NEWS 3
COMMUNITY 11
Hospital campaign launched
WWE stars return home
SPORTS 27
All-girls ball hockey league formed
5
THINGS TO DO THIS WEEKEND THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2020
There’s more at Burnabynow.com
LOCAL NEWS – LOCAL MATTERS.
EXTREME MAKEOVER: Painter Steve Boal works on the “Swinging Girl” for a project to refurbish the iconic Heights sign. Read more about this project on page 3.
SEE PAGE 13
PHOTO CORNELIA NAYLOR
City getting serious about fixing northwest rec centres Chris Campbell
ccampbell@burnabynow.com
When you look at some of the community facilities in Burnaby, you see some that need more than TLC – they need to be replaced. Nowhere is that more true than in northwest Burnaby, the stretch from Kensington all the way to Boundary Road. For example, the Willingdon Community Cen-
tre was originally built in the early 1960s, and later renovated with an addition in 1981.The Confederation Park seniors centre was built way back in 1988 and the Eileen Dailly pool in 1991.The Kensington ice arena is more than 40 years old. There have been newer facilities added in this area, such as the modern McGill library, but the City of Burnaby has recognized up-
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grades are needed and has embarked on an information-gathering process. “To date, we have gathered community feedback and conducted a Needs Assessment of programs, facilities, and community spaces; reviewing community centre development trends; and analyzing future space needs,” says the city. “This process will inform the redevelopment of community spaces in northwest Burn-
aby.” Two open houses have now been scheduled to detail what the community has said is needed in northwest Burnaby and list potential programs for new and existing facilities. The two open houses are happening on: ! Wednesday, March 4, 5:30-7:30 p.m. at the Willingdon Community Centre ! Saturday, March 7, 10
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a.m.-2 p.m. at the Eileen Dailly Leisure Pool & Fitness Centre Current community facilities in northwest Burnaby include: ! Willingdon Community Centre ! Confederation Park facilities (includes Eileen Dailly Leisure Pool and Fitness Centre, McGill Public Library, Confederation Seniors Centre, SummitYouth Centre and a variety of out-
door amenities) ! Kensington Park Complex (including arena) The city says it reached over 1,400 people through a survey, and engaged with many community members at two pop-up events and seven focus group sessions. If you have any questions or comments about the project, residents are urged to email civicprojects@ burnaby.ca.
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2 THURSDAY February 20, 2020 • BurnabyNOW
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY February 20, 2020 3
City now BUSINESS
‘Swinging Girl’ set to make her return
Cornelia Naylor
cnaylor@burnabynow.com
When the neon “Swinging Girl” on Hastings Street in Burnaby’s Heights neighbourhood stops swinging, people notice. When she disappears, people panic. That’s why the Heights Merchants Association decided to warn community members last fall before the sign was taken down to be refurbished. But that didn’t stop some from calling anyway when it happened, according to Heights Merchants Association executive director Isabel Kolic. “Lots of people noticed that she was missing, and I think they were alarmed that they’d lost her forever, but we quickly told them that, no, the city was taking care of her,” she said. Kolic said the iconic sign had been having mechanical issues for a while. So the last time it stopped swinging, in the fall, the city decided to take it down and give it a thorough once-over. It was taken to Mainland Signs in Richmond, under the direction of Sicon Signs, which is contracted to maintain the sign. “It’s so much easier for them to do the quality work while it’s in the shop as opposed to hanging off the side of a building trying to repaint it,” said City of Burnaby heritage planner
Lisa Codd. Step 1 of the process was to create a stencil of the sign, so its colours – the two-toned blue dress, the red lips and pale-peach face, arms and legs – could be meticulously replicated. The sign had been touched up with paint for years, according to Sicon Signs owner Tim McLean, so the second step was to sandblast away layers of flaking paint. Inside the sign, the motor was repaired and cleaned and a bearing replaced, McLean said. Painter Steve Boal, who was tasked with repainting the sign, said he recognized it as soon as it came into the shop. He said he remembered seeing it as a kid when taking the bus to Vancouver. “It was pretty hard to miss. Back in the ’80s there was not a lot of neon around, and it just really stood out, and I thought it looked really cool,” he said. The sign was originally commissioned by Helen Arnold in 1955 for her store, Helen’s Children’s Wear at 4142 Hastings St., to draw the eye of customers then increasingly taking to automobiles. By the time the store was sold 52 years later, in 2007, Helen’s Swinging Girl had become a beloved landmark, and the city stepped in to save it. It bought the sign from
Iconic sign: The ‘Swinging Girl’ (above) and the neon Heights sign (below) have been refurbished. PHOTOS CORNELIA NAYOR
Sicon Signs, which had bought out the original creator and owners of the Swinging Girl, the Wallace Neon Company, in the 1970s. (Most of the Lower Mainland’s iconic neon signs were not owned by the businesses they advertised, McLean explained.They were rented from sign companies, like Wallace.) The city then contracted Sicon Signs to refurbish it.
In place of “Helen’s,” the top of the sign was changed to read “Heights.” In 2010, the city then listed the sign on its community heritage register, officially naming the girl on the swing Helen, in honour of Arnold. The city hoped to have the Swinging Girl swinging in the Heights again this week. The cost of the project will be about $10,000, according to Codd.
HEALTH CARE
Hospital foundation launches $30-million campaign
Janaya Fuller Evans
jfullerevans@burnabynow.com
Burnaby Hospital Foundation is launching its most ambitious fundraising campaign to date, with the help of a prominent Burnaby family. The Proud History, Bright Future campaign aims to raise $30 million in the next one to two years. The Beedie family, which established the well-known real estate company Beedie Development Group, is donating $8 million towards the campaign. “We have very deep roots here,” Ryan Beedie said at the campaign announcement. “I was born in this hospital in 1968, and our office is just down the street.
Our company has been in Burnaby for 66 years now and will be for the foreseeable future.” The Beedie family sees the hospital, which was built in 1952, as a priority for the community, as well as for them personally, Beedie said. “It’s long overdue,” Beedie told the NOW, adding the last major update to the hospital was decades ago. “It’s keenly needed in this community. It cannot happen soon enough.” The $30 million will go towards Phase 1 of the hospital redevelopment, which will include the Keith and Betty Beedie Pavilion, named for Ryan’s parents. Keith, who passed away in 2017, was a big supporter of
the hospital. In the past, the family donated more than $2 million toward the facility. The Burnaby Hospital Foundation is taking a community-minded approach to fundraising for the campaign, according to Kristy James, the foundation’s CEO. “We have a very supportive community,” she said, adding the campaign will take a lot of work. “Finally now, after years of advocating and waiting, we’re on the verge of a brighter future in health care for all of us,” James said at the announcement. Mayor Mike Hurley thanked the Beedies for their contribution. “I believe that we all have
a duty to lift someone up when we have the chance to do so,” he said regarding the Beedies’ donation. “You’ve lifted our whole community up, and I think that’s something really very special.” Construction on Phase 1 is expected to begin next year.The first phase of the redevelopment project is expected to cost about $550 million. Phase 1 is a six-storey, 11,858-square-foot tower with 78 beds. It includes the hospital’s maternity and newborn services as well as a unit for adults with mental health and substance use concerns. The patient rooms are all single rooms with their own bathroom. The facilities support building will be extend-
New facility: A rendering of the redevelopment of Burnaby Hospital. PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
ed and renovated, and increased parking is also included in the first phase.
The total budget for the hospital’s redevelopment is $1.3 billion.
4 THURSDAY February 20, 2020 • BurnabyNOW
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY February 20, 2020 5
City now
MISSING TEETH?
ENERGY
We can help!
Burning garbage could heat Burnaby homes City eyes using local waste-to-energy plant
The New Westminster Youth Ambassador Society Supports
The energy could also be used for community facilities.
each year.That’s in part because it would offset the use of natural gas but also because using the hot water produced by the facility would avoid energy losses that come from converting steam to electricity. In all, the city estimates up to 70,000 tonnes of CO2-equivalent could be saved through that process. That’s the equivalent of tailpipe emissions from nearly 31 million litres of gasoline
– roughly 470,000 refuels of a 65-litre tank – according to calculations by the NOW using federal government statistics. Burnaby and Metro Vancouver are expected to appeal to the federal and provincial governments through the Canada Infrastructure Program. In September last year, the provincial and federal governments committed $150 million for green infrastructure. City staff said the incinerator heating project would be “very well-suited” for some of that funding, which is earmarked for projects that meet one of three criteria, including reducing pollution. If approved, the project will be funded up to 73.33% (40% from the feds and 33.33% from the province), with the rest to be funded by MetroVancouver.
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Your home may one day be heated by burning garbage – but that would be a net positive for the environment. It all depends on whether a project at the Metro Vancouver Waste-to-Energy Facility, located in Burnaby, succeeds.The city and regional district are putting in a joint proposal for funding from the federal and provincial governments to help fund the project. The waste-to-energy facility currently burns garbage to produce steam, powering a wind generator to produce electricity for the region. City staff were given the go-ahead from council last July to work with Metro Vancouver staff on a feasibility study for a project that would capture the heat produced from the process for residential and business use. If approved, the proposed project would convert the steam to hot water, which would be transported through an underground system to nearby properties.The heat from the water could be used for home
heating and hot water and potentially for cooling, according to a city staff report. The energy could also be used for community facilities, like swimming pools and ice rinks, along with industrial uses, staff said. Staff noted the project would prevent thousands of tonnes of carbon emissions
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6 THURSDAY February 20, 2020 • BurnabyNOW
Opinionnow OUR VIEW
Premier sold out principles with no bridge tolls
Look, we get it – nobody wants to pay more to drive. We hate gas taxes and we hate bridge tolls, but both are effective ways to deal with the climate crisis Canada and the rest of the world face. Both raise money to fight climate change, and they discourage some people from driving – pushing them in the direction of taking transit. So it was painful to watch Premier John Horgan last week in New Westminster when he updated work on
the Pattullo Bridge replacement. “Safer, easier, toll-free commutes is what our government is dedicated to,” Horgan said. Yeah, Horgan is committed to toll-free commutes, which is why he got rid of tolls on the Port Mann and Golden Ears bridges. We guess it was smart politics because the BC NDP did well in Surrey.We just hope it was worth selling out the party’s principles that claim to want to fight climate change.
Sadly, New Westminster and even Burnaby will both suffer from any increased traffic People who take transit have to pay to use the service, so why is it so hard to grasp that drivers should have to pay to use a bridge or a road? And don’t say it’s because drivers already pay taxes that fund the road system, because transit users pay those same taxes.
As for the bridge itself, people in Surrey and Delta have to stop thinking that it will magically solve their commuting woes.The bridge is being replaced because it’s old and decrepit – not to necessarily make commutes faster.The current bridge is unsafe, which
is why the wider lanes will be welcomed. Surrey and Delta have both complained about the new bridge only being four lanes and, unfortunately, Horgan played into that with his announcement. Horgan said “a fourlane bridge with four real lanes” is an appropriate way to start, but the bridge has the capacity to expand to six lanes, or five lanes with counterflow, in the future. As transportation experts will tell you, the issue of “induced demand” means
that if you add more lanes for traffic, you only attract more traffic. Sadly, New Westminster and even Burnaby will both suffer from any increased traffic with a new Pattullo Bridge. Our communities are already suffering from the piles of traffic that roll through on a daily basis. Tolls would have likely reduced that traffic volume, but hey, there were votes to get in Surrey, so who cares about Burnaby and New Westminster?
MY VIEW KEITH BALDREY
Look for First Nations to end up sidelined It is apparent that the protest that began over a natural gas pipeline has turned into something much bigger. Ironically, it threatens to harm what this protest was supposed to be about from the beginning – Indigenous rights.The protest has spread well beyond B.C.’s borders and taken on a national scope. Railways are being blockaded, thus threatening the economy of the entire country. The protest has become a catch basin for various assorted “causes” and wrongs. At the protest that blockaded the B.C. legislature last week, I heard protesters denounce everything from colonialism to pipelines to fossil fuels to capitalism in general. Lost in this chorus is the fact so many of B.C.’s 204 First Nations actually support many of the things now being condemned. The Coastal Gaslink pipeline that was originally at the heart of this protest has the support of the band councils of 20 First Nations along the pipeline route, including that of the Wet’suwet’en.The hereditary chiefs, however, oppose it. The Federal Court of Appeal’s recent decision that gave the green light for the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion to go ahead noted that 120 of 129 First Nations along that pipeline’s route either support the project or at least do not oppose it. At least two consortiums of First Nations are actually trying to buy the TMX pipeline in order to allow their members to share in
potential economic prosperity. Many First Nations are trying to take advantage of opportunities that may rescue their members from what are, in many instances, situations of grinding poverty.Those efforts could be thwarted by a protest that seems to have been taken over by the well-organized environmental protest movement. In no way are any of these developments surprising.There has long been schisms among B.C.’s 204 First Nations, and it has been obvious that the environmental protest community has exploited that reality by hiving off some of those nations into their camp. Inevitably, unless the hereditary chiefs change their position, this protest will merge with the simmering protest against the TMX pipeline. Many people will be arrested for civil disobedience. Political protests have a greater chance of eventual success if they can combine several causes under the same umbrella.That is exactly what seems to be happening, which may prove unnerving to both federal and provincial governments across the country. This tinderbox was created long ago. It has been waiting for something to come along to set it alight. That “something” turned out to be Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs, who will likely be sidelined eventually by a potentially massive, broad-based protest against all pipelines. And many First Nations may well be worse off as a result.
’TWAS SAID THIS WEEK ...
OUR TEAM
Burnaby being as diverse as it is, there’s bound to be some tension at one point or the other. Michel Pouliot, page 12
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School construction conflict
Social Credit MLA ElwoodVeitch warned that funding for a new Forest Grove elementary school could be withheld if the school board insisted on hiring only union workers to build it.Veitch accused NDP members on the board of “playing provincial politics.” But board chair Barry Jones said hiring union workers had been a 10-year policy in Burnaby, and a government move against the board’s decision would be an attack on local autonomy. He said school board had already been “emasculated” by governments and complainedVeitch’s threats illustrated more of the same.
CHRIS CAMPBELL
Editor
CANADIAN COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER AWARD 2013
ccampbell@burnabynow.com THE BURNABY NOW IS A MEMBER OF THE NATIONAL NEWSMEDIA COUNCIL, WHICH IS AN INDEPENDENT ORGANIZATION ESTABLISHED TO DEAL WITH ACCEPTABLE JOURNALISTIC PRACTICES AND ETHICAL BEHAVIOUR. IF YOU HAVE CONCERNS ABOUT EDITORIAL CONTENT, PLEASE CONTACT PAT TRACY AT EDITOR@NEWWESTRECORD.CA. IF YOU ARE NOT SATISFIED WITH THE RESPONSE AND WISH TO FILE A FORMAL COMPLAINT, VISIT THE WEB SITE AT MEDIACOUNCIL.CA OR CALL TOLL-FREE 1-844-877-1163 FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION.
BurnabyNOW THURSDAY February 20, 2020 7
Opinionnow INBOX
BCA has ‘shameful’ legacy in this city Editor: When I heard the news that Burnaby Citizens’ Association councillors Colleen Jordan, Paul McDonell and Dan Johnston were quitting the BCA because they were not doing enough on affordable housing, I nearly chocked on my coffee. According to them, it all came to a head over their colleagues’ refusal for the city to subsidize rents on a new “non-market” rental development on Sussex Avenue. The “affordable” rents will be $1,338 for a onebedroom apartment, which we all know will not be affordable for many renters. However, the councillors have known this since at least Dec. 13, 2017 when 64 rental units were at a demoviction public hearing. At the hearing, councillors were told by activists, residents and the Society to End Homelessness in Burnaby that subsidized rents in the new rental building will be unaffordable. The new affordable units built would rent for over $1,300/month, while the existing one-bedroom units rented for between $700 and $1,000. Councillors Jordan, McDonell and Johnston had no problem with that and voted the project through. In fact, in the years between 2011 and 2018, they voted to destroy over 800 of the most affordable market rentals in the Lower Mainland and threw 2,500 low- and moderate-income renters out of their homes while wholeheartedly defending their housing strategy. These same councillors also passed the Me-
trotown Downtown Plan in 2017 with substantial public opposition. The plan puts over 5,000 of Burnaby’s rentals at risk of demoviction and resulted in developers and landlords literally making billions overnight. Only a fool would take their excuse for quitting the BCA at face value. But this is not a defence of the BCA. How can people in Burnaby trust a party that was complicit for two decades while formerMayor Derek Corrigan waged a war on Burnaby renters and the homeless. In my opinion, the party should quietly die so Burnaby can look past this shameful legacy of Corrigan and his backers. Murray Martin, Burnaby
New bridge will hurt us Editor: I attended the Pattullo Bridge announcement (on Monday, Feb. 10). Not a single person from Burnaby. No mayor or councillors. Both Burnaby and New Westminster will suffer from additional traffic from the new, wider bridge where each lane of traffic can carry about 30% more traffic per hour than the old bridge. The only solution is what was proposed when Highway 1 was constructed. A direct connector/ link from Highway 1 to the new Pattullo Bridge from the Cariboo interchange via tunnel/road to McBride, then over the bridge. It would be somewhat similar to the Cassiar connector that was built connecting to Second Narrows/Ironworkers bridge. How long do we have to wait for the connector? Nathan Davidowicz, Burnaby
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, email to: editorial@burnabynow.com (no attachments please) or fax to: 604-444-3460. Letters to the editor and opinion columns may be reproduced on the Burnaby NOW website, www.burnabynow.com.
In Burnaby Schools, we teach kindness and we celebrate diversity When students feel welcome, supported, respected and safe, they are more engaged in learning.
Burnaby proudly celebrates Pink Shirt Day on February 26.
Together, we can make a difference! Mayor Mike Hurley and City Councillors: Pietro Calendino Sav Dhaliwal Dan Johnston Colleen Jordan
Paul McDonell Joe Keithley Nick Volkow James Wang
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8 THURSDAY February 20, 2020 • BurnabyNOW
City now ENVIRONMENT
City removing cherry trees The City of Burnaby will be removing more heritage cherry trees in the Heights area. A city spokesman told the NOW a second group of cherry trees will need to be removed as part of the Boundary Road Combined Sewer Separation and Water Main Replacement project. This is the same project that forced the city to re-
move cherry trees last year. For this stage, six boulevard trees on Boundary Road between Oxford Street and Hastings Street will be removed and replaced. This project will involve replacing sidewalk, boulevard and trees along Boundary Road. The trees will be removed later this month or early
March – before nesting season. The six cherry trees will be replaced with 12 cherry trees, in accordance with the city’s tree bylaw.They will be planted as close to the original trees as possible. Letters have been sent to houses in the Boundary Road neighbourhood to alert them of the upcoming work.
Burnaby Public Library www.bpl.bc.ca
We support diversity, inclusivity and
PINK SHIRT DAY! Visit https://bit.ly/2wnu42l or come in and talk with us for materials that address bullying. #LiftEachOtherUp
Celebrate Diversity
Februa ary y 26, 2020 BC Pink Shirt Day April 8, 20 020 International Day of Pink
Will yo ou be wearing pink to stand against bully yin ng, discrimination, homophobia and tra ansphobia? On those days celebrate divverssity by wearing pink at school.
Be creative!
bctf.ca/DayofPink • DayofPink.org
A message from the Burnaby Teachers’ Association
BurnabyNOW THURSDAY February 20, 2020 9
CityConnect
Your Connection to the City of Burnaby!
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BURNABY TRANSPORTATION PLAN UPDATE UNDERWAY
Our city’s Transportation Plan is 25 years old! It’s time for an update.
We’re working with the community to build a new plan that responds to how we live today and how we want to live in the future as the city grows.
We look forward to seeing you there!
Transportation is an essential part of everyday life. Decisions we make about transportation affect how we build our city, and how it works over the long term. An effective transportation plan can help us meet our goals for social connection, safety, environmental sustainability and more.
Stay Connected!
burnaby.ca/yourvoice
cityofburnaby
Watch for consultation for Phase 2 this spring. Sign up for our newsletter at burnaby.ca/transportationplan to find out more information and get involved.
CITY OF BURNABY–PUBLIC HEARING–ZONING BYLAW AMENDMENTS The Council of the City of Burnaby hereby gives notice that it will hold a Public Hearing
TUESDAY, 2020 FEBRUARY 25 AT 6PM
in the Council Chamber, 4949 Canada Way, Burnaby, BC to receive representations in connection with the following proposed amendments to “Burnaby Zoning Bylaw 1965”. 1)
Burnaby Zoning Bylaw 1965, 2) Burnaby Zoning Bylaw 1965, 3) Burnaby Zoning Bylaw 1965, Amendment Bylaw No. 1, 2020 - Bylaw No. 14121 Amendment Bylaw No. 2, 2020 - Bylaw No. 14122 Amendment Bylaw No. 3, 2020 - Bylaw No. 14123 Rez. #16-34 Rez. #18-25 Rez. #18-26 5000 Glenlyon Place 4161 Dawson Street 4161 Dawson Street From: CD Comprehensive Development District (based on M2 From: CD Comprehensive Development District (based on RM5s From: CD Comprehensive Development District (based on RM5s General Industrial District, M5 Light Industrial District) Multiple Family Residential District, C3 General Commercial Multiple Family Residential District, C3 General Commercial District, P2 Administration and Assembly District and District, P2 Administration and Assembly District and To: Amended CD Comprehensive Development District Brentwood Town Centre Development Plan as guidelines) Brentwood Town Centre Development Plan as guidelines) (based on M2 General Industrial District, M5 Light Industrial District, M5r Light Industrial District, the Big To: Amended CD Comprehensive Development District (based To: Amended CD Comprehensive Development District (based on Bend Development Plan, and the Glenlyon Concept Plan on C3, C3f General Commercial District, RM5s Multiple C3, C3f General Commercial District, RM5s Multiple Family guidelines and in accordance with the development plan Family Residential District and Brentwood Town Centre Residential District and Brentwood Town Centre Development entitled “5000 Glenlyon Place, Burnaby BC” prepared by Development Plan as guidelines and in accordance with the Plan as guidelines and in accordance with the development Taylor Kurtz Architecture and Design Inc.) development plan entitled “Gilmore Place Phase II Suitable plan entitled “Gilmore Place Phase II Suitable Plan of Plan of Development – Tower 5” prepared by IBI Group) Development – Tower 6” prepared by IBI Group) The purpose of the proposed zoning bylaw amendment is to permit the construction of a two-storey light industrial and The purpose of the proposed zoning bylaw amendment is to permit The purpose of the proposed zoning bylaw amendment is to permit office building with an accessory restaurant/café. construction of a residential high-rise within Phase II of the Gilmore construction of a residential high-rise within Phase II of the Gilmore Place Master Plan Site. Place Master Plan site.
All persons who believe that their interest in property is affected by a proposed bylaw shall be afforded a reasonable opportunity to be heard: » in person at the Public Hearing » in writing should you be unable to attend the Public Hearing: Email clerks@burnaby.ca Letter Office of the City Clerk 4949 Canada Way, Burnaby, BC V5G 1M2 Fax 604-294-7537
burnaby.ca |
Please note all submissions must be received by 3:45pm on 2020 February 25 and contain the writer’s name and address which will become a part of the public record.
Copies of the proposed bylaws may be inspected at the Office of the City Clerk at 4949 Canada Way, Burnaby, BC V5G 1M2 from 8am to 4:45pm weekdays until 2020 February 25.
The Director Planning and Building’s reports and related information respecting the zoning bylaw amendments are available for public examination at the offices of the Planning Department, 3rd floor, in Burnaby City Hall.
NO PRESENTATIONS WILL BE RECEIVED BY COUNCIL AFTER THE CONCLUSION K. O’Connell OF THE PUBLIC HEARING
CityOfBurnaby | 4949 Canada Way, Burnaby, BC V5G 1M2
CITY CLERK
Fo ur
1Be d
Ho m
es Re m
ai n
10 THURSDAY February 20, 2020 • BurnabyNOW
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Communitynow Resilience, grit got Burnaby brothers to WWE Moscrop grads returned to their alma mater last week to share their story with students Cornelia Naylor
cnaylor@burnabynow.com
When Harvinder Sihra walked into his old Burnaby high school last week, he had a flashback of his younger, scrawnier, teenaged self arriving at school in the mornings more than 15 years earlier. “Every morning when I used to come in, I’d have my wrestling music playing, and in my mind I was at a wrestling arena,” he said. For Harv and his older brother Gurvinder, professional wrestling was an escape to another world, full of larger-than-life characters they passionately wanted to be a part of. “Besides hockey, that’s all we really watched,” Gurv said. “We watched it as a family. It wasn’t just the two of us watching, dad, mom, the whole family.” The duo practised wrestling moves in the Moscrop Secondary School lunchroom and told their friends they wanted to be stars on WWE, the biggest profes-
sional wrestling promotion in the world. “Everybody used to laugh.They thought it was so far-fetched,” Harv said. Last Wednesday, however, the duo stood in front of a gym full of Grade 8 to 10 students to talk about how grit and resilience helped them to do just that. Gurv and Harv Sihra, who now wrestle under the ring names Sunil and Samir Singh, a Bollywood-inspired tag-team duo, earned their first WWE contract in 2016. But it had been an uphill battle from the start to get there. “We faced a lot of hardship, obstacles, especially being smaller guys trying to survive in a big-man world,” said Gurv. “Most wrestlers that you see are six-foot-five, 200-plus pounds.” (Gurv is five-foot-10. His brother is five-foot-nine.Together they weigh just over 300 pounds.) They began wrestling for smaller promotions in 2005, including promoter Tony Condello’s so-called “Death
Then and now: WWE wrestler and Moscrop grad Harvinder Sihra, right, poses by his old locker last week. On the left, Sihra poses years earlier at the same locker, decorated with WWE heroes.
PHOTO TWITTER
FEB 22, 27, 29 | 8PM PM M FEB 24 & 26 | 2PM shadboltcentre.com | 604-205-3000 shadboltcentre boxoffice@burnaby.ca |
STICK TO IT: Moscrop Secondary grad Harvinder Sihra talks to students at his alma mater about his long journey to the WWE as his brother and WWE tag-team partner Gurvinder listens. The two spoke to Moscrop students on Feb. 12. PHOTO CORNELIA NAYLOR Tour” in Northern Manitoba. “We got all the way up north to the reservations, driving 72 hours,” Harv said. “Sometimes we’d be in the car for five days, but we never had a grain of doubt that we were doing whatever it takes to make it.” Between shows and small towns, the duo would send their resumés and photos and videos of their matches to WWE. In 2008, in an attempt to wow WWE recruiters with their work ethic, the brothers flew to Toronto, lied their way backstage at a show at Air Canada Centre and started handing out their highlight videos and photos. “They told us to get the hell out and never to contact WWE ever again,”
Harv said. “That broke our hearts.” Six years later, they said they got a chance to give WWE bigwig Paul Michael Levesque (a.k.a.Triple H) a 30-second elevator pitch. But that wasn’t their big break either. Levesque recognized the pair as the “Bollywood Boyz” – their ring name at the time – and said, if they really wanted to make it as a Bollywood act, they should go to India and break into the movie industry there. Harv gave it a shot, even though he didn’t know anyone in the movie industry in India, he said, and eventually landed a small, uncredited role in Brothers, a 2015 film starring Bollywood superstar Akshay Kumar. But his goal was always WWE, he said.
In June 2016, the Sihra brothers finally got their big break with an invitation to compete in the promotion’s first-ever Cruiserweight Classic, a 32-man tournament in Orlando, Fla. showcasing up-and-coming
You take your failures and you use them to your advantage
talent from across the globe. Today, wrestling for WWE is the duo’s full-time job. “You can’t take no for an answer,” Harv told Moscrop students. Besides determination,
the brothers stressed the importance of hard work and resilience. “You take your failures and you use them to your advantage,” Gurv said. “You learn something from them.” The Sihra brothers’ talk at Moscrop is one example of what Burnaby schools are doing to support mental health skills and social emotional learning, according to the school district. “Increasing understanding and support of mental health and well-being is a key goal in our strategic plan,” stated a district press release. To find out more about what the district is doing to promote mental health in schools, visit https://tinyurl. com/SD41mentalhealth.
M BU B Y BY Y GIACOMO PUCCINI The BC Gaming Commission
12 THURSDAY February 20, 2020 • BurnabyNOW
City now Anti-racism group hosts community dialogue Dustin Godfrey
dgodfrey@burnabynow.com
An anti-racism group is hoping to hear from a diverse range of voices when it hosts a community dialogue on global migration to Burnaby. That means hearing not only from the converted but also from those who are skeptical of immigration. The organizers say the intent is to reach beyond the echo chamber. Burnaby Together is a coalition group led by Burnaby Family Life intending to tackle racism and hate in the community, part of the province’s Organizing Against Racism and Hate program. The group is planning to hold on Feb. 26 a community dialogue described as a “provocative forum on how communities are changing.” “Burnaby being as diverse as it is, there’s bound to be some tension at one point or the other.We see it sort of manifest from time
to time, in terms of there was some sort of white supremacy posters around the library at one time,” said Michel Pouliot, executive director of Burnaby Family Life. “Sometimes (we get) direct reports of incidents where newcomers are made to feel like they don’t really belong in Burnaby. And I think that you’re watching what’s happening south of the border, and some of that sentiment is reflected here as well.” With that in mind, Pouliot said the group wanted to have a community forum to talk about what it means to live in a culturally diverse community. “We often have those events and we bring people together to try to talk about anti-racism and how do you tackle racism?” he said. “What we found is that we tend to always get the same people around the table, and those people are the people that already support cultural diversity.”
Pouliot said the group decided it needed a new approach to try to go beyond preaching to the choir, and they’re hoping the forum will draw people with a variety of viewpoints on the matter. The event will work to facilitate those speaking Arabic, Farsi and Chinese languages, said Ana Maria Bustamante, a coordinator with Burnaby Family Life. She added the facilitator, UBC researcher Alden Habacon, will be laying out ground rules, and everyone will have to follow those rules as soon as they’re laid out. Pouliot said he has confidence in Habacon as a facilitator to ensure a safe environment for everyone involved. The event will be held at Burnaby Neighbourhood House (4460 Beresford St.) near the Metrotown SkyTrain station from 6 to 8 p.m. on Feb. 26.
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City now
1
CHECK OUT SOME SERIOUS VIDEO GAMES at the inaugural BashFest at the Delta Hotel at 4331 Dominion St.Tickets are $45 for one day or $60 for three days.The event starts at 5 p.m. on Friday and runs Saturday from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. More info at smash.gg/ tournament/bashfest/.
PHOTO ISTOCK
2
Gaming, robotics and art are on the agenda
GO FOR A WALK at the Coldest Night of theYear and raise money for the local homeless community during the coldest time of year. If you haven’t already, you’ll have to register quickly – the walk is on Saturday at 4 p.m. Or you can support walkers by giving $20 or more at cnoy. org/location/burnaby.
3
MARVEL AT OUR FUTURE ROBOTIC OVERLORDS at the VEX Tower Takeover.The high school robotics competition is holding its last-chance qualifier at BCIT on Saturday ahead of the provincial championship in West Vancouver a week later. Best part – aside from the robots – is that it’s free! For more info,
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THINGS TO DO THIS WEEKEND
4
MAKE SOME ART WHILE SURROUNDED BY ART at the McGill
5
library at 4595 Albert St. The family-friendly art program is being held from 1 to 4 p.m. and is being put on by the Burnaby Art Gallery, inspired by its current library exhibit, Justin Patterson: Bad Moon Rising. No registration required. For information, call 604-299-8955 or see www.bpl.bc.ca/events.
STAY IN AND WATCH SOME NETFLIX. The forecast is for rain, so why not take some time with yourself, a bowl of popcorn and some new releases? This week, Netflix is releasing two original series: volume three of The Chef Show and part one of The Expanding Universe of Ashley Garcia.
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City now Ombudsperson coming to town If you feel you been treated unfairly by a provincial or local public organization, you now have a place to air your complaint.
BC Ombudsperson staff will be holding in-person appointments to hear complaints from the public the week of Feb. 24 in Metro
Vancouver. To make an in-person appointment, call 1-800-5673247. For more, visit www. bcombudsperson.ca.
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Laissez les bons temps rouler! Date:
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Time:
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Location: 7230 Acorn Avenue, Burnaby
For more information, call 604.526.2248. For more information, call 604.526.2248.
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY February 20, 2020 15
Entertainment now Brandi Carlile, Steve Earle to play Burnaby Blues Fest A Grammy Award winner and a classic American folkrocker are the headliners for this year’s expanded Burnaby Blues + Roots Festival. The festival has just announced its summer lineup, plus a new format for this year’s show at Deer Lake Park. Previously held on one Saturday in August, this year’s festival will include two days of performances – on Friday, Aug. 7 and Saturday, Aug. 8. Friday night’s entertainment will be headlined by Steve Earle and the Dukes, while the Saturday headliner is Brandi Carlile. Earle, now 65, has been making music and touring since kicking off his career in Nashville in the 1970s. His latest album, Guy, pays tribute to his longtime friend and mentor, Guy Clark, who died in 2016. Carlile – known as a singer, songwriter, performer and producer – has a slew of Grammy Award nominations and five Grammy Awards to her credit.
Headliners: Steve Earle and the Dukes are lined up to play the Burnaby Blues Fest on Aug. 7 in the festival’s first Friday night outing. Music will also run Saturday, Aug. 8 at Deer Lake Park. PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
Friday’s lineup will also include Canadian singersongwriter ColterWall and folk-rocker Amigo the Devil. On Saturday, audiences can also enjoy Alabamabased rock-and-roll/soul band St. Paul and the Broken Bones, along with Black Pumas, nominated for Best New Artist at the 2020 Grammy Awards, plus the blues/soul/R&B sounds of Son Little, the soul/neofolk/R&B stylings of Tonye
Aganaba, and the folk-rock tunes of singer-songwriter Jeremie Albino. Tickets are $35 earlybird for Aug. 7 and $50 for Aug. 8.There’s an earlybird Internet presale today (Thursday, Feb. 20) from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. (password FESTIVAL), and regular sales begin Friday, Feb. 21 at 10 a.m. Buy through www. ticketmaster.ca or find more info at www.burnabyblues festival.com.
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City now Students invited to RCMP academy Ever thought of becoming a Mountie? If you’re a student in the Burnaby school district aged 16 to 18, you can see what that would be like at Burnaby RCMP’s first-ever youth academy. From June 29 to July 3, 2020, participants will learn about frontline policing, forensic identification, mental health outreach, safe social media use, drill and physical
and mental well-being. Students will also see presentations by various RCMP units, including Police Dog Services and the Emergency Response Team. “We’re really excited about the opportunity to bring theYouth Academy to young people in our community,” RCMP Cpl. Mike Kalanj said in a press release. “Our officers and
staff are looking forward to showcasing the work that we do each and every day keeping Burnaby safe.” The academy is being put on in partnership with the Burnaby school district. “At Burnaby Schools we work to create learning experiences that empower students with the skills they need to succeed,” school board chair GaryWong said.
“We appreciate our partnership with the RCMP, which is enabling this wonderful career exploration opportunity for our students.” The application deadline is March 13.To apply, visit the career services department at your school and fill out an application form. Students will need to complete a physical capabilities test and an interview.
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Construction is underway. Stay informed. Sign up at TransMountain.com
As construction of the Trans Mountain Expansion Project progresses, we want you to be informed about potential activity in your neighbourhood so you can plan accordingly. On our website, you can view an interactive map of construction areas, sign up for notifications, track what’s happening along the route and much more. As always, safety is our number one priority, every metre of the way.
info@transmountain.com
I
1.866.514.6700
I TransMountain.com
Le présent message contient des renseignements importants. Si vous avez besoin d’une traduction, veuillez communiquer avec info@transmountain.com
Committed to safety since 1953.
BurnabyNOW THURSDAY February 20, 2020 19
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20 THURSDAY February 20, 2020 • BurnabyNOW
Artsnow ARTS CALENDAR TO SATURDAY, FEB. 29 Golden Year, a 50th anniversary exhibition by the Burnaby Artists Guild, at Deer Lake Gallery, 6584 Deer Lake Ave. Admission by donation. Info: www. burnabyartscouncil.org.
777 Columbia St., part of the Vancouver Chamber Music Series. Info: www. anvilcentre.com.
Magnificat, a concert by Amabilis Singers, featuring soprano Erin Sutton, organist Lin Kim, violinist Andrea Siradze and string
ensemble, directed by Ramona Luengen with pianist Ingrid Verseveldt, 8 p.m. at New Westminster Christian Reformed Church,
8255 13th Ave., Burnaby. Tickets $25 regular, $15 for secondary school students, free for children under 12, available online at www.
eventbrite.ca or by calling 604-897-7258. Info: www. amabilissingers.org. Send entertainment listings to calendar@burnabynow.com.
Drinking Habits 2: Caught in the Act, presented by Vagabond Players at Bernie Legge Theatre, Queen’s Park, New Westminster, with shows Thursday through Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. Tickets $17, or $15 for seniors and youth. Tickets: www.vagabondplayers.ca/ tickets or 604-521-0412. TO SUNDAY, MARCH 22 Looking Through a Hole in the Earth, featuring the work of Genevieve Robertson, at Burnaby Art Gallery, 6344 Deer Lake Ave. In the BAG Family Sunday is also running in connection with the exhibition on March 8. For full details see www. burnabyartgallery.ca or call 604-297-4422. TO END OF MARCH Burnaby Neighbourhood House is hosting an art exhibition by Nadia Diamond at its North House art wall, Mondays through Thursdays from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Open house Friday, Feb. 21 from 6 to 8 p.m. at North House, 4908 Hastings St. Info: 604-294-5444 or email northinfo@burnabynh.ca. THURSDAY, FEB. 20 Samantha Martin and Delta Sugar perform at the Studio Theatre at Shadbolt Centre for the Arts, 6450 Deer Lake Ave., tickets.shadboltcentre. com or 604-205-3000. SATURDAY, FEB. 22 TO SATURDAY, FEB. 29 Madama Butterfly, presented by Burnaby Lyric Opera in the James Cowan Theatre at Shadbolt Centre for the Arts, 6450 Deer Lake Ave. Tickets: tickets. shadboltcentre.com or 604-205-3000. Info: www. burnabylyricopera.com. SUNDAY, FEB. 23 Vancouver Youth Symphony Orchestra performs at 2:30 p.m. at Michael J. Fox Theatre, 7373 MacPherson Ave. It’s the Senior Orchestra concerto winners’ concert, and admission is by donation. Info: www.vyso. com. SATURDAY, FEB. 29 Viano String Quartet performs at 7:30 p.m. at Anvil Centre Theatre,
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY February 20, 2020 21
City now Keithley, D.O.A. featured in doc Dustin Godfrey
dgodfrey@burnabynow.com
Burnaby councillor and punk rock legend Joe Keithley and his band, D.O.A., will be the subjects of an upcoming documentary. According to an Instagram post by Keithley, who also goes by the stage name Joey Shithead, the documentary will be titled Something Better Change. The film will focus on Keithley and his “journey from punk to activist to activist politician and still-per-
forming punk musician,” Keithley wrote on Instagram. “I’ve been at this for over 40 years and have no intention of stopping.” Director Scott Crawford has previously focused on the Washington, D.C. punk scene in the ’80s in Salad Days (2014) and the early days of Creem, a rock magazine that launched in 1969, in Boy Howdy (2019). Producer-director Paul Rachman took a more broad look at the U.S. punk scene from the ’80s in American Hardcore (2006).
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In a description on Something Better Change’s Facebook page, the filmmakers noted the defining punk bands of the ’80s – Black Flag, D.O.A., Dead Kennedys, Circle Jerks – which paved “the way for the eventual explosion of punk bands through radio and MTV in the decades to come.” Keithley ran for a city council seat in 2018 under the Burnaby Greens banner, which opposed the dominant Burnaby Citizens Association slate, includ-
ing then-mayor Derek Corrigan. Keithley won a seat on council, making him, at the time, the only non-BCA member of council besides independent Mayor Mike Hurley. In a brief Facebook exchange, the filmmakers confirmed the film is expected to be released in August 2022 – just a few months ahead of that year’s municipal election.They added regular attendees of city council should expect to see the filmmakers at work during some council meetings.
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Help the University of Guelph improve hearing g healthcare across Canada. Connect Hearing and Professor Mark Fenske at the University of Guelph are seeking participants who are over 50 years of age, have never worn hearing aids and have not had a hearing test in the last 24 months, for a hearing study that investigates factors that can influence better hearing. Study Parameters The researchers will examine listening in a range of situations, from one-on-one, to group conversations, watching TV and wider social contexts like supermarkets and other noisy environments, and how it effects connection and socialization.
Why Participate? It is estimated that 46% of people aged 45 to 87 have some degree of hearing loss, but most do not seek a solution right away. In this study you’ll be playing an important part in determining the key factors around identifying hearing loss and what influences the decision to seek treatment.
Participants will be significantly adding to growing knowledge surrounding hearing loss. You can register to be part of this groundbreaking new hearing study by calling 1.888.242.4892 or visiting connecthearing.ca/hearing-study *Wingfield, A., Tun, P. A., & McCoy, S. L. (2005). Hearing Loss in Older Adulthood: What It Is and How It Interacts With Cognitive Performance. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 14(3), 144–148. † Study participants must be over 50 years of age and have never worn hearing aids. No fees and no purchase necessary. 1. Cruickshanks, K. L., Wiley, T. L., Tweed, T. S., Klein, B. E. K., Klein, R, Mares-Perlman, J. A., & Nondahl, D. M. (1998). Prevalence of Hearing Loss in Older Adults in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin: The Epidemiology of Hearing Loss Study. Am. J. Epidemiol. 148 (9), 879-886. 2. National Institutes of Health. (2010).
22 THURSDAY February 20, 2020 • BurnabyNOW
Artsnow SAVE THE DATE – FEB. 29
MAGNIFICAT
WHAT’S HAPPENING? The Amabilis Singers present Magnificat, a concert featuring the Magnificat by young Norwegian composer Kim Andre Arnesen, featuring organ, string ensemble and soprano solo. WHERE AND WHEN? The concert is on Saturday, Feb. 29 at 8 p.m. at New Westminster Christian Reformed Church, 8255 13th Ave., Burnaby (between First and Newcombe streets). WHO’S PERFORMING? Amabilis is a 60-plusvoice community choir, originally formed in 1980 as the Douglas College Community Choir. It became an independent community choir, under its current name, in 1989. The choir is led by artistic director Ramona Luengen, with pianist Ingrid Verseveldt. For the Magnificat
concert, the choir will be joined by soprano soloist Erin Sutton, violinist and string ensemble leader Andrea Siradze, and organist Lin Kim. WHAT’S ON THE PROGRAM? A write-up about the concert notes that the Magnificat, also known as the Canticle of Mary, is taken from the Gospel of Luke and has been a source of inspiration for countless composers over the eras, including Palestrina, Bach, Mozart, Franz Schubert, Anton Bruckner and Krzysztof Penderecki. Arnesen’s Magnificat, the centrepiece of the program, was conceived as a prayer for the sick and the poor, out of hope for those who struggle, and as a musical reflection of Mary, who herself was of humble means. It’s a 40-minute, seven-movement work scored for strings, piano,
organ, choir and soprano solo, and it’s described as a “remarkable, heartfelt journey supported by beautiful melodic writing, radiant harmonies and exquisite tenderness.” Audiences will also hear Martin Sedek’s I Sing of a Maiden, Pärt Uusberg’s Ave Maria, and Dan Forrest’s new work The Sun Never Says. The concert will be sung without intermission. HOW CAN I GET TICKETS? Tickets are $25 regular price (adults and seniors), $15 for secondary school students and free for children under 12. Tickets are available online at www.eventbrite.ca (search for Magnificat with Amabilis Singers, or use a direct link at www.tinyurl. com/AmabilisMagnificat), by calling 604-897-7258, or at the door. WHERE CAN I GET MORE INFORMATION? For more on the choir, including details of an upcoming 40th anniversary celebration, see www. amabilissingers.org.
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY February 20, 2020 23
Artsnow
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Check out a new art show at Neighbourhood House Burnaby Neighbourhood House is inviting everyone in to check out the work of a local artist. An open house is set for tomorrow (Friday, Feb. 21) for a new exhibition on the North House art wall. It features the work of Nadia Diamond, a Persian-Canadian artist who is focused on “spiritual techniques for living, selfawareness and awakening,” as a press release says. Diamond grew up with a mother who was a miniaturist and gained a bachelor’s degree in arts, prompting Diamond to pursue painting and drawing herself. At the age of 19, she moved to Turkey, where she gained experiences in a variety of art forms and mediums – including live dancing in music festivals, stage decorating, fabric design, character concept art, painting and 3D face design projects. Within three years, she was on her way to Canada,
where she gained experience working on interior design projects. “She is a proud Canadian citizen who is focused on her artistic journey and hopes to become even more successful in future,” said the release. Diamond’s work will be on display for the rest of February and throughout the month of March. You can stop in to check
it out anytime Monday through Thursday, 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The open house is on Feb. 21 from 6 to 8 p.m. at Burnaby Neighbourhood House’s north location, 4908 Hastings St. For information, call 604294-5444 or email north info@burnabynh.ca. See www.burnabynh.ca for more on Neighbourhood House offerings.
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24 THURSDAY February 20, 2020 • BurnabyNOW
Artsnow
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Burnaby Lyric Opera stages Madama Butterfly Julie MacLellan LIVELY CITY
jmaclellan@burnabynow.com
If you’re an opera fan in Burnaby, you’re likely already looking forward to this one. If you haven’t booked your tickets already, snag them now for Burnaby Lyric Opera’s mainstage production of 2020, Madama Butterfly. Music director Angus Kellett and stage director Brian Parkinson lead a cast of emerging professional opera singers in Giacomo Puccini’s beloved opera, set in turn-of-the-20th-century Japan, which tells the tragic story of a beautiful young geisha, Cio-Cio-San, who falls in love with and marries B.F. Pinkerton, an American naval lieutenant. Soon after their wedding, Pinkerton returns to America, and three years pass as Cio-CioSan raises their son and awaits his return. But, when Pinkerton finally comes back, it is to take his son back to America with him. Burnaby’s own Chloe Hurst (soprano) stars as Cio-Cio San, with tenor Martin RennerWallace as Pinkerton.They’re joined by mezzo-soprano Emma Parkinson as Suzuki and baritone Scott Brooks as Sharpless. If you’re familiar with the opera, you’ll already know that it contains music that’s considered some of the most beautiful ever written, including the aria Un Bel Di and the Love Duet. It will be sung in Italian, with English surtitles. The production is onstage at Shadbolt Centre for the Arts from Feb. 22 to 29,
with 8 p.m. shows on Feb. 22, 27 and 29, plus 2 p.m. matinees on Feb. 24 and 26. Tickets are $36 regular, or $15 for youth. Buy through tickets.shadboltcentre.com or call 604-205-3000. ART AT THE LIBRARIES Art lovers, be sure to stop by two Burnaby Public Library branches to check out a pair of ongoing off-site exhibitions by Burnaby Art Gallery. At the Bob Prittie (Metrotown) library branch at 6100Willingdon Ave., you can check out Warren McLachlan’s Future Primitive. McLachlan’s work uses pages torn from the bindings of science fiction and natural history books, which serve as the foundation for handmade paper and collage works. His work explores themes surrounding “the speculative nature of human imagination and our desire for a structured and definitive understanding of the world,” as a write-up about the show notes.The show is underway until May 3. Meanwhile, at the McGill branch (4595 Albert St.), you can see Justin Patterson’s Bad Moon Rising, featuring a series of works rendered in graphite on canvas that “contemplate the elusive nature of memo-
ry in the (re)construction of meaning,” as a gallery writeup notes. “Seemingly disparate images follow Patterson’s attempt to reconcile multiple historical narratives and ancestral oral histories surrounding a series of tragic events,” says the write-up. Intrigued? Swing on by and check the exhibitions out any time during library hours. Or, for more, see www.burnabyartgallery.ca. WHODUNIT? If you’re a fan of mystery novels, then mark this night on your calendar. The Burnaby Public Library is hosting a Librarians’ Choice: Mystery Night on Tuesday, March 3 at the McGill branch (4595 Albert St.). Librarians will offer up a night of reviews of mystery titles, running from 7 to 8:30 p.m.They’ll cover recent publications and new authors, as well as unearthing a few rewarding reads by authors who’ve been lost in the stacks. It’s open to anyone who’s interested in crime and suspense writing. You can register at any library branch, call 604-2998955 or sign up through www.bpl.bc.ca/events.
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A community is like a family – show it some local love FAMILY DAY IS A TIME TO CONNECT WITH OUR LOVED ONES AND REFLECT ON OUR GRATITUDE FOR ONE ANOTHER, BUT WHAT ABOUT OUR WIDER COMMUNITIES? LIKE A FAMILY, A COMMUNITY REQUIRES NURTURING AND CARE IN ORDER TO FLOURISH. This week ask yourself: how well do you know the other families in your neighbourhood? This year marks the United Way’s 90th anniversary. With the new decade only just begun, United Way is designing innovative solutions to the issues facing communities of today and tomorrow – including social isolation. “For the past few years, we have been hearing from residents in communities that social isolation is a growing issue,” says Kim Winchell, Director of Social Impact at United Way. Social isolation can look like not knowing our neighbours, difficulty making friends and feeling closed off in communities that are meant to be connected. Critically, the ramifications are much more serious than feeling a little lonely. Researchers from the University of Chicago have shown a link between social isolation and increased rates of depression, poor sleep, cognitive decline, heart issues and impaired immunity. The most startling conclusion: these negative health impacts of social isolation are observable at every stage of life, meaning everyone in a community, no matter their age, is at risk. Luckily, community is also one of our greatest sources of strength – sometimes it just needs a little “local love,” as United Way likes to call it. This is the premise of United Way’s Hi Neighbour initiative, which empowers everyday residents with tools to foster connections in their own unique ways.
In order to combat this feeling, she started to invite new mothers into her home to get to know one another. After she saw the demand in attendance, Kyle knew she had stumbled upon a cause very important to her, and was desperate to find more ways to help. Meanwhile, community engagement specialists at United Way were also tracking a sense of isolation in the Burke Mountain area. That’s why it is now home to one of its eight Hi Neighbour initiatives, and why Kyle has been tapped as a local community builder to spark change in the area. Recently, Kyle launched her podcast Parent Talk to discuss topics affecting new parents in an openminded and safe space. She’s also partnered up with like-minded community connectors, like Audrey Poulin, founder of a Canadian app called Social Mom. Kyle is using these innovative tools to ensure moms have a place to meet, socialize, and organize real-time events in which all communities can benefit. Help from United Way, and its Local Love Fund in Hi Neighbour Burke Mountain, have been instrumental in helping Kyle expand her reach and mobilize local moms. As it marks its 90th anniversary, United Way continues to serve vulnerable populations through programs in our local communities – including those that help kids, families and isolated moms. United Way also sees change-makers like Kyle as part of the solution.
“Through Hi Neighbour, we have mobilized teams in eight local neighbourhoods where social isolation is a growing concern. These teams are embedded in the community and are working alongside residents as they design their own solutions to the issue,” says Winchell. “Our society has never been so connected and so disconnected at the same time,” says Geneviève Kyle, Coquitlam resident and founder, producer and co-host of podcast Parent Talk.
burnaby@nursenextdoor.com 604-553-3330
Kyle moved to the Burke Mountain area of Coquitlam years ago from Quebec and felt overwhelmed at the number of new moms who admit to feeling isolated in the community.
“Meeting in person is a very good way to solve loneliness, anxiety and depression because it is all connected.”
“We really see the importance of providing programs and services for those most vulnerable in communities alongside community initiatives,” says Winchell. “When those two go hand in hand, we really see stronger, sustainable communities.” To find new ways to mobilize, collaborate or give back to your community, visit United Way’s website at uwlm.ca
BurnabyNOW THURSDAY February 20, 2020 25
City now It’s time to ban cellphones in schools Mommy’s
GROUNDED Bianca Bujan
Sitting in the cafeteria of my oldest daughter’s soonto-be high school, I listened wide-eyed as the vice principal explained to our group of Grade 7 parents the importance of encouraging our kids to leave their devices at the door when heading to bed. “The sooner you start this habit, the better,” she emphasized in a stern voice. As I listened to her reasoning, I realized that I had loosened the reins when it came to the screen-time restrictions of my eldest. She was pretty good about putting her phone away when asked. She also needed to have her phone close as it was what she used for her alarm clock, I thought to myself – justifying my negligence. “Don’t let them convince you that they need their phones for the alarm,” she continued, “get them a proper alarm clock instead.” I could feel my face reddening as she said this – it
was as though she had read my mind. She went on to explain the challenges many teens face at her school today. Sleeplessness. Anxiety. Dropping grades. All as a result of spending too much time staying up late and staring at screens once their heads hit the pillow. “It’s really become an issue that’s impacting every aspect of their lives,” she shared. Last year, when I read that Ontario was going to enforce a cell phone ban in schools, I was opposed to the idea of B.C. following suit. I didn’t think that banning phones entirely was the right way to address device dependence, and suggested that schools promote selfregulation instead. I have since changed my tune. According to a recent survey conducted by the Research Co., 88% of the B.C. adults polled believed that the province should restrict the use of mobile phones during instructional time in kindergarten to Grade 12 classrooms.
I agree. In a recent article shared by TheWall Street Journal, experts are now treating teens for separation anxiety after being separated from their phones.The article reads, “Before class each day, a high-school teacher in Indianapolis grabs a clear plastic bag and fastens it to her waist with a ribbon.The homemade pouch is a repository for phones that are either confiscated or handed over voluntarily by students who don’t want to be tempted to tap or swipe during class. She calls this the ‘phoney pack.’ ” Students are so dependent on their devices that compromises are being made to ease the separation anxiety that occurs, such as letting young people see their devices from afar, or keep them close but locked up in a pouch to restrict access. As it stands now, my daughter’s future high school leaves it up to each teacher to determine whether or not devices are allowed in the classroom. Some allow use for class-
work only, others have a phone “parking lot” where devices are parked when students enter the classroom, and others ban them altogether. I think it’s time for schools to get on the same page and ban phones entirely. Kids can stay digitally connected with laptops for completing schoolwork. Let’s focus on learning and leave the distracting devices at home. Bianca Bujan is a mom of three, Editor ofWestCoast Families magazine, and a freelance writer who shares about travel, family, and food in various major print and online publications. Find her on Twitter @biancabujan and Instagram @bitsofbee.
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26 THURSDAY February 20, 2020 • BurnabyNOW
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Business in Vancouver and the Chartered Professional Accountants of B.C. have once again partnered to recognize BC’s most outstanding Chief Financial Officers. Honourees are chosen based on their performance relating to corporate growth through strategic decision making, overall performance & execution, and sound business principals.
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY February 20, 2020 27
Sportsnow
Sport to report? Contact Dan Olson at 604.444.3022 or dolson@BurnabyNow.com
BALL HOCKEY
They’re having a ball in new all-girls league
Local players are needed to fill out rosters this spring, with the Metro Ball Hockey Association not requiring a registration fee Dan Olson
dolson@burnabynow.com
Usually in sports, access breeds success. Here’s a case where the reverse may be true, too. B.C.’s girls ball hockey team that made an impressive showing at last year’s Canadian national junior under-19 girls championships is now seen as an inspiration behind the West Coast Ball Hockey Association’s creation of an allgirls league, beginning next month. As part of the program’s aim to introduce the sport to more girls, the regional organizations, including Burnaby-based Metro Ball Hockey Association, is offering a league where there is no registration fee – just the cost of being properly equipped to put stick to floor and chase the ball. “If we want this to be a place where we can compete (with national champion Ontario), we need this,” said MBHA president Paul Hundal. “There’s obviously an appetite for this, we need to keep going on with this. Let’s see if we can continue that progression and get them playing together during the year.” Metro is inviting girls from Burnaby, New West, Vancouver and the Tri-Cities to sign up for the fledgling league (visit www.metroballhockey.ca). Other regional partners, including Delta and Richmond, are also taking part in the program, which is geared towards girls ages 11 to 19.Younger players would still play co-ed, and other girls may choose to stay with their co-ed leagues. But only the all-girls league is free. Hundal, who was the coach of last year’s inaugural Team B.C., notes how a lot of lessons were learned from competing at the national level, with a team that had little concrete floor experience. B.C. would rise to the challenge, placing third overall, and fuel the interest of taking the next step. That means providing a place where girls can get a taste of the game in a comfortable, supported atmosphere. “The opportunity here is to offer a sport for another demographic, to play
Ready to go: A member of Team B.C. and the Canadian Junior national team, Keasha Dahlsted hopes the recent string of successes for B.C. girls on the ball hockey front help boost the sport. To that end, the local Metro Ball Hockey Association is launching an all-girls league. PHOTO MARIO BARTEL, TRI-CITY NEWS
a sport that currently exists for just a few now,” said Hundal. His resume prior to last season was as a coach of boys teams in a variety of sports.Taking on the task of getting a girls team together over a short period of time was a huge task, but one that opened his eyes to what a committed all-girls league could enhance. “I’m super stoked for this. Lessons learned for me was, female ball hockey in B.C. has mostly just been ‘let them play with the boys.’ They start out young and by the time they’re 11, 12, the difference in physique and mindset occur, and girls basically drop out. “We want to encourage and create a place where they can develop their talents.” To that point, some have already seen the rewards. Keasha Dahlstedt and Jenna Proulx were members of B.C.’s u19 team who caught
the eyes of the Canadian junior national coach. A few months after last summer’s tournament, the pair received emails inviting them
It’s a lot easier to get comfortable in a sport where you are with people similar to you.
to join the national team. “When I got the email I was really excited about it. It seemed really surreal. I didn’t think it was actually a thing. I still don’t feel like it’s actually happening,” said Dahlsted, 16, of Coquitlam. The Dr. Charles Best student has an ice hockey background, playing
with the Tri-City Predators midget A1 team. She was one of the more experienced players with B.C.’s ball hockey squad, having started the sport three years earlier after a concussion in lacrosse made her check out other options. At that time, it meant playing with boys – which has been the norm for a lot of ball and ice hockey girls. The idea of an all-girls league makes complete sense to her. “It’s definitely a league where it would be more comfortable.There’d be a lot more players at the same skill level, and a chance to meet new friends and people in the community,” Dahlsted said. “I believe it’s going to be a real awesome opportunity.” For Proulx, who hails from North Delta and has played her girls ice hockey with the Richmond Ravens program, the benefit of a girls league were obvious.
“It’s a lot easier to get comfortable in a sport where you are with people similar to you,” said Proulx, 18. “Being on a boys (ice hockey) team meant I felt different. I had to change in a separate changing room, and you felt segregated a bit.” Although she had only one year in ball hockey – back when she was six years old – it was a fascinating immersion to be selected to Team B.C. “I’d played 13 years on ice, so when I got asked to play it was a real new experience,” said the Burnsview Secondary grad. “There was not a lot of time to get use to each other.We had to bond really fast, and the adjustment from chasing a puck to a ball was tougher than I thought it would be.” Dahlsted envisions their next adventure, trying to bond with an Ontario-based national squad under the pressure of a world champi-
onship, as a wonderful opportunity. Had her B.C. team garnered layers of experience on an all-girls league, like many with the Ontario squad, they’d have been all the more prepared. “I think we were a bit blown back by that – (Ontario) is such a good team. That’s where we got to see everyone play as hard as they could, the skills really showed and our passes were clicking. … I think having a whole girls league where we could have played against, we’d probably have done better,” she said. The new Metro all-girls league will begin play in late March at Moody Park, Burnaby Lake, Kensington and Trout Lake arenas. Registration has already begun, so interested parents and players should sign up soon. For info email femaleballhockey@metroball hockey.ca.
28 THURSDAY February 20, 2020 • BurnabyNOW
Looking for a new home? Start here.
B.C. Budget 2020: No new relief for renters or homebuyers British Columbian renters or would-be homebuyers looking for relief will be disappointed, as the B.C. Budget announcement contained no new measures or changes to current housing policy, beyond funding already slated within its existing 10-year housing plan. In her stay-the-course budget, finance minister Carole James took the opportunity to laud the progress of the province’s Homes for BC plan, which she said was spending $1 billion a year on building new affordable homes across the province. The plan, which was promised in the NDP’s 2017 election campaign and formalized in its 2018 budget, aims to have 114,000 such homes built over one decade. The minister also took the chance to repeat a previous announcement that the B.C. government is funding an inquiry into money laundering in real estate and other sectors. James said in a statement, “Already, more than 23,000 homes for families, seniors, and individuals are complete or underway in 90 communities. Budget 2020 includes funding for new homes as well as funding for a public inquiry on money laundering. By cracking down on money laundering, stopping fraud, targeting
speculators, closing loopholes, and making renting more secure, government is working to make housing more affordable for British Columbians.” Despite rental prices increasing beyond wage growth and inflation, and home prices now creeping up again following a recent correction, there were no additional measures to help renters or would-be homebuyers. The Budget reported that the total value of home sales across the province is forecast to climb between four and six per year over the next three years, and that revenue from Property Transfer Tax is expected to increase correspondingly. In her Budget speech, James acknowledged, “The housing market is bouncing back.” However, there was some relief in the supportive housing sector, which did see new funding announced. The B.C. Budget website said, “New investments in Budget 2020 will open an additional 200 supportive homes for people and communities in need. With this new investment, government’s commitment to supportive housing now stands at 4,900 supportive housing units. In addition, two new 60-bed navigation centres — shelters with enhanced services — will open for people with complex challenges.”
FUTURE BRIGHT SIGN-UP EVENT FREE MONEY FOR KIDS' EDUCATION
Pink Happy m ay fro Shirt D t us a all of r! couve n a V y EFr
Saturday, March 14, 2020 | 1- 7 PM, BNH Community Hall 5024 Rumble Street, Burnaby | Get up to $3,200 in funding! Future Bright is a EFry program that helps families access free funding for their children's post-secondary education. Our Future Bright team, banks, Service Canada, and the Canada Revenue Agency will be on site at the event to help families register for the Canada Learning Bond (CLB) and BC Training and Education Savings Grant (BCTESG). Unable to attend? Contact us at: www.elizabethfry.com/future-bright or call 604-520-1166
Eligibililty CLB Family net-income less than $47,630*Adjusted according to no. of children Child born in 2004 or later BCTESG Child born in 2006 or later and be between the ages of 6-9 years old Reside in British Columbia
Change to mortgage stress test The B.C. Budget came on the same day that the federal Liberal government made a tweak to the federal mortgage stress test, which has been widely cited as a key reason for the recent price correction in many housing markets. The qualifying rate for insured mortgages (those with less than 20 per cent down payment) will now be calculated at the weekly median five-year fixed rate from mortgage insurance applications, plus two per cent. This replaces the previous calculation, which was the Bank of Canada’s average posted interest rate, or the mortgage applicant’s contracted rate plus two per cent, whichever was the higher. The new measure, which goes into effect April 6, is set to ease the qualifying rate from some lenders from the current 5.19 per cent to 4.79 per cent. James Laird, co-founder of Ratehub.ca and president of CanWise Financial, said, “Canadians who are getting insured and insurable mortgages can expect to qualify for a little bit more than what they can today. Homebuyers who cannot currently qualify for what they want, but are close, should redo their qualifying calculations using the new stress test. This change will be welcomed by the mortgage industry and consumers.”
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY February 20, 2020 29
Your Community
MARKETPLACE Book your ad ONLINE:
Or call to place your ad at
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classifieds.burnabynow.com REMEMBRANCES
IN MEMORIAM
LEGAL
MARKETPLACE
LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICES
FOR SALE - MISC
By virtue of the Warehouseman’s Lien Act.
KINGSWAY BAILIFF SERVICE will dispose of: 1) 2017 FORD ESCAPE VIN# 1FMCU9J9XHUD88020 RO: DANIEL ZYVITSKI 2) 2016 FORD F150 VIN# 1FTEW1EP1GFD45593 RO: CANADIAN ROAD MANAGEMENT CO, GB DRYWALL CONSTRUCTION INC 3) 2016 KIA OPTAMA VIN# 5XXGU4L37GG097593 RO: BENJAMIN PATERSON
RIGBY,
Joan Elsie
Units can be viewed at: 301 Mansfield Place, North Vancouver, BC, V7J 1E4, between 9:00am to 6:00pm, Monday to Saturday. All written bids to Kingsway Bailiff Service by February 28, 2020 at: info@kingswaybailiff.com
March 27, 1924 February 24, 2007 Love’s Greatest Gift ~ Remembrance. Missed and Loved; Glen, Linda & Sheldon
www.KingswayBailiff.com
Notice of Sale Tom Tao is indebted to Inter-Town Auto Ltd. dba Metrotown Mazda for the amount of $1,109.92. By virtue of the Repairers Lien Act, his 2004 Mazda RX-8 Sports Coupe (VIN: JM1FE17N940104527) will be sold after March 6th, 2020, 9:00am at Metrotown Mazda, 5775 Kingsway, Burnaby, BC, V5H2G7.
BUSINESS SERVICES
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LEGAL SERVICES CRIMINAL RECORD? Why suffer Employment/Licensing loss? Travel/Business opportunities? Be embarrassed? Think: Criminal Pardon. US Entry Waiver. Record Purge. File Destruction. Free Consultation 1-800-3472540. accesslegalmjf.com
REAL ESTATE SERVICES WE BUY HOUSES Townhomes & Condos Any Situation, Condition or Price Range.
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STEEL BUILDING SALE ... “REALLY BIG SALE IS BACK EXTRA WINTER DISCOUNT ON NOW!” 20X21 $5,929. 25X25 $6,498. 28X31 $7,995. 32X33 $9,994. 35X33 $12,224. One End Wall Included. Pioneer Steel 1-855-212-7036 www.pioneersteel.ca
PRACTICAL NURSING
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RENTALS
ATTENTION
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or 604-630-3300 Email: DTJames@glaciermedia.ca
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**Some conditions apply. *Vancouver Career College, CEF Program
30 THURSDAY February 20, 2020 • BurnabyNOW
HOME SERVICES
EMPLOYMENT
CAREER TRAINING
BUILDING CONTRACTORS
GENERAL EMPLOYMENT
Zone Supervisor
CAVE
EMPLOYMENT PROGRAM for AGES 17 to 29 Start March 9, 2020
• 5 weeks in-class training, up to 12 weeks job search support • Paid work placement + Wage Subsidy • Industry-specific training & certificates • Workplace & job search skills, resumes, cover letter writing, interview skills and more
ELIGIBILITY
• Ages 17-29 • Canadian citizen, permanent resident, or person who has been granted refugee status and legally entitled to work in Canada • Living in British Columbia • Not a full-time student • Not actively participating in another government-funded training program • Unemployed or precariously employed
LOCATION
Douglas College – Burnaby Training Centre 4250 Kingsway #202, Burnaby, BC V5H 4T7 Phone: 604.438.3045 Email: cave@douglascollege.ca Website: https:///ww ww.d douglascollege.cca/cave
DRIVERS BAKERY LOCATED IN BURNABY LOOKING FOR A DELIVERY DRIVER
Experience preferred, but not a requirement as we will train. Must be able to drive a 5 - tonne truck. Must be energetic, hardworking, enthusiastic and a team player. Must be able to communicate in English.
The New Westminster Record is looking for an energetic and customer friendly individual for our Distribution Department. The right candidate must have excellent communication and organizational skills, attention to detail, the ability to work with minimum supervision, and basic knowledge of MS Word, Excel and email. Duties include supervising 100+ youth carriers, recruiting new carriers, surveying old and new delivery areas, monitoring carrier performance, and following up on householder delivery concerns. A reliable vehicle is a must. This part-time position offers a flexible 20 hours per week, working from home and in the field. Please forward your resumé to: New Westminster Record 3355 Grandview Hwy Vancouver, BC V5M 1Z5 Or email it to mblack@van.net NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
FOOD/BEVERAGE HELP Interwest Restaurants Inc. o/a Tim Hortons is currently looking for 15 Food Service Supervisors
Location: _ "fe# ,UZB^h RGAW^@kDh' QGEAZBWkV' RQ' +g7 d)! e +kikUiZ^C _ "g!# 7ZU\C?k1 S@^UA^' 2GDB QGEAZWBkV' RQ' +gQ ".! d +kikUiZ^C _ K"#" & gfgg 4GDB[ /Gkh' RADUkj1' RQ' +g8 #S! f +kikUiZ^C Terms of Employment: 2^DVkU^UB' MAWW&-ZV^' 2kDB&-ZV^' NkDW1 5GDUZU\' .[Z]B' *^^X^Uh' 5GDUZU\' Pk1' 4Z\[B I N@^UZU\ .kWkD1` J"f%de$[GAD ( R^U^<BC .BkDB PkB^` S.S2 N>F^DZ^Ui^` " 1^kD BG W^CC B[kU ! 1^kDC% NhAikBZGU` 4G h^\D^^' i^DBZ<ikB^ GD hZFWGVk% 2W^kC^ iGUBkiB ]GD YGj h^CiDZFBZGU%
Please call 604-298-5000
How to Apply: 9U 2^DCGU GD VkZW` SB kjG@^ WGikBZGUC by email: timhortons@inwest.com
GENERAL EMPLOYMENT
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CONCRETE
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The Disability Case Management Advisor is responsible for the timely and effective case management, rehabilitation services, accommodation, and return to work planning for the Liquor Distribution Branch (LDB). The advisor is responsible for the co-ordination of a variety of services flowing from the Short Term Illness and Injury Plan (STIIP), long term disability and WorkSafeBC programs that are available to LDB employees. Qualifications/Experience: • Post-secondary diploma or certificate in disability management • 4 years of recent, progressive, experience in disability management, or claims management. • Managing (or experience with) a breadth of different claims with varying degrees of complexity • Adjudication of benefits • Return to work planning • Absence management/accommodation • Interpreting and applying legislation and/or policy. Apply online at http://www.bcldb.com/careers Close Date: March 4, 2020 Create your own ads at burnabynow.adperfect.com
604-341-4446
FLOORING
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GUTTERS Gutters Cleaned & Repaired WorkSafeBC insured
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY February 20, 2020 31
HOME SERVICES PAINTING/ WALLPAPER
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39. Comes after a cut 41. A place one lives 42. Cognizant of 43. Albanian monetary unit 44. Carrot’s partner 45. Famed garden 46. Chilean seaport 48. Days (Spanish) 49. Sudden anxiety 50. 100 square meters 51. A type of beer 52. French/Belgian river
19. Consumed 20. Falters 22. Radioactive form of an element 23. Catch a wrongdoer 24. Breeze through 27. Thick piece of something 28. Yellowish-brown color 29. “The Raven” poet 31. Rural free delivery (abbr.) 32. Creating **/ ("&-%!+$-$ 30+', 34. Northwestern state 35. Was obligated to repay
36. Diverging in lines from a common center 37. Bleak 38. We all have them 39. Hit with the palm of one’s hand 40. Sea that’s part of the 1-$#-%' )2.+4. 44. Political action committee 47. Famed Spanish soldier El __
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32 THURSDAY February 20, 2020 • BurnabyNOW
WEEKLY SPECIALS! Prices Effective February 20 to February 26, 2020.
100% BC OWNED AND OPERATED Choices’ Own 4.25” Quiche
Yarrow Meadows Whole Organic Chicken
Assorted Varieties
2 for 800
499/lb
each
11.00kg
Shepherd Gourmet Cow Feta and Sheep Feta Cheese
Organic Lemons Imported from California
o Ne w t s e Choic
398
499
907g (2lb) bag
Cow Feta Cheese 200g
148/lb
499
3.26kg
600g each
withinUs TruMarine Collagen
New Roots Vitamins & Supplements
Thank You
Choices Customers We raised $37,000 from our “Star of the Season” fundraising campaign which ran during the holiday season. Your generous contributions help to support local neighbourhood houses and food banks across Metro Vancouver, the Fraser Valley and the Okanagan.
Assorted Varieties Regular Price 1.79-103.99
25% off assorted sizes
4299 6499 20 packs
We R $37,0 aised 00.00
Green & Black’s Organic Fair Trade Chocolate Bars
Assorted Varieties
Assorted Varieties
2/1500
2/700
284g
@ChoicesMarkets
250g
Kicking Horse Organic Fair Trade Ground Coffee
Kitsilano | Cambie | Kerrisdale | Yaletown Commercial Drive | Burnaby Crest /ChoicesMarkets
Sheep Feta Cheese 200g
Choices’ Own Multiseed Sourdough Bread and Wholesome Country Sourdough Bread
Organic Large Navel Oranges from Homegrown in California
choicesmarkets.com
699
/Choices_Markets
90g
SEE IN-STORE FOR HUNDREDS OF GREAT DEALS THIS WEEK!
NEWS 3
COMMUNITY 11
WWE stars return home
Hospital campaign launched
SPORTS 27
All-girls ball hockey league formed
5
THINGS TO DO THIS WEEKEND THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2020
There’s more at Burnabynow.com
LOCAL NEWS – LOCAL MATTERS.
SEE PAGE 13
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