Burnaby Now August 8 2014

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‘It’s just music, man’: Big Sugar at fest PAGE 3

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Behind the silver screen

Magic of the movies:

Vancouver Film School student Morgan Leontowicz turns classmate Minchel Shin into a mystical faun at the Burnaby Village Museum on Aug. 2. The demonstration was part of the museum’s summer series of film industry demos. Every Saturday, till the end of August, the museum is hosting demonstrations from experts in the film industry, revealing various tricks of the trade. This Saturday’s event features animal handlers from Cinemazoo at 1:30 and 2:30 p.m. From noon to 4 p.m., there is a special effects makeup demonstration from Blanche MacDonald Centre. Admission to the museum is free. Chung Chow/burnaby now

Mental health support program cut Program used to provide support for parents of kids with mental health challenges Cornelia Naylor staff reporter

A provincial non-profit that supports families of kids with mental health challenges has had to pull the plug on its parent support program in Burnaby and New

Westminster because of a lack of funding. The F.O.R.C.E. Society for Kids’ Mental Health (FORCE), a West Vancouver-based organization, has funded a Parent in Residence, Danielle Dionne, in Burnaby and New West for a year-and-a-half. Her role has been to empower parents of children and youth who struggle with mental health issues and to help them navigate the child and youth mental health system. “Here’s an example,” director Christie

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gation friendly,” said FORCE founder Keli Anderson, who found school meetings one of the toughest parts of helping her own child manage mental health problems. “It’s very tough to navigate, and just to have somebody else with you can just be another set of ears even, to listen and support some questions that you might have wanted to ask but you don’t know how to ask or you’re forgetting to ask.” The FORCE has had funding from the

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Durnin told the NOW. “You’re a parent and you have a child who has anxiety or has bipolar, and you’ve gone to see your family doctor, and you’re on a wait-list now to see a clinician, and you aren’t sure what to do in the meantime or where to begin.” FORCE Parents in Residence – all of whom have “been there” when it comes to child and youth mental health struggles – can also sit in on school meetings. “The system is certainly not very navi-

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Burnaby NOW • Friday, August 8, 2014 • 3

4 Learn streamkeeping

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See more photos from the film makeup demonstration at Burnaby Village Museum Page 1

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Turn the Lights On: Big Sugar frontman Gordie Johnson (second from right) chatted with the NOW about the alt rock band’s breakup and reunion, various side projects and why they gave the reggae treatment to some of their biggest hits on their latest album.

‘It’s just music, man’

Check out a video of Big Sugar’s reggae-infused rock Page 3 Watch a video of the Uncover Your Creeks streamkeeping program Page 4 Explore the Archives of Lesbian Oral Testimony Page 11 See more Paper Postcards from travelling readers Page 21 Watch a video from the WLA Lakers’ win against Maple Ridge Page 23 See photos from the recent regional swim competition Page 23

Follow the Burnaby NOW on Twitter for news as it happens – @BurnabyNOW_ news

Big Sugar brings reggae-infused rock sounds to the Burnaby Blues & Roots Festival stage Jacob Zinn staff reporter

W

hen Toronto alt rockers Big Sugar broke up at the end of 2003, frontman Gordie Johnson felt it was time for the band to “tap out creatively.” But his musical drive wasn’t gone – Johnson went on to form Texas cowboy metal trio Grady, join Saskatchewan hard rockers Wide Mouth Mason as their full-time bassist and tour in the gospel dub duo Sit Down, Servant!! Likewise, his bandmates kept busy in the six-and-a-half-year interim, but somewhere in that break, the guys started coming up with more musical ideas that suited their former band of 16 years. “The only way it was going to happen is if we were going to do some new music and be an actual band again,” said Johnson. “We only wanted to do it if it was going to be a living, breathing band.” The Canadian rock quintet reunited in

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2010, but with a broader range of genres. While blues and reggae had always been an element to their sound, it was seemingly brought out more than the traditional electric rock ‘n’ roll the band was known for in the ‘90s. But to Johnson, there was no conscious decision to up the reggae style. It just came naturally. “That’s just the sound of us with all of our friends in a room playing music acoustically,” he told the NOW. “We tend to not rehearse with the full electric, double-neck guitar presentation, we tend to do a more stripped down kind of thing. “We just play the music we dig. It’s just music, man.” Nonetheless, that relaxed, stripped-down style comes through on their latest record, Yardstyle, a soulful 13-track LP that’s laidback and smooth from the first track to the last. It also contains rerecorded versions of classic Big Sugar tunes like Turn the Lights On and 100 Cigarettes, which just might come out on the Burnaby Blues & Roots Festival main stage when the band headlines this Saturday.

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“Every night’s different, man – we just play it the way we feel it,” said Johnson. “That’s what keeps it interesting for us and our fans. “I’ve got people who’ve seen us 30 times – I can’t expect them to keep coming to see me play if I just bring it exactly the same every night.” Johnson’s also doing double duty at the fest, performing earlier in the day with Wide Mouth Mason on the Westwood stage in the afternoon, one of the many bands that’s a perfect fit for the festival’s chill atmosphere. That said, Johnson promised a “full-on rock show” from Big Sugar, so things might get loud in Deer Lake Park. He’s bringing his double-neck Gibson, plugging it into a Marshall stack and turning it up to 11. Big Sugar takes the main stage from 8:30 to 10 p.m., closing out the 15th annual festival. Other performers include Matt Andersen, Bettye LaVette and Imelda May. For the full details about the day, check out www.burnabybluesfestival.com.

Last week’s question Are you planning to attend the Burnaby Blues & Roots Festival? YES 56% NO 44% This week’s question Do you support the province’s planned $40/day rebate for parents during the teachers’ strike? Vote at: www.burnabynow.com

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Learn streamkeeping Evergreen B.C. is encouraging Burnaby residents to trade in this weekend’s sand and sun for a chance to get their hands a little dirty. The organization’s Uncover Your Creeks program, an initiative aimed at teaching people how to become watershed stewards, wraps up Saturday at Jim Lorimer Park. Locals are taught streamkeeping basics, including invasive plant removal and water quality testing. “We give them a general overview of how we in an urban watershed impact the health of creeks by the things we do every single day,” said Evergreen’s Sharon Johal. “Everything from fertilizer use to washing your car on the street.” Johal added the survival of these last remaining waterways is crucial to wildlife.

“We saw salmon come back to spawn last fall. It’s important we take care of it because it’s right in the middle of an industrial park, with a Home Depot and a SkyTrain station across the street.” According to Johal, the free drop-in event has been a real success since it kicked off in June. “Public awareness is on the rise. I get a lot of emails asking about the program,” she said. “When you see those people come out, they definitely take something away from it.” Participants must wear closed-toed shoes, bring water and meet at the park just before 10 a.m. Snacks and tools will be provided. For more information and to register, visit www.uncoveryourcreeks.ca. Evergreen is a national not-for-profit that was established in 1991. –Tereza Verenca

Helping nature:

Uncover Your Creeks facilitator Paul Oster holding Himalayan blackberry, an invasive plant that volunteers like Carlo Acuna and Vic Balon (in background) have been digging up and removing.

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Chung Chow/ burnaby now

Support: Program cut continued from page 1

Ministry of Children and Family Development for Parents in Residence in a number of B.C. communities, including Coquitlam, but the organization has never been able to secure funding for Burnaby and New Westminster. “We had been able to have our Parent in Residence from another community cover off some of Burnaby and New West,” Anderson said, “but it wasn’t something that could be sustained without some supported funding.” Local parents can still access a Parent in Residence by calling the Kelty Mental Health Resource Centre at B.C. Children’s Hospital in Vancouver, but Anderson said it’s not the same as having a parent in the community. She said the situation points to a provincewide problem with child and youth mental health funding, which she called “deeply inadequate.” “If, at a provincial level, you don’t have funds that go down to regions and communities, they’re impacted,” she said. “I think there’s funding issues across the board around child and youth mental health.” For more info about contacting a FORCE Parent in Residence, phone 855-887-8004 or visit forcesociety.com.

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Whiz kids enjoy a summer challenge

Twelve top Burnaby students selected for prestigious Shad Valley program Cornelia Naylor staff reporter

Some teens might not light up at the prospect of spending half their summer “immersed in the rewards and rigours of higher learning,” but 11 bright young Burnaby students sure did. Last month, 12 local teens in grades 10 to 12 were among 620 students across Canada to participate in the Shad Valley science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) program. Designed to push students’ intellectual, creative and leadership skills to the next level, the Waterloo, Ont.-based program places students at 12 host universities across the country. For four-weeks, they live in dorms, take in science, engineering, technology and entrepreneurship workshops, and work in

teams to create a prototype of a product with an accompanying business plan. The Burnaby participants – whose career aspirations after high school range from engineering to theoretical physics and medicine to business – said the experience was “life-changing” and nothing like regular school. “From the very beginning they taught us that ‘failure is an option’ and failure is often crucial to success,” said Burnaby South student Marina Gonzalez, who attended Shad at Queen’s University in Ontario. “In school, we don’t have time to learn from our failures.” Moscrop’s Caitlin Wu, another Queen’s “shad,” said much the same. “It was OK to fail, because that meant that at least we tried something different, something that was outside the box,” she said. “A problem in society today is the lack of creativity in ideas – people play it safe.” Wu said it took awhile to get out of that mindset herself. “The most challenging part was learn-

ing not to shoot down crazy ideas immedi- competitive process, based on marks and ately,” she said. “We have become so con- community involvement. “Shad sparks personal growth and ditioned to sticking to the status quo that most of the time, we can’t see the genius healthy self-confidence in Canada’s next behind an idea that seems so far fetched or generation of STEM leaders and change makers – a group that needs special attenthe path that it may lead us to.” tion and support beyond reguFor Burnaby South’s lar high school classroom setFederico Firoozi, who attend“A problem in tings.” Shad president Barry ed Shad Waterloo, being sursociety today is Bisson said. rounded by highly motivated It was also a whole lot of students like him was another the lack of fun, according to the Burnaby novelty. creativity in ideas contingent. “One of the first days at “There was never a dull Shad, I was sitting at a table in – people play it moment,” Wu said, “and there the cafeteria, talking to another safe.” was always something to look fellow Shad about how to find forward to around the corthe volume of a sphere using CAITLIN WU ner.” integral calculus,” he said. Moscrop student Burnaby’s other “shads” this “Soon enough, others joined our table, eager to learn about what we year were Frank Cheng, Harold Xi, Lily were talking about. It really shocked me Xiong, and Nancy Yang (Burnaby North); that there are other people out there who Sarah Savic Kallesoe (Byrne Creek); Angela Yu and Robyn Lee (Burnaby Mountain); are passionate about math.” Building a network of Canada’s best Albert Kragl (Stratford Hall School); and brightest has been a goal of Shad for and Lasya Vankayala (David Thompson 34 years, so getting into the program is a Secondary).

Final count shows homelessness down in Burnaby The final report on the 2014 Homeless Count in the Metro Vancouver Region was released July 31 and confirmed the preliminary findings released in April, of Burnaby’s 58 homeless. This figure confirms a decrease in the city’s homeless number, which was down from 78 in the

last count in 2011. The report defines homeless as not having an expected place to stay, and not paying rent, for 30 days. The report showed that 44 of the 58 homeless in Burnaby were unsheltered. Unsheltered is defined, primarily, as someone

with no physical shelter, such as sleeping in a park or couch surfing at someone else’s house. Thirteen homeless people reported staying in emergency facilities, and one person was of no fixed address. In Burnaby, 25 of the homeless had lived in the city 10 years or

more at the time of the survey. Of the eight people who were new to the city – having lived in the municipality less than one year – all said they came to Burnaby from another part of Canada. Four were from another part of Metro Vancouver, and one was from elsewhere in B.C. None came from

outside the country. There were nine youth and children homeless on Burnaby streets. Ten seniors and 13 First Nations people reported being homeless. The count is done every three years and took place on March 12. – Jennifer Thuncher

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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

Prison expansion plans make no sense

prisons solving problems got a scathing Canada is safe. review in Texas. The last time crime rates were this Yes, you read that right. Even Texas low the Post-It hadn’t been invented and has figured out something that Canada The Beatles were together. apparently has not. So why are the Conservatives spearNot too long ago, Texas was lockheading a multibillion-dollar prison ing up more criminals than expansion? Canada ever could – approxiThe Tories seem determined Burnaby NOW mately five per cent of the to convince Canadians they adult population – but it was don’t feel safe and facts be never enough. damned. Eventually, the Lone Star state took Besides the obligatory opposition money earmarked for even more prisons from the NDP and Liberals, the idea of

OUR VIEW

and invested in mental health and drug treatment. A budget crisis was averted, the incarceration rate fell and the crime rate plunged. The union representing Canadian prison guards has also dug in its heels against the expansion. Prisons have become more crowded and dangerous, for both prisoners and guards, despite a decade of declining crime rates. Part of the reason is that rather than

focusing on rehabilitation or prevention, the ruling Conservatives favour longer sentences while chopping pay for working prisoners and reducing access to libraries. The fact is, longer prison sentences have only ever resulted in higher recidivism rates. Surely, the way to combat that trend is not to put more poor and poorly educated ex-cons on the street. Every Canadian should feel safe these days – except maybe the ones in prison.

Opposing the pipeline expansion B

ration that owns The Vancouver urnaby council’s courageous stand against Kinder Sun and Province. But in the Fossils’ slick proMorgan’s plan to slice paganda, there’s little mention a pipeline bearing Alberta tar of the oil sands’ biggest global sands bitumen through our city reflects valid local concerns. But downside. Leading climate scientist James Hansen estimates it has global significance. that they contain nearly half the The many local, regional and carbon that humans can national reasons for still burn if global temopposing this project Bob Hackett perature increases are to include these: potenstay under the accepted tial spills, explotwo-degree threshold for runsions and fires; taxpayers’ cost away climate catastrophe. in preparing for them; property Bill McKibben, founder of values; earthquake risk; First Nations’ rights; the extra toxicity 350.org and a writer who preof diluted bitumen; groundwater sciently warned of global warming that now kills an estimated quality; long-term marine environment damage from tankers in 300,000 people annually, calls the tar sands a “carbon bomb.” Burrard Inlet; the export of jobs In his now-famous article to refineries overseas; Canada’s “Global warming’s terrifying future energy needs; and the new math,” McKibben labels the continued undermining of our Fossils (like tobacco a generademocracy by the fossil fuel tion ago) a rogue industry: their industry’s (the “Fossils”) excesactive obstruction of the necessive influence. The alleged economic benefits sary transition to a post-carbon economy makes them an enemy are overstated. According to of the planet. Conversations for Responsible “Wrecking the planet is their Economic Development (credbc. business model,” says Naomi ca), oil, gas and support services Klein, who is writing a book on comprise just three per cent of the climate crisis. “That’s what British Columbia’s GDP (and six they do.” per cent of Canada’s), compared If we’re in a state of “planto 76 per cent for B.C.’s service etary emergency” (Hansen’s sector. phrase), what is needed? A No wonder the Fossils are full-scale policy turn, driven by spending millions on public mobilized citizens who won’t relations. Through the Canadian tolerate our business-as-usual Association of Petroleum drift to civilizational Producers, they’ve even made a “thought leadership” advertorial Delay Page 7 deal with Postmedia, the corpo-

IN MY OPINION

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Government tactics questionable Dear Editor:

As a teacher in Burnaby I have a strong interest in seeing the strike/lockout resolved by September. We all want to go back to school. But when the government offered its $40/day subsidy to parents, they threw gas on the fire. I have three questions for the Minister of Education: First, where will the qualified child-care workers and tutors come from? There probably isn’t even enough time or capacity to process the criminal record checks necessary for these tens of thousands of caregivers, even if there were places for them to work. Perhaps parents are to entrust their children to some strangers from Craigslist.

Secondly, will this money be clawed back from parents on income assistance? If so, they will not be able to afford any services for their children – and again we see the provincial government perpetuating child poverty. Also, will the subsidy be taxed back from higher income brackets? Third, isn’t this plan bargaining in bad faith? The government is making plans to replace teachers the week before discussion resumes. Fortunately, I know that British Columbians are not so foolish as to be bribed with their own money. I urge the government to get back to negotiating, appoint a mediator and apply the educational resources to improving our system rather than to insulting teachers. Donna Morgan, Burnaby

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Burnaby NOW • Friday, August 8, 2014 • 7

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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR City should do better Dear Editor:

On Mayne Island, we recycle pretty much everything. And at significant cost, because – hey folks, it’s an island! So my daughter visits me from Burnaby this weekend, and tells me with this new system Burnaby no longer accepts soft plastic in its bins, and residents have to drive their plastic to some centre. And what this means, of course, is that not many people will drive to that centre, but will put their plastic in the garbage. And those who do just counteract the recycling value by using gas. Great. More garbage, more gas emissions. This is better how? And funny, but I used to think of Burnaby as a progressive municipality. Sharlene Lazin, via email

Why midwives matter Dear Editor:

Midwives bring pregnancy and birth back to the realm of the sacred/divine feminine – the shared capacity of the female body to carry and birth a child underwrites the relationship which as much a professional partnership as personal one. The relationship between two women – one professional, the other client – enriches the experience of the pregnancy and birth and provides better health outcomes as one is free to share intimate aches and pains. The naturalistic holistic approaches advocated by midwives – from acupuncture to doulas to homebirths to drug-free pain relief options – are now being backed by recent medical evidence as beneficial. The midwifery approach of care – built on partnership, information, choice and close working relationship – worked for me as a single mother with a mental disorder. Suffering from bipolar disorder, the midwife was there at the hospital facilitating visits with my daughter who was then in foster care. She helped me make choices at a time when I was psychotic and para-

noid, and, once discharged, she continued the home visits till I was stable and had my daughter back in my care. The other medical team wrote me off as “inaccessible,” but the midwife was the only one I could trust and talk to. We all know the savings – reduced C-sections, shorter or no hospitals stays, fewer epidurals etc. – but let us not miss the intangibles – the interpersonal connections, the empowering affirming experience, the close working partnership forged. In a society that has lost connections, midwives bring back the humanness, the time to discuss things that matter, the hands-on care, the personal, the feminine, wrapped in compassionate professionalism. The government should do everything it can to support midwives, to expand the number of trainees, to increase locum positions so that a work-life balance exists, boost benefits so that it can remain a viable profession where being a woman providing care to another woman matters. F. Aden, Burnaby

Press failed its duty

Dear Editor:

Re: It’s Hancott vs. Corrigan in Burnaby mayor’s race, Burnaby NOW, Aug. 1. Burnaby NOW, shame on you! Burnaby First announced its mayoral candidate, Daren Hancott, and it was on page 9. This is front-page information. I am neutral in the civic elections until I gather all the information regarding all the parties. As a newspaper, I think it is your duty to engage the public about Burnaby’s election in an unbiased manner. Please get all the facts out regarding all the parties, so that the citizens of Burnaby can make an informed decisions. That requires giving both parties equal coverage. I want what is best for Burnaby, as does everyone else. So let’s start treating each party equally, and give the citizens of Burnaby the front page coverage of information they need to make an informed decision in November 2014. Maria Marrello, via email

Delay: Exercise responsibility continued from page 6

collapse. End the Fossils’ massive tax subsidies. Divert them to greener technologies and renewable energy. Increase employment through a green jobs strategy, as the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives has outlined. Shift B.C.’s commendable carbon tax to an ongoing revenue-neutral carbon tax-and-dividend system. If the Harper government wants to turn Canada into an authoritarian petro-

state, throw it out in 2015. Slow the breakneck pace of tar sands development so that land reclamation and carbon offsets can catch up, as MLA Andrew Weaver suggests. Encourage international adoption of European-style restrictions on trade in especially dirty oil. Support the growing international fossil fuel divestment movement, like the one that helped defeat South African apartheid, by dumping your own fossilheavy mutual funds. Some analysts say carbon industries are increasingly risky

investments anyhow. Burnaby is a key chokepoint for exported oil sands bitumen. By stopping or delaying the Kinder Morgan pipeline, we can buy time and build coalitions for these more hopeful developments, overcoming the inevitable opposition of the fossils. In doing so, we not only protect our city. We also exercise our responsibilities as global citizens. Bob Hackett is one of the intervenors to the National Energy Board’s hearings on the Kinder Morgan pipeline.

The Burnaby NOW welcomes letters to the editor. We do, however, edit for taste, legality and length. Priority is given to letters written by residents of Burnaby and/or issues concerning Burnaby. Please include a phone number where you can be reached during the day. Send letters to: The Editor, #201A-3430 Brighton Ave., Burnaby, B.C., V5A 3H4, fax them to 604-444-3460 or e-mail: editorial@burnabynow.com

•NO ATTACHMENTS PLEASE• Letters to the editor and opinion columns may be reproduced on the Burnaby NOW website, burnabynow.com The Burnaby Now is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org.

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8 • Friday, August 8, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

Purse snatching suspect sought Mounties are hoping for the public’s help in identifying the suspect of a recent purse snatching at Metrotown. On July 12 at 8:47 p.m., a woman was at the food court at Metropolis at Metrotown when a man stole her black Chanel purse. According to a press release from the Burnaby RCMP, a bystander chased after the suspect but was assaulted outside the mall near Target on Central Boulevard. The suspect is described as a Caucasian man, 18 to 21 years old with short brown hair and a clean-shaven face. At the time of the incident he was seen wearing a zip-up, hooded sweatshirt with thick, two-tone horizontal stripes, blue jeans and white shoes with blue laces. Police are trying to track down the suspect and are asking anyone with information on Photo contributed/burnaby now who he is to contact the detachment at 604-294Who is he? Mounties are trying to ID the suspect, 7922 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477. – Cayley Dobie pictured, of a recent purse snatching at Metrotown.

Man arrested in SkyTrain stabbing Transit Police have arrested a New Westminster man in connection to a recent SkyTrain stabbing near the Edmonds station. Police say Blaine Michael Alan Dunn, 26, was arrested at his home without incident. He has been charged with assault with a weapon and assault causing bodily harm. Dunn appeared in court and was released on an undertaking with conditions to abstain from alcohol and illicit drugs, and to abide by an 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew. The stabbing occurred at 1:40 a.m. on July 27 on one of the last SkyTrains of the night, heading through Burnaby. A 40-year-old Surrey man, who was returning home with his girlfriend, got into an argument with two other men and a woman. The Surrey man was stabbed in the arm before the group of three fled the train. While the other man and woman in the group were arrested, the third man got away. The victim was transported to hospital and received 15 stitches. Anyone with information is asked to call Transit Police at 604515-8300 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477).

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Burnaby NOW • Friday, August 8, 2014 • 9

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A Burnaby cyclist who was wounded in a latenight shooting during a 600-kilometre race through B.C. in June is calling on any witnesses to come forward with their information for the ongoing investigation. Around 1 a.m. on June 1, Craig Premack was riding alone in the Cache Creek 600 along the Trans-Canada Highway when he was shot in the arm. As he started to bleed out, Premack used his pants as a tourniquet and propped himself up against the roadside barrier. “For a moment, I was worried – I was wondering if this was the end,” he told reporters. “After the longest 20 minutes of my life, I could see the lights of what could only be my cycling friends. “I’m extremely thankful to them for the aid and support they gave me while waiting for emergency personnel to arrive.” Premack saw a darkcoloured vehicle drive away from a nearby pullout. Insp. Ed Boettcher, the

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medically cleared to get back on a bike, nor has he been able to return to work, which has burdened him financially. “The shooting of Mr. Premack was a brazen, unprovoked, potentially deadly attack, and we’re very fortunate today to be talking about a shooting and not a homicide,” said Boettcher. Anyone with information regarding the shooting or other incidents is asked to call Lytton RCMP at 250455-2225, or to remain anonymous, call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477).

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10 • Friday, August 8, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

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Burnaby NOW • Friday, August 8, 2014 • 11

16 Today’s Drive

17 Top 5 Things To Do

21 Paper Postcards

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

To check out the archives, scan with Layar

Larry Wright/burnaby now

Preserving history: Archivist Nailisa Tanner at the Simon Fraser University library with some of the Archives of Lesbian Oral Testimony. Tanner will be presenting a lecture about the hidden stories of lesbian history as part of New West Pride. The lecture is set for Monday, Aug. 11 at 7 p.m.

Giving voice to a silent past Archives fills in important historical gaps by preserving stories of LGBT history Jennifer Thuncher staff reporter

For generations the engaging and important stories of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered men and women were not shared publicly in newspaper articles, magazines or the history books. As part of the New West Pride Festival, the New Westminster Public Library is holding a free lecture on the relatively new Archives of Lesbian Oral Testimony – housed at Simon Fraser University on Burnaby Mountain – that aim to bring the long hidden stories of lesbians to light. “I will be talking about why oral history is important and why in particular it is important to LGBT people,” said SFU archivist Nailisa Tanner, who will be pre-

Check

relatives or friends at some point and now senting the lecture. want to add those stories to the collection. “LGBT people, and lesbians especially, Tanner said the great thing about oral they have a really rich and fascinating histories is anyone can be a part of collecthistory, and their voices have often been ing them for posterity. All it excluded from official historical documents. For example, “You don’t have takes is a cellphone, computer or tablet with a voice recorder. you can’t find any census to be an “You don’t have to be an information from 50 years ago academic,” she said. “You about what lesbians were up academic. You can go out and talk to a queer to,” she said. can go out and elder in your life or just talk The project got underway talk to a queer to your grandma with a tape last October. So far, there are five collections of stories and elder in your life recorder.” Tanner said having the many more left to be digitized. or just talk to story collections not only There are at least 100 cassette helps fill in important gaps in tapes, 10 to 20 VHS tapes and your grandma history but also creates contimany video clips still to be with a tape nuity between generations. converted. “By archiving the stories “The collection is growing recorder.” of older queer people we can all the time,” Tanner said. sort of facilitate intergeneraStories come from research NAILISA TANNER SFU archivist tional dialogue and connecprojects and community tions between younger and groups but also from indiolder queer people,” she said. viduals who took it upon themselves to One of Tanner’s favourite collections interview lesbian, gay or transgendered

www.Burnabynow.com

includes stories about “butch and femme” relationships in Toronto in the 1950s and 1960s, before civil rights. “There were these really strict social codes about how you kind of projected what your sexual identity was in order to evade the notice of the police but make other queer people notice you,” she said. In addition to talking about the collections, Tanner will be showing video clips and giving tips on how people can get started collecting stories of their own. The seminar will be held at the main branch of the New Westminster Public Library at 716 Sixth Ave., on Monday, Aug. 11 at 7 p.m. Registration is suggested, phone 604527-4667. To view the archived collection, go to alotarchives.org. New West Pride runs from Aug. 8 to 16, with the kickoff Stonewall Dance tonight (Friday) and the main street party on Saturday, Aug. 16. For the full schedule of events of the nine-day festival, see the website at www.newwestpride.ca.

for breaking news, photo galleries, blogs and more


12 • Friday, August 8, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

ARTS

Shakespeare lessons inspire new memoir

Burnaby native’s book hits the shelves this coming week Anyone who’s gone through high school English knows what it’s like to learn Shakespeare as a teenager, but what about as an elementary school student? Burnaby-born, Los Angeles-based teacher and author Mel Ryane started a Shakespeare Club for grades 3 to 6 students and has compiled a number of often hilarious stories into a memoir titled Teaching Will: What Shakespeare and 10 Kids Gave Me That Hollywood Couldn’t, coming

out this month. “Teaching Will chronicles the first year of the Shakespeare Club, an after-school program created by Ryane as a volunteer at a local elementary school,” reads a post by Ryane on her LinkedIn account. “Her romantic notions of teaching are shattered as she educates her unruly students about the life and works of William Shakespeare. Together they experience both heartbreak and joy as they prepare to mount a production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Teaching Will hits bookstore shelves on Aug. 12. –Jacob Zinn

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14 • Friday, August 8, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

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16 • Friday, August 8, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

today’sdrive

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Dear Tom and Ray: We have a 2005 Toyota Sienna with 52,500 miles on it (I don’t get out much, I know). I drive like an old lady, and it’s been a pretty low-maintenance vehicle until recently. During its last checkup, we were told that it needs a new front differential seal, new rack-and-pinion assembly, new timing belt/water pump, new transmission pan gasket and new rear shocks, all to the tune of $4,800. We still have two kids living at home, and a third who frequently accompanies us on vacation trips. My husband drives a Prius, and we both like it. It has always been our intention to replace the Sienna with the larger Prius V “when the time comes.” Now we are trying to decide if the time has come. We talked to a local dealership about a car on the lot, one of the station-wagon-style Prius V’s. They offered us $7,000 on our car as is, in trade for the Prius V. Of course, we have no payments right now on the Sienna, and pretty low insurance rates. All of that would change with a new

car. Then again, we’d have a new, presumably very reliable car that gets great gas mileage. What to do, what to do? Thanks! –Donna RAY: If ever a second opinion were called for, this would be the situation, Donna. TOM: There are two things you want to find out, Donna. No. 1 is: How much of this work is actually necessary? I’m not saying it’s not needed, but with only 52,000 miles on the car, and you driving like an old lady, it would surprise me if the rack and pinion were gone. RAY: The timing belt and water pump should be done, just based on their age. And it’s possible you need the other stuff, too, but a second opinion would tell you for sure. TOM: The second question is whether you’re being overcharged for whatever work you do need. Off the top of my head, being generous, I’d say the differential seals should cost you about $400, even if you do both of them. RAY: The timing belt and water pump – again, being generous – should be no more than $1,000. The rack and pinion, if you need it, is another $1,000 or so. The transmission pan gasket is $150. And let’s say

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the rear shocks are $400. That’s $3,000, not $4,800. TOM: That’s if you actually need all that stuff. So take it to another mechanic and ask him to go over the whole vehicle from top to bottom, and see how his diagnosis and price match up with the dealer’s.

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“buy” a good review on that site. TOM: And if you really want the Prius V, you can still go ahead and get it. But you might be better off doing the necessary work on the Sienna, for maybe half the amount these guys quoted you, and then sell-

ing the van yourself for $11,000 or $12,000. RAY: But whatever your plans are for the Sienna, we’d recommend a second opinion before either trading it in or dropping five G’s on a 10-year-old car. Write to Click and Clack at www.cartalk.com.


Burnaby NOW • Friday, August 8, 2014 • 17

Top weekend picks

T

here are tons of activities on this weekend, so you will have to choose between our top picks for Aug. 9 and 10. Or better yet, you can try and attend them all. The weekend forecast calls for clear skies with highs around 25C, so bring water, sunscreen and a hat. Check out the Kensington Community Fair on Saturday, Aug. 9 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Kensington Park in North Burnaby. The annual fair features musicians, face painting, crafts, games and community activities. There will be midway rides for the kids and a giant hamster ball that children can climb inside of. Kensington Park is at 6159 Curtis St. Don’t miss the 2014 Africa Musical and Cultural Festival at Swangard Stadium on Saturday, from noon to 8 p.m. This year’s event features drummers, cultural performances, dance groups, food and more. Admission is free. Swangard Stadium is in the northwest corner of Burnaby’s Central Park. Drop by the Ethiopian Community

1

2

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Association’s annual sum- Kensington Park all weekmer festival on Saturday, end. from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. at The final game is Wesburn Park. There will scheduled for 2 p.m. on be an Ethiopian coffee cerSunday. Admission is free. emony, a poetry reading, An interesting highlight is art, fashion, food and chilthere’s a B.C. girls’ Selects dren’s activiteam taking ties. Many on the boys local dignitarthis year. ies have been The B.C. invited to Society attend, so you of Model may see some Engineers familiar faces. is celebratWesburn ing its 85th Park is at anniversary Patterson this weekend. Avenue and The North Moscrop Burnaby track Street. will be open (or more) The annual to the public, Burnaby running minThings to do Blues & Roots iature trains this weekend Festival is on from 11 a.m. this Saturday, to 5 p.m. on Aug. 9 at Deer both Saturday Lake Park. Tickets are and Sunday. While the $50 in advance ($65 at the trains are small, they’re big gates), available online at enough to carry passenwww.burnabybluesfes gers through the park. tival.com/tickets. The two-mile track is at The show runs from 120 North Willingdon Ave. 2 to 10 p.m., and the acts (The main entrance is off include Big Sugar, Wide Penzance Drive.) Mouth Mason, Matt The society has more Anderson, Imelda May than 100 members around and more. the world, and some will For a full lineup, go to be bringing their trains to www.burnaby run on the tracks. bluesfestival.com. Want your event featured The bantam 15-U in our Top 5 column? Send single A baseball details to jmoreau@burnaby championships are on at now.com.

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Students join the fight against hunger Theresa McManus staff reporter

A charity that helped some of the poorest people in Canada has received a helping hand from Burnaby high school students. Henning Nielsen started One More Time out of a desire to help feed homeless people, never thinking it would be something he’d still be doing nine years later. When Nielsen and his contingent of more than 100 volunteers served dinner in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver on July 20, One More Time passed the milestone of having fed and/or clothed 50,000 people. “This will be our 30th big feeding,” said Nielsen, a New Westminster resident. “We do mini feedings all the time.” One More Time, now a registered charity, raises money to put on free meals for the needy through social events such as dances, car washes, personal donations and by selling items at garage sales and flea markets. The next meal will largely be funded by a national philanthropic program. A group of students at Cariboo Hill Secondary in Burnaby contacted One More Time, as they were interested in helping the organization and volunteering at some of its events. It was part of a philanthropy project, with the students ultimately winning. “They ended up winning and got a $5,000 bursary for One More Time,” Nielsen said. “We are going to feed 3,500 people with

the $5,000 bursary. I want them to know it is appreciated.” The Youth and Philanthropy Initiative seeks to engage young people in social change and empower them to participate in the growing of compassionate communities. The organization’s website states that it has awarded grants valued at $6.7 million across Canada since it was started in one school in Toronto in 2002. One More Time recently received the cheque from the Toskan Casale Foundation and the Youth Philanthropy Initiative thanking them for meeting with the students and sharing the “important” work it does. “YPI would not – and could not – have the impact that it does without the experience of students being able to meet with you, without the opportunity to witness firsthand the incredible work you do, and how and where you do it,” said a letter from Julie Toskan-Casel, president of the Youth and Philanthropy Initiative. “We see the passion and the knowledge YPI students exude during each final presentation assembly we attend. We see the direct, personal, realworld involvement. … YPI is making a genuine impact on not only the education, but the very character of these young students.” Some of the Cariboo Hill Secondary students helped serve food at the July 20 meal in the Downtown Eastside. Previously, the students got a firsthand look at life in Canada’s poorest

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Back, from left, Don McMillan, Armaan Rajan, Henning Nielsen and Jared Dutra, with Kobe Li (holding tray) are among those who help to feed those in need through the efforts of the charity One More Time. Larry Wright/ burnaby now

neighbourhood by visiting a crack house, a halfway house and other programs in the Downtown Eastside, helping out at a mini feeding of about 400 people and a larger feeding of about 3,000 people, and making sandwiches and distribut-

ing them to street people. Students have written to Nielsen and One More Time thanking them for sharing their personal experiences and giving them a firsthand look at their activities – and showing them the “very scary” life that people live

on the street. It’s a life that Nielsen has learned a lot about since he launched One More Time on a whim. “Now it’s become my purpose,” he said. “I am not out to change the world. If I help one person, it makes a

difference.” In addition to the students from Cariboo Hill, a group of students from Dr. Charles Best in Coquitlam also chose to work with One More Time as part of the Youth and Philanthropy Initiative program.

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Burnaby NOW • Friday, August 8, 2014 • 19

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Customer Relations: 1-866-999-9890.


20 • Friday, August 8, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

Movies in the square buy you a hotdog and drink. The outdoor pool is in Kensington Park, close to the corner of Hastings Street and Kensington Avenue.

HERE & NOW

I

Jennifer Moreau

t’s not too late to catch a free outdoor movie in the park. The City of Burnaby is screening family friendly films in Civic Square every Thursday evening this month, just outside the Bob Prittie Metrotown library branch. Films start at 8:30 p.m. and run till 10 p.m. Next up is Orz Boys on Aug. 14 (in Mandarin with subtitles), followed by Frozen on Aug. 18, and Planes on Aug. 28. All of the movies are rated G, so bring the kids, pack a blanket and popcorn and make an evening of it.

Free swim

I’m truly amazed at how many fun things there are to do this summer that are totally free. This one is a yearly affair – the Cool Down @ Kensington free swim nights for youth aged 10 to 16. These sessions run Friday evenings, rain or shine, from 8 to 10 p.m., and a loonie will

Community fair next week

Don’t miss the Willingdon Community Fair on Thursday, Aug. 14. The event is free, and there will be tons of fun activities for families, including crafts, free Zumba classes, martial arts demonstrations, live bands, games, face painting, a barbecue and police and firefighter displays. The fair runs from 5 to 8 p.m., and this year marks the 50th anniversary for the community centre. The centre is at 1491 Carleton Ave.

Crooner’s crowd

Henry Thompson’s performance at Music in the Park was quite the hit, I am told. Lindy McQueen from EPIC, the Edmonds residents’ group, dropped us a line to say about 250 people attended the July event – many had blankets and chairs, so it was clear they were coming for the show,

See your community through our window

not just strolling by. “It was so heartwarming, Jennifer. People were coming to be there; they weren’t just walking by and saying, ‘This looks interesting,’” Lindy said. Among those were 10 or so friends and fans of Harry’s, the Burnaby senior known for his smooth voice and a cappella performances. Harry also called the NOW to sing another little tune for us in gratitude for the media coverage. The next Music in the Park event is on Sunday, Aug. 31. (We don’t know who is performing yet, but all of the acts are local talent.) This will be the last in the musical series. Thanks to the folks behind EPIC – Jeff Neufeld and Lindy and Jim McQueen – for organizing the summer music series. I know EPIC would like to do it again next year and possibly expand, but the volunteers need more funding. Hopefully, we’ll see another round next summer. Do you have an item for Here & Now? Send ideas to Jennifer, jmoreau@burnaby now.com, or find her on Twitter, @JenniferMoreau.

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建友会 KENYU KAI Better House Better Life


Burnaby NOW • Friday, August 8, 2014 • 21

For more Paper Postcards, scan with Layar

On the road:

took the NOW to Floreana Island – part of the Galapagos Islands of Ecuador and home to giant tortoises. The couple travelled throughout Ecuador and Galapagos Islands for 18 days earlier this year.

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Curious reptile: Above, globetrotters Susana and Tom Wong

Above, longtime Burnaby resident Rowena List golfing with a gang of kangaroos in Mareeba, Queensland, Australia. Left, Pat and Louise took a trip to Mexico’s Puerto Vallarta and posed for this photo on the boardwalk, also known as El Malecon in Spanish. Contributed photos/burnaby now

IMPRESS WITH A HEALTHY SMILE!

NEW PATIENTS SPECIAL:

Free dental whitening with a complete new patient exam, x-rays and cleaning! Welcome to the newly RE-OPENED Edmonds Dental! We look forward for your visit! Caring Family, General and Cosmetic Dentistry Dr. A. P. Singh.

EdmondsDENTAL

Open 5 days a week including Saturdays.

SOS for Burnaby Caregivers In June, the Burnaby Seniors Outreach Services Society lost its funding to provide vital support to people caring for an elderly loved one. Every donation to this crowdfunding campaign helps pay for various aspects of this program, such as $15 to rent a room for a support group meeting, $25 for a caregiver handbook or $40 to pay or a caregiver’s attendance at a workshop.

Go to FundAid.ca and search for SOS for Burnaby Caregivers

111 – 7738 Edmonds St. - Burnaby, BC

604.553.3456

BURNABY SENIORS OUTREACH SERVICES SOCIETY

THE VANCOUVER CANADIANS ARE BACK IN TOWN

6 game homestand startS SUNDAY! SUNDAY, AUG 10 A&W Family Fun Sunday & Baseball Giveaway First 500 kids 12 & under Gates Open at 4pm. First Pitch 5:05

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TUESDAY, AUGUST 12 Superstar Appearance by Tom Henke & Card Giveaway First 1,000 Fans Gates Open at 6pm. First Pitch 7:05

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 14 Blanket Giveaway First 1,000 Fans Gates Open at 6pm First Pitch 7:05

FRIDAY, AUGUST 15 Scotiabank Bright Future ’Nooner Gates Open at Noon First Pitch 1:05


22 • Friday, August 8, 2014 • Burnaby NOW


Burnaby NOW • Friday, August 8, 2014 • 23

24 Tiebreak beats Braves 24 BNSS athlete awards

24 Four-gold swimmer

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

Burnaby clubs earn 100 spots at regionals Tom Berridge sports editor

Sayla Briggs and Octavia Lau were the big winners at the Simon Fraser regional summer swim championships. Briggs and Lau both won four gold in their respective divisions for the Burnaby Mountain Mantas at the provincial qualifying meet at Central Park Pool last weekend. Briggs won the Div. 5 girls’ 50 and 100 metre freestyle, 50m butterfly and 100m breaststroke. Lau took gold in the Div. 4 girls’ 50 and 100m free, 100m backstroke and 200m individual medley. Two other Mantas, Kevin Wei and Elva Yu, were also big winners. Wei won the Div. 2 boys’ 50 and 100m free and 100m IM, while taking a silver medal in the 50m breast. Yu placed first in the Div. 3 girls’ 50m fly, breast and 100m IM. She was also runner-up in the 100m free. Bryan Yu and Hannah Cui of the Mantas also won four medals apiece at the meet. Yu earned a pair of gold in the Div. 5 boys’ 50 and 100m fly and two silver in the 100m back and 200m IM. Cui was first in the Div. 3 girls’ 50m back and 100m free and second in the 50m free and fly. The Mantas won a total of 59 medals, including 23 gold. Also striking gold were Lauren Sartori in the Div. 5 girls’ 100m fly, Ethan Xue in the Div. 6 boys’ 50m free, Boris Zhang in the Div. 1 boys’ 50m free, Peter Huang in the Div. 2 boys’ 50m fly and Sean Li in the Div. 3 boys’ 50m back. Sartori also won silver in the 100m breast and bronze in the 50m fly. Xue had a second-place medal in the 100m free. Zhang placed third in the 50m fly and Huang was also third in the 50m back. Xavier Lau swam to

three silver medals in the Div. 5 boys’ 50 and 100m free and 50m fly. Other Mantas’ multimedal qualifiers included Bryan Cheung, Megan Kao, Teresa Peng, Henry Huang, Fu Yamaoka, Desiree Wu and Aaron Cheong. Louisa Tsang, Daniel Kim, Leroy Wang, Emma Hwang, Shawn Hwang and Roy Lin also medalled for the Mantas.

57 for ’Cudas

Ashley Ko, Leo Shen and Alessia Marquez were all double For gold medallists for more photos, the host Burnaby scan Barracudas swim with club at the proLayar vincial qualifying meet. Ko won the Div. 1 girls’ 100m free and IM and was runner-up in the 50m free and back. Shen won the Div. 7 boys’ 100m back and 200m IM and was second in the 100m free and fly. Marquez won a pair of gold in the Div. 5 girls’ 100m back and 200m IM. Randy Ho was another four-medal winner, winning gold in the Div. 6 boys’ 100m free, silver in the 50m free and 200m IM and bronze in the 100m back. Amy Kang placed first in the Div. 1 girls’ 50m breast and second in both the 50m fly and 100m IM. Jakub Vincalek won a gold in the Div. 7 boys’ 100m back and silver in the 100m breast and 200m IM. Justin Lee was the Div. 2 boys’ winner in the 50m back. Lee also earned bronze in the 50m fly and 100m IM. Cayden Liang took top spot in the Div. 2 boys’ 50m breast and second place in the 100m IM. Maria Sulaver and Garrett Yeo also won gold medals in their respective 100m breast finals. The Barracudas garnered a total of 57 medals, 13 of them gold. Emi Wong was another four-medal winner, taking Swim Page 24

Chung Chow/burnaby now

Tight checking: Burnaby’s Mackenzie Burns, right, creates a turnover for Team B.C. in a 15-1 win over Manitoba at the National midget lacrosse championships at Queen’s Park Arena on Tuesday. The nationals run through the week, with the midget gold-medal final at Queen’s Park at 1:45 p.m.

Senior A Lakers take Game 1 of WLA lacrosse semifinal Tom Berridge

sports editor

Robert Church made the Burnaby Laker believers. The crafty Laker righthander scored four times to lead Burnaby to a 10-5 victory over the Maple Ridge Burrards in Game 1 of the Western Lacrosse Association semifinal at the Bill Copeland Sports Centre on Wednesday. Church scored a back-to-back pair in a 4-1 first period and one each in the next two periods, while Tyler Richards provided the backing in goal, kicking out 34 shots to post the win in goal. “We kind of jumped on them early. (The Burrards) were not prepared for what we offered and we just kept pushing on them for the rest of the game,” said Richards. “It was definitely our most complete

game.” Burnaby kept the pressure on for the remaining two periods, getting goals from Dane Stevens, with his second of the game, and Church, with his fourth, to start the second and third periods, respectively. Stevens tied Church for top pointgetter with five points. Tyler Digby had a four-goal game, including Burnaby’s 8-3 goal late in the middle frame. Shawn Dhaliwal gave the home team its biggest lead late in the contest, scoring on a clear run to the crease at the 18-minute mark of the period. Casey Jackson garnered three points, all assists, while newcomer Chris O’Dougherty scored his first goal for the Lakers, shorthanded on a transition break with Pete

McFetridge in the second period. The Lakers are currently 5-1 since an 8-6 loss at home to Victoria in July in what Richards called a pivotal point in the season for him and the team. “From then to now is how To I expect myself to play,” he watch a video, said. scan After a strong finish to the with regular season, the Lakers Layar are hoping to build confidence as they move on in the playoffs. “We have to play to our strengths and dictate what their offence will do,” added Richards. “It’s a new sense of belief in ourselves. We’re proving to ourselves that we can win at this level.” Game 2 of the playoffs is Saturday in Maple Ridge. Game 3 is back at the Copeland centre on Monday. Both games are 7:45 p.m. starts.

Jr. B Steelers open season versus Sockeyes The Burnaby-based Grandview Steelers open their Pacific Junior Hockey League season against the defending Tom Shaw conference champion Richmond Sockeyes on Sept. 11. The Steelers play their home opener at the Burnaby Winter Club on Sunday, Sept. 14 against the Port Moody Panthers, which was moved from the Brittain conference this sea-

son to accomodate the new Langley Knights franchise that took over from the North Delta Devils that folded. The Grandview club will play all its home games this season on Sunday at 4 p.m. Grandview’s final game of the regular season will be played on Feb. 15 against Delta at home. Grandview will play four exhib-

tion preseason games, beginning at home against the Delta Ice Hawks on Aug. 23. The Steelers will also play exhibtion games in Port Moody on Aug. 27, a return matchup against the Ice Hawks in Delta on Aug. 30 and at home against the Abbotsford Pilots on Sept. 7. tberridge@burnabynow.com


24 • Friday, August 8, 2014 • Burnaby NOW

Chung Chow/burnaby now

Golden girl: Burnaby Mountain Manta’s Sayla Briggs won four medals at the Simon Fraser region provincial qualifying swim meet at Central Park Pool last weekend.

Swim: B.C.’s to be held in Kamloops continued from page 23

silver in the Div. 6 girls’ 50m fly and 200m IM and bronze in the 100m fly and back. Cameron Dickson won three silver medals in Div. 4 boys’ races, while Rowan Cheung and Catlin Paige won three bronze in their respective divisions. Other Barracuda multi-medal qualifiers included: Markus Wong, Ricky Dang and

Olivia Graham. Erica Marquez, Henry McKenzie, Brady Liu, Conlin Duong, Martina Blazevic, Mitra Suseendran, Kate Wang, Montavi Kidd, Ivan Phung and Joanne Lee also qualified with single medals for the host club. The B.C. summer swimming championships will be held in Kamloops from Aug. 11 to 17. Twitter @ThomasBerridge

AA Braves beaten on tiebreak The Burnaby Braves did themselves proud at the B.C. bantam 15-and-under AA provincial baseball championships. The tournament hosts – riding a three-game win streak through the wildcard playdowns – blanked top seeded Cloverdale 3-0 in the opening game, before finishing pool play with a 2-2 record. Burnaby ace Cole DallaZanna, a second-year lefthander, overwhelmed the Spurs with his sidearm delivery not allowing a run through six innings. Aaron Gardner came on to successfully close the game in the seventh inning. The unlucky Braves were denied a spot in the final four following a threeway tie for second place in their pool that was decided on run differential. Ironically, it was the

Get the Key to Exclusivity

Chung Chow/burnaby now

Shutout arm: Strong pitching gave Burnaby an opening day shutout over favourite Cloverdale.

Cloverdale Spurs that beat out the Braves for the semifinal berth. The Surrey club

went on to beat Abbotsford in the provincial championship final.

North athletes of the year awards Soccer players Ali Zahedi and Michella Grippo were named Burnaby North Secondary’s Grade 12 athletes of the year. Alex Boswell, Mazen Al-Darwesh, Bryan Cheung and Brian Shim were North’s senior male runners-up. Alicia Kan,Vivian Chen, Vanessa Agonos, Alison Gu and Carr-Lee Visona were shortlisted in the senior female athlete category. Ryan Wong and twin sisters Allyson and Christina Dickson shared Grade 11 top athlete awards.

Enoch Cheung, Vivian Li, Michelle Kao, Tess Woldring and Hannah To were runners-up. Junior male and female athlete awards went to Devon Jones and Kaitlyn Tsang. Robert Green and Calvin Hua-Nguyen and Megan Lai were North’s juvenile athletes of the year. Justin Chau and Kimia Tavakoli took home the bantam athlete of the year awards. tberridge@burnabynow.com

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Burnaby NOW • Friday, August 8, 2014 • 25


26 • Friday, August 8, 2014 • Burnaby NOW


Burnaby NOW • Friday, August 8, 2014 • 27

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