Burnaby Now January 31 2014

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Your source for local sports, news, weather and entertainment! >> www.burnabynow.com SEVERAL FIRES IN BUILDING

RCMP look for arsonist Cayley Dobie staff reporter

Jason Lang/burnaby now

Suspicious: Mounties are investigating several fires at an apartment complex on Kingsway Avenue. The RCMP is hoping the public may have information that could lead them to a suspect.

A series of fires at an apartment complex in Burnaby has RCMP turning to the community in hopes someone has information that might lead investigators to a suspect. On Jan. 3 at 7:27 a.m. there was a small fire in the stairway of an apartment at 7575 Kingsway Ave. in South Burnaby. A resident used a fire extinguisher to stop the fire before it got out of control, and there was minor damage to the drywall and carpet, according to Insp. Bob Page of the Burnaby RCMP. The following day, on Jan. 4, a second fire was reported, this time on the ground floor of the building around 7 p.m. Again, a tenant was able to extinguish the fire before it got out of control, Page added. “Then there’s a third fire on Jan. 24,” Page said. This time the Burnaby Fire Department was called out to the apartment complex after an alarm was triggered. Firefighters located the small fire in the first floor hallway and put it Arson Page 8

Oil pipeline: Teachers concerned about safety Jennifer Moreau staff reporter

The Burnaby Teachers’ Association is raising concerns that the new Kinder Morgan oil pipeline will run close to even more local schools. The teachers’ association is opposed to the pipeline expansion and has joined a growing number of applicants hoping to intervene in the National Energy Board’s upcoming hearing for the project. “The concern is if there is a pipeline rupture – and it’s inevitable there will be, we just don’t know how bad it’s going to be – our members, as far as we know,

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haven’t received any training on how to deal with a pipeline leak,” said Patrick Parkes, the association’s first vice-president. “A pipeline leak is pretty different from an earthquake or a fire. I don’t know what you can do to adequately protect staff and students from airborne issues.” The current pipeline, which has been transporting oil from Alberta to Burnaby since the 1950s, already runs along two elementary school properties: Forest Grove and Stoney Creek. The association is also raising concerns that the pipeline route for the proposed

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expansion would run close to Westridge Elementary (which is already close to the old pipeline), Lochdale, Montecito, Cameron, Seaforth and Burnaby Mountain Secondary. Kinder Morgan wants to For an twin the line but use a new interactive map of the route in Burnaby, where development and density pipeline, scan with have increased over the Layar years. The proposed new pipeline corridor runs down Lougheed Highway, from North Road at the Coquitlam border, and turns north close to Underhill Avenue, crossing an area close to the

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Kinder Morgan tank farm on Burnaby Mountain. The corridor then runs down Burnaby Mountain Parkway to a short stretch of Hastings Street, and then north down Cliff Avenue to the Westridge Marine Terminal, where tankers fill up with crude. The school district recently released detailed pipeline maps and new safety and evacuation plans for the affected schools, and the teachers’ association is reviewing the information. The association is also hosting a meeting for concerned parents on Wednesday, Feb. 5, at 4 p.m. at #115, 3993 Henning Dr. RSVP by emailing in bta@bctf.ca.

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Burnaby NOW • Friday, January 31, 2014 • A03

9 Ocean doc screening

10 Festive generosity

13 Then & Now

City questions enviro process

NLINE EXTRAS

Stefania Seccia

Check out more local content at www. burnabynow.com

NEWS

Best Buy Canada culls 950 full-time jobs

NEWS

Mounties investigate crash involving pedestrian

BUSINESS

Burnaby company maps British Columbia’s past

OPINION

Get a taste of what columnist Chef Dez has to say about culinary arts

View our stories and photos with Layar Using Layar: Download the

Layar app to your smartphone. Look for the Layar symbol. Scan the photo or the page of the story as instructed. Ensure the photo or headline is entirely captured by your device. Check for advertisements that have Layar content, too. Watch as our pages become interactive.

See an interactive map of the pipeline route Page 1 More stories, photos on the coal spill in Burnaby Page 3 See the trailer for an environmental documentary Page 9 Check out our Then & Now photo gallery Page 13 More photos of u-11 soccer action Page 40

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staff reporter

Burnaby council expressed its serious concern over how the railway company responsible for the coal spill is the same one organizing the environment impact study. Leon Gous, director of engineering, updated council on the status of the CP train derailment that overturned seven cars, with three cars dumping about 40 tonnes of metallurgical coal along the embankment and into Silver Creek on CN’s rails on Jan. 11. “Following the incident, coal from the derailed cars and the embankment area was removed and placed onto a tarped section on the north side of the rail tracks next to Government Road,” Gous states in his report. “All of the train cars were removed from the site and the damaged embankment was repaired using large rocks.” As the railway lines belong to CN, it is responsible for the cleanup. The national company retained Triton Environmental Limited to assist in the development of a work plan. The data collected from a survey by Triton will be used to develop a draft response plan for coal recovery from the waterways,

For more stories and photos on the coal spill, scan with Layar File photo/burnaby now

Cleanup: Environmental consultants work on the water at Burnaby Lake. City council wants the B.C. Ministry of Environment to take charge of the investigation into the Jan. 11 coal spill. which will be submitted to the B.C. Ministry of Environment for its comments and approval. And that is exactly what council is against. Coun. Sav Dhaliwal said the company responsible for the spill

should not be the one to hire the company to assess its impact. “I’m concerned that the Ministry of Environment isn’t really taking the charge,” he said. “I’m not sure what we can do, I just raise the concern because I’m not

overly comfortable with this being under the purview of CN to hire their contractor who’s going to be reporting on the environmental impact.” Coal Page 8

‘I REMEMBER SOMEONE ELSE WHO WAS INVOLVED IN BOOK BURNING’ – MAYOR CORRIGAN

Council blasts feds closing libraries Stefania Seccia staff reporter

A descent into the Dark Ages is how Burnaby council views the federal government’s decision to shut down national libraries, at its last council meeting. On Jan. 27, council asked Mayor Derek Corrigan to write a “strong” letter protesting the closure of federal libraries and the destruction of research and other records, to the prime minister and minister of fisheries and oceans. The environment committee had raised particular concern for the closure of seven of 11 regional department of fisheries and oceans libraries – which housed decades of aquatic research – among the other types of national libraries that have closed their doors. “I heard a rumour that Prime

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Minister Stephen Harper is try- they are basically trashing libraring to get rid of any evidence of ies that took over 100 years to evolution,” Corrigan said. “You develop in this country,” he said. “They’re throwing know, I remember material out using the someone else who “I heard a excuse, ‘Well, it’s all was involved in book rumour that right because it’s all burning.” being digitized, and in Coun. Nick Prime Minister digitizing this, more Volkow said ignoStephen Harper and more Canadians rance is becoming an integral part of public is trying to get rid will be able to have to it.’” policy, as far as the of any evidence of access Volkow said the federal government is evolution.” federal government is concerned. doing this “under the “We have a numDEREK CORRIGAN cover of darkness,” ber of libraries that Mayor of Burnaby and the closures also have a 100-year histomean the country is ry of collecting inforlosing librarians. mation in regards to Coun. Anne Kang said many freshwater environments, lakes, and then all of a sudden out of of the concerns stem from purgthe blue for an alleged savings, ing the library books. “I’ve read online and in the if you can believe it, of $430,000,

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Last week’s question Do you think the formal apology should include a head tax refund? YES 45% NO 55% This week’s question Do you support a referendum on TransLink? Vote at: www.burnabynow.com

newspapers, is that basically only five per cent of these documents were actually processed,” she said. “And another concern by scientists is that they haven’t received information on how they could receive or have access to these digitized reports.” Due to copyright laws, many documents cannot be digitized, which means many of the documents will disappear, Kang said. “People have witnessed that research and reports were scooped up and given away for free to private companies, or they were destroyed, being hauled down to dumpsters – and that is before these materials were digitized,” Kang added. “Libraries are very valuable to our communities.” Coun. Pietro Calendino Libraries Page 8

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Court decision could impact Burnaby students along. “We have some classes in Burnaby with up to seven and eight special needs students in one class, so that’s quadruple of what the limit would have been at that time,” said James Sanyshyn, president of the Burnaby Teachers’ Association. Because the 2002 language has been retroactively reinstated, the teachers can file a grievance for that period and ask for remedies at the bargaining table, Sanyshyn explained. Sanyshyn said that grievance may be filed provincially by the B.C. Teachers’ Federation or locally, on a district-level.

Jennifer Moreau staff reporter

B.C. teachers have won a 12-year battle with the provincial government over bargaining rights, but what that means for Burnaby schools is still up in the air. Monday’s major B.C. Supreme court decision found provincial government legislation that limited teachers’ bargaining rights and removed limits on class sizes and the numbers of special needs students was unconstitutional. Since the court decision reinstates language from the teachers’ 2002 contract, those limits should have been in place all

“But certainly what has happened for over 12 years in Burnaby needs to be taken into account in whatever kind of grievance we file,” Sanyshyn said. “We’ve been quite good with class sizes in Burnaby. … But where we have suffered in Burnaby is around the composition issue.” According to Sanyshyn, there are more than 400 classes in Burnaby with more than three special needs students. “If we had a magic wand and we could wave it today, there would be a whole lot more teachers in Burnaby,” he said. In 2011, the BCTF won a similar court case, where the government’s Bill 28 was

struck down and deemed unconstitutional, but the Liberals responded by bringing in Bill 22, which in Monday’s decision was described as virtually identical. As a result, the province was ordered to pay the teachers $2 million in damages, plus legal costs. The BCTF is also in the midst of contract negotiations with the province, and Sanyshyn wants to see more funding for education and teachers’ wages from the province. “They need to bring dollars to the table, which will work in opposition to their political goal, which is to balance the budget at any cost,” he said.

City MP’s e-petition motion Bus route changes at open house passes with two vote margin Canadians may soon be able to submit electronic petitions to members of Parliament, now that Kennedy Stewart’s e-petition motion has passed in the House of Commons. “At a time when more and more Canadians are feeling left out of the political process, it is encouraging that MPs from all parties put aside partisan differences and agreed to improve grassroots democracy,” Stewart said in a media statement. As a member of the Official Opposition, Stewart’s motion stood little chance of being passed, but he managed to secure support from a few

Conservative backbenchers, and the motion passed by two votes. The House of Commons accepts petitions on paper but not online versions, which are becoming more and more popular. Stewart’s motion also proposes that short Parliamentary debates be triggered when a petition receives a significant number of signatures and is sponsored by at least five MPs. A Parliamentary committee is spending the next year, developing recommendations on how to best implement e-petitioning. – By Jennifer Moreau, staff reporter

TransLink is taking proposed changes to two bus routes in Burnaby to an open house next week. On Feb. 4, the public can give input on a potential redesign of bus routes 49 and 116, which will affect Burnaby transit users. “They most likely will be implemented later this year,” Jiana Ling, TransLink spokesperson, told the Burnaby NOW. “We’re just going out early to get public consultation on them.” The 49 bus goes from Vancouver to Burnaby along 49th Avenue, and the changes are expected to make it five minutes faster per trip, according to Ling. The Champlain Mall service will be removed and some customers will have to walk a further distance to access it. The 116 bus route changes will meet the growing needs of the industrial community

in the Big Bend area, Ling said. Some customers may experience a longer travel time of about seven minutes per trip. Although one stop is being removed, the route is being extended. “Basically these redesigns are supposed to make these routes more efficient, and service faster,” Ling added. “People can go out and voice their concerns if they’re for it or not.” There will be four open houses held across Metro Vancouver in February, as there are proposed service changes in Delta, Richmond, North Vancouver and Vancouver, as well. The Burnaby open house will be held at the Holiday Inn Express-Metrotown, from 5 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 4. For more information, visit www.translink.ca. – By Stefania Seccia, staff reporter

9.4% Sanitary Sewer 8.8% Fire 3.7% Solid Waste 3.1% Planning & Building 3.1% Library

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Your Opinion is Important to Us We would like to receive your comments by Friday, February 14, 2014 in order to provide approval of the tax rates in May. The 2014 Provisional Financial Plan is available for viewing on our website (www.burnaby.ca) under Our City Hall > Financial Reports.

those of Burnaby citizens, we want to hear from you!

If you would like to send a comment, please contact: Noreen Kassam, Assistant Director Financial Planning & Capital Equity at noreen.kassam@burnaby.ca.

The City’s 2014 Provisional Financial Plan was presented to Council on December 9, 2013 with a proposed tax rate increase of 2.47%. We would like your views on the budget and, in particular, municipal services and priorities.

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Speak up! The Burnaby NOW welcomes letters to the editor and opinion pieces. Email your letter to: editorial@burnabynow.com or go to our website at www.burnabynow.com, click on the opinion tab and use the ‘send us a letter’ form

Don’t hold your breath on TransLink referendum

Now, if the referendum contained Premier Christy Clark says she’s open questions like: Would you be willing to reconsidering the fall date for a referto have your taxes raised slightly if endum on TransLink. No wonder. Most TransLink did an across the board 20 of the mayors in the region are steadfast per cent pay/bonus reduction to all staff against holding the referendum. And, first? or, Are you in favour of even if the mayors softened dismantling TransLink and their stance, the main obstacle Burnaby NOW starting from scratch? – then remains: How do you have a you might have slightly better yes or no referendum question odds of getting a majority yes vote. that forces taxpayers to agree to a tax The unfortunate reality is that taxpayhike? Because, let’s face it, any refereners rarely vote yes for spending more dum is going to include some way of of their hard-earned money on governtrying to get more money out of the taxment projects. Even if they do depend payers to fund the infrastructure.

OUR VIEW

I

on those projects to get from point A to point B. Transportation Minister Todd Stone was reported as saying, “The mayors have not come together to unite on a common vision for transit and transportation priorities yet it’s their responsibility to do so.” Apparently he wasn’t joking when he said this. Mayors are elected to promote and protect their own turf. Or at least that’s what the taxpayers say they want them to do. Common visions which include other municipalities are seldom on their

‘vote-for-me-brochures’. One only has to look at the Pattullo bridge situation to see the clash of territories. New Westminster is trying to stop the flood of traffic evading the new Port Mann bridge tolls. The city isn’t receiving a whole lot of sympathy or support from the league of Lower Mainland mayors. In fact, the city is appealing to Clark for action. Meanwhile TransLink is still trying to come up with updated traffic stats on the bridge. Sigh … it’s a little like being trapped in a roundabout for eternity.

Fresh ideas in civic politics

in cities across B.C. might take t may be wise old King Solomon who is credited with root everywhere. Candidates looking to hold the line on taxes the phrase, “there is nothing should look first at labour costs new under the sun,” but anyone and work by Prince George and who has read brochures put out by municipal election candidates Penticton. Penticton set the standard for can attest to that pearl of wismunicipal labour negotiations dom. by negotiating down This November, starting wages. Three thousands of candiJordan Bateman years ago, a core review dates will seek office showed Penticton was in city halls across paying lifeguards and parks British Columbia, looking to staff $8 more per hour than serve their fellow taxpayers as a private operators in the same mayor, councillor or director. community. That core review Their brochures will offer gave Penticton council the familiar themes: warm, fuzzy ammunition it needed to push pictures of landmarks in their community; and the usual vague for a better deal. Starting wages were slashed by $5 an hour. promises to spend tax dollars Meanwhile, Penticton found wisely and make their particuother efficiencies within municilar city hall more transparent. pal departments, eliminating Taxpayers need more than platioverlap of personnel and equiptudes. Municipal government in ment. The result: a three-year B.C. is a $10.8-billion business property tax freeze. – more than the combined budThis month, Prince George gets of the provincial ministries of aboriginal relations, advanced council went even further when it settled a four-year contract education, agriculture, chilwith its union. The first two dren and family development, years were “net zero”– the same citizens’ services, energy, envimodel used by the provincial ronment, finance, forests, jobs, government to hold the line on justice, social development and its labour costs. After 28 years of transportation and the premier’s annual increases in pay, Prince office. George stuck to its guns – even Needless to say, taxpayers deserve more than the same-old, in the face of a one-day walkout – and got two years at net zero, same-old from potential mayors and councillors. We want details followed by two years of very small raises. and real ideas. And, in a world “(Continual raises are) not where “there is nothing new sustainable for the taxpayer that under the sun,” one hopes a few ideas that have popped up Politics Page 7

IN MY OPINION

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Legalize assisted suicide now Dear Editor:

Re: Choosing her own fate, Burnaby NOW, Jan. 24. Assisted suicide should be legal. Doctor-assisted suicide should be set aside as a separate issue. It clouds the main point. It slows the whole debate. You can learn how to kill someone in a few days. It takes seven years or more to become a doctor. Most importantly, doctor-assisted suicide goes against the doctor’s primary purpose – to save life. It’s outside the job description. No wonder the doctors resist. Doctors have enough worries trying to keep us alive. No doctor should ever be accused of encouraging a suicide to free a hospital bed or to provide an organ to another patient. No doctor should ever

have such doubts of his own actions. No doctor should ever say “Did I do enough to help that person survive, or did I just take the easy route?” The ending of life is an entirely different job and requires an entirely different set of skills. Done properly, it requires that the person doing the job determine that quality of life is the issue and not just temporary depression. If it is determined that the depression is temporary, the person would be sent back to the healers. If not, the patient would proceed with their rights to a person skilled at killing. Parliament needs to allow assisted suicide, but it needs to be done right by the right people. Doctors should be written out of the plan. They have enough to deal with. If the issues are properly separated, the decision should be easy to reach. Albert Melenius, Burnaby

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Burnaby NOW • Friday, January 31, 2014 • A07

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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Don’t lay a guilt trip on me Dear Editor:

Since I missed the Hilton Vancouver Metrotown meeting for public input on offering an apology to the Chinese for the head tax of long ago, I’d like to offer my input now. The first question raised to me was, since when does our B.C. Liberal government adopt an idea put forth by a defeated NDP opposition leader? The answer, obviously, is only when it looks good for votes. In fact I’ll bet Adrian Dix is kicking himself around the block right now that he didn’t think of that apology idea during the election last May. Or maybe his whole party is kicking him for missing that “quick win” strategy. Surely he could have swept Vancouver where 19 out of the 20 most common names are now Chinese according to Canada 411. Apologies are meaningless to present generations of Chinese unless there’s money attached, although they set precedents for financial compensation. And if there’s money then the door is opened to racial discrimination complaints from other ethnic or special interest groups who feel that they should also be able to hop on the gravy train. But first of course, they have to represent enough

votes for any politician or political party to speak up for them. No one is going to lay a guilt trip on me as a white Anglo-Saxon about apologies, especially when I’m now a member of the new minority race. And that may be what our forefathers wanted to prevent in the first place. Jim Ervin, Burnaby

Thanks to kind strangers Dear Editor:

On Saturday, Jan. 18, I was walking through the restaurant parking lot on the corner of Kingsway and Nelson in Burnaby when I somehow tripped and fell, landing on my face. A lady in a wheelchair called 911 for me and also a young couple came over to help – I asked her to please get my husband for me, which she did while the man stayed and talked to me making sure I was OK until the ambulance came. He was very nice and kept me relaxed. Even though I did thank them, I also wanted to let them know I appreciated all the help they gave to me that afternoon. I also want to say thank you to the paramedics and the fire department for the care I received.

continued from page 6

without the big project is a major step forward. Annual business licences have long been an annoyance to entrepreneurs. While some jurisdictions have tried to push regional licences, the best solution can be found in the City of Langford, which decided to scrap annual business licences. Instead, Langford businesses will pay the old fee once for a “perpetual” licence. As Mayor Stewart Young pointed out about the old annual system: “What are we going to do (if they don’t pay)? Kick them out? They’re already employing people. We’re happy they’re here in

$

Sandy Chartier, Burnaby

Politics: Ideas should be copied has reached a tipping point in their ability to pay,” said Mayor Shari Green. When it comes to consulting taxpayers on large projects, Port Coquitlam broke the mould this year. Instead of putting a major recreation centre renovation – and 1.5 per cent tax increase – into its budget, Port Coquitlam went to the public with a 0.34 per cent tax cut, and an option to add the rec centre, if the community wants it. Usually cities resist giving taxpayers the facts on what they could save by forgoing flashy projects; this subtle shift to showing what the budget would be

RESTAURANT WITH THE BEST VIEW!

Langford. They give us three times the (property) taxes as residential and then we mess around with these little $50 business licences.” Langford expects to make up most of lost annual revenue through increased business and cutting bureaucracy at city hall. There is nothing new under the sun, Solomon taught us. Hopefully that chestnut holds true, and we see many candidates stealing from the playbooks of Penticton, Prince George, Port Coquitlam and Langford this fall. Jordan Bateman, is the B.C. director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.

ONLINE COMMENTS Find us on facebook at: Facebook/BurnabyNOW Or on Twitter at: @BurnabyNOW_news Comment via BurnabyNOW.com I Streamkeeper 1952: Don’t you have to maintain an ecological setback for it to be beneficial? (Environmental services officer Christine) Ensing seems to think you can bulldoze the whole setback and build a road, and then at some later point re-plant (probably with a bunch of exotics). The main point is to not work within the setback. Loggers can’t log in a buffer and re-plant, developers shouldn’t develop in one, even temporarily. Add 30 yards to this setback and give the salmon a break. Comment via BurnabyNOW.com I Burnaby_Birder: Forget about the birds for a minute, Byrne Creek is also an important salmon-bearing stream. Provincial regulations require at least a 15m buffer from the bank alongside a second-order salmon stream, although I agree 30m or even 100m would be much better in this urban environment. Clearly regulations are being ignored for this development.

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A08 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

Arson: Tenants asked to report any suspicious activity at apartments continued from page 1

out. The fire caused only minor damage to the wall and carpet, Page added. “We’re looking for anyone who might have information on these (fires),” Page said. “We’ve also got a notice out to the tenants to be vigilant in reporting any suspicious activity.” Mounties are concerned about the similarities between each fire and how many have occurred in such a short period of time. Page said this could indicate all three fires were started by the same person, but who that person is and what his or her motive is, continues to evade investigators. “The investigation is ongoing, so for the purpose of the integrity of the investigation I don’t want to disclose where

we’re at, but definitely we’re looking for anyone who might have information to call (police),” he said. While none of the fires have caused any major damage or injuries, police are worried about the locations of the fires. “Like any fire, it can spread, and when they’re in stairways, that’s points of exit, so that’s very concerning for us,” Page said. Anyone with information on these fires is asked to contact the Burnaby RCMP at 604-294-7922 and ask to speak with the arson investigator with the detachment’s economic crime unit. People can also report any tips to Crime Stoppers at 1800-222-8477. If anyone witnesses a fire, they are reminded to call 911 immediately.

Libraries: Federal conservatives ‘bringing us back to the Dark Ages’ continued from page 3

expressed his dismay over the situation. “It’s barbaric,” he said. “I don’t use that term lightly because it actually brings us back to the times of the barbarian invasions, back to the Dark Ages. They say you can’t move back the clock, but here it is, the Harper government is bringing us back to the Dark Ages.” On Jan. 7, Gail Shea, minister of fisheries and oceans, released a statement to correct the “serious misinformation … spread recently about the consolidation of Department of Fisheries and Oceans libraries.” “The primary users of DFO libraries, over 86 per cent are employees of the

department,” she said. “An average of only five to 12 people who work outside of DFO visited our 11 libraries each year. It is not fair to taxpayers to make them pay for libraries that so few people actually used.” Shea said users prefer to access digitized materials, and that duplicate materials were offered to other libraries and third parties, if they wanted them. “It is absolutely false to insinuate that any books were burnt,” she noted. However, according to several media reports, council isn’t alone in being skeptical as many other scientists have questioned the federal government’s claims. twitter.com/stefania_seccia

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Coal: Work underway on cleanup after train derailment in Burnaby continued from page 3

The provincial ministry should hire an independent contractor to report back to the ministry, and then send the bill to the “polluters,” Dhaliwal said. Mayor Derek Corrigan said he was also concerned, as most people are probably surprised that the company that did the damage is allowed to hire the company to advise how much money should be spent to undo the damage. “That doesn’t make sense to most average people,” he said. “One would think you’d want the company to be independent and reporting to the Ministry of Environment on what the issues were that should be dealt with.” Corrigan said Triton’s first duty is to the company that hired them. “People suspect that they will be offering up a mitigation plan that will most support the company’s objectives, which are to minimize how much money it costs for them,” he said. Corrigan noted that it’s difficult to determine if the advice from the lawyer of the company responsible for the damage is trustworthy. “There’s a strange system going on here that seems to permeate (in) the federal government that in fact, it’s big business that will tell you not only what the regulation should be, but exactly how much they should pay and what they should pay if in fact they breached the regulations,” he said.

WHAT’S BEEN DONE According to Burnaby’s director of engineering, Triton Environmental Limited has completed the following steps, which will lead to a draft response plan: Collected geo-referenced coordinates to identify areas where the coal has deposited in Silver Creek, Burnaby Lake and Brunette River; Characterized deposition areas based on particle size and thickness to assist in remediation planning; Outlined habitat characteristics in the channel, such as wetted width, channel width, substrate and cover; and Collected other relevant information to aid in formulating practical solutions for the removal of coal accumulations.

City staff has asked the B.C. ministry to include the following in its assessment and recovery plan: options on methodologies to use in recovering coal from Silver Creek, Burnaby Lake and Brunette River; details on mitigation measures, which would be applied to reduce impacts to various species and life stages (salmon eggs, turtle hibernation, Nooksack Dace); details on monitoring a plan both during and post coal recovery; analysis of the impact to downstream habitats from the fine coal particulates; and details on how much coal was released and recovered. “City staff has been closely monitoring the assessment phase,” Gous said. Staff is expected to receive a draft of the recovery plan, and will continue to monitor the clean-up efforts.

Heights Merchants BIA Celebrates 20 Years!

Old met new on the Heights when guests came together to celebrate 20 years of the Business Improvement Area (BIA) at a special birthday party held January 22.

Jack Kuyer, owner of Valley Bakery, Larry French, former owner of Robertson Home Hardware, and Ed Wood, former owner of Regent Fish Market, who helped establish the Heights Merchants Association BIA in 1994, cut the cake with current HMA President Josie Romeo. The Heights Merchants Association (HMA) is a local non-profit that, together with the City of Burnaby and other community partners, advocates for the Heights district, organizes Hats off Day and other community events and initiatives, and looks after the maintenance and promotion of the North Burnaby neighborhood shopping area.

Current HMA Executive Director, Isabel Kolic and the HMA’s first Executive Director, Claudia Laroye

for breaking news, photo galleries, blogs and more


Burnaby NOW • Friday, January 31, 2014 • A09

Library screens new ocean documentary bc.ca/events or in person at the library, or by calling 604-299-8955.

Temple tour

It sounds like the mosque tour in Burnaby HERE & NOW was a hit. More than 60 Jennifer Moreau people showed up to tour the Masjid al-Salaam f you’re at all conand Education Centre on cerned about the planCanada Way as part of et, then you may want a new series put on by to check out this upcomthe Burnaby Inter-Faith ing event. Project. North Burnaby resi“The Burnaby Interdent Peter Cech and Faith Project has orgalocal librarian Lise Kreps nized some great events in are hosting a commuthe past, but this one was nity documentary night the best yet,” said Wanda on Thursday, Feb. 13 at Mulholland, one of McGill library Burnaby’s foremost To branch, and they watch advocates for the are showing the film homeless. Revolution, an trailer, The next interaward-winning scan faith tour is at the documentary with Guru Ravidass Layar about saving the Sabha Temple, oceans and, ultiat 7271 Gilley Ave. on mately, ourselves. Thursday, Feb. 13. There’s Director Rob Stewart a tour of the Sikh temple is best known for his film Sharkwater, which is about from 6 to 7 p.m., and a saving sharks from extinc- vegetarian dinner from 7 to 7:45 p.m. The tour is tion. While touring and free, but register online at showing his film, Stewart tinyurl.com/SikhTour. realized there were bigger The idea behind the threats facing the oceans, event series is to build so he set out to make knowledge and underRevolution. standing between the The event runs from city’s diverse faiths. 7 to 9 p.m., and after the film, someone from the Vancouver Aquarium will The Wildlife Rescue talk about the Ocean Wise Association of B.C., one of program, which involves our favourite sources for labelling sustainably stories, needs more volunsourced seafood so conteers. sumers can choose prodThe association is based ucts that don’t damage the at Burnaby Lake and oceans. helps injured or orphaned The film is free but, as wildlife recover. always, space is limited, The association needs so register online at bpl.

I

Helpers sought

people to answer the wildlife help line, help with summer nature camps for kids, or transport volunteers who may be called out to pick up an animal. “If you want to help sick and injured wildlife, this is the perfect opportunity to get involved,” said volunteer coordinator Stefanie Broad. Last year, the association broke its own record and helped 4,131 animals. To sign up, or for more information, call 604-5262747 or go to www.wild liferescue.ca.

Happy birthday, Susan Elliott!

Yet another Burnaby resident turned 100 recently. Susan Elliott, a former Burnaby teacher, celebrated her birthday on Jan. 19, and nearly 50 friends and family members attended. The party was held at the Willingdon Care Centre, where she lives. Elliott’s husband, whom she met in the 1930s, worked as a principal in the Burnaby school district, and the two were strong believers in education. At the party, Elliott greeted all of her guests personally and received a floral arrangement from Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan.

GIVE A LIFT, CHANGE A LIFE.

Volunteer with the Seniors Transportation program. Getting around can become increasingly difficult with age. Our program provides affordable, convenient transportation for seniors in the community. Come join our great team of compassionate, friendly volunteer drivers. To get involved contact Heidi Magnuson-Ford at 604-292-3901 or Heidi@BbyServices.ca

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EMPOWERINGPEOPLECHANGINGLIVES 2055 Rosser Avenue • Burnaby, BC V5C 0H1 • 604-299-5778 • www.BbyServices.ca

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Do you have an item for Here & Now? Send ideas to Jennifer Moreau, jmoreau@burnabynow. com. Find her on Twitter, @ JenniferMoreau.

Photo contributed/burnaby now

Happy birthday: Former Burnaby teacher and longtime local resident Susan Elliott

celebrated her 100th birthday this month. Her party was held at the Willingdon Care Centre, where she lives.

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A10 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

January 8 – February 28

p Dailyy for Your Share of Swipe

File photo/burnaby now

Santa’s helpers: Toy room coordinator Pam Bloom stocks the shelves at the Burnaby Christmas Bureau’s toy room in the lead-up to Christmas. The bureau had another successful year in 2013.

Burnaby folks were full of festive generosity Local charities fared well over the 2013 holiday season Jennifer Moreau and Jane Leung staff reporter

Burnaby residents dug deep in their pockets and opened their hearts this past Christmas season, helping the multitudes of charities and various causes their fellow citizens often rely on in hard times. Here are a few updates on organizations and how their charitable efforts fared for the holidays.

Sock it to Poverty

The Burnaby Teachers’ Association’s annual drive to help the homeless was a success this season. Every year, the association spearheads a charity drive, called Sock it to Poverty, where teachers collect socks and toiletries for the Progressive Housing Society, which redistributes the

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items to Burnaby’s homeless. For 2013, the association collected 1,115 toiletries, 587 pairs of socks and 97 pairs of gloves and mittens. That’s not to mention the toques, scarves, shorts and underwear they also collected. “Teachers, students, parents and community members have pulled together to make this year’s campaign a great success,” said association president James Sanyshyn in a press release. “Our collective generosity is a testament to the fact that teachers recognize poverty and homelessness as serious ills facing modern society as a whole.”

Burnaby Christmas Bureau Rotary Coats for Kids

The holidays can be hard on lowincome families. That’s what makes the Burnaby Christmas Bureau so important in ensuring they get extra help to make Christmas magical for the children. The bureau, facilitated by Burnaby Community Services, collects donations of presents and money to make sure children have toys and isolated seniors have hampers for the holidays. This year, donations were high but not quite high enough to meet the $153,000 target. As of Dec. 27, the bureau had raised $142,342. “In 2013, Burnaby was incredibly generous. We had a lot of great gifts donated: from bikes, Lego, Barbies, MP3 players, books, gift cards for teens, items for mothers and hampers for seniors,” said Stephen D’Souza, executive director of Burnaby Community Services. The non-profit accepts donations yearround, and any toys not used this season will be put towards next year’s stock. Meanwhile, Burnaby Community Services is looking for volunteer drivers to take seniors to medical appointments and help with income tax returns. For more information on volunteering or donating to the bureau, go to www. burnabycommunityconnections.com.

in Instant Prizes

The annual Rotary Coats for Kids campaign was a success in 2013. Every year, the Rotary Club of Burnaby-Metrotown collects new and gently used hooded coats to redistribute to local children in need. This past season, Rotary handed out roughly 1,300 coats, according to Gloria Staudt, one of the campaign’s key organizers. “It just shows the need is still there. Parents want to make sure their kids are warm,” said Staudt. Demand is high for coats for babies and kids up to six years old, which Staudt thinks correlates to B.C.’s high child poverty rate. Rotary also collects cash donations to buy coats when there aren’t enough to go around, and this year, volunteers found they were buying more coats to keep up with demand. People can donate any time of the year. To get involved, email rotarycoatsforkids@gmail.com. “We do want to thank the community for responding,” Staudt said.

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Helping the homeless

Progressive Housing Society hosted a special event in December to help the city’s homeless. The yearly Outreach Christmas was on Dec. 5 at the West Burnaby United Church. More than 300 people attended, and 246 received help from the society. The event included a pancake breakfast, coffee, a hockey tournament, a clothing table, games, present from Santa and entertainment. See a full round-up of how local charities did over the holiday season, online at www. burnabynow.com

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A12 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

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Burnaby NOW • Friday, January 31, 2014 • A13

14 Movers & Shakers

19 Lively City

26 Top 5

SECTION COORDINATOR Jennifer Moreau, 604-444-3021 jmoreau@burnabynow.com

Winter fun at city’s historic Patterson House Burnaby is a city with a rich past, and it is that past we honour with our Then and NOW series. Janaya Fuller-Evans staff reporter

P

atterson House has been a site of snow-day fun in the Edmonds neighbourhood since the early 1900s. The house was part of a parcel of land at the corner of Kingsway and Edmonds Street, owned by Dugald Campbell Patterson. The first photo was taken in 1910, but the building completion date is listed in the archives as 1911. It was renovated in 1912 for the visit of Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught, who was Governor-General of Canada at the time. “It was the fancy house, and the Duke and Duchess stayed here,” Dave Myles, one of the current residents, told the NOW. The house was notable in those days for another reason, according to Myles. “This house had the first flush toilet of all of B.C., and he was so proud of it,” Myles said of Patterson. “You could see the big tank outside the back of the house.” Patterson, a prominent city pioneer who moved to Burnaby in 1894, served in the First World War and came home in a wheelchair. When he returned to Burnaby, he began writing and pressing for environmental preservation in the city. “He was actually writing back in the ’30s about why they should be protecting the streams and not cutting down the trees near streams in Burnaby,” Myles said. “He was like an environmentalist ahead of his time.” His book of poetry was published before his death in 1931. The house has continued to be a unique fixture in the area. In 1955, it was moved from 7260 Edmonds St. to its current location at 7106 18th Ave. Myles and Luci Baha bought the home in 1986. “We’re really proud of the house,” Myles said. “It’s one of the few Edwardian heritage homes in Burnaby.” In the early ’90s, they sold it to a developer – MacLean Management Ltd. The company built a townhouse development behind the house, while agreeing to restore it to its 1912 splendor, Myles said. He continues to live in the home. “What makes it even quirkier is, I’m actually part of a townhouse division,” he says.

Then

&NOW

To see the Then & NOW photo gallery, scan with Layar

Courtesy of City of Burnaby Archives, photo ID 171-008/burnaby now

Snow day:

Above, three children throw snowballs and play outside the D.C. Patterson house in the Edmonds district. The house was originally located at 7260 Edmonds St. near Kingsway. It was relocated in 1955 to 7106 18th Ave. and is a city heritage site. Left, Luci Baha and Dave Myles now live at Patterson House, which was built in 1911.

Jennifer Gauthier/ burnaby now

Check www.Burnabynow.com for breaking news, photo galleries, blogs and more


A14 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

A fond farewell to Burnaby businesses MOVERS & SHAKERS Janaya Fuller-Evans

T

he Movers and Shakers column has generally been dedicated to upcoming events, award winners, business openings and other miscellaneous tidbits from Burnaby’s business community, but today, I want to use this space to thank all the business sources in the community who have come forward and shared their stories. Since joining the Burnaby NOW newsroom, I have had the privilege of profiling Burnaby

businesses. I have written about the awards and accolades they receive, I have attended Burnaby Board of Trade events, but most importantly, I have had the opportunity to sit with business owners and find out why they choose to open up shop in our city. Anyone who has ever started a small business knows it isn’t easy. And of course, anyone who has ever started or run a big business knows it isn’t easy, either. It takes a particular kind of person to dedicate themselves to a career beyond the 9 to 5 existence, working whenever necessary, against difficult odds and a high chance of failure. Those are the people I’ve been lucky enough to interview. In some cases, just when they’re starting

out, and it isn’t always clear whether or not they’ll make it. In other cases, I’ve written about businesses run by multiple generations of family members, or ones that close when the family members decide to move on to other pursuits. It has all been fascinating – to hear about what drives business owners, what worries them and what accomplishments fill them with pride. It isn’t your usual, dry business fare, much of the time. For every story with its share of bureaucratese, I have been able to write many others with frank, fresh perspectives; wonderful quotes and interesting back stories. There was Burnaby resident Olesya Aleksandrova, owner of Perfect Fabrics, who attrib-

2014 Bus Service Optimization Open House

uted her tenacity when starting her business to her father. She detailed her family’s struggle living and working in Kyrgyzstan, where she grew up. “I was grown in my strong father’s hand,” the fabric importer said in an interview with the NOW. There was Lynn Mueller, CEO of International Wastewater Systems, who explained his drive to conserve energy by harnessing wasted heat from sewage systems with his sewage Sharc. “I used to go to these villages in the Arctic, now, these same villages are under water,” Mueller told the NOW. “I personally see the effect of climate change, but I never thought I would in my lifetime.”

And there were families such as the Siormanolakis family, owners of Romana restaurant in the Heights. They were featured just last year when the restaurant celebrated 40 years in business. This year, they announced they would be putting the business up for sale by the end of March. “My parents have worked very, very hard, and they’re very tired, and it’s time to move on,” Jenny Siormanolakis, daughter of the owners, told the NOW. “We know that Romana is an institution, and it couldn’t be there without the support of so many people in Burnaby and the community.” Community has been a big aspect of covering business in Burnaby. The connections made with

customers and other business people, the desire to create something beyond a successful business venture – something that is a part of the fabric of the community – these are the stories I have been lucky enough to write. So thank you, to everyone who has sent an email or phoned to let me know about a new business opening, to those of you who have kept in touch over the years and let me know how your businesses are doing, and, of course, to all our readers. I am off for the next year on maternity leave, but I look forward to coming back and telling your stories upon my return. Please send items and ideas for business stories to the Burnaby NOW at editorial @burnabynow.com.

We invite you to attend a 2014 Bus Service Optimization Open House to learn more about the proposed changes and how you may be affected, ask questions and review alternative travel options available to you.

BURNABY OPEN HOUSE

Date: February 4, 2014 Time: 5:00pm – 8:00pm Location: Holiday Inn Express – Metrotown Salon A 4405 Central Boulevard Burnaby

PROPOSED ROUTE CHANGES 116 Service Redesign Reroute the 116 along North Fraser Way and Marine Way to better serve the Big Bend area. 49 Service Redesign Adjust the portion of the current route which travels along 54th Avenue. The new route will remain on 49th Avenue.

Service optimization is the process of reallocating “bus service hours” from areas of low productivity to where customer demand is higher. It’s a critical part of TransLink’s ongoing program of managing the transit network to become more efficient and effective.

For further information on route changes visit translink.ca/serviceop and for event details please contact Vincent Gonsalves, TransLink Community Relations Coordinator, at Vincent.Gonsalves@translink.ca or 778.375.7661.

translink.ca/serviceop

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A16 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

YEAR OF THE HORSE

Year of the Horse: Are you an equine?

T

he spirit of the horse is recognized to be the Chinese people’s ethos – making unremitting efforts to improve themselves. It is energetic, bright, warm-hearted, intelligent and able. Ancient people liked to designate an able person as “Qianli Ma,” a horse that covers a thousand li a day (one li equals 500 meters).

Strengths People born in the year of the horse have ingenious communicating techniques and in their community they always want to be in the limelight. They are clever, kind to others, and like to join in a venture career. Although they sometimes talk too much, they are cheerful, perceptive, talented, earthy but stubborn. They like entertainment and large crowds. They are popular among friends, active at work and refuse to be reconciled to failure, although their endeavor cannot last indefinitely.

their daily work. They are independent and rarely listen to advice. Failure may result in pessimism. They usually have strong endurance but with bad temper. Flamboyant by nature, they are wasteful since they are not good with matters of finance due to a lack of budgetary efficiency. Some of those who are born in the horse like to move in glamorous circles while pursuing high profile careers. They tend to interfere in many things and frequently fail to finish projects of their own.

Weaknesses They cannot bear too much constraint. However their interest may be only superficial and lacking real substance. They are usually impatient and hot blooded about everything other than

Jason Lang/burnaby now

The Yau Kung Moon Club staged Chinese New Year festivities at Brentwood Town Centre on Jan. 25.

Happy Chinese New Year!

Richard T. Lee MLA Burnaby North

Office: 1833 Willingdon Ave., Burnaby Ph: 604.775.0778 Fax: 604.775.0833 Email:Richard.Lee.MLA@leg.bc.ca • www.richardleemla.bc.ca


Burnaby NOW • Friday, January 31, 2014 • A17

YEAR OF THE HORSE

Celebrate Chinese New Year with rolls

C

hinese New Year is a traditional holiday that dates back several centuries. Several myths and traditions are associated with Chinese New Year, which is celebrated in countries across the globe. Those celebrations vary depending on geography, but a focus on family and food is a common theme of celebrants regardless of where they live. A traditional Chinese New Year celebration will feature a reunion dinner on New Year’s Eve. Family members gather for this celebration, which includes a large spread of food featuring dishes of pork, chicken and fish. Specialty dishes that feature meats like duck and Chinese sausage are often reserved for the reunion dinner and other special occasions. Though Chinese New Year was initially only celebrated within China, it is now observed throughout the world, and celebrations tend to be more grandiose in those communities that feature a large population with Chinese ancestry. But celebrants need not be Chinese to enjoy the pageantry of Chinese New Year. For example, San Francisco residents, regardless of their ancestry, can enjoy the city’s annual Chinese New Year Festival and Parade, which is the largest celebration of its kind outside of Asia. Vancouver’s Chinatown also hosts a large Chinese New Year parade.

Makes 16 rolls 16 chong) 4 thawed 1 2 1/2

METROCREATIVE

These ham and chicken rolls feature Chinese five-spice powder.

But even those who cannot attend such celebrations can still partake in Chinese New Year festivities by bringing the party into their own homes and kitchens. The following recipes for Asian Sausage Rolls and Chinese Ham and Chicken Rolls from Vicki Liley’s Asian Wraps & Rolls (Periplus) make great additions to any Chinese New Year celebration.

Chinese pork sausages (lop sheets frozen puff pastry, egg, beaten teaspoons sesame seeds cup hoisin sauce

Preheat oven to 450 F. Line a baking tray with parchment paper. Using a sharp knife, trim sausage ends. Place 1 pastry sheet on a work surface and cut into 4 equal pieces. Turn each square so that one corner faces you. Brush pastry edges with beaten egg. Place a sausage 1 inch from the bottom end of each pastry square. Roll bottom end of pastry over sausage. Fold in sides, then roll to form a cylinder. Brush top with beaten egg. Sprinkle with sesame seeds. Repeat with the remaining sausages and pastry. Place rolls on prepared pan. Bake for 15 minutes, or until golden and crisp. Remove from oven. Cut each roll crosswise into 4 pieces. Serve hot, with hoisin sauce for dipping.

Asian Sausage Rolls

Rolls Page 18

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Did you know that Chinese New Year is the longest and most important festivity in the Chinese lunar calendar? It is celebrated around the world in countries and regions that have significant Chinese populations. The year 2014 is the Year of the Horse. If you were born in 1918, 1930, 1942, 1954, 1966, 1978, 1990, or 2002, this is your year!


A18 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

YEAR OF THE HORSE

Rolls combine chicken and pork continued from page 17

Chinese Ham and Chicken Rolls Makes 4 rolls 1/2 teaspoon salt 1/4 teaspoon ground white pepper 1/4 teaspoon Chinese five-spice powder 1 clove garlic, finely chopped 4 boneless, skinless chicken breast fillets 4 thin slices ham 4 frozen square spring roll wrappers (8.5 by 8.5 inches), thawed 1/4 cup all-purpose flour 1 egg, beaten with 2 tablespoons milk 3 cups vegetable or canola oil for deep-frying 1/2 cup Thai sweet chili sauce In a small bowl, combine salt, pepper, fivespice powder and garlic. Stir to blend. Place a chicken breast in between 2 sheets of plastic wrap. Using a meat mallet, pound very thin.

Spread garlic mixture on chicken. Roll a slice of ham and place at one end of chicken. Fold sides of chicken in, then roll chicken around ham to form a log. Repeat with remaining chicken, garlic mixture and ham. Place 1 spring roll wrapper on a work surface, with a corner facing you. Coat 1 chicken log in flour, then in egg mixture. Place chicken diagonally across wrapper, 1 inch from bottom. Fold in sides and roll up securely. Bunch edge of wrapper with egg mixture and seal. In a large, heavy skillet, deep fryer or wok, heat oil to 375 F or until a small bread cube dropped in oil sizzles and turns golden. Working in batches, fry ham and chicken rolls until golden, 3 to 4 minutes. Using a wire-mesh skimmer, transfer to paper towels to drain. Let stand for 3 minutes before slicing. Serve hot, with chili sauce for dipping.

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

4712

BEST WISHES FOR GOOD HEALTH AND MUCH HAPPINESS.

For more information or to donate to the Burnaby Hospital Foundation

call 604.431.2881, or visit us online at www.bhfoundation.ca

Happy Chinese New Year! London Drugs wishes everyone a happy, healthy and lucky year of the horse!


Burnaby NOW • Friday, January 31, 2014 • A19

Arctic Fiction exhibit opens at gallery sure through the organization. The work shows a young black bear in a tree. “Being a father, I know the importance of providing children with a safe and comfortable home,” Mayer Jr. explains in an artist statement online. “A mother bear also wants her children to feel safe in the forest, surrounded by massive, moss-lined trees, overgrown bushes loaded with fresh berries, wild and sweet and possibly a bee hive dripping with honey. In this painting, I wanted to portray this juvenile black bear being perfectly content to climb this half-rotten tree to contemplate its future. Soon he will be full grown and remembering all the good lessons its mother taught him.” Every year, hundreds of artists from across the continent submit their artwork for a chance to have it made into limited edition prints. The money raised supports Ducks Unlimited’s habitat conservation projects, research, education programs and public policy work. Check out more at www.ducks.ca.

LIVELY CITY

Julie MacLellan

H

Contributed/burnaby now

Art: At left, Hannah Campbell’s Arctic photographs are on exhibition at the Deer Lake Gallery. Above, Denis Mayer Jr. ‘s Home Sweet Home is part of Ducks Unlimited Canada’s national art portfolio. we come to understand place through secondhand accounts,” explains a press release. “By exploring the mythic quality associated with the Arctic, she challenges the viewer to negotiate truth within the places many of us only come to know through photographs.” Intrigued? The Deer Lake Gallery is at 6584 Deer Lake Ave. You’re invited to pop by the opening reception to meet Hannah – it runs 2 to 4

p.m. this Saturday, Feb. 1. The gallery is open Tuesdays through Saturdays from noon to 4 p.m., and admission is free. Call 604-298-7322 or email info@burnabyarts council.org for more.

Music makers

The Cameron Seniors Sunshine Sing-along is looking for musicians. The group meets on alternating Mondays from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. at Cameron Recreation

Centre, 9523 Cameron St. It gives people a chance to sing along to old-time favourites with friends. Volunteer musicians are being sought to play piano, drums and other instruments. The group has a piano and a drum set for musicians to use. Its upcoming sessions are on Feb. 3, Feb. 17, March 3, March 17 and March 31. For more information, contact Sue McIntyre, seniors’ program coor-

dinator, at 604-297-4453 or email sue.mcintyre@ burnaby.ca.

Save the ducks

A Burnaby artist is helping to save Canada’s wetlands. Denis Mayer Jr. has been selected for inclusion in Ducks Unlimited Canada’s national art portfolio. His work, Home Sweet Home, is part of this year’s new portfolio of work that will receive national expo-

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ow do we come to understand a place through secondhand accounts? Artist Hannah Campbell is exploring that question in a new exhibition at the Burnaby Arts Council’s Deer Lake Gallery. Arctic Fiction opens Feb. 1 and runs until Feb. 22. Hannah is an artist and environmental activist from Vancouver who took part in an Arctic Circle residency in 2013, travelling aboard a tall ship along the coast of Svalbard, Norway. Arctic Fiction features photographs from her journey, accompanied by the storytelling of strangers. She posts her photographs through online classified ads, asking strangers to interpret them through fiction. “Here she explores how


A20 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

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Burnaby NOW • Friday, January 31, 2014 • A21

AND

WHEELS Deals

Get oil changed regularly to prevent sludge

CLICK & CLACK TALK CARS Ray & Tom Magliozzi

Dear Tom and Ray: Is it safe to add a few capfuls of denatured alcohol to the crankcase of my two older vehicles to remove oil sludge

before I change the oil? – Lorilee RAY: Is it safe? Well, I don’t think it’s ever a good idea to dilute your oil. But you can put a couple of capfuls of almost anything in five quarts of oil without doing a whole lot of damage. I mean, you can add a couple of capfuls of cat urine to your crankcase and still drive the car for a long time. The question is, why would you want to?

TOM: The same question should be asked of denatured alcohol. I don’t see a good reason to do it. RAY: First of all, while denatured alcohol is a solvent, we have no idea whether it does anything to remove engine sludge. TOM: Second, we don’t even know if you have excessive engine sludge. Did your mechanic tell you that your oil is not draining down quickly enough from the top of

the engine? Or do you just have S.A.D.: sludge anxiety disorder? RAY: Unfortunately, even if you’re sure your engine is sludged up, it’s unlikely that any oil additive is going to fix it. TOM: We work on Volvos that develop sludge problems sometimes. What happens is the crankcase ventilation system gets plugged up and doesn’t allow oil fumes to be purged from the engine.

So those fumes get trapped and solidify, forming sludge and gunking up the top of the engine. RAY: At that point, the only way to remove the sludge is to remove the valve cover and actually scrape off the stuff. TOM: If you’re wanting to add the denatured alcohol simply as a preventative measure – if you’re worried about getting sludge in the future – then the single best thing you

can do is change the oil regularly instead, and make sure your crankcase ventilation system is working properly. RAY: Save the denatured alcohol for cleaning your windows. And on those nights when you toss and turn, restlessly worrying that sludge is somehow building up inside your valve train, get up and change the oil, then go back to bed.

Dry grad winners The British Columbia Automobile Association, in partnership with the BCAA Road Safety Foundation, has announced the three winning high schools of the BCAA Dry Grad Video Challenge. “Sixteen to 25-year-olds account for the highest number of impaired drivers involved in crashes,” Niela Melanio, communication specialist at BCAA, said in a press release. “The goal of the contest is to get teens thinking and talking about the issue of impaired driving in a way that will change their driving behaviours for life and have them making responsible choices now, and for the rest of their adult years.” BCAA will award $12,000 to the schools for their dry grad celebrations. First prize went to Hugh McRoberts Secondary in Richmond for its video, It was just a few. The school will receive $6,000 for its celebration. Second prize went to Whistler Secondary for its video, Heads or Tails, (never gamble with your life). They will receive $4,000. Third prize went to Abbotsford Christian School for its video, This is your future. The school will receive $2,000. Last September, BCAA called on Grade 12 students from across B.C. and the Yukon to produce 90second videos encouraging other teens to make responsible choices and never drive under the influence.

Consumer Protection for Homebuyers Buying or building your own home? Find out about your rights, obligations and information that can help you make a more informed purchasing decision. Visit the B.C. government’s Homeowner Protection Office (HPO) website for free consumer information.

Services • New Homes Registry – find out if any home registered with the HPO: • can be legally offered for sale • has a policy of home warranty insurance • is built by a Licensed Residential Builder or an owner builder • Registry of Licensed Residential Builders

Resources • Residential Construction Performance Guide – know when to file a home warranty insurance claim • Buying a Home in British Columbia Guide • Guide to Home Warranty Insurance in British Columbia • Maintenance Matters bulletins and videos • Subscribe to consumer protection publications

www.hpo.bc.ca Toll-free: 1-800-407-7757 Email: hpo@hpo.bc.ca

New Homes Registry Keeps Homebuyers Informed This helpful, easy-to-use, online resource is available from the Homeowner Protection Office (HPO) website at www.hpo.bc.ca. Savvy homebuyers are using it to make more informed purchasing decisions. The New Homes Registry provides free access to find out if a home has a policy of home warranty insurance and is built by a Licensed Residential Builder, or whether it’s built without home warranty insurance. Homebuyers can obtain valuable information such as the name and contact number of the warranty provider, the builder’s warranty number and whether an ownerbuilt home can be legally offered for sale. Every new home built for sale by a Licensed Residential Builder in British Columbia is protected by mandatory third-party home warranty insurance. Better known as 2-5-10home warranty insurance, this coverage includes: two years on labour and materials, five years on the building envelope (including water penetration), and 10 years on the structure. It’s the strongest system of construction defect insurance in Canada. Visit the HPO website for free access to the New Homes Registry which is optimized for mobile devices.


A22 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

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A24 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

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A26 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

Happy New Year:

Celebrate the Year of the Horse this weekend at events at Lougheed Town Centre, the Heights, the McGill library branch, and at the Chinese New Year skate at Kensington Recreation Complex.

File photo /burnaby now

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Top picks for this weekend Burnaby is celebrating the Year of the Horse this weekend, with many ways to bring in the Chinese New Year. However, for those looking for other sorts of events, there is plenty going on as we head into February. We’re continuing with our popular feature – our staff’s Top 5 (Or More) Things To Do This Weekend. Here’s our Top 5 list for Jan. 31 to Feb. 2. Get celebrating the Chinese New Year on Friday at the McGill branch of the Burnaby Public Library at 4595 Albert St. The library is hosting the event at 3 p.m. in honour of the year of the wood horse in the Chinese Zodiac. The Burnaby International Folk Dancers will be on hand to perform in honour of the occasion and refreshments will be provided. All are welcome to this free event. No registration is required. Get on the ice to celebrate the Chinese New Year on Friday from 6:30 to 9:15 p.m. at the Kensington Recreation Complex at 6159 Curtis St. The event includes ice skating, face painting, crafts and games. Regular admission and rental rates apply. Get saying Gung Hei Fat Choy along with the Heights Merchants Association on Saturday from noon to 2:30 p.m. The association is ringing in the Year of the Horse along Hastings Street with music and dance, including lion dancers performing special blessings to bring luck and prosperity to Heights businesses. Lion dancers will hand out fortune cookies and red envelopes, with special messages and chances to win prizes inside. Also on Saturday, Lougheed

1

2

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Town Centre is holding professor Jan Walls at the its Chinese New Year Nikkei National Museum celebration. and Cultural There will Centre, 6688 be a Korean Southoaks Cres., drum parade on Saturday from at 10:30 a.m., 2 to 4 p.m. The Korean pertalk is specifically formances at on folklore and centre court customs appearat 10:40 a.m., ing in the Ukiyoe a Chinese Spectacular: lion dance at Japanese noon, and the Woodblock lion will bless Prints exhibit. the retailers at The centre is (or more) 12:30 p.m. Things to do co-hosting the of more Get learnthis weekend exhibit than 100 wooding about blocks with the Japanese West Vancouver Museum. folklore and popular For more information, go customs at a talk by SFU

5

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to centre.nikkeiplace.org/ ukiyoe-spectacular. Get cultured at the Burnaby Art Gallery’s free family Sunday program, with an interactive hands-on activity connected to the First Nations and Inuit prints exhibition. The free drop-in program takes place on Sunday from 1 to 4 p.m. The gallery is located at 6344 Deer Lake Ave. For more info, go to www. burnabyartgallery.ca. Email Top 5 ideas to calendar@burnabynow.com. You can also check out our arts and events calendar listings at www.burnabynow.com. – Compiled by staff reporter Janaya Fuller-Evans

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Let’s start creating healthier communities HEALTHWISE

Dr. Davidicus Wong

W

hat are the key factors that influence your health and the health of others in our community? Most of us think first about the health-care system and your access to

quality care. In the 2009 report of the Senate subcommittee on public health, only 25 per cent of the health of the population was attributable to the health-care system. Fifteen per cent was due to individual biology (i.e. genetics), and 10 per cent to environmental factors such as air quality and civic infrastructure. The remaining 50 per cent was due to a variety of social determinants, including poverty, work conditions, housing, diet

and community factors. In the winter and spring of 2013, the Canadian Medical Association held town hall meetings in cities across the country and consulted widely online. The association’s report, Healthcare in Canada: What Makes Us Sick?, was released in July 2013. Poverty was found to be the most significant determinant of illness. Other significant determinants included access to affordable and safe housing, early childhood develop-

ment and education. Most of us have a good idea of what we need to do in order to live healthier lives. Exercise, eat a healthy diet, maintain a healthy weight, don’t smoke or use recreational drugs, limit alcohol, reduce stress and maintain good relationships. Yet for most of us, there are barriers to doing all the right things. Due to poverty, many families struggle to get food on the table. To eat

five or more fruits or vegetables a day is not affordable. Others are unable to find safe and affordable housing. Some neighbourhoods do not have easy access to transit, community centres, parks or safe areas to walk. The global healthy cities and community movement is working to engage communities, cities and governments to address the social determinants of health and to work together to improve the health of the population.

You now have an opportunity to get involved. My Health My Community is a major public survey currently being conducted by the Vancouver Coastal Health and Fraser Health authorities. The online survey is seeking to identify the health supports you need in your neighbourhood. It will identify the barriers to healthy living, including access to services, housing, recreational facilities, affordable food, mobility,

Survey Page 28

Wash hands, slow down and stay fit this winter MEDICAL FILE Stefania Seccia

W

intertime is dotted with large meals, colder drafts and more sniffles than any other season,

that’s why the Fraser Health Authority has released tips to staying healthy during winter. “Over the holidays, we see spikes in the number of patient visits to our emergency departments and sometimes these visits can be avoided by simply planning ahead,” said Dr. Anne Clarke, program medical director for emergency services, in a media release. “We use a triage

system in the emergency to ensure priority is given to those patients requiring the most urgent care.” The tips include: ◆ Slow down: The season can be busy and stressful, take it slow. Take everything in moderation. ◆ Look both ways: Shorter daylight hours and rainy weather makes driving more difficult and pedestrians harder to see. ◆ Clean hands: Make sure

to keep those hands fresh by washing them or using alcohol-based lotion, especially before eating a meal. ◆ Stay fit: Get regular exercise and eat nutritious foods.

Doctor tips

As part of the Burnaby family practice initiative, Burnaby NOW columnist Dr. Davidicus Wong will be speaking at a library

event about the patientdoctor relationship. In an effort to improve health care, Wong will be giving tips on how to make the most out of a family doctor visit, which will include: ◆ how to find the right doctor; ◆ how to prepare for the first visit; ◆ how to communicate with clinic staff; ◆ what you should know

about your own medical history; and ◆ how to work with your family doctor to take charge of your health. The event is co-sponsored by the Burnaby division of family practice. It is free, but registration is required. The event is on Monday, Feb. 17 at the Bob Prittie Metrotown library Tips Page 28

Rotary Peace Fellowship Award funds a 2-year Master’s Degree or a 3-month Professional Development Certificate for Bachelor’s Degree holders who have passion and experience in international understanding and peace efforts. The Rotary Club of If you are eligible, contact your local Rotary Club or Burnaby Metrotown Gloria at burnabymetrotownrotary@gmail.com

ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS: • A strong commitment to • Minimum five years’ relevant • Proficiency in English and a international understanding and second language (master’s work experience with current peace demonstrated through program) or in English full-time employment in a mid their professional and academic (certificate program). to upper level position for the achievements and personal and • Excellent leadership skills. certified program. community service activities. • Minimum three years’ combined Scan to visit us on Facebook: • A bachelor’s degree or paid or unpaid full-time relevant equivalent in a related field with work experience for the strong grades at the time of master’s degree program. application.

www.burnabymetrotownrotary.org


A28 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

Survey: Assessing needs of community continued from page 27

transportation and language. The six main areas covered in the survey are sociodemographics, health status, lifestyle, health-care access, the built environment and community belonging. In this project, the health authorities are partnering with local government and community organizations as the survey will provide a greater understanding of the needs of our communities

Tips: Dr. Davidicus Wong at February event continued from page 27

and allow informed action to address them. For more information and to take the survey, go to myhealthmycommunity. org. We are all responsible for the health of our community. Dr. Davidicus Wong is a family physician and physician lead of the Burnaby division of family practice. His Healthwise column appears regularly in this paper. You can read more about achieving your positive potential in health at davidicuswong. wordpress.com.

branch from 1:30 to 3 p.m. For more information, call 604-436-5400 or register online at bpl.bc.ca/ events.

Maternity clinic Three Shoppers Drug Mart stores raised $10,030 for the maternity clinic at Burnaby Hospital through

its Tree of Life campaign. The campaign receives donations from employees and customers, which are intended to go towards women’s health in the

community. The Burnaby Hospital Foundation was chosen as the recipient of the campaign for 2013, according to a media release.

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Burnaby NOW • Friday, January 31, 2014 • A29

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• Appliance Repair ____________________________________________ • Auto Body Shop _____________________________________________ • Auto Service Centre __________________________________________ • Bike Repair _________________________________________________ • Car Wash ___________________________________________________ • Carpet Cleaner ______________________________________________ • Continuing Education ________________________________________ • Cosmetic Laser Centre_________________________________________ • Dance Studio _______________________________________________ • Daycare Centre ______________________________________________ • Dental Clinic ________________________________________________ • Dog Daycare________________________________________________ • Driving School ______________________________________________ • Dry Cleaner_________________________________________________ • Financial Institution __________________________________________ • Fitness Centre_______________________________________________ • Hair Salon __________________________________________________ • Hearing Centre ______________________________________________ • Insurance Agency____________________________________________ • Law Firm ___________________________________________________ • Maid Service ________________________________________________ • Maritial Arts Studio___________________________________________ • Medical Clinic _______________________________________________ • Music Studio________________________________________________ • Optician_______________________________________________________ • Pet Grooming _______________________________________________ • Photo Studio________________________________________________ • Plumber ___________________________________________________ • Pre-School _________________________________________________ • Real Estate Agency___________________________________________ • Realtor_____________________________________________________ • Retirement Residence ________________________________________ • Shoe Repair_________________________________________________ • Spa/Esthetics________________________________________________ • Tanning Salon_______________________________________________ • Travel Agency _______________________________________________

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A30 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

Revue pays tribute to Broadway’s golden age because none of the existing ones honoured the composers in the way he wanted them to be honoured. Though he’s long been a fan of the duo’s work, he said directing the Chemainus Theatre production of Oklahoma! a few years back gave him an entirely new appreciation of their depths. “Really sitting down with the music and lyrics and seeing how the songs were constructed, … there was so much sophisticated craftsmanship in what they did,” he said, adding his respect for their work “ballooned” after that. “I wanted to create my own tribute to them.” Out of a Dream includes songs from all 11 shows created by the duo, including the big five hits Oklahoma, Carousel, South Pacific, The King and I, and The Sound of Music – along with State Fair, Cinderella, Allegro, Pipe Dream, Me and Juliet, and Flower Drum Song. Jorgensen has woven together offerings from all 11 plays to create an evening that he says will appeal to fans of the golden era of musical theatre. “They’ll be taken back to those stories they remember,” he said. “And they’re also going to have some surprises.” Jorgensen is particularly pleased with the cast he’s assembled for the production. “We’re lucky in Vancouver. We’re a smaller market, but within our market we’re got really top-notch performers,” he pointed out. Jorgensen has been able to assemble an “A-list” cast, including Warren Kimmel and Caitriona Murphy, who’ll be familiar from Arts Club and Patrick Street productions. They’re appearing alongside Kaylee Harwood, best known locally for her per-

Julie MacLellan staff reporter

Since its founding in 2007, Patrick Street Productions has been pushing the boundaries of musical theatre for Vancouver audiences – offering up shows that might otherwise never have made their way to the city. Now, with its first ever two-play season, the Burnaby-born theatre company is stepping back into the golden age of musical theatre to stage Out of a Dream, a Rodgers and Hammerstein revue. Out of a Dream runs from Feb. 5 to 16 at the York Theatre on Commercial Drive. Former Burnaby resident Peter Jorgensen, co-artistic producer of Patrick Street Productions – with his wife, Katey Wright – is directing the production. That they’ve chosen the work of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II to open the season is, Jorgensen said, a fitting gesture for the company devoted to contemporary musical theatre. “Contemporary musical theatre really began with them, and the risks they took as writers,” he pointed out. Patrick Street’s second musical, which follows in March, is Floyd Collins – written by current Broadway phenom Adam Guettel, whose Light in the Piazza was a hit for PSP in 2011. Guettel also happens to be the grandson of Rodgers. “We just love the balance between the two shows and the lineage between Richard Rodgers and Adam Guettel,” Jorgensen said. Out of a Dream was created by Jorgensen himself. There were already some Rodgers and Hammerstein revues in existence, but Jorgensen chose to create his own, he said,

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David Cooper, courtesy of Patrick Street Productions/burnaby now

Dream time: Caitriona Murphy, Warren Kimmel, Kazumi Evans and Sayer Roberts

star in Out of a Dream, onstage at the York Theatre Feb. 5 to 16. formance as Cosette in the Arts Club’s Les Misérables. She also went on to appear at the Stratford Festival and then on Broadway with Stratford’s Jesus Christ Superstar, and this season she’ll return to Ontario for her second season at the Shaw Festival. They’re joined by two young performers whom Jorgensen describes as two “huge up-and-comers”: Kazumi Evans and Sayer Roberts. Evans has been on Jorgensen’s radar for

quite some time. Most recently, he notes, while he was directing Arts Club’s Avenue Q, Evans stepped in partway through the run when another performer had to withdraw. Roberts most recently dazzled local audiences in last year’s Royal City Musical Theatre production of Oklahoma! – a performance that has earned him an Ovation Award.

Out of a Dream Page 31

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Burnaby NOW • Friday, January 31, 2014 • A31

Out of a Dream: ‘A-list talent’ in new Rodgers and Hammerstein revue continued from page 30

“People were raving about his performance,” Jorgensen says. He adds he loves finding young talent like Evans and Roberts. “It’s exciting when you find the show that you go, ‘That’s the one, that’s the one I want to work with you on.’”

Wrapping the evening up in a perfect package is the fact that its run extends over Valentine’s Day – and Rodgers and Hammerstein were nothing if not romantic. “It’s one of their strong suits,” Jorgensen said with a smile. “It’ll be a really lovely show to take your honey to.”

Patrick Street has teamed up with Federico’s Supper Club to offer dinner and show packages, with a special offering for Valentine’s evening. Jorgensen is hoping the show will draw an audience that might not have ventured out to some of Patrick Street’s earlier, lesser-

known productions. Once they’re in, he says, he hopes those same audience members will think about returning for a future performance – such as, for instance, Floyd Collins, which is running from March 11 to 30. ◆ Out Of A Dream runs Feb. 5

to 16 at the York Theatre, 639 Commercial Dr. in Vancouver. It’s on Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m., Saturdays and Sundays at 2 p.m. Tickets start at $19. Buy online at tickets.thecultch.com or by phone at 604-251-1363. twitter.com/juliemaclellan

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604-521-1355

www.nwcrc.ca/beehive-preschool

Full Montessori Curriculum Full Day Group Child Care

57 Seventh Ave., New West. & 4415 Fitzgerald Ave., Burnaby www.cambridgemontessori.ca 778-668-7188

PUDDLE JUMPERS 4304 Parker St., North Burnaby

• ECE Qualified Staff • Daycare • Kinder Care • School Aged Care • Serving Kitchener, Gilmour and Confederation Park Schools

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We offer full day and half day programs

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Preschool & Kindergarten Full Montessori Curriculum Music & French Programs Ages 2.5 to 6 years 1320 7th Ave., New West

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THE MUNCHKIN MANOR EARLY YEARS CHILD CARE CENTRE is a nature-based Reggio-Emilia inspired daycare. Our cozy home environment is central to our philosophy. We offer a full and part time program for infants, toddlers and school age children. Our staff is ECE certified.

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NURTURING THE HEART, MIND & SPIRIT. We provide a comprehensive education that embodies the Catholic faith. Register your child for kindergarten for the 2014 -2015 school year. 604 - 437-1312 • www.stmary.bc.ca • office.smarv@cisva.bc.ca

497 Glenbrook dr., New Westminster


A32 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

Plant the seeds of a glorious edible garden GREEN SCENE

V

Anne Marrison

egetable seed listings are now a glorious circus of heirlooms, new colours, worldwide sources and increased resistance to pests. Plant breeders are also tackling solutions to climate problems In small garden spaces, ornamental vegetables are a wonderful bonus (at least until you harvest them). Peppermint chard is ahead of this game since you can cut-and-come again till frost. Its stems are red at the base merging up into white. For container gardeners, this type of food crop is very practical. Cos (a.k.a romaine) lettuces such as the red-tinged Paris Island can also keep on producing for many weeks if you harvest the oldest, outside leaves first. I have also seen red cabbage used this way in containers. Coloured carrots are always offered separately, but some catalogues list a “rainbow blend” of carrots, which gives a long harvest since different kinds mature at various times. Beet collections in mixed colours also offer the same extended harvest.

There’s also the new cauliflower Graffiti, which is said to be deep purple and show an improved tolerance for heat. Different colours apparently show unique qualities. Limegreen cauliflowers are said to accept low-nitrogen soil while orange heads demonstrate high levels of beta-carotene. Purple-tinged leeks are popular now, and not entirely for their beauty. They’re also exceptionally cold hardy and are sold under many names including the French heirloom Blue Solaise and Darcy’s Purple Leek. For brilliantly coloured salads, radishes have a lot to offer. Starburst (a “watermelon” type) has red flesh inside white skin. The heirloom Black Spanish Round has white flesh and black skin, while White Icicle grows an allwhite root up to 15 centimetres long. The Rat-Tail heirloom radish dating at least from 1860 is still occasionally listed. The roots aren’t edible. But the seed pods give a lengthy harvest and are crunchy, nicely peppery and best when they reach about 25 cm long. Edible pod peas are very practical wherever you grow them because if you miss the early pod harvest you can still use them as shelled peas. Some heirloom pod peas are available with interesting pod colours and sometimes two-tone

flowers. These names include Blue Pod Desiree Pea, Dwarf Grey Sugar, with purple flowers on an approximately 90 cm plant, and Golden Sweet Edible Pod, with yellow pods and two-tone purple flowers. Winter hardiness can be a major issue with kale in some areas, especially if it’s combined with intolerance of wet soil. Winterbor kale is one of the favourites for hardiness and productivity. But the English heirloom Dwarf Green Curled (a.k.a. Dwarf Curlies) promises more. This one is said to tolerate cold, windswept unsheltered gardens with wet, poor soil. It’s described as growing up to 45 cm with tender, delicate leaves. Some edible and pretty vegetables may be too much of a good thing. Golden-leaved purslane is pretty and delicious but almost as invasive as the green form. Another dubious blessing is the heirloom Rampion (Campanula rapunculus) – once popular for crisp, white, edible roots and long spires of purple bells. This one leaves desperate gardeners in its wake as it steadily takes over gardens, roadsides and cracks in asphalt parking lots. Anne Marrison welcomes gardening questions sent to amarrison@shaw.ca. Please include your city or region.

Make some new friends

Cabo By Night by Sarah Bancroft

Last week, we explored the Baja by day - this week, it’s all about what happens after dark.

feast

Make sure to plan dinner at the cliff-side seafood restaurant El Farallon, serving local specialties like grouper, sea bass and tuna ordered by weight and cooked over an open grill. Consider a quote from Hemingway at the bar: “A ship in port is safe, but that’s not what ships are built for.” Sounds like a travel mantra to us. At Capella Hotel, www.capellahotels.com

drink

Rosemary margaritas in the open-air bar while whale watching over the Sea of Cortez. It doesn’t get much better than that. But if you move on to dinner at Cocina Del Mar (try to get the lower tables cantilevered over the sea) you will see it can. The seafood tortilla soup, with little neck clams and white Baja prawns is outstanding. At Esparanza Resort, www.esperanzaresort.com

dine

Right in the heart of downtown Cabo, the open-air, lantern-filled restaurant at the boutique Bahia Hotel gets so busy at dinner it overtakes the lobby. And there is good reason: the food, music and ambiance are all outstanding. Owned by a group of high-profile New York bankers, the hotel is undergoing a room-byroom renovation, but we kind of loved the charm of the original rooms with their kitchenettes and plaster scallop shell over the bed, all for under $150/night. www.bahiacabo.mx/en.htm Read the rest of our Cabo By Night itinerary at www.vitamindaily.com

Closet Zen

Mother of Invention

You won’t be surprised to hear of another new Canadian yoga wear brand, but you might be surprised to find one that makes clothing that can transition to the coffee shop, or even lunch, after your workout. Zen Nomad is a Toronto-based yogawear collection that features tops, dresses, and leggings that work just as well with jeans or jewelry as they do on a yoga mat. The longsleeve asymmetrical practice top ($92) is a wardrobe staple that works under sweaters as well as under the dimmed lights of hatha yoga practice. The Delphine dress ($96) can be paired with leggings during backbends and with boots and tights for a post-workout lunch. And if your New Year’s resolution has been downgraded into a daily practice of savasana, then this whole collection can adapt to that. Relaxation pose was always the one we were best at, anyway. Zen Nomad yoga wear available online at Thieves boutique, www.thievesboutique.com

Why on earth didn’t we think of it first?

by Alexandra Suhner Isenberg

by Marianne Wisenthal

Ontario’s Julie Thompson has beaten us to the punch with the creation of Lil’ Tights ($14.99), thigh-high socks with padded knees. Perfect for crawlers, speedy diaper changes, potty training and layering under clothes during cold snaps, they fit snug and won’t sag during mad sprints to the monkey bars. Lil’ Tights made their Hollywood debut at the Golden Globes gift lounge so don’t be surprised if you see baby Wilde-Sudeikis sporting a pair at the Studio City Farmers Market. 9-48 months at www.skights.com

Bird’s Eye View

Massage Now, Flaunt Later

Americans might claim it as their bird, but the world’s largest population of bald eagles is in Brackendale, BC during the winter.

Even rail-thin supermodels can be dimple-prone— we’ve seen it with our own eyes! While there isn’t a magical cure for the bumps, the texture can be improved with groundbreaking treatments like LPG Endermologie, or Lipomassage (sounds techy, but it’s really a high-performance deep tissue massager). It was invented in France in order to boost collagen production and circulation in burn victims. Of course, the clever French turned it into a beauty gadget. Here’s how it works: You strip down, then slip on a full-body stocking (yes, a little awkward!), and the technician massages away at your “problem” areas, whether it’s thighs, arms, or belly. We visited Vancouver’s esteemed LPG specialist Joy Stewart at the quaint Touch of Joy spa. With intense massaging action over six sessions, the circulation was enhanced, lipolysis reactivated, and overall texture significantly smoother. C’est si bon! It’s never too early to start bikini shopping. $855/6 sessions, $1500/12 sessions, A Touch of Joy, #33–638 W. Sixth Ave., Vancouver, 604-605-4046, www.touchofjoy.ca

by Alexandra Suhner Isenberg

by Anya Georgijevic

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There is also the option of renting one of the cabin (with vaulted ceilings and hardwood floors) for the night. Slip into the hot tub, and the eagle has landed.

Oly’s Pet Connection

$100 per person, $65 for children under 12. $285 for the cabin rental (based on double occupancy). Book at www.sunwolf.net/eagle-tours

(Approx. Value is $500) Look for the Glacier Media & SocialShopper booth along with Urban Safari Rescue Society to drop off your entry form.

Name: Address:

The best way to see these majestic birds is on the Eagle Viewing Boat Trip from Squamish-based Sunwolf. You start with coffee and pastries while they suit you up in the necessary gear (hopefully the rain suit will only be for show, not out of necessity). Then you’ll float down the Cheakumus and Squamish rivers and watch as bald eagles feast on the spawning salmon. End the trip with a steaming bowl of chili next to the fire at their lodge.

Phone:


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A38 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

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Massive home sells for more than $1.1 million East Burnaby house on market for six weeks Niki Hope

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Burnaby NOW • Friday, January 31, 2014 • A39

40 Clan posts 1st win

40 Big night for Big Red

40 Still time for run clinics

SECTION COORDINATOR Tom Berridge, 604-444-3022 • tberridge@burnabynow.com

The week’s best at home and abroad Tom Berridge sports editor

Simon Fraser University women’s basketball alumna Nayo RaincockEkunwe was named the EuroBasket player of the week in round 13 of the Swiss season. The 6-2 forward was a major part of her team, Esperance Sportive Pully, holding on to fifth place in the Swiss national women’s basketball league, as she led her team in their last game with 29 points, nine rebounds and three assists. Raincock-Ekunwe is one of Pully’s top players in her rookie season with the team, averaging 19.5 points and 12.8 rebounds per game. With the Clan, she was a 2013 NCAA Div II AllAmerican, and the national leader in field-goal percentage. Raincock-Ekunwe also holds over eight Great Northwest Athletic Conference records, including most career double-doubles with 63. The EuroBasket player of the week is chosen based on efficiency calculation, as well as game result and importance of the game among other factors. She also had her jersey hung in the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame’s Ring of Honour, that celebrates the top collegiate and high school players each season. Raincock-Ekunwe’s player of the week nod comes in the same week that current Clan player Erin Chambers was named the Great Northwest con-

Juniors draft three from Team B.C. Tom Berridge sports editor

Jason Lang/burnaby now

Cutline intro: Junior Erin Chambers scored a total of 64 points for the SFU women’s basketball team in back-to-back wins over two Alaska teams in Great Northwest conference play last week.

ferernce player of the week. The Clan junior earned the honour following her combined 64-point weekend in back-to-back wins over the Alaska Fairbanks Nanooks and the Alaska Anchorage Seawolves. Over the weekend, the guard-forward shot .629 (22-35) from the floor and .412 (7-17) from beyond

the arc, as well as going 13-14 from the free throw line. “I never really pay attention to the points when I play,” said Chambers in a press release. “I just play what comes at me and take what I can. If we are struggling I might look to focus on shooting, but mainly I just read the court.” Against the Nanooks,

Chambers had 30 points and five rebounds, helping SFU erase a 16-point deficit in the Clan’s 75-73 victory. She followed that up on Saturday with 34 points, five rebounds and three assists as SFU beat the Seawolves, 78-74. Chambers and the now 6-3 Clan host two big games this weekend as Seattle Pacific and

Montana State-Billings come to the West Gym as the top four teams in the conference battle it out. AlongwithSFU’sborder rival Western Washington, SPU and MSUB also boast 6-3 GNAC records. “We’ve played both these teams this season and they were both hard Basketball Page 40

Clan hockey fundraising for Type 1 diabetes Andrew Parent posted his seventh and eighth wins of the year to pace the Simon Fraser University hockey club to weekend wins over Thompson Rivers University. The fourth-year Clan goalie allowed just two total goals in back-to-back victories, including a 1-0 shutout over the third-place Kamloops hockey club. Parent registered a 4-2 win over Thompson Rivers on Friday at the Kamloops Memorial Arena, before garnering his second shutout of the season and the game’s second star in Saturday’s 1-0 victory over the Wolf Pack. The wins clinched a playoff spot for the SFU club. Clan newcomer Scott Brkich

scored the game-winning goal on a second-period power play from Aaron Enns and Jono Ceci. In the opening game, Trevor Milner and Ceci, with the eventual game-winner, both scored in the third period to break a 2-2 tie. SFU held a 2-1 first-period lead on single goals from Colton Schock and Graham Smerek. Thompson Rivers goalie Chris Solecki was named a first star in both games, stopping a total of 81 of 86 shots fired his way. The wins boosted SFU’s leagueleading record to 14-3-0-0, one point better than second-place and defending B.C. Intercollegiate league champion Selkirk College. This weekend, SFU plays a

home-and-home series against fourth-place club Trinity Western University. The two teams play at the Langley Events Centre on Friday, before moving to the Bill Copeland Sports Centre for a rematch Saturday at 7 p.m. The game in Burnaby will also serve as a fundraiser in support of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation. Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is an autoimmune disease that strikes individuals of any age. It occurs when the body’s own immune system destroys the insulin-producing cells in the pancreas, which is an essential hormone needed by the body to obtain energy from

food. The onset of Type 1 diabetes has nothing to do with diet or lifestyle. More than 300,000 Canadians live with the disease. Saturday’s game will feature a silent auction for special gameworn jerseys worn by SFU and autographed following the game. There will also be other auction items, including a stay at the downtown Sutton Place Hotel, and an autographed Martin Jones Los Angeles Kings jersey. All proceeds from the auction will be donated to the foundation. For more information on how you can donate, please visit www. sfuhockey.com or email hockey@ sfu.ca.

The junior A Burnaby Lakers drafted three Team B.C. players in last Sunday’s midget lacrosse draft. The Lakers, which last month dealt their first overall pick to the Delta Islanders in exchange for four players, picked up an additional six players in the second and third rounds of the midget draft held in Port Coquitlam on Sunday. With their second-round selections Burnaby took offensively skilled Mason Pomeroy from Semiahmoo ninth overall. The junior Lakers then took provincial teammembers Davis Goodman from Semiahmoo, Chase PretiPearsall from Vancouver and goalie Thomas Hankins from Maple Ridge with their next three of four picks. Burnaby also picked up Damon Prince from North Vancouver with its final pick of the second round and Parker Colley from Pitt Meadows with its 22nd pick in the third round. “We upped our skill level and our size,” said incoming Burnaby junior general manager Brad Hara. Hara also convinced former Burnaby Cablevision Minto Cup champion and New Westminster junior A head coach Brad Parker to take over the coaching duties behind the Burnaby bench. “We’re going to turn this thing around,” said Hara. “Everybody (I’ve talked to) wants to make Burnaby better.” Hara also put another piece in place towards righting the Lakers’ ship, installing Julian Kolb, who coached the Toronto Beaches to a provincial title in the Ontario junior B league last season, as the new head coach of the intermediate A team in Burnaby. In the Dec. 12 trade that gave Delta the No. 1 pick in the midget draft, Burnaby received in return 20-yearold Islanders goalie David Mather and runner Randy Draft Page 40


A40 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

Still time for Sun Run clinics

UNIVERSITY SPORT

Clan men post first conference basketball win

and 11 points in total to put SFU up 16-2 after four sports editor minutes of play. Big games by juniors Hamilton’s three treys Justin Cole and Sango came just two minutes Niang helped lead Simon apart at one stage of the Fraser University to its second half, helping the first Great Clan lead 60-38 Northwest at half time. “We were due for men’s basketThe scoreline ball conference a good shooting was the largwin this seaest margin ever night.” son. against a Great Cole scored Northwest conJAMES BLAKE a game-high 28 ference oppoSFU men’s head coach points, while nent since the Niang netted Clan began 24 points in SFU’s 98-73 play in the NCAA Division road win over Northwest II in 2010. Nazarene on Jan. 23. On Saturday, SFU were Senior Dillon Hamilton back in the loss column, came off the bench to chip falling 96-79 to Central in with 14 points, includ- Washington. ing three from beyond the Niang had another big arc. Taylor Dunn added a night, scoring 22 points, dozen points to the Clan while David Gebru scoreline. matched his Clan team“We were due for a mate also with 22 points. good shooting night. I’m Trailing 50-35 at the half, proud of how we shared SFU opened the second half the ball and made the extra with a 14-6 run and then pass,” said SFU head coach staged a mini 7-0 rally to James Blake in a Clan press pull within a single point release. with less than 10 minutes Cole set the tempo for left to play. the Clan, nailing a pair of The loss dropped SFU to back-to-back threes just 1-8 and in last place in the two minutes into the game, conference.

Tom Berridge

SFU swimmers win the battles but lose the war in Seattle Simon Fraser University swimmers won 17 of 28 races against NCAA Division I Seattle University, but came away just shy in points, dropping the dual meet 131-125. Clan teams opened with wins in the men’s and women’s 200-yard medley relays. Meghan Quon then notched the Clan’s first win of the day in an individual race, taking the 1,650-yds. freestyle event in a time of 17:36.69. Alex Schofield grabbed her first individual win, placing first in the 200-yds. free in 1:56.14, while Grace Ni won the 100-yds. backstroke in a time of 58.58 seconds. Hans Heyer got the men their first individual win, taking the 100-yds. back in a time of 50.22 seconds, followed by a win for Julian Monks in the 100-yds. breaststroke in a time of 57.29 seconds. Freshman Lauren Swistak won the 200-yds. butterfly with a time of 2:04.23, while Ciaran McDonnell took the men’s fly in a time of 1:52.78. Nicole Cossey earned her first individual win in the 50yds. free in a time of 24.19 seconds, and followed that up with another first in the 100-yds. free in 52.50 seconds. Heyer then won another race for the Clan men, taking first place in the 100-yds. free in a time of 46.42 seconds. Monks also won the 200-yds. breast in a time of 2:05.32, while also taking the Clan’s last individual race of the day in the 200-yds. individual medley. Clan freshman Lucas Greenough also finished second in the event. The Clan won both 100-yds. fly events with Schofield taking the women’s race in a time of 56.84 and McDonnell finishing first on the men’s side in a time of 51.30. The SFU swim teams will be back in action from Feb. 12 to 15 at the Pacific Coast Swimming Conference Championship in La Mirada, California.

For more photos, scan with Layar Jason Lang/burnaby now

Stepping into it: Ronin Geraghty, in green, of the South Burnaby Metro Club Pumas clears a ball ahead of Cliff Avenue player in u-11 boys’ soccer.

BURNABY SPORTS BRIEFS The North Burnaby Boxing Club’s Vincent Franklin won the main event at the Cascade Casino in Langley. Franklin won a grueling decision over Ocean City’s Josh Wright in a 152pound welterweight main event bout. Three other NBBC fighters also participated in the boxing show on Jan. 24. Leo “The Lion” Sammerelli won a unanimous decision over Nolan McKay of Regina in a lightweight bout at 135 lbs. Ilya Kovalenko lost a close three-round split decision at 140 lbs. to Duncan junior welterweight Johnny Williams. North Burnaby’s Connor Hollingshead took on Saskatchewan fighter Austen Kopas in an exhibition match at 112 lbs.

Stealth stymied

The Vancouver Stealth lost its first National Lacrosse League home game, falling 9-8 to the unbeaten Edmonton Rush at the Langley Events Centre on Jan. 25. The Stealth held a 7-1 advantage heading into the second half before Mark Matthews led an Edmonton comeback, scoring two goals and adding three assists.

First power play goal

Rookie forward Marcus Vela scored the go-ahead goal for the Langley Rivermen in an eventual 2-2 tie with the Chilliwack Chiefs in B.C. Hockey League play on Jan. 25. The goal was Vela’s ninth goal this season and first on the power play.

Double production

Kaleigh Fratkin scored her third and fourth goals of the season for Boston

University despite a losing weekend series in Vermont in NCAA Division I women’s hockey. Fratkin scored Boston’s opening goal in a 4-2 loss to Vermont on Jan. 24. The senior defender had her team’s only goal in a 5-1 loss the following day.

Big night for Big Red

Cornell University senior Dustin Mowrey registered a goal and three assists in a 4-4 draw with St. Lawrence, extending his team’s unbeaten streak to six games in NCAA Division 1. Mowrey’s four-point game was the Big Red’s first such effort in three seasons.

Griff named 2nd star

Burnaby Winter Club product Landon Ferraro was named a second star following a two-goal game in the defending American Hockey League champion Grand Rapids Griffins’ 4-1 win over the Texas Stars on Jan. 25.

A second shortie

Adam Helewka scored his 18th goal of the season for the Spokane Chiefs in a 6-2 win over the Kamloops Rockets on Wednesday. The goal was the second shorthanded tally for the second-year Burnaby forward.

A game-winning touch

Marco Ballarin scored the gamewinning goal for the Prince George Spruce Kings in a 5-1 victory over the Coquitlam Express at home on Sunday. The counter was Ballarin’s fourth of the year and second game-winner since making the jump from junior B earlier in the season.

Basketball: Two wins are a must continued from page 39

fought games,” added Chambers. “It’s really just owning what we do well and if we work together we can come up with two big wins.” The two games are part of a fourgame weekend in the West Gym, as the men host Alaska Anchorage on Thursday at 5:15 p.m. followed by the women against Seattle Pacific. Saturday

night the women play first against the Yellowjackets at 5:15 p.m. before the men close out the weekend against Alaska Fairbanks. “These games are huge – we win and we are first in the conference, while two losses put us down near seventh,” said Chambers. “All the girls know the stakes and we are ready to get down into it.”

Training clinics have begun for the 30th anniversary Vancouver Sun Run. For latecomers there are six venues in Burnaby and two in New Westminster offering the 13-week guided clinics to get you ready for Canada’s largest 10kilometre race in April. Programs are available for walkers, novice Learn to Run, more experienced runners and Nordic walking. Clinic registration deadline is Feb. 14. There are walk/run programs at Bonsor rec centre on Sundays at 9 a.m.; Burnaby Lake Sports Complex-West on Wednesdays at 9:30 a.m.; Cameron rec centre on Sundays at 8:30 a.m.; Confederation centre on Wednesday at 6:15 p.m.; Edmonds community centre on Saturdays at 8:45 a.m. and Fortius Sport and Health on Saturdays at 9 a.m. Nordic walking is offered at Bonsor, Burnaby Lake-West and Fortius only. The SportMed training program includes weekly guided sessions with trained leaders, who provide advice, coaching tips and motivational support, as well as online technical support and information. The $139 plus tax clinic fee includes entry to the Vancouver Sun Run and other bonuses. For more information, go to www. vancouversunrun.com.

Draft: continued from page 39

Jones, as well as defender Nick Kapusty and firstyear Ryan Vogrig, who had eight goals and 22 points in just 11 junior games in 2013. Vogrig is the older brother of Tyler Vogrig, the first overall pick of the junior Lakers in last season’s midget draft. The younger Vogrig lit up the B.C. intermediate A league last season with a league-best 69 goals and 119 points. In another move, Hara also sent Burnaby junior goalie Jack Woodhouse to the Port Coquitlam Saints in exchange for runner Corey Wong and a swap of third-round draft picks in 2015. Wong had eight goals in 16 games with the Saints last year.


Burnaby NOW • Friday, January 31, 2014 • A41


A42 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW


Burnaby NOW • Friday, January 31, 2014 • A43


A44 • Friday, January 31, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

57TH ANNIVERSARY 100% BC Owned and Operated Prices Effective January 30 to February 5, 2014.

We reserve the right to limit quantities. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.

Grocery Department

Meat Department assorted varieties

assorted varieties

SAVE

35%

from

assorted varieties

3/6.99

SAVE

35%

Nuts to You Almond Butter

assorted varieties

8.49

SAVE

from

33%

SAVE

19%

3.79

Liberté Méditerranée Yogurt

SAVE

SAVE 2.99

500g product of Canada

30%

6.99

300g product of Canada

3/6.00

SAVE

740ml product of Canada

35%

skim, 1, 2 or 3.25% 4L product of Canada

3/7.50

Tre Stelle Shredded Cheese

Eco’s Coconut Water

assorted varieties

assorted varieties

170-200g • product of Canada

Health Care Department

each

20% off regular retail price

1.99-3.99

4/9.00

250-530g

398ml product of USA

4.99-5.99

package of 6

Gluten Free

52.99

818-829g

Vega Sport is the first complete, natural, plant-based sport performance system specifically developed to help athletes perform at their best – before, during and after training and competition.

Inno-Vite Inno-Q Nol 60 capsules

• Guaranteed stability through a patented process. • Promotes superior heart health. • Boosts energy levels

Macro Greens

Brown Rice Bread

sandwich or regular

5.49

Vega Sport Protein Powder

44.99

Bars

assorted varieties

250g – 454ml • product of Canada

from 3.79

5.99

bins or bags

mini or regular assorted varieties

assorted varieties

7.99

Oriental Rice Crackers

Organic Sourdough Bread

Old Dutch Potato Chips, Restaurante Tortilla Chips or Salsa

Dairyland Organic Milk

Bulk Department

Bakery Department

assorted varieties

assorted varieties

3.99

assorted varieties

1.58lb/ 3.48kg

Bothwell Squeak`rs Cheese Curds for your Superbowl Poutine reg 7.99

Wolfgang Puck Organic Soup

VIP Dishwashing Liquid

41%

5.99

each 24 oz container

Vij’s Frozen Meat Curry Indian Meals

assorted varieties

SAVE

2/6.98

900g

each

Organic Roma Tomatoes Grown in Mexico

Choices’ Own Beef Gravy for your Superbowl Poutine

2 varieties

227g product of Canada

38%

2.98

3.99lb/ 8.80kg

2/4.98

SAVE

900ml +deposit +eco fee product of Canada

Organic Long English Cucumbers Grown in Mexico

Deli Department

McCain Frozen SuperFries for Superbowl Poutine

assorted varieties

assorted varieties

38%

125-200g product of Britain/Canada

Sunflower Kitchen Dips

Happy Planet Smoothies

24%

2/4.00

SAVE

500g product of Canada

37%

SAVE

assorted varieties

220g product of USA

product of Canada

Paradise Valley Boneless Pork Shoulder Roast

Carr’s Crackers

Kettle Brand Potato Chips

1.58lb/ 3.48kg

4.49lb/ 9.90kg

56g product of Canada

33%

15 bags product of USA

value pack

3/5.97

SAVE

7.99

Organic Gala Apples from Cawston, BC

Specialty Chicken Wings

Dagoba Organic Chocolate Bars

Mighty Leaf Tea

Produce Department

425-450g

1L • +deposit +eco fee

29.99

287g

Macro Greens® contains 38 ingredients that feed the body at a cellular level, nourishing the body with antioxidants, co-nutrients, enzymes, vitamins, minerals and amino acids.

product of USA

Happy Anniversary West 57th! Stop by Saturday, February 1st from 11:00am to 3:00pm at 1888 W. 57th Ave, Vancouver to celebrate our 14th Anniversary. We will be hosting a donation barbecue and serving cake and coffee. Take advantage of our many in-store specials. See you there! 2010 - 2013 Awards. Your loyalty has helped Choices achieve these awards. Thank you!

Find us on Facebook: facebook.com/ChoicesMarkets Best Organic Produce

Best Grocery Store

Follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/ChoicesMarkets

2010-2013

www.choicesmarkets.com Kitsilano

Cambie

Kerrisdale

Yaletown

Rice Bakery

South Surrey

2627 W. 16th Ave. Vancouver 604.736.0009

3493 Cambie St. Vancouver 604.875.0099

1888 W. 57th Ave. Vancouver 604.263.4600

1202 Richards St. Vancouver 604.633.2392

2595 W. 16th Ave. Vancouver 604.736.0301

3248 King George Blvd. South Surrey 604.541.3902

Burnaby Crest

8683 10th Ave. Burnaby 604.522.0936

Kelowna

Floral Shop

1937 Harvey Ave. Kelowna 250.862.4864

2615 W. 16th Vancouver 603-736-7522


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