taken on Boxing Day morning when the tide was about 5.34 m. For comparison, the maximum recorded high tide at the Point Atkinson lightstation was 5.61 m in December 1982. Extreme high tides (sometimes called King tides) help highlight which coastal areas are susceptible to sea level rise associated with climate
change. The BC Ministry of Environment predicts sea level near Vancouver will rise about 30 cm by 2100, but could be as much as 100 cm. Bowen Island’s steep, rocky shorelines are generally resilient to sea level change. But even a moderate increase in sea level will increase shoreline erosion during storms, kill trees and change vegetation at Sandy Beach, the Lagoon, and Bowfest Field, and flood low-lying areas in Snug Cove and Deep Bay during high tides. Nick Page
Image and reality are out of alignment here continued from PAGE 4 We are less of an educated, liberal and caring community than we see ourselves as being. There is no right or wrong in this. It is what it is. If we do look into a mirror we might also recognize we are less of a rural island with Snug Cove as the village at its heart and more like suburbia with no village. Until image and reality come into alignment, Bowen will never move forward to become a community. It will be stagnant and lose control of itself to the mammon of money. Canada’s biggest uniting
theme is “we are not American”. By looking after ourselves first and not our community we are much closer to an American style of behaviour, than many islanders are willing to admit to themselves. For me a national park is a low priority issue which can simmer away in the background of Bowen politics while some thing important is done for the people of Bowen. Daniel Heald P.S. I am happy with any future vision for Bowen Island, I just ask for reality and vision to be in alignment.
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1. Do we really need affordable housing on Bowen Island? Affordable housing is a hot topic for local businesses, resident employees and those who commute to Bowen for work. It has been a hot topic for awhile. The businesses are saying it is hard to find employees who live on Bowen, resident employees struggle to find good long-term rental and cannot afford to buy a single-family home, and many of those who commute to work here would live here if they could find a way. For a more detailed answer with data to back it up, download a pdf of Margaret Eberle’s Affordable Housing Needs Assessment (2007) at: http:// bowenhousing.org. It’s on page 41. Short answer: Yes, we really need it. 2. What does the term “affordable housing” mean on Bowen? It means housing that is affordable to singles, couples, families and seniors who live here or work here. It means townhouses and apartments for rent in the $600 - $1,500 range. It means any housing unit that can be purchased for $175,000 to $350,000. It also means subsidized social housing for single parent families, seniors and those with disabilities. 3. Why is there a shortage of affordable housing here? The short answer is the market price of land and the cost to build. But the biggest problem on Bowen is that, according to the 2006 census, 92 per cent of our housing stock is single-family homes. Apartments, townhouses and suites in total number about 85 units
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(under seven per cent). Less than 20 per cent of our housing stock is rental. A broader range of housing choices, especially smaller multifamily units, is needed. Another reason for the shortage is a lack of multi-family zoning and little incentive for developers to build anything but single-family homes. 4. Why won’t developers build townhouses and apartments? There is very little land on Bowen zoned for the density required to make this break even, let alone profitable. The approvals process for rezoning is long and arduous and, therefore, expensive. Purchasing existing lots in Snug Cove for redevelopment with the kind of projects we need to provide a mix of housing and commercial appropriate to a walkable village would be expensive. Several lots would have to be assembled to work for this kind of development. It is much easier and more profitable to just keep on building big single family homes. 5. What will happen if we fail to find a way to create affordable housing on Bowen? The same thing that is happening now - we will continue to lose young people just starting out in the workforce, young families, seniors and all those good people on Bowen who do not currently own a home and are fed up with a difficult rental market. These people are an essential component of any community. They are the volunteers, the organizers, the teachers, nurses, tradespeople, artists of all kinds, community providers...... the list goes on. They will be replaced by vacation home-owners, who are good people, but do we want them to be the dominant demographic? What would that do to our community fabric? Will The Snug still be able to get staff to look after us? I know, I am supposed to be answering the questions, not asking them, but the current dynamic of replacement (who is replacing whom) on Bowen is a core issue. We are losing community members who do not wish to leave. Perhaps we need to tell a few of their stories to bring it home to us.
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EN ISLAND 20092010 AGENT BOW ESTATE To View Video Tours of Listings L A E R G #1 TOP PRODUCIN www.bowenhomes.ca
Happy New Year Bowen Island! from Dee Elliott
Tip of the Week: Add to your kit: • First aid kit • Special items such as prescription medications, infant formula and equipment for people with disabilities
Is your family prepared?
Best Wishes for a Healthy and Prosperous 2011!
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Christmas Eve a little more magical with baby’s birth continued from PAGE 1 The family missed the eight o’clock ferry but was able to get the nine o’clock ferry. They rushed to St. Paul’s Hospital, where a seven-pound, 14-ounce baby girl was born five seconds after midnight. “I was worried it would have looked a little staged,” Etherington laughs a few days later. The night was a beautiful experience for the entire family, especially since it was MacKinnon who had officiated at their marriage ceremony. The birth of a daughter, as part of such a magical evening at the church, was “a pretty special gift.” MacKinnon says, “to go into labour on Christmas Eve, in a church, is the most beautiful thing for us.” All the images around Christmas coalesced at that moment - having to travel, a birth, the hopes of a new beginning. MacKinnon especially loves the “awe and vulnerability” that the birth of a child in a manger represents. After the Updegrove family made their hasty retreat from the church, the congregation couldn’t help but reflect on what miracles might await them as the candle representing Christ was lit and seemed to burn a little brighter.
It’s not too late to buy Ron Woodall’s portrait calendar. It’s only $15 and proceeds go to the Danielle DuLong Memorial Scholarship Fund. Calendars are available at the Ruddy Potato office, the Pharmacy and Phoenix
Every birth is a miracle, but the birth of this baby girl was even more special. Her mother went into labour in the midst of the Little Red Church’s Christmas Eve service. The family rushed to St. Paul’s where the baby was born five seconds after midnight on December 25. Meanwhile, the Undercurrent would love to know who the first baby born in 2011 will be. Please call editor Martha Perkins if you know of a birth in the early days of the new year.
Land Act: Notice of Intention to Apply for a Disposition of Crown Land
Land Act: Notice of Intention to Apply for a Disposition of Crown Land
Take notice that Pamela Bell of 3852 West 2nd Ave, Vancouver, BC V6R1K2, intends to make application to the Province of British Columbia, for a Tenure for Private Moorage purposes covering a portion of the water frontage of Strata Lot 13, DL 1545, Group 1, NWD, Strata Plan BCS2585 situated on Provincial Crown land located at the south of King Edward Bay on the west side of Bowen Island.
Take notice that Barbara Melosky of 1470 Blanca St, Vancouver, BC V6B4N7, intends to make application to the Province of British Columbia, for a Tenure for Private Moorage purposes covering a portion of the water frontage of Strata Lot 11, DL 1545, Group 1, NWD, Strata Plan BCS2586 situated on Provincial Crown land located at the south of King Edward Bay on the west side of Bowen Island.
The Land File Number is 2410550.
The Land File Number is 2410551.
Comments on this application may be submitted in two ways:
Comments on this application may be submitted in two ways:
1) Online via the Applications and Reasons for Decision Database on the Integrated Land Management Bureau (ILMB) website at: www.arfd.gov.bc.ca/ApplicationPosting/index.jsp where details of this application, including maps can also be found.
1) Online via the Applications and Reasons for Decision Database on the Integrated Land Management Bureau (ILMB) website at:
2) By mail to the Senior Land Officer at 200-10428 153rd Street, Surrey, BC V3R 1E1.
2) By mail to the Senior Land Officer at 20-10428 153rd Street, Surrey, BC V3R 1E1.
Comments will be received by ILMB until January 21, 2011. Comments received after this date may not be considered.
Comments will be received by ILMB until January 22, 2011.
Be advised that any response to this advertisement will be provided to the public upon request. For information, contact the FOI Advisor at the ILMB regional office.
Be advised that any response to this advertisement will be provided to the public upon request. For information, contact the FOI Advisor at the ILMB regional office.
www.arfd.gov.bc.ca/ApplicationPosting/index.jsp where details of this application, including maps can also be found.
Comments received after this date may not be considered.
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Torch Run brought island together continued from PAGE 1 The second has to be the whole Olympic and Paralympic Games. Having seeing the reaction on Bowen extended to all of Canada was truly amazing. I guess the primary feeling is pride. Pride in being a Canadian. The Games brought out the honest feeling of nationalism that I haven’t felt since I was at a tourism conference in Winnipeg and the result of the Quebec separation vote was announced; the entire room of 500 people stood up, held hands and sang O Canada. The third started with the announcement that I was named as Citizen of the Year for Bowen. The feeling of pride that being able to “give back” to a community that I have been part of for as long as I can remember was recognized. It’s the pride I have every time I walk into the Credit Union and realize I had something to do with bringing this amazing business to Bowen... employing five awesome people in jobs that pay “city wages” with benefits and providing a future career path. The pride I get in seeing how successful the Bowen Island Community Foundation has become. The feeling of pride when I look back on how involved the Chamber was in tourism... the opening of the info centre and the commencement of a tourism plan for the Island. The wonderful pride in reliving the Torch Run (and looking forward to Spirit Week starting February 6, 2011). My primary hope for 2011 is that whatever happens with the national park initiative is accepted by all islanders and whatever that decision is, that it will be the BEST decision for the island and that we can move forward when that decision is made. My next hope will be that finally we will have a start in developing a Snug Cove that we can all be proud of. We have an amazing team on the island who have spent years on this project. I challenge Mayor Bob Turner to give us the opportunity to vote on not only the national park initiative in April but on our choice for THE Snug Cove plan that we like and then go forward with the plan that receives the most votes.
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Olympic torch lights up the cove Hundreds line road in early morning darkness and catch the Olympic spirit MARTHA PERKINS EDITOR
It was a morning beyond anyone’s expectations. How do you describe what it was like when, in the early morning darkness on February 10, hundreds of Bowen Islanders paraded down Trunk Road in the wake of the Olympic Torch? It was as if you could feel the pride that islanders feel in their home, in their country, in their Olympic athletes. In the glow of the light that got its start from the brilliance of the sun in Athens, Greece, an electrical current surged through the crowd. It was as if the torch turned on some invisible light in people’s hearts - this is what the Olympic spirit is all about. One of the biggest thrills for people was to see 15-year-old Rosie Ander hold the flame high above her as she walked out of the parking lot of BICS at 6:10 in the morning. The day before, she’d got a phone call from Spirit of Bowen chairman Murray Atherton. He told her that the Torch Run organizers asked him to suggest the name of a young Bowen Islander who exemplified the spirit of the Olympics. continued, PAGE 20
With glowing hearts, Bowen Island teenager Rosie Ander finishes her leg of the torch run on Wednesday morning by lighting the torch of Vancouver resident Mike Jusiak as the morning’s third torch bearer, Valerie Hahn, and hundreds of spectators cheer them on. Andrew Stone videotaped the entire morning for the spirit committee. It will soon be on www.onbowen.ca Martha Perkins photo
Night Sky bylaw before articial turf lights are installed: council MARTHA PERKINS EDITOR
B
owen Island municipal council is not yet ready to turn on the lights at the
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artificial turf field. On Monday night, it considered a motion to “de-couple” a previous motion not to install lighting on the new soccer field until it had a bylaw governing
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how to keep the night skies dark. Staff had been concerned that there wasn’t enough time to get the Night Sky bylaw drafted and passed before federal funding ran out to help pay for the light-
ing. It was suggested that council work on both initiatives at the same time rather than linking a decision about the lighting to the passing of the bylaw. continued, PAGE 15
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Once those two initiatives are in the implementation stage, we can decide on our overall future by the creation of an economic development plan for the island. Let’s just do it. My personal goal is to stay healthy, fit and enjoy our wonderful golf course and community. Morgan Quarry, Bowen Island FC I guess its a bit of a cliche for a sports guy to write about sports but ... if the shoe fits. Ironically my two fondest memories involve lights in the darkness. My first would be the morning the Olympic flame came to Bowen. I was amazed at how many people made the effort to wake up on a cold morning in February to witness it but it was worth it. Many people have said that the decision to have the Olympic torch run touch so many communities was one of the reasons behind the huge success of the Games and after experiencing that moment with friends and neighbors I can see why. It was unforgettable. My second favourite was a combination of the first night we played coed soccer under the lights and watching the U11 boys (and one girl) soccer team practice under the lights on the artificial turf field on a clear, beautiful winter evening in late November. Perhaps the only true thing that I miss about living back East is playing shinny at night during the winter. There is no doubt that the lights in the darkness adds
HEALTH & WELLNESS Genevieve McCorquodale
CertiÅed Massage Practitioner
wholistic massage & doula service member, Natural Health Practitioners of Canada gift certiÅcates available stillwatersmassage.ca • 604-722-4472
BOWEN ISLAND WELLNESS CENTRE 604-947-9755 CATHERINE SHAW Dr. Traditional Chinese Medicine/Acupuncturist
u MARY MCDONAGH Reg. Massage Therapist Classical Homeopath
u SANDY LOGAN Registered Physiotherapist
Dr. Dana Barton
Naturopathic Physician 596 B. Artisan Square
The Spirit of Bowen Committee wishes to commission a videographer to edit raw footage of the local 2010 Torch Relay Celebration. The intent is to produce a 15-minute video, combining the raw footage, still photos and music capturing the excitement of last year’s festivities. This video will be screened at a Community Spirit Party, on 6 February, 2011, as part of this year’s Spirit Festival activities. Copies of the video will be available for purchase for a nominal charge. Please submit your proposals to admin@biac.ca no later than 10 January. Include cost of editing, and production of 300 videos.
Horseshoe Bay • 604-921-8522
Bowen Island Family Physicians
Dr. Susanne Schloegl M.D.
EVERY THURSDAY DR. ZANDY'S OFFICE
Call for an appointment 566 Artisan Lane, Suite 203
Lisa Shatzky
Dr. Utah Zandy 604-947-9830 CALL FOR APPOINTMENT OPEN MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY & FRIDAY
B.A., B.S.W., M.S.W., RCC Family, Child, Couples and Individual Psychotherapy
947-2246
Shari Ulrich, Community Hall Advisory Committee Memorable is the key word, given my abysmal memory. So I’ll have to go with something REALLY recent - going to the Christmas Craft Fair at BICS. It’s always a highlight of the year for me - seeing so many people I’ve known for years and taking in the stellar work of Bowen’s artisans. The perennial highlight for me is strolling through the Sunday Market (or is that me just longing for a hot summer day?) But particular to 2010 would be the sight of the lit up turf field on a winter evening with a bunch of steaming kids and adults running. As to my hopes of what will
Dentists
Natural Family Medicine
Family Therapist
Peter Frinton, Councillor 2010 has mercifully been another year of good health living on a paradise island among good neighbours and friends. Politically, the most significant events have been the failure of the Cape Roger Curtis process and the very good, now almost complete, work on the Official Community Plan update. For 2011, I hope the community closely considers the national park proposal(s) and supports a well-crafted agreement which is beneficial to all parties. This could be one of the most significant things to have ever happened on Bowen.
Call for Video Editing Services
Artisan Square • 604-947-0734 Fridays 10am-5pm
6:45 - 9:00 A.M.
Cro Lucas, Councillor I think one of the special
moments of 2010 would be the granting of immigration visas for Andrea Bastin and Michael Segal’s twin boys. This happened as a direct result of the positive power that was generated by Bowen Islanders coming together on an issue (and generous help from our MLA, John Weston.) For 2011 my wish is that, regardless of the outcome of the national park issue, that islanders come together and find consensus to move forward and finally resolve outstanding ferry marshalling issues and collectively embrace a clear vision for the future development of Snug Cove.
Dr. Gloria Chao Dr. Peggy Busch
604-947-2957 BLOOD TESTS, URINE TESTS OR ECGS
to the attraction. The outdoor lit hockey rink is part of our social fabric. Its part of how we face winter and overcome it. Seeing the lights on at the AT field reminds me of that feeling and I am drawn to it. Now I realize that some may roll their eyes at this but the reason why it was so special was not because we were all playing soccer but rather because for the first time in my time here people were engaged in a nighttime sports activity during the long dark winter months. One of the things I find most intriguing about Bowen is the diversity of the people who live here. Its not always easy to get to know people from outside your own interests or social circle. I am always amazed when I discover what people do or the talents they possess when I see their work in an art show or on display somewhere. The coed league has been so successful because it has brought people from different backgrounds from across the island and placed them in a social setting. Watching your child play under the lights on a winter evening is a special feeling and so is playing soccer with a group of adults who have all sorts of different backgrounds but share a desire to get outside and play! Having the lights has prolonged that feeling and allowed it to continue over the winter. These two events have something in common. A sporting event bringing people together who perhaps normally would not. That’s why I chose them. As for 2011 I wish for the following: Less reports, letters to the editor, commissions, committees and meetings. More decisions and action. It’s always important to weigh the pros and cons of any initiative or decision but if you take too long it can create further divisiveness and lead to unnecessary delays and stagnancy.
604-947-9986
Bowen Island Arts Council 589 Artisan Square Bowen Island, BC V0N 1G0 604-947-2454 www.biac.ca Promoting and Celebrating arts and culture on Bowen Island.
happen in 2011, it’s impossible not to answer that with my dream of seeing the community come together to build their hall by the next year. Piers Hayes, Snug Café and Rotary Club Hayes has a lot of highlights from 2010 to choose from when it comes to picking his favourite. One occurred very late in the year, Christmas Eve to be precise, when his daughter Sarah Jane announced that she was betrothed to Gordon Curry, with a summer wedding in England being planned. At the very start of the year was his successful recovery from heart bypass surgery. And right in the middle were his efforts to form Bowen Island’s first Rotary Club. “It’s like being a kid in a candy store,” he says of his surfeit of good news. The Rotary Club was granted provisionary status in December and one of his goals for 2011 is to get full status. He’d also like to see tourism improved on the island. Perhaps one way to start, he suggests, is by removing tariffs for daytrippers who arrive by boat and tie up at the government dock. Kevin Manning, Manager of First Credit Union Without a doubt the Olympics in general and the torch coming to Bowen specifically were my highlights of 2010. That was a magical morning for Bowen and the memory of it will be one my children and I will cherish for the rest of our lives. I would include the beautiful commemorative statue by Simon James and Shane Tweten in front of the library as part of this great event. For 2011, I have little doubt as to my hopes and that is for an official fundraising campaign for the community hall to be launched and the site prepared for the beginning of construction in 2012.
4th Annual New Year’s Day Brunch!
Best Recovery Brunch Ever! 3 course brekkie including champagne & OJ $24.95pp • 10am-2pm First come, first served Happy New Year from all of us at The Snug!
Open 7 Days a Week 604.947.0402
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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 33
INFORMATION
ATTENTION RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL SURVIVORS! If you received the CEP (Common Experience Payment), you may be eligible for further cash compensaton. To see if you qualify, phone toll free 1-877-988-1145 now. Free service!
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PERSONALS
DATING SERVICE. LongTerm/Short-Term Relationships, FREE CALLS. 1-877-297-9883. Exchange voice messages, voice mailboxes. 1-888-534-6984. Live adult casual conversations-1on1, 1-866-311-9640, Meet on chatlines. Local Single Ladies. 1-877804-5381. (18+). FREE TO TRY. LOVE * MONEY * LIFE. #1 Psychics! 1-877-478-4410 $3.19 min. 18+ 1-900-783-3800 NOW HIRING.
WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com TRAVEL 74
TIMESHARE
SELL/RENT YOUR TIMESHARE FOR CASH!!! Our Guaranteed Services will Sell/ Rent Your Unused Timeshare for CASH! Over $78 Million Dollars offered in 2009! www.sellatimeshare.com (800)640-6886
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DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING
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Medium sized contracting Co. located in the Vancouver BC region is searching for a mechanical supervisor to manage its field and shop repairs. We require a licensed heavy equip. mechanic with a proven ability to lead a mechanical department in a multiple site operation. The ability to diagnosis, troubleshoot and repair integrated hydraulic systems and diesel equipment is a must. Specialized training and certification in hydraulics and familiarity with mining and exploration drilling equipment is considered an asset. Also, some overnight travel to field projects. Please forward your resume in confidence to: explore.mining@gmail.com
Optician Training Start January 17, 2011 BC College Of Optics 604-581-0101
www.bccollegeofoptics.ca TOBEI COLLEGE *Accounting *Business Administration *E-Business Technology *Green Business & Sustainability Diplomas *ESL. Call 604-284-5030. www.tobeicollege.ca
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HELP WANTED
FLAGGERS NEEDED If not certified, training available for a fee. Call 604-575-3944 MEDICAL OFFICE Trainees Needed! Drs & Hospitals need Medical Office & Medical Admin staff! No Experience? Need Training? Local Career Training & Job Placement also Available! 1-888-778-0459
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108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
142 OFFICE SUPPORT/CLERKS RUSH IHAS Hardwick LLP, a boutique litigation law firm has an opening for a senior litigation assistant. Our ideal candidate will have substantial experience in civil litigation. We offer a competitive wage and benefit package. Submit your resume to Rush Ihas Hardwick LLP, 1368 St. Paul Street, Kelowna, BC V1Y 2E1, or to, info@rihlaw.com.
Direct reach to BC Sportsmen and women...Advertise in the 2011 BC Freshwater Fishing Regulations Synopsis, amazing circulation 400,000 copies, year long impact for your business! Please call Annemarie at 1-800-661-6335 or email fish@mondaytourism.com HYGIENITECH Mattress Cleaning & Upholstery Cleaning/Sanitizing Business. New “Green” Dry, Chemical-Free process removes bed bugs, dust mites, and harmful allergens. Big Profits/Small Investment. 1-888-999-9030 www.Hygienitech.com
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TRADES, TECHNICAL
ENSIGN ENERGY SERVICE INC. is looking for experienced Drilling Rig, & Coring personnel for all position levels. Drillers, Coring Drillers, $35 -$40.10; Derrickhands $34, Motorhands $28.50; Floorhands, Core Hands, Helpers, $24 - $26.40. Plus incentives for winter coring! Telephone 1-888-ENSIGN-0 (1888-367-4460), Fax 780-955-6160. Email: hr@ensignenergy.com
HEALTH PRODUCTS
ATTENTION DIABETICS with Medicare. Get a FREE Talking Meter and diabetic supplies at NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, this meter eliminates painful finger pricking! Call 888449-1321
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FINANCIAL SERVICES
* 12% ROI – Paid Monthly •
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FINANCIAL SERVICES
DEBT CONSOLIDATION PROGRAM Helping Canadians repay debts, reduce or eliminate interest, regardless of your credit. Steady Income? You may qualify for instant help. Considering Bankruptcy? Call 1-877-220-3328 FREE Consultation Government Approved, BBB Member
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LEGAL SERVICES
CRIMINAL RECORD? Guaranteed Record Removal since 1989. Confidential, Fast, Affordable. Our A+ BBB Rating assures EMPLOYMENT / TRAVEL & FREEDOM. Call for your FREE INFORMATION BOOKLET. 1-8-NOW-PARDON (1 866 972 7366). www. PardonServiceCanada.com
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 218
EDUCATION/TUTORING
AIRLINES ARE HIRING- Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (877)818-0783 MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION is rated #2 for at-home jobs. Train from home with the only industry approved school in Canada. Contact CanScribe today! 1-800466-1535. www.canscribe.com. info@canscribe.com.
182 BE YOUR OWN BOSS with Great Canadian Dollar Store. New franchise opportunities in your area. Call 1-877-388-0123 ext. 229 or visit our website: www.dollarstores.com today.
TRADES, TECHNICAL
Licensed Heavy Equipment Mechanical Supervisor
EDUCATION
big deals
TRAVEL
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TransX Class1 Drivers & O/OPS Needed for B.C-Alberta L.H Signing Bonus! Ph: 604-532-2999
SUNNY WINTER Specials. At Florida’s Best Beach-New Smyrna Beach. Stay a week or longer. Plan a beach wedding or family reunion. www.NSBFLA.com or 1-800-541-9621.
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EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
BUSINESS/ OFFICE SERVICE
DOES your business need help? Has the Christmas season been slower than expected? Do you want an experienced business person to find ways to improve your operations & revenues? I have over 20 years local experience and can help. Call Mark 778-355-6105 Mature woman will provide just-intime assistance, online or onsite. serena.howlett@gmail.com 604947-2470
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PLUMBING
10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fitter. Aman: 778-895-2005
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS GL ROOFING. Cedar shakes, Asphalt Shingles, Flat roofs BBB, WCB Ins. Clean Gutters $80. 24 hr. emer. serv. 7dys/wk. 604-240-5362
374
TREE SERVICES
Get your trees or tree removal done NOW while they’re dormant
✓ Tree & Stump Removal ✓ Certified Arborists ✓ 20 yrs exp. 60’ bucket truck ✓ Crown reduction ✓ Spiral pruning ✓ Fully insured. Best Rates
604-787-5915, 604-291-7778 Info: www.treeworksonline.ca
10% OFF from now to Feb 1 with this AD
PETS 477
PETS 477
PETS
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 SAVANNAH Cats & kittens for sale $500 & up. All shots & dewormed. Call: (604)576-4402. YORKSHIRE TERRIER X Chihuahua, 2 males (1 teacup), $550 & up. (778)888-0563 / 604-465-1756 M.R
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE 545
MEDICAL SUPPLIES
MALE Size Enlargement. FDA Medical Vacuum Pumps. Gain 1-3 permanently. Testosterone, Viagra, Cialis. Free Brochures. Free Pills (619)294-7777 code Suburbs www.drjoekaplan.com (discounts available)
560
560
TRANSPORTATION
MISC. FOR SALE
810
AUTO FINANCING
Wine of the Month Club Send the gift of wine all year long! 2 Bottles each month from awardwinning wineries around the world. Call 888-751-6215 and get FREE SHIPPING!
566 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS COLLECTORS SAXOPHONES Soprano Buecher Silver 80 yrs old, excellent condition $3000. Baritone Saxophone 1926 Silver CM Conn Ltd, all original $2700. Call 604534-2997
FUEL
BEST FIREWOOD 32nd Season & 37,000 Cust Deliv. Fully Seas. Maple, Birch, Alder 604-582-7095
559
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
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REAL ESTATE 603
627
BUILDING SALE... “ROCK BOTTOM PRICES!” 25X30 $5,449 30X40 $7,850. 32X60 $12,300. 32X80 $17,800. 35X60 $14,200. 40X70 $14,700. 40X100 $24,600. 46X140 $36,900. OTHERS. Ends optional. Pioneer MANUFACTURERS DIRECT 1-800-668-5422. CAN’T Get Up Your Stairs? Acorn Stairlifts can help. Call Acorn Stairlifts now! Mention this ad and get 10% off your new Stairlift! Call 1-866-981-5991. CAN’T GET UP YOUR Stairs? Acorn Stairlifts can help. Call Acorn Stairlifts now! Mention this ad and get 10% off your new Stairlift. Call 1-866-981-6591. **HOME PHONE RECONNECT** Call 1-866-287-1348. Prepaid Long Distance Specials! Feature Package Specials! Referral Program! Don’t be without a home phone! Call to Connect! 1-866-287-1348. HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com OMAHA STEAKS. Wrap up your Holiday Shopping with 100% guaranteed, delivered-to-the door Omaha Steaks! SAVE 67% PLUS 2 FREE Gifts - 26 Gourmet Favorites ONLY $49.99 ORDER Today! 1-888-702-4489 Mention offer 45102 AAD or www.OmahaSteaks.com/gift03.
HOMES WANTED WE BUY HOUSES
Older Home? Damaged Home? Need Repairs? Behind on Payments? Quick CASH! Call Us First! 604.657.9422
MISC. FOR SALE
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ACREAGE
Own 20 Acres $129/mo. $13,900 Near Growing El Paso, Texas (safest city in America!) Low down, no credit checks, owner financing. Free Map/Pictures. 866-254-7755 www.sunsetranches.com.
660 LANGLEY/ALDERGROVE HOMES FOR SALE-SUPER BUYS
www.dannyevans.ca
Homelife Benchmark Realty Corp. Langley
696
OTHER AREAS
Eaglehomes.ca NEW HOME AND LAND in the Shuswap! Doublewides and singlewides.... No Pad Rent! Close to shopping and recreation, Alice: 250-819-0047. www.mark@eaglehomes.ca
RENTALS 736
HOMES FOR RENT
ALDERGROVE Rent-to-Own a brand new mobile home! Looking for outstanding tenant and will help you build equity! 778-908-0245
744
RECREATION
Shared ownership late model 40’ 60’ cruising yachts moored on Vancouver Island & Lower Mainland. Sail & Power. Professionally maintained. 604-669-2248. www.one4yacht.com
TRANSPORTATION
WANT A VEHICLE BUT STRESSED ABOUT YOUR CREDIT? Last week 11 out of 13 applications approved! We fund your future not your past. Any Credit. $500.00 Xmas CASH back. www.coastlineautocredit.com or 1-888-208-3205.
818
CARS - DOMESTIC
1997 Chrysler Intrepid Sport 192K, well maint/good shape/runs well, 1 owner, $1500 as is, 604-460-2021.
845
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $100 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673 The Scrapper
810
AUTO FINANCING
STEEL BUILDINGS PRICED TO CLEAR - Incredible end-of-season factory discounts on various models/sizes. Plus FREE DELIVERY to most areas. CALL FOR CLEARANCE QUOTE AND BROCHURE 1-800-668-5111 ext 170.
WANT A VEHICLE BUT STRESSED ABOUT YOUR CREDIT? Last week 11 out of 13 applications approved! We fund your future not your past. Any Credit. $500.00 Xmas CASH back. www.coastlineautocredit.com or 1-888-208-3205.
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PETS
CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 856-4866 Chorkies, 3F/1M, blk/tan mom Chihuahua, dad Yorkie, ready now. Up to 6lbs, $500. (604)824-5997 MINI SCHNAUZER pups, 1st shots, dewormed, tails docked vet ✓ $750/ea. Call 604-657-2915. PUREBRED Doberman puppies, ready for Christmas. 6 girls, 3 boys $900 obo. 604-807-9095.
8S SYV ZEPYIH VIEHIVW &PEGO 4VIWW ERH XLI &' 74'% WYTTSVX VIWTSRWMFPI TIX KYEVHMERWLMT &IJSVI FY]MRK E TYTT] IRWYVI XLI WIPPIV LEW TVSZMHIH E LMKL PIZIP SJ [IPJEVI XS XLI ERMQEPW :MWMX WTGE FG GE JSV QSVI HIXEMPW
UNCLASSIFIED
CATES HILL: 1 bdrm, Granite Counters, View, Hardwood floors, Stainless Steel Appliances, Heated bathroom tile, lots of windows. Good, sound insulation. Private Patio. One year lease. $925+utils. Avail Feb 1, 2011. Info/View: 604-377-6200 FOR RENT: 2 BDR apt in Village Square. Avail Jan 1st References req’d. Sorry no pets 947-2944 FOR RENT: 3 BDR with flat yard in Millers Landing. Electric & Propane heat. Avail. Dec 1st $1450/mos Call Angell & Hasman Realty 604-657-1864
UNCLASSIFIED
FOR RENT 3 bedroom home, wood stove & electric heat. Long term. $1550/month. On bus route & close to park. Angell Hasman & Assoc. 604-657-1864 FOR RENT Millers/Scarborough Area Lg. 2 BDR, In-suite Laundry Wood Heater, Hardwood floors, Sep. Entry, N/S, N/P $750 947-9228 TRY A bcclassified.com CLASSIFIED AD.
Lance’s Recycling $20/load sorted. Kindling - $20 a box Call 947-2430
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UNCLASSIFIED
LOST Favourite mini reading glasses in a red lipstick type of casing. If found - pls drop off at Undercurrent office. Office/Studio/Retail Space available @ Artisan Square 604-329-5643, 947-9119 or 947-2293 PRIME RETAIL/OFFICE SPACE: 1200 sq ft available. Suite 101, 102, 103 - 485 Bowen Isl Trunk Rd. in Snug Cove (under Union Hair & Ruddy Potato offices) 947-0099 ext. 104 LOOKING FOR A NEW JOB? Use bcclassified.com - Employment Section 100’s
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A 180YEAR-OLD TRADITION Bowen Island’s Black Sheep revive an old peasant drama every Christmas for the enjoyment of ferry passengers. Clockwise from far left: Martin Clarke plays Father Christmas, but unlike his descendent, Santa Claus, he likes to take rather than give. Rodger Grant was a foreign stranger, which made St. George, played by Graham Ritchie, suspicious. Bob Doucet played the melodion while a costumeless dragon, Jim Crawford, awaits his scenestealing turn. Jim McConnan played a doctor who can bring people (and dragons) back from the dead; Chris Crowley was the bylaw officer. St. George used his sword to slay the hapless dragon, which the ferry passengers found highly amusing. Martha Perkins photos
John Weston, Member of Parliament West Vancouver - Sunshine Coast - Sea to Sky Country West Vancouver Constituency Office: Suite 21 - 285 17th St. West Vancouver, B.C. V7V 3S6
T: 604 981-1790 | F: 604 981-1794 E: Weston.J@parl.gc.ca | www.johnweston.ca
Happy New Year! First, thank you for electing me to represent you as Member of Parliament for the North Shore and Bowen Island. It’s been a distinct honour and privilege to serve you. Secondly, I would like with you to reflect upon a year of peace and economic recovery in our community and upon some of our recent accomplishments on the North Shore. We have much to celebrate in 2010. Strong signs of economic recovery come to mind, along with an exuberant Olympic Torch Relay and the successful Games that followed. When I was elected in 2008, constituents said they wanted an MP who would serve the community; listen; reflect the community’s priorities; work towards them; and deliver results. The priorities you set for me included: assembling a responsive constituency staff; focusing on the economic recovery, for workers and seniors; upgrading our infrastructure; engaging the Pacific Rim; focusing on health; and protecting or enhancing our precious environment. Today we see an updated aquatic and community centre, and senior’ centre; highway, sewer and water treatment plant improvements, an extended Spirit Trail, improved playing field facilities, brand new artificial turf fields for field hockey and soccer; and a replacement for the old “Blue Bridge” along Marine Drive. I’m proud of how quickly and efficiently Canada’s Economic Action Plan was implemented, helping Canadians through the worst global recession since the 1930’s. The
Plan has won global acclaim while; more importantly, we have seen about 450,000 new jobs created since July 2009. Meanwhile, individuals, families, and community organizations are still struggling, and together we still have work to do. We saw positive results from the Prime Minister’s visit to China, in the form of Approved Destination Status for China-based tourism to Canada. Last month, our Government waived the visa requirement for Taiwan visitors another initiative which I specifically supported. Meanwhile, our Environment Minister added over 30% to the total of Canadian lands dedicated as national parks; signed the Copenhagen Accord; and participated actively on the international stage to bring the major polluters closer to an effective agreement to decrease emissions. In Ottawa, I was humbled by unanimous House of Commons support for my first Private Member’s Bill, C-475, which battles crystal meth and ecstasy. My Parliamentary Fitness Initiative continued, an all-party program to profile the virtues of increased physical activity. After two years serving as your Member of Parliament, one observation hits home. Achievements in public life are attained, not by MP’s alone, but by close communication and cooperation among community members. With that thought in mind, on behalf of my staff and family, I thank you again, and wish you a healthy and prosperous New Year. With best regards, John Weston, MP
itty ity
JACUZZI & SUNDANCE ON SALE NOW! CHOICE OF ONE FREE OPTION (with purchase of any hot tub) Synthetic wood steps (list $399) — or Coverlifter “Covermate 1” (list $399) — or Ozone System (list $399) 104 Philip Avenue, North Vancouver Tel: 604.985.0057 www.crystalview.ca ON THE NORTH SHORE SINCE 1986!
M-F 8:30-5 Sa 9:30-4:30