CITY 3
COMMUNITY 15
Man shot near Edmonds Park Giro bike race ready to roll
EVENTS 27
Your top events for the weekend
FOR THE BEST LOCAL
COVERAGE
THURSDAY, JULY 4 2019
LOCAL NEWS – LOCAL MATTERS.
new weSt
CO - PRESENTED BY:
There’s more at Burnabynow.com
GO TO PAGE 32
Get ready to mingle on the mews! Fridays on Front is back for another summer series of community street socials on Downtown New West’s historic Front Street. A fully licensed event, featuring artisan vendors from New West Craft, live music curated by the Arts Council of New Westminster, and of course, our favourite Food Trucks from the Columbia StrEAT Food Truck Fest.
Friday - July 12
Friday - July 5
Opening Night
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fOOd trucks
Friday - July 19
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Friday - July 26
Analog Night
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Friday - August 2
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music
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Friday - August 9
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music bar
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Extras:
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Friday - August 16
Friday - August 23
fOOd trucks
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music bar
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bar
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Antique Alley j NW Sale Bob the Dog Columbia Street Sandwich Co. Dragonscale Journals Family Place Kids Activities Rain City Juicery Royal City Gogos Solasta Chocolate Strong N Free Strong Side Conditioning Whimsy’s Jewels
Port of Vancouver is offering a free Paddlewheeler Riverboat Cruise, leaving at 5:00 pm.
SPONSORED BY:
Please note: schedule is subject to change. Visit www.downtownnewwest.ca for weekly updates all summer long.
CITY 3
COMMUNITY 15
Man shot near Edmonds Park Giro bike race ready to roll
EVENTS 27
Your top events for the weekend
FOR THE BEST LOCAL
COVERAGE
THURSDAY, JULY 4 2019
There’s more at Burnabynow.com
LOCAL NEWS – LOCAL MATTERS.
AFTERMATH: Not much was left of this bicycle after it and the rider were struck down by a driver Saturday on Gaglardi Way.
GO TO PAGE 32
PHOTO SHANE MACKICHAN
Fatality sparks call for protected bike lanes Chris Campbell
ccampbell@burnabynow.com
Alcohol was likely a contributing factor in a hit-andrun collision that killed a 53-year-old cyclist on Burnaby Mountain on Sunday, according to police. The cyclist, since identified by friends as engineer and father of two Charles Masala, was hit at about 1:30 p.m. while riding on Gaglardi Way at the bottom of Burnaby Mountain. He died at the scene. The driver of a black Jeep Cherokee SUV suspect-
ed of hitting Masala did not stop at the scene, but was located and arrested a short time later on University High Street and Tower Road, according to a Burnaby RCMP press release. “It is early in the investigation; however, it is believed that alcohol was a contributing factor in this incident,” RCMP Cpl. Daniela Panesar said. No charges have yet been laid. Police would now like to talk to anyone who witnessed the collision or the driving behaviour of the
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Jeep before the collision. They would also like to hear from anyone with dashcam footage. Call Burnaby RCMP at 604-646-9999.To remain anonymous, contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222TIPS or www.solvecrime. ca. In the wake of this tragedy, some cycling advocates are calling for protected bike lanes to be installed on the two routes that lead up to SFU and the UniverCity housing development. Gaglardi has a small lane set aside for bikes, but not
any kind of protective barrier. “This is terrifying, but I wish I could say it is surprising,” said New Westminster Coun. Patrick Johnstone, in a tweet. “Gaglardi is a freeway – drivers ignore the 60km/h speed limit with impunity, and every piece of road design here tells them to do so. Cyclists need separation and protection here.” Another cycling advocate who rides in Burnaby, Richard Campbell, tweeted that changes are needed. “Horrible. No need for two traffic lanes downhill.
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It just facilitates dangerous fast driving. Re-allocate one lane to make a safe bike path.” This June is believed to have been the deadliest month for road fatalities in separate incidents in Burnaby’s history. On June 6, a 71-year-old man was killed in a hit-andrun involving a semi-truck on Marine Way. On June 7, a 69-yearold woman was killed on Lougheed Highway when a driver lost control of his vehicle and ran into her. On that same day, an
eight-vehicle pileup at Kingsway and Nelson resulted in the death of one person. On June 11, a 33-yearman ended up in the path of a transit shuttle bus on Hastings Street after an altercation with another man on the sidewalk. He has now been called neurologically deceased by the coroner, so effectively a fifth fatality. Another serious pedestrian crash happened on June 2, when a 53-year-old woman was seriously injured when she was hit by a driver in the Edmonds area.
Glenn Chivers 604-420-9100 GlennChivers@remax.net ChiversBell.ca
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY July 4, 2019 3
Citynow CRIME
Man shot inside SUV near Edmonds Park Cornelia Naylor
cnaylor@burnabynow.com
A daylight shooting in Burnaby’s Edmonds neighbourhood left a 22-yearold man with serious but non-life-threatening injuries Sunday. Police were called to the 7100-block of Fulton Avenue just after 4:30 p.m. for reports of shots fired, according to Burnaby RCMP. They found the 22-yearold inside a parked SUV suffering from gunshot wounds. Police said that he remained in hospital in stable condition as of Tuesday morning. No arrests have yet been made. “It is still early in the investigation but it appears that the parties involved in this incident were known to each other,” Burnaby RCMP Cpl. Daniela Panesar said in a press release. Anyone with information about the incident is asked to contact Burnaby RCMP at 604-646-9999.To remain anonymous, contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800222-TIPS (8477) or submit a tip online at www. solvecrime.ca.
DAYLIGHT SHOOTING: Burnaby RCMP converse next to a vehicle that was involved in a brazen daytime shooting in the Edmonds neighbourhood on Sunday afternoon. PHOTO SHANE MACKICHAN
ENVIRONMENT
New energy-efficiency rules passed for homebuilders
Kelvin Gawley
kgawley@burnabynow.com
Anyone building a home in Burnaby will soon have to hire an energy advisor and test for air-tightness to comply with new green building standards. In an effort to improve energy efficiency, council approved the new policy, which applies to the construction of “Part 9” buildings – single-family homes, duplexes and multi-unit buildings with a footprint of less than 600 square metres (6,458 square feet). The building requirements for these smaller structures come just as similar rules for larger “Part 3” projects – commercial buildings taller than three storeys or with a footprint larger than 600 square metres (6,458 sq. ft.) – are set to come into force July 1. As of Sept. 1, those building Part 9 homes will be required to comply with
Step 1 of the BC Energy Step Code, a new component of the province’s building code.They will have to work with an energy advisor during the design phase and test for air-tightness both mid-construction and upon completion. The builder will only be issued an occupancy permit once documentation of the above requirements are provided to the city. Missing from the new requirements, however, are any stringent rules for how airtight newly constructed buildings need to be. Instead, Step 1 only requires structures to perform equal to or better than a home built to existing BC Building Code standards. Burnaby then plans to jump to Step 3 of the step code in “approximately one year,” according to a staff report. “There will be more stringent requirements in the future, as we bring in
New rules: Anyone building a home in Burnaby will soon have to hire an energy advisor and test for airtightness to meet new green building standards. PHOTO NOW FILES
the higher steps,” explained Lise Townsend, an ecosystem planner with the City of Burnaby. Asked why Burnaby isn’t taking a more urgent approach by introducing stricter rules out of the gate, Townsend said the com-
ing rules are “a fairly significant change in practices and we want to try to set up the builders for success.” “I can understand the point of view saying we need to do more sooner, but we also need to make sure that what we’re requiring
has a good chance of success,” she said. Townsend said the step code introduces a “performance-based approach” instead of the BC Building Code’s prescriptive rules, which state which kind of windows, insulation and
other materials builders can use. Townsend estimated hiring an energy advisor and testing for air-tightness would cost a builder approximately $2,000. She called the cost increase “relatively modest in the context of the total cost of construction.” While a central goal of the step code is to create more energy efficient homes, it does not directly address greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. “Although reducing energy demand can help to save costs and resources, it may not necessarily reduce overall GHG emissions, as a high-efficiency home that uses natural gas will still emit significantly more carbon compared to a home that uses electricity for heating and cooling, regardless of the efficiency step achieved,” the staff report states.
4 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
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6 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
Citynow
Connect with your Mayor and enjoy a healthy walk!
HOUSING
Residents tell Burnaby to add more density Kelvin Gawley
kgawley@burnabynow.com
The City of Burnaby should allow four- to sixstorey apartment buildings in single-family residential neighbourhoods. That’s what 70 per cent of respondents told the city’s housing task force at a recent workshop (44 per cent strongly agreed, while 26 per cent agreed with the idea). The Community Recommendations Workshop brought together 97 people – 74 randomly selected residents and 23 representatives of community organizations – for a daylong session meant to find solutions to the city’s housing crisis. Participants were separated into 14 tables, where they deliberated and later presented their top-three recommendations to improve housing affordability and accessibility.
So-called “gentle density” was popular. “Thirteen of the 14 tables presented recommendations which supported densification in order to increase and diversify existing housing supply,” states a workshop summary report. Some participants wanted to see Burnaby allow laneway homes, coach houses and more secondary suites. Under the direction of council, city staff are already studying how the city might pursue those types of housing. Gently densifying single-family neighbourhoods would be a significant change, of course, for a city that has concentrated new development in its town centres, according to Burnaby’s assistant director of long-range planning, LeeAnn Garnett. “There seems to be this consensus that, yeah, our single family neighbour-
hoods are going to change,” Garnett said. “This is really interesting – that there’s this big desire for change in neighbourhoods outside of town centres.” Workshop participants did not, however, call for an end to the flurry of condo tower development in town centres (Metrotown, Edmonds, Lougheed and Brentwood). Sixty-seven per cent agreed the high-density towers should continue to be built. Respondents to a workshop exit survey also said they want Burnaby to create more affordable housing, such as social, low-income, subsidized and non-market developments. “Participants emphasized the importance of focusing on the most vulnerable residents first (homeless, at risk of homelessness, low income, etc.),” according to the report. Continued on page 7
WALK WITH THE MAYOR SUNDAY, JULY 14 | 9AM
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Burnaby Mayor Mike Hurley invites you to walk with him at Burnaby Lake Regional Park. Meet at the back of the Burnaby Lake Rugby Club (3760 Sperling Avenue). Walk goes from 9-10am. $1.00 Pancake Breakfast served at 9:30am by the Burnaby Firefighters Charitable Society. All proceeds go to the Burnaby Neighbourhood House.
@mayorofburnaby | burnaby.ca
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Citynow Workshop hears call for more housing partnerships
Continued from page 6 Participants seemed to agree the city should do more than provide infrastructure and amenities and leave the creation of affordable housing to higher levels of government. Only 14 per cent of survey respondents felt the city should stick to a more traditional municipal role. The vast majority of
workshop participants also called on Burnaby to pursue more partnerships with non-profits, private companies and higher levels of government. They also asked the city to take a holistic approach to planning by ensuring residents have the recreational, transit and health services they need. “Participants felt that in
Dr. Matthew S. Ng
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order to develop more inclusive, healthy and connected communities, it is important to not consider housing in isolation, but rather as part of a broader ecosystem alongside other social, environmental and recreational characteristics,” the report states. Another key theme arising from the workshop participants’ recommendations
was a desire for more protections and supports for renters. Some tables called for the city to use rental-only zoning and require the inclusion of rental units in new developments – proposals council has already endorsed and moved to implement. Three in four participants agreed the city should restrict short-term rent-
als such as AirBnB, while 78 per cent agreed the city should prioritize cracking down on empty homes and speculation. The recommendations from the workshop will inform the Mayor’s Task Force on Community Housing’s final report, expected later this month. The workshop was facilitated by Simon Fraser
University’s Morris J.Wosk Centre for Dialogue, which has partnered with Burnaby for the task force process. Wosk’s manager of engagement and social enterprise, Michelle Bested, said the workshop brought an informed, deliberative approach to public engagement, which is sometimes lacking in municipal decision-making.
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8 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
Opinion now OUR VIEW
Climate change has turned B.C. into a pile of kindling The term “wildfire season” is becoming too common with people. It’s not a season like “camping season” or “boating season.” It’s not something fun or something people should get used to or accept. Our climate emergency has led to unseasonably warm and dry conditions in many parts of our province this spring that have resulted in higher fire danger ratings in some areas. So we’re urging you to be responsible when it comes
to getting out into the great outdoors. Some of the things we’re going to mention might seem obvious, but a lot of people aren’t paying attention. For one thing, smokers need to get their act together and stop flicking their butts into any area that can catch fire. It doesn’t take much to spark a wildfire. According to the provincial government, humancaused fires are completely preventable and unneces-
sarily divert crucial firefighting resources away from naturally occurring wildfires. From April 1 through June 26, 2019, the BC Wildfire Service responded to 405 wildfires throughout B.C. About 293 of those fires (or about 70 per cent) are believed to have been caused by people. Seventy per cent! Campfires are currently permitted throughout the province within the BC Wildfire Service’s jurisdiction, but larger Category 2
and Category 3 open fires are prohibited in some areas to reduce wildfire risks and protect public safety.The use of fireworks is also prohibited in some regions. Here are some basic campfire safety tips and fire precautions: ! Campfires must not be larger than 0.5 metres high or 0.5 metres wide. ! Never light a campfire or keep it burning in windy conditions.Weather can change quickly and wind may carry embers to other combustible material.
! Maintain a fireguard around the campfire.This is a fuel-free area where all flammable materials (grass, kindling, etc.) have been removed right down to the soil. ! Never leave a campfire unattended. Anyone who lights a campfire is legally responsible for making sure it does not escape. That person could be held accountable for damages and fire suppression costs if their negligence results in a wildfire. Anyone
riding an all-terrain vehicle or dirt bike on Crown land must have a spark arrestor installed on the vehicle. Check the condition of the muffler, regularly clear build-ups of grass or other vegetation from hot spots, stay on dirt paths and avoid tall grass and weeds to help reduce wildfire risks. So, you’ve been warned. We’ve shown you the things you need to remember. It’s up to you to be responsible. You’re an adult. Act like one.
MY VIEW KEITH BALDREY
B.C. vindicated on carbon tax The BC NDP government won a major court case last week, even though it was technically the latest ruling on a matter pitting Ottawa against several other provinces. When the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled that the federal government’s proposed carbon tax is legal and constitutionally sound, it was a big boost to the Trudeau government’s plan to fight climate change. It was also a victory here in B.C., the birthplace of this country’s first carbon tax. B.C. had sought intervener status. A steadily rising carbon tax is a key part of B.C.’s own plan.The tax is pegged at $35 per tonne of carbon dioxide emissions and the NDP plans to increase that tax by $5 a year until it hits at least $50 per tonne. B.C. could find itself at an economic disadvantage if it was the only province with a carbon tax that kept growing.That is precisely the position right-leaning provinces, such as Alberta, Saskatchewan and Ontario, take. Their leaders are vehemently against it. The Ontario court ruled Ottawa’s proposed carbon tax isn’t even really an actual tax. Rather, the court found, it is simply a regulatory charge tied to a desired outcome (in this case, reducing greenhouse gas emissions). This part of the ruling is another potential gift to Premier John Horgan. It is conceivable the BC NDP now drops the word “tax” in its next budget and replaces it with “levy.”
The Ontario court ruling – which follows a similar one from the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal – pushes the BC NDP and the federal Liberals closer together on the climate action file. The federal NDP and Greens both favour far more aggressive action, but Horgan and Trudeau – who face the challenges that come with governing, unlike their Opposition counterparts – prefer mastering the art of political compromise. For now, B.C.’s carbon tax is not unpopular in this province. It certainly brings in a lot of money for the provincial government: an expected $1.7 billion this year, rising to more than $2 billion annually two years from now. The tax used to be “revenue neutral” (it was originally tied to an income tax reduction), but it lost that status in the final years of the last BC Liberal government. The BC NDP has completely shredded any notion of revenue neutrality and now ties the tax to clean energy projects and transit – a political calculation that likely makes sense. As we approach the federal fall election,Trudeau can understandably take considerable comfort in high court rulings backing a key part of his climate action strategy. But standing right beside him is Horgan, happy to see their carbon tax position vindicated over the objections of their right-wing provincial colleagues. Keith Baldrey is chief political reporter for Global BC.
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This is terrifying, but I wish I could say it is surprising. Patrick Johnstone, story page 1
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Neighbours save old home An energetic campaign by neighbours in east Burnaby saved a 72-year-old Dutch colonial-style farm house from the wrecking ball in January.The new owners of the Floden family farmhouse, which sat on two small lots on the corner of 4th Street and 18th Avenue, planned to demolish it and build two new homes. But neighbours who wanted the two-storey house saved launched a petition and door-to-door pamphlet campaign, and the city eventually agreed to buy it and move it to a city-owned site at a total cost of about $90,000.
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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 July 4, 2019 9
Opinion now INBOX
New roads should come with bike lanes Editor: On any given day, I see various people biking around Burnaby. Some are the serious riders in cool outfits, others are people heading to work, and then there are the loafers like me, plodding along. The Globe and Mail recently reported that Vancouver and Montreal are named among the world’s most bike-friendly cities. So, Vancouver and Burnaby have done some good things in creating separate bike greenways and bike lanes on busy highways, such as Lougheed. However, what about when new roads are constructed or redone, such as the case with Broadway during the FortisBC pipe upgrade? Do you take the opportunity to improve the road, to add a bike lane (an extra four feet of asphalt) since you are repaving the road anyway? Would it not make sense in any upgrade to consider adding a marked bike lane and pedestrian walkway if room provides? Of course it would, but that would mean Burnaby City Hall has to think, plan and spend a little bit more money. It’s better to wait and build a bike lane years later at a much higher cost. In new construction and repaving streets, care should be made to design them around transit, walking and cycling. All cities should design plans to improve non-car alternatives as part of the city’s growth.
I challenge Vancouver and Burnaby to always consider putting in a bike lane whenever a road is redone. A real mindset change and innovation is needed in Burnaby and other municipalities. Broadway at Lake City Way is newly repaved with gravel coming right up to the narrow single way road. This is dangerous since as a bike moves over for cars, the bike will slide and lose control. Further, as I found in China, if you add protected bike lanes, you will get even more riders of all ages taking a bike ride to the store, local mall or bank, eliminating traffic. Neglecting to change infrastructure, like on Broadway, shows how some municipalities still lack insight and proper planning. More and safe bike lanes and new infrastructure are needed to get people out of their cars. Riding along Lougheed at times is scary since cars do wander over into the bike lane and give the cyclist no protection. Another need is to have a safe place to lock up our bikes. The Lake City SkyTrain station has no safe areas to lock up your bike and no parking for that matter. In comparison, while on a recent trip to Boston, the subway station I used had a daycare, three levels of parking and a cage to lock up your bike. Let’s get a little more progressive and do something Burnaby. Michael Sorbo, Burnaby
Riding along Lougheed at times is scary.
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.
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City now
PUBLIC NOTICE Lion Ruhul Zaman of Burnaby, British Columbia
POLITICS
Two PPC candidates named Kelvin Gawley
kgawley@burnabynow.com
His name is Rocky Dong – “not Rocky Balboa,” as he clarifies in the opening of his first campaign video. The People’s Party candidate in Burnaby NorthSeymour nevertheless dons boxing gloves to take on his top political issues. Punching a padded tree, he exclaims with each blow: “High cost of living! High personal income tax! We will eliminate the carbon tax! No more unvetted immigration! We will end supply management! No more corporate welfare!” The humourous clip suggests Dong and the PPC don’t take themselves too seriously, but it remains to be seen whether voters will take the new party seriously. And its ability to break through could depend on whether it finds an appetite for its unique blend of populism and libertarianism, according to one political scientist. Dong is joined by fellow PPC candidate Al Rawdah, another businessman new to politics, in Burnaby South. Both men told the NOW they are confident the PPC’s platform promising low taxes, reduced immigration and an end to supply management will break through in Burnaby this fall. The PPC has yet to elect a member of Parliament since it was created by former Conservative Maxime Bernier last year. Its high watermark thus far came in the Feb. 25 Burnaby South byelection, where its candidate, Laura-Lynn Tyler Thompson, came in fourth with 10.6 per cent of the vote. In three other byelections, PPC candidates have
come in fifth or sixth, averaging just over two per cent support. “When some things start, they take time to get real momentum. It’s just like an automobile; it takes time,” Dong said. Dong said he voted for Beech in 2015 out of a desire to defeat the Conservative government of the day, but now, he said, Canadians have something to vote for, rather than against. Asked what he thought the top issues were in Burnaby North-Seymour, Dong first mentioned immigration. A central theme of PPC messaging has been its call to reduce the number of migrants allowed into the country each year. Dong, a Chinese immigrant who came to Canada in 2001, said he wants to see stricter background checks for both immigrants and refugees. “Some immigrants maybe also need to go through a face-to-face interview,” he said. “We can make sure
a “unique community dynamic” in the aftermath of the murder of local teen Marrisa Shen. The man accused of murdering her is a Syrian refugee. No publicly available evidence suggests Canadian authorities missed red flags – such as a criminal record – in vetting him, but Thompson used the case as evidence Canada has lax security checks for migrants. Prest believes it was this messaging and an ability to draw on a network of socially conservative church congregations that likely led to Thompson’s 10-per-cent showing in February. “That was the strongest indication that (the PPC) may be able to play a role in the upcoming election. Everything since then suggests that their impact is going to be very limited indeed on a national scale,” Prest said, referring to results in other byelections and national polling that has the party hovering around two or three per cent.
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every immigrant is a good person; they will not jeopardize our society.” Dong said immigrants can retain their cultural practices but should assimilate to Canadian values. Using an analogy, he said unity should trump diversity to make for a stronger society: “If I give you five chopsticks, you can break the chopsticks one by one. If ... you bundle (them) together, you try it, it’s hard.” Stewart Prest, a Simon Fraser University political scientist, said the PPC’s rhetoric on immigration is “forcing into the open a discussion that we really haven’t had before in Canada.” “There’s been close to consensus position among all Canadian political parties that immigration is a good thing for the country,” he said. He said Thompson, the former Burnaby South byelection candidate who plans to run in Alberta this fall, appeared to capitalize on
The Chartered Professional Accountants of British Columbia (CPABC) cautions the public that Lion Ruhul Zaman, of Zaman Business Solution Inc., is improperly using or displaying the initials “CPA” on his business card and LinkedIn profile. Lion Ruhul Zaman is not a member CPABC.
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY July 4, 2019 11
Citynow CRIME
North Burnaby house raided Stories by Cornelia Naylor cnaylor@burnabynow.com
Police moved in on a house in a quiet North Burnaby neighbourhood and hauled out vanloads of stolen property, including guns, high-end handbags and expensive booze. On June 19, at 9 a.m., Burnaby RCMP’s Strike Force Unit surrounded a single-family home at 7206 Braeside Dr. with help from the RCMP’s emergency response team and one of its armoured vehicles. They were there to carry out a search warrant con-
nected to an investigation into break-ins taking place across the Lower Mainland, according to an RCMP press release. The investigation began in late April, police said, after a break-and-enter at a residence in central Burnaby while the homeowners were out of the country. Local Mounties identified two suspects and, in the weeks that followed, linked them to a number of other break-and-enters in Burnaby,Vancouver, Surrey and Richmond. Police arrested the two suspects, aged 26 and 27,
without incident after officers closed in at 7206 Braeside Dr. on June 19. A neighbour who witnessed the incident said police were on scene for several hours removing items from the house and garage in vans and towing away a black pick-up truck. Among the seized items were two firearms, four imitation firearms, multiple high-end handbags, highvalue alcohol and other items linking the two men to other break and enters, according to police. Charges are pending.
Police arrest alleged SkyTrain flasher A 33-year-old Vancouver man faces charges of committing an indecent act in relation to an alleged flashing incident on SkyTrain in April. The April 29 incident involved a man who cruised trains between Burnaby and Vancouver for nearly an hour, according to police, and allegedly flashed his genitals at one female passenger. The woman, sitting on one of the trains, noticed a
man looming uncomfortably close to her, police said. When she looked toward him, she noticed his erect penis and testicles exposed over the waistline of his sweatpants, only a foot away from her face, according to police.The passenger snuck a photo, which she later provided to police. Security video later revealed the man had first boarded a train at the Commercial-Broadway station and then ridden trains be-
tween the Main Street and Edmonds stations. After transit police put out a press release with photos of the suspect, a tip from the public led them to a location in Vancouver where a man believed to be the suspect was found. The suspect has been released on a promise to appear and faces charges of committing an indecent act.
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY July 4, 2019 13
Citynow
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, CANADA:
Burnaby had multiple Canada Day celebrations taking place on Monday, including in Edmonds and at Burnaby Village Museum. (Top right) Masjid Al-Salaam and Education Centre draped a massive flag on its building. (Centre right) The Coastal Wolf Pack at the museum. (Bottom right) Matthew Cachila poses with an RCMP officer at the museum. (Bottom left) Katherine Marie Campbell, 3, and Hana Dhaliwalk, 3, dance outside of the Edmonds Community Centre.
PHOTOS JENNIFER GAUTHIER
14 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
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A need for speed: This year’s Giro di Burnaby, held in the Heights, is poised to be the biggest race yet, with a full field of racers and events for thousands of spectators to enjoy. The festivities get underway at 5:30 p.m. on Thursday, July 11. The Giro, which includes men’s and women’s races, is part of B.C. Superweek, an annual cycling competition.
It’s ready, set, go for Giro di Burnaby Racers will take over Hastings Street in The Heights
16 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
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BUY 10 SAUSAGES GET 1 FREE
BLUE GOOSE ORGANIC GROUND BEEF
$6
45 /lb
$14.18/kg
$14.18/kg Cucina Special
Cucina Special
Cucina Special
STEAK SANDWICH WRAP
SPICY CHICKEN SPAGHETTI
ITALIAN POTATO SALAD
With marinated arugula, fresh tomato, sauteed peppers and onions, garlic aioli, and mozzarella cheese
$12
99 each
$11
99
$3
99
500 ml
4142, 4150 & 4156 Hastings Street Burnaby (604) 291-9373
www.cioffisgroup.com Meat Market + Deli + Cucina
In the
of the Italian community!
• European Cuts • Fresh Poultry • European Meatballs-´Cevapi • Fresh Italian Sausage • Top Quality Meats • Groceries • Party Trays • Prepared Foods • Gift Baskets • Free Range Products • Wholesale & Retail Pricing
BurnabyNOW THURSDAY July 4, 2019 17
Big wheels, racing thrills part of Giro di Burnaby By SoAya Ikponmwosa Heights contributor
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Hairpin turn: The riders take turnaround and head back west on Hastings during last year’s race. The course offers not only numerous challenges for riders, but a variety of great vantage points for spectators . PHOTO NOW FILES
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BURNABY METROTOWN 604.434.6446
1698–4500 Kingsway
BURNABY NORTH 604.569.1162
3776 Hastings St.
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GIRO DI BURNABY THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2019 5:30pm 6pm 7:15pm 8:30pm
Boffo Breve Youth Race Women’s Race Men’s Race Awards
Race Start/Finish: Hastings & Carleton Mayor Mike Hurley and City Councillors: Pietro Calendino Sav Dhaliwal Dan Johnston Colleen Jordan
Paul McDonell Joe Keithley Nick Volkow James Wang
The Cit y of welcom Burnaby commu es the nit Giro di y to the Bur Cycle R naby a ce
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20 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
Giro di Burnaby has evolved over 12 years By Dan Olson & Maria Rantanen Z,* (JN ED(J (I.N` (JN YI*, PI "'*-hgd fIFF (hGN ,&N* Xh)(I-K) 8(*NN( h-P g*I-K (JN (J*IFF ,M (JN *hQN (, "'*-hgd XNIKJ() ,- V'Fd EE^ 5JN N&N-( Jh) K*,f)I-QN I() Nh*Fd Phd)` g,(J I*N+'(h(I,- h-P )IcN` h) NFI(N *hQN*) QJ,,)N (, QI*QFN (JN Phd h-P FI-N '+ M,* ,-N ,M (JN gIKKN* *hQN) ,- (JN "^!^ 8'+N*fNNG QhFN-Ph*^ LW(2) PNj-I(NFd K*,f- I-(, ,-N ,M (JN QI(d2) ihK)JI+ N&N-()` I- )IcN h-P )Q,+N`7 *N.h*GNP N&N-( ,*Kh-IcN* h-P Q,_M,'-PN* 9hI-d UN-(^ L5JN jNFP I-QF'PN) -h_ (I,-hF` ;Fd.+IQ h-P 5,'* PN Z*h-QN QdQFI)() -,f^7 W( hFF gNKI-) fI(J (JN QF,)'*N ,M Xh)(I-K) 8(*NN( h( B +^.^ ,- V'Fd EE gN(fNNShQl,-hFP h-P ShPI),h&N-'N)` FNhPI-K '+ (, A<C\ +^.^` fJN- QdQFI)() M*,. h*,'-P (JN f,*FP FI-N '+ M,* (JN gIK *hQN^ "NM,*N +*, *IPN*) .,'-( (JNI* gIGN)` J,fN&N*` ,*Kh-IcN*) h-P h- h*.d ,M &,F'-(NN*) Jh&N =\ .I-'(N)
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7.
$ 45 ON SALE THIS WEEK JULY 2 JULY 6, 2019
Apple Cartwheels Puff pastry baked with cinnamon sugar and filled with an apple fruit filling. This rustic treat is only available on occasion. Try it today!
French Bread (regular) This bread derives much of its flavor from the crust. Try our hearty french bread with simple cheeses and meats.
ON SALE NEXT WEEK JULY 8 JULY 13, 2019
Whipped Cream Donuts Whipped cream is what is amazing in this donut.
Date Oatmeal Cookies
We make a date puree and sandwich it between two oatmeal cookies.
Voted Burnaby’s BEST BAKERY & SPECIALTY CAKES
ON SALE THURSDAY, JULY 11TH ONLY
Giro Wheels
To celebrate the Giro we make these puff pastry pastries with cranberries and currants and lots of cinnamon.
BurnabyNOW THURSDAY July 4, 2019 21
Giro organizers ready for an evening of excitement Continued from page 20
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#( A<C\ +^.^ I( hFF )(h*() fI(J (JN ",6, "*N&N d,'(J *hQN^ 5JN +*, f,.N-2) *hQN GIQG) ,6 h( @ +^.^` M,FF,fNP gd (JN +*, .N-2) *hQN h( ? +^.^
Enjoy the Giro di Burnaby! Anton’s Pasta Bar Voted Burnaby’s Best Italian Restaurant Here at Anton’s we still embrace Tony’s original philosophy... eat lots, feel at home and have fun!
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22 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
WE’RE NOT JUST BLURRING THE LINE BETWEEN INSIDE AND OUTSIDE, WE’RE ERASING IT. ARAGON.CA/AMBER PUBLIC OPENING SATURDAY, JULY 6 FROM 12 – 5PM It’s not about bringing the outdoors inside. It’s about eliminating the distinction entirely. Using industry-leading building materials and techniques, we are able to create large spans and panoramic views. Finished with folding glass window walls, these light-filled spaces give you unobstructed access to the outdoors – and turn your living room into your backyard.
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY July 4, 2019 23
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24 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
Community now ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Buskers play every week on the mountain Julie MacLellan LIVELY CITY
jmaclellan@burnabynow.com
A Burnaby actor is onstage in the Ensemble Theatre Company’s seventh annual Summer Repertory Festival. The festival is onstage July 10 to Aug. 16 at the Jericho Arts Centre, 1675 Discovery St. in Vancouver. Burnaby’s Anthony Santiago appears in Superior Donuts,Tracy Letts’ lighthearted comedy about a former ’60s radical who sees his run-down family doughnut shop in Uptown Chi-
cago radically transformed when he hires a young black man “with visionary zeal and an appetite for change,” as a press release puts it. It’s in preview on Thursday, July 18 and opens on Friday, July 19. It alternates evenings with Garson Kanin’s BornYesterday (preview July 11, opening July 13) and Michael Healey’s The Drawer Boy (preview July 10, opening July 12). “Theatre brings us together to celebrate, challenge and provoke through the telling of stories,” said Tariq Leslie, artistic direc-
tor of Ensemble Theatre Company, in a press release. “The plays we have programmed for our seventh season embrace conversations about what our culture was, is and could be – the stories we tell ourselves and the truths we all share – each one filled with humour and with pathos.” Single tickets start at $25. See www.ensembletheatrecompany.ca for full details and a performance calendar. MUSIC ON THE MOUNTAIN Have you stopped by the Summer Block Party fun at
UniverCity yet? The summer busker series continues on Wednesdays from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Town Square at 8960 University High St. A variety of entertainers will offer up live music throughout the summer, and audiences can also enjoy a range of food truck fare at SFU’s StreetEat Wednesdays. Note that the next session is on Thursday, July 11, featuring music by jazz vocalist Kaya Kurz and food from the Flying Fish n Chipper. (It’s the only Thursday session of the summer; the rest are Wednesdays.)
It continues on July 17 with music by Stringz Aloud! and food by Mr. Arancino, followed on July 24 with music by Caden Knudson and food by the Sea Island Diner. Closing out July, on the 31st, will be music by Sara Magal and food by Japadog. In August, Stringz Aloud! will return on Aug. 7 (food to be announced), and Kaya Kurz returns on Aug. 14 along with food from The Diner Truck. Aug. 21 will see a performance by Madeleine Grace and food from Japadog, while Aug. 28 will feature music by Sillken and
food by G’s Donairs. There are also two sessions in September: music by Sara Magal (food to be determined) on Sept. 4, and music by slinki, with food by the Sea Island Diner, on Sept. 11. See www.univercity.ca for all the details. Note that the musician and food truck lineup is subject to change, so be sure to follow UniverCity on social media (www.facebook.com/UniverCitySFU or @UniverCity_SFU on Twitter and Instagram) for the most current info.
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26 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
METROTOWN’S BEST VALUE
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The Developer reserves the right to make changes, modifications or substitutes to the building design, specifications and floorplans should they be necessary. Renderings, view and layouts are for illustrative purposes only. Prices subject to change without notice. E.&O.E. Sales and Marketing by Intracorp Realty Ltd. Intracorp Maywood Park Limited Partnership.
Maywo o d Living.co m
BurnabyNOW THURSDAY July 4, 2019 27
Communitynow
1
WATCH AS ARTISTS RACE AGAINST TIME to create beautiful works of art – Live! The Park’s Edge Live Paint Off runs from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday at Deer Lake Art Gallery (6584 Deer Lake Ave.). The event is open to everyone and fun for the whole family.
PARK ART: Sharon Leung at work during the 2018 Park’s Edge Paint Off. A call for artists is now open for this year’s event, coming July 6 to Deer Lake. PHOTO NOW FILES
Artists paint against time at live event in the park
2
CHECK OUT Women’s Work: New Acquisitions. Since 2013, Burnaby Art Gallery has been focusing on enhancing its collection of works by women. Now, you can see some of the new womanmade art at the gallery.The gallery, located at 6344 Deer Lake Ave., will be open from noon to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
3
EAT AND DANCE at the City of Lougheed’s Summer Series at the Eateries. Every Friday and Saturday, the mall will host live music from noon to 2 p.m.This Friday will feature Olin Brix, followed by DJ Juice on Saturday.
5
THINGS TO DO THIS WEEKEND Kelvin Gawley
kgawley@burnabynow.com
4
FIND NOURISHMENT AT THE Farmers’ Market in Burnaby
City Hall’s parking lot (4949 Canada Way) from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. It’s the best place to find locally
grown conventional and organic produce, prepared foods and crafts.There will also be live music, a book exchange and a children’s play tent.
5
COOL DOWN AT ONE OF Burnaby’s eight pool locations. Whether you want to do laps, soak in a hot tub or just splash around
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28 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
Community now
INJURED?
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ARTS
Library pays tribute to Pride about a young gay AfricanAmerican man growing up in a rough part of Miami. It’s on at 6:30 p.m. On July 12, the featured movie is But I’m a Cheerleader about a naïve teenager who is sent off to a “rehab camp” when her family suspects she may be lesbian. It’s on at 6:50 p.m. For July 19, it’s Love, Simon, the story of 17-yearold Simon Spier, who hasn’t told his family or friends that he’s gay and who doesn’t know the identity of the anonymous classmate
By Julie MacLellan
jmaclellan@burnabynow.com
The Burnaby Public Library is paying tribute to Pride with its Friday flicks all summer long. The Friday night movies are shown at the Tommy Douglas branch, 7311 Kingsway, every Friday evening. Screenings are all free, and no registration is needed. On Friday, July 5, audiences can take in the Academy Award-winning Moonlight, a coming-of-age film
he’s fallen for online. It’s on at 6:30 p.m. July 26 features Call Me ByYour Name, the 2017 film set in Northern Italy in 1983, when 17-year-old Elio begins a relationship with his father’s visiting research assistant, Oliver. It screens at 6:10 p.m. In August, Friday Flicks starts on Aug. 2 with Carol, the story of two women from very different backgrounds who find themselves in an unexpected love affair in 1950s New York. It’s on at 6:20 p.m.
The Aug. 9 screening is The Danish Girl, a love story inspired by the lives of artists Lili Elbe and Gerda Wegener. It starts at 6:20 p.m. For Aug. 16, the movie is Pride, director Matthew Warchus’ story of the unlikely friendship forged between a small community of striking miners in Wales and the London-based gay activists who raise funds to feed their families in the summer of 1984. It was inspired by actual events.The screening is at 6:15 p.m.
Burnaby author hosts book launch A Burnaby-based Ismaili Muslim author is sharing a message of understanding and togetherness in a new children’s book. Shaista Kaba Fatehali, who lives in Burnaby with her husband and daughter, is releasing her new book, Back Home, with a special launch event on Monday,
July 8. Fatehali is a kindergarten teacher who’s currently completing her PhD in early childhood education. Her book tells the story of a young Muslim girl named Asha who was forced to flee her Middle Eastern home with her family and build a new life in a Western coun-
try.The story chronicles Asha’s everyday experiences adapting to a new life and culture – and her discovery that the values of her faith are the same values her new friends share. The book is illustrated by Michelle Simpson, a professional illustrator based in Ontario’s Niagara region.
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The launch is being held in the Forum Room on the second level of Fortius Sport and Health, 3713 Kensington Ave. Doors open at 5:30, with the reading and launch at 6 p.m. The book is also available for pre-order on Amazon.
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY July 4, 2019 29
Community now
A LOT GOES INTO YOUR WEBSITE MAKE SURE CUSTOMERS CAN FIND IT
Couples going on birth strikes Mommy’s
GROUNDED Bianca Bujan
The other day, as I was scrolling through my Twitter feed, a tweet by a fellow journalist caught my eye. It read, “My husband and I have made the conscious decision to not have children.” She went on to explain her reasoning (she didn’t have the desire and thought it would be better for the planet) and says she had the full support of her parents (they had never tried to pressure her). She added she would appreciate not being asked when she and her husband would be trying for a baby. In an article titled, “No children please, we’re ‘birth strikers’: new growing trend against starting a family,” shared in TheTelegraph, the author explores the efforts made by a group of protesters from the radical environmentalist group Extinction Rebellion, who took to the streets in London, arguing that the dangers to future generations can no longer be ignored.
In the article, the writer shares, “The population has doubled in the last half-century, rocketing from 3.61 billion to 7.3 billion today, and bringing children into this world means taking the food out of others’ mouths, putting more pressure on natural resources, and potentially sentencing those children to a life of uncertainty and hunger.” One “birth striker” - a 28-year-old woman who is confident that her “biological clock will not start ticking” (despite the disbelief of her friends and family) - shares, “The older I get, the more my decision has solidified.There are now a lot of wider issues that I’m passionate about in terms of the planet and climate change that have confirmed that decision for me. Beyond not eating meat, recycling, using public transport, the number one thing that you can do for the planet is not reproduce.” As a mother of three who admittedly doesn’t take all of these eco-friendly approaches to protecting our planet (I’m a confessed carnivore who drives a gas-guz-
zling SUV), I don’t take offence to these efforts to save the Earth, and instead admire the willingness of many to allow their emotional urges (many confess that they’d still love to have kids) to be taken over by their environmental ones. People are choosing to save the planet over procreating, and I’m not angry I’m in awe.While some of their actions may seem radical to naysayers, and offensive to parents who have chosen a different path, their message definitely has me thinking about the future I want for my kids, and some of the changes that I should be making for my family’s future. I appreciate that people are putting more thought into both the emotional and environmental impacts of having children, and while I may have made an alternate choice for myself, I certainly will listen on with open ears and an open mind. Bianca Bujan is a mom of three, writer, editor, and marketing consultant. Find her on Twitter @biancabujan and Instagram @bitsofbee.
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COME GET *LOUD* THU J U LY 1 1 7PM
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30 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
Community now CULTURE
Nikkei centre hosts Tanabata
By Julie MacLellan
PLEASE RECYCLE THIS NEWSPAPER.
jmaclellan@burnabynow.com
You’re invited to celebrate all things Japanese at an upcoming festival. The Nikkei National Museum and Cultural Centre is holding its Tanabata event on July 6 and 7.Tanabata, known as the Star Festival, is a popular festival in Japan. It celebrates the meeting of the deities Orihime and Hikoboshi, represented by the stars Vega and Altair, respectively. In Japan, colourful displays of bamboo with paper streamers are put up in various places.The streamers, or tanzaku, are rectangular strips of paper on which people write wishes and then attach them to the bamboo stalks. The Nikkei’s Tanabata event includes a host of cultural offerings, including Japanese movies, a book sale (including both Japanese and English novels, comics, DVDs and CDs), games, food and more. It runs from noon to 6
Getting it right: A fitting for the 2018 Tanabata event. PHOTO FILE PHOTO
p.m. both days. Movie screenings (all in Japanese, with English subtitles) are as follows: Okko’s Inn: Saturday, July 6 and Sunday, July 7, 12:30 p.m. (doors at 12:15 p.m.) Mirai: Saturday, July 6 and Sunday, July 7, 2:30 p.m. (doors at 2:15 p.m.) Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated feature, this film from acclaimed director
Mamoru Hosoda tells the story of four-year-old Kun, whose world is turned upside down when he meets his new baby sister, Mirai. Shoplifters: Saturday, July 6, 5 p.m. (doors at 4:45 p.m.) Hirokazu Kore-eda’s film earned the Palme d’Or at the 2018 Cannes Film Festival. It tells the story of a poor family, struggling to survive through petty crime,
who take in a little girl and find their lives changed. Single film tickets for Okko’s Inn and Mirai are $6 for Nikkei members, $8 for non-members, if bought in advance, or $10 at the door. Single film tickets for Shoplifters are $8 for Nikkei members, $10 for nonmembers, if bought in advance, or $12 at the door. (GST will be added to all ticket prices.)
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY July 4, 2019 31
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Deadline: July 22, 2019
Deadline: July 29, 2019
Business in Vancouver presents the BC CEO Awards. Winning CEOs will be profiled in BIV on October 1st and honoured at a gala dinner where each winner will share their leadership lessons to an audience of Vancouver’s business community.
Business in Vancouver continues to highlight the achievements of BC’s young entrepreneurs, executives and professionals by finding 40 outstanding professionals worthy of the Forty under 40 distinction. Winners selected are under 40 and have demonstrated excellence in business, judgment, leadership and community contribution.
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APPLICATIONS NOW OPEN! Deadline: August 19, 2019 The BC Export Awards are the province’s most prestigious awards paying tribute to the success and innovative approaches of BC export companies. Extending across industries the awards recognize achievements in 9 different categories and are a celebration of the contributions exporters have made to both the provincial and national economy.
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NOMINATIONS NOW OPEN! Deadline: October 15, 2019 Business in Vancouver is once again recognizing BC’s most outstanding business women in private or public sector companies. Honourees have risen through the ranks to become senior executives or entrepreneurs. Through corporate board placements they help influence and shape policy at some of Canada’s largest companies. Winners will be profiled in a February issue of Business in Vancouver.
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MICHELLE POCKEY LEADERSHIP AWARD
Applications Now Open! Deadline: October 15, 2019 A winner of the Influential Women in Business Award in 2016, Michelle Pockey worked tirelessly for 20 years, advancing women in business, law, First Nations and non-traditional sectors until her passing from cancer in June 2016. To help support Michelle’s legacy and advance other women along their leadership journeys, Business in Vancouver and Minerva BC have partnered to recognize this exceptional female leader through the creation of the Michelle Pockey Leadership Award. This award gives first priority to an Indigenous woman and single parents, and second priority to women pursuing law, justice, Indigenous or environmental studies. An award and bursary will be presented at the Influential Women in Business Awards luncheon in March 2020.
Donate or apply at www.biv.com/leadership-award
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2019 Event Sponsorship Opportunities Still Available From signature award shows to topical panel discussions, BIV offers a variety of high-quality, informative events throughout the year. Event sponsorship provides your organization with a multiple-touch marketing approach with exposure through in-print and online advertising, networking opportunities and more.
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32 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
Sportsnow LACROSSE
Lakers make moves Addition of Ricci, Fairsall bolsters Burnaby attack Dan Olson
dolson@burnabynow.com
With an eye on pumping up the offence, the Burnaby Lakers used a new rule to add some temporary help for the 2019 Western Lacrosse Association playoff drive. By acquiring lefties Dean Fairsall and Vinny Ricci from the Coquitlam Adanacs on the June 30 trade deadline, the club bolstered its offence. The cost was the playing rights of Tyson Kirkness, a second-round pick from last February’s junior draft. Both Fairsall and Ricci’s stay in Burnaby will expire at the end of the season, with their rights reverting back to Coquitlam. On the floor, the Lakers maintained their hold on first place, thanks to a thrilling 1413 overtime win last Friday over the New West Salmonbellies. Zach Gould’s goal at 3:12 of the five-minute suddendeath frame earned Burnaby the win, in a game where they traded tallies with the ’Bellies over much of the night. Leading by two after two periods, the Lakers twice saw New West rally, forcing overtime with a pair of goals midway through the third. Robert Church led the way with three goals and three assists, while Tyler Digby counted two goals and three assists. Also scoring twice were Scott Jones and Gould. Two days later in Nanaimo, the upstart Timbermen handed Burnaby just its third loss, an 8-5 setback. The Lakers took a 2-0 lead on early strikes by Peter McFeteridge and Ryland Rees, before Nanaimo counted the next five goals. A late surge, with markers by Jared Pozzobon and Gould, got Burnaby back within two, but the T-men stood their ground, bolstered by a 40-save effort from netminder Charles Claxton. Burnaby’s next game is Thursday when they visit New West (7:30 p.m.), followed by Friday’s match against Victoria, 7 p.m. at the Copeland Arena.
Sport to report? Contact Dan Olson at 604.444.3022 or dolson@BurnabyNow.com
BCIT grad thrives on cycling circuit
Local rider Sara Bergen’s route to 2018 victories re-inforced cyclist’s determination Mario Bartel
editorial@burnabynow.com
Sara Bergen gives hope to weekend road warriors everywhere. The 30-year-old Coquitlam native has become one of Canada’s most accomplished bike racers because, six years ago, she wanted to ride in the Whistler Gran Fondo. Bergen finished fourth amongst all the female riders in the 120-km event that is geared more for recreational cyclists than racers. Last year she won the Canadian women’s criterium championship, then quickly followed that up with a win in the women’s event at the New West Grand Prix and second place finishes in the Gastown Grand Prix and PoCo Grand Prix. At the 2018 Giro di Burnaby, the Rally Cycling leader played a role in helping teammate Summer Moak earn her spot in the winner’s circle, providing key pacing and blocking during the 40 laps of the 1.14-kilometre course. She’s eagerly anticipating the July 11 race on Hastings Street, a big part of the BC Superweek series that runs across the Lower Mainland from July 5 to 14. Bergen didn’t set out to become a professional bike racer. She was commuting on a mountain bike from her family’s home near Coquitlam’s Mundy Park to architecture school at BCIT in Burnaby when, she said, her competitive nature led her to set personal challenges to ride faster than the other bike commuters on her daily route. She even pumped her bike’s heavy knobby tires to their maximum capacity so they’d roll easier and quicker on pavement. With extra money from a scholarship Bergen earned in her final year of studies burning a hole in her pocket, she decided to gear up her cycling game – and make it a bit more efficient on her legs – by buying a road bike and shoes.That allowed her to explore routes further afield from her usual routine. She climbed Mt. Seymour, then she did it and Cypress on the same day. “It was super haphazard,” Bergen said of her training regime. On the ride to Whistler, Bergen said she was enthralled when groups of cyclists working together would pass her. “This is freaking cool,” she said. “It’s sweet and fast and efficient.” The experience fuelled Bergen’s competitive nature even further.Through a spin class, she con-
CYCLING SPOTLIGHT: Sara Bergen, at left wearing the 2018 national criterium championship white jersey, didn’t take up cycling seriously until after finishing her studies in architecture at BCIT. PHOTO JENNIFER GAUTHIER
nected with a coach in Vancouver, joined a local club then started entering amateur races like the Tuesday night criterium races that used to circumnavigate a course out at the University of British Columbia and are now based in Burnaby. Bergen said her learning curve was steep, but she absorbed a lot of information about training, race tactics and team dynamics from her teammates and other competitors. “That was the first time I’d been exposed to getting direction,” Bergen said, adding some of her mentors included Canadian Olympian Denise Ramsden and veteran pro racer Leah Guloien, who had experience in big-time women’s races in Europe like the Ladies Holland Tour and the Route de France. “I’ve been fortunate to have really good people around me,” she said. Bergen said her naivety about the rigours of top-level racing probably worked in her favour. She said she was driven by a “reckless passion,” and an unflappable belief that she
could succeed if she applied herself. “It takes hard work, but that’s the one skill I can bring,” she said. After learning her trade with smaller amateur teams, Bergen turned pro with Rally/UHC Cy-
It takes hard work, but that’s the one skill I can bring. cling in 2017.That meant instead of rubbing elbows with other racers in a tight, flat circuit around a Burnaby business park, she was hitting the road in multi-day races like the Santos Women’s Tour Down Under in Australia, the Tour of the Gila in New Mexico and the Amgen Tour of California. “Once those things start coming, you get exposed to the bigger world of bike racing,” Bergen said. Just this past week, she put it on the line in an attempt to defend her
Canadian criterium title, finishing fifth at the nationals. After BC Superweek, where Bergen will by vying for a second title in New West and fight for the top step of the podium in Burnaby and Gastown, she is headed for Europe to compete in La Course, a oneday event organized by the Amaury Sports Organization, the same company that puts on the Tour de France. She’ll also race in RideLondon that is a legacy of the 2012 Olympics in that city. Bergen said the tight quarters of North American criterium racing are a good warmup for racing on the narrow roads of Europe, where positioning and timing can make or break a result. But, she said, racing in front of a hometown crowd is special, especially when so much of her season is spent away from Greater Vancouver. “It’s a bomb,” she said. “There’s a really fun undertone to it that now you’re racing in my backyard.”
Fung, Deng and Zaborniak scoop up Rebels’ awards Cameron Fung, LeYi Deng and Stephanie Zaborniak garnered some heavy hardware during the Burnaby South Rebels 2018/19 varsity athletic awards event recently, celebrating the past season of athletes and accomplishments. Fung picked up the Bill Gray Award for Outstanding Grade 12 Male, having competed in
five sports as well as a mentor and a coach. The Diane Murphy Award for Outstanding Grade 12 female was shared by Deng and Zaborniak, who were instrumental in a variety of sports. Deng, a member of South’s sister school the B.C. School of the Deaf, was relentlessly dedi-
cated in practice and games for cross country, basketball, wrestling and track and field. Zaborniak enjoyed a standout Grade 12 year as a member of the cross country, basketball and netball teams. Her unmatched work ethic and leadership skills were an inspiration for her teammates and classmates.
BurnabyNOW THURSDAY July 4, 2019 33
Sports
Sport to report? Contact Dan Olson at 604.444.3022 or dolson@BurnabyNow.com
Dodd makes long list for award Simon Fraser University middle distance runner Sophie Dodd is one of a record 585 female college athletes who have been nominated by NCAA member schools for the 2019 NCAA Woman of theYear award, as announced last week. Dodd graduated from the Beedie School of Business this summer with a 3.59 grade point average. Her passion is to help businesses actively change the way they view sustainability and social responsibility. During the year, Dodd was the volunteer chairperson for Embark SFU, an independent, student-led not-for-profit that empowers the next generation of student sustainability leaders. She championed its food rescue program that takes produce that typically is tossed out from an on-campus market and re-distributed it for free to hungry students. The West Point Grey alumna was also the driving force behind the learning garden, which teaches students how to grow their own produce and develop their garden skills. Dodd also helped to improve SFU’s sustainability policy as Canada’s first fair trade university and volunteer coached elementary school children weekly. Finally, Dodd completed a remarkable senior season in athletics, help-
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In the hunt: SFU’s Sophia Dodd, centre, was among 585 female college athletes nominated for the 2019 NCAA Woman of the Year award. PHOTO HOWARD LAO/SFU
ing to lead SFU cross country to ninth place at the NCAA championships last fall. She followed that with a ninthplace finish at the indoor track championships and an All-American eighth place run at the outdoor championships in the 800 metres. She was recognized as an Academic All-American by the U.S.Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA). Dodd received the 2019 Bill DeVries Senior All-Around Athlete of
theYear Award at SFU. Established in 1991, the NCAA Woman of theYear award recognizes graduating female college athletes who have exhausted their eligibility and distinguished themselves in academics, athletics, service and leadership throughout their collegiate careers. There were 131 nominees from NCAA Div. 2.The selection committee will whittle the nominees down to a Top 30 list, with nine finalists being announced in September.
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BURNABY MINOR HOCKEY ASSOCIATION Boys and Girls Leagues & Programs for Kids Ages 4 to 20 Years Old
Join BMHA!
Register for 2019/20 Season Saturday, July 6 - 10 am to 3 pm Thursday, July 11 - 7 pm to 9 pm Tuesday, July 30 - 6 pm to 8 pm Kensington Complex - Community Room (upstairs) 6159 Curtis Street, Burnaby
For more information, visit www.burnabyminor.com or call 604-719-1009
34 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
Looking for a new home? Start here.
Sub-3% five-year fixed mortgage is back – for now: forecast Around 18 months of steady overnight rate rises have led mortgage holders and applicants to brace themselves for bigger monthly payments. But five-year fixed rates, held by 80 per cent of homeowners, are in fact declining because of a fall in government bond yields, which dictate fixed rates, according to the B.C. Real Estate Association. In its latest quarterly Mortgage Rate Forecast, issued June 28, the BCREA reported that the average five-year fixed rate for 2019’s second quarter will have been 2.99 per cent, down from Q1’s 3.60 per cent. That rate is expected to stay the same through summer to September, and the declines are even steeper than those predicted in BCREA’s March forecast. However, the association is predicting that five-year fixed-rate mortgages will begin to climb “modestly” again in the fall, with an average of 3.14 per cent in 2019’s fourth quarter, and the same in the first six months of 2020. Despite this, the Bank of Canada’s five-year
posted (qualifying) rate is expected to remain unchanged all the way through to the end of next year, at 5.34 per cent. This means that mortgage applicants undergoing the stress test will have to qualify at that rate, even if they are only paying around three per cent as a contracted rate. The BCREA’s report said, “As currently constituted, the mortgage stress test is the higher of the contract rate plus two per cent or the posted five-year mortgage rate. The latter has not changed in close to a year despite the drop in five-year bond yields. In fact, the posted rate appears to be divorced from its prior statistical relationship with the five-year bond yield.” MORTGAGE STRESS TEST The association reiterated its many previous calls for the federal government to ease the mortgage stress test. It added that even if the mortgage stress test isn’t eased, decreasing the Bank of Canada’s five-year posted rate would have the same effect. It wrote in the report,
Attached Detached
BCREA also suggested a cut to the Bank of Canada’s overnight rate – which affects variable-rate mortgages – could be on the cards. The overnight rate has risen to 1.75 per cent over a series of hikes since summer 2017, but has plateaued since late 2018.
Attached Detached
The report said, “With market expectations at odds with communication from the Bank of Canada, its worth asking, ‘Is it time for the Bank of Canada to cut interest rates?’ The argument in favour of lower rates is a growing risk of recession, caused by an exogenous shock like the escalation of global trade disputes, when the Bank has limited ammunition to boost the economy.”
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Attached Detached
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* Total units registered sold June 10-16 as of July 2 ** Median sale price of units registered sold June 10-16 *** Highest price of all units registered sold June 10-16 † Listings as of July 2 †† Median days of active listings as of July 2 All sold and listings information as of July 2
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BurnabyNOW THURSDAY July 4, 2019 35
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DER, Barbara K. It is with much sadness we announce the passing of our mother, Barbara Kay Der (nee Dimsdale). Former Councillor for the City of Burnaby, devoted volunteer & humanitarian. Barbara leaves us with an extensive list of accomplishments that form her body of work and represent her active participation in many areas including local and provincial politics, the non-profit sector and many community organizations. Recipient of a number of recognitions and awards for her community service including the Paul Harris Fellow Award, National Capital Commission Volunteer Award, BCWLC Mary Ozolin Award, Special Olympics Volunteer of the Year, YWCA Woman of Distinction Nominee, BC Community Achievement Award, Burnaby and New West Seniors of Distinction Awards and most recently, the Sovereign’s Medal for Volunteers awarded by the Governor General of Canada. Barbara was born in McLennan, Alberta before moving to Vancouver where she attended Point Grey Secondary. Mother of 4, Barbara lived for many years in Burnaby and New Westminster. Predeceased by her youngest daughter Charlene Ferguson, parents Sybil and Alfred Dimsdale, brother Norman Dimsdale, sisters Anne Dimsdale and Lane Carich. Barbara is survived by her daughter Shelley and husband Dan Watson, daughter Valerie Smith and son Conrad Der, siblings Shirley Hewitt, Gordon Dimsdale, Jerry Dimsdale and Sharon Franks, 6 grandchildren, 1 great-granddaughter and the rest of her beloved family and cherished friends. We will miss her vibrancy, her flaming red hair as she drove around in her convertible, and most of all her laughter which would fill a room. Celebration of Life is being held at 1:00pm on Friday, July 5, 2019 at the Burnaby Lake Rowing Pavilion, 6871 Roberts St. Burnaby with Tea following. In lieu of flowers donations most gratefully acknowledged to the following: L’arche Foundation “We All Belong” campaign (L’arche Vancouver) & Special Olympics Burnaby.
GRANT, Tillie M. October 1918 - June 2019 Died in her 101’st year in New Westminster, BC. Having her formal education interrupted early she was proud to say she never stopped learning. Through diligence in retail and clerical work, study and training, Tillie eventually became a partner/owner of a successful Credit Bureau. After selling the business, Tillie and husband Fred moved to BC, where she worked for the Vancouver bureau until her retirement. Tillie loved her church. A lifelong Presbyterian, and Elder of Knox Church in Sapperton, she was always on hand to greet and take part in all that went on there. Born in Brandon, Manitoba, Tillie was the middle child of nine born to Anton and Pauline Bygarski. Predeceased by her husband, Fred Grant, daughter Carroll Johnson and seven of her siblings, Tillie is survived by her son, Charles Hughes (Nancy) of Coquitlam, sister Ann Sherban (Ed), sister-in-law Jessie Roberts both of Brandon, six grandchildren, nine greatgrandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews. A Memorial Service and reception will be held at Knox Presbyterian Church, 403 East Columbia Street, New Westminster (Sapperton) on Saturday, July 6th at 2:00 pm.
YEE, Mary Rose Ly-Yip, 18 October, 1942 - 19 June, 2019 Mary, our beloved sister, passed away peacefully but unexpectedly at Seton Villa, Burnaby. Mary will be sadly missed, especially, by her family. Mary’s friends and all those who have been touched by her kindness, generosity and laughter will also hear of her passing with shock and disbelief. Our thanks and gratitude go to her doctor and team who have looked after Mary for the past number of years; also, to her carers at Seton Villa. Mary is survived by 4 siblings: eldest brother, Lionel (Pauline) younger sister, Rosie (Graham) younger brother, Jasman (Delfa), and the youngest, Vincent (Margaret). Mary had been blessed with 4 surviving nephews, 5 nieces and 1 predeceased nephew. Mary had also been a dear and proud Grand-auntie to 16 active, keen youngsters. Mary was an avid reader and kept herself up to date with current events. She also like to knit and sew. Her end products generally ended up as personal gifts or sold in flea markets around the Lower Mainland. While living at Seton Villa, she was recognized for her artwork and she spent time gardening in the communal plot growing flowers and vegetables of her choice. She took part in Bingo and other social activities that were offered. She was active and walking was part of her daily routine. A Funeral Service was held at 9.00am on Wednesday July 3 at Kearney Burnaby Chapel 4715 Hastings St. Burnaby with Fr. Maciej Wos officiating. Interment to follow at Forest Lawn Memorial Park 3789 Royal Oak Ave., Burnaby. Condolences for and tributes to the family may be left at www.KearneyFS.com
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604-444-3000 LEGAL
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
Please recycle this newspaper.
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WITNESS WANTED Anyone having witnessed or knowledge of a motor vehicle accident that occurred on September 30, 2018 at approximately 9:26pm, east bound on Kingsway and Royal Oak Avenue in Burnaby, BC., where a GMC Yukon rear ended a Ford Fusion (Blue in colour) pushing the Ford vehicle into a Toyota Matrix, is asked to contact: Jessie Baily of Yearwood & Dyson at 604-876-7000 "+#*)%$!* '(*& */ 2?OJ3( 8$ JU( DCO(U83N( T?(: ,AJ C:+ 8: B(UC=$ 8$ ,::CA?N T8A>36 GJ8OCW( %(68J 1( 1?== +?N68N( 8$ W88+N B(=8:W?:W J8 E?:A(:J IA'8O>=(- :C<(=/@ S7R 799L ; 4LP %3JAU<C: "JU DU((=- EXH@ YM'#4.I4.F7.M.M9.- J8 O(A82(O )Y95LQM& 6=3N CAAO3?:W NJ8OCW( C:+ C:/KC== 8JU(O (06(:N(N O(=CJ(+Q FU(N( W88+N 1?== B( <C+( C2C?=CB=( $8O NC=( C$J(O V3=/ 79JU- 4.79Q !88+N CO( A3OO(:J=/ B(?:W NJ8O(+ ?: %(=JC- *'Q '8:JCAJ L.Y;"4M;.5&& $8O $3OJU(O ?:$8O<CJ?8:Q
36 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
GARAGE SALES
EMPLOYMENT
GENERAL EMPLOYMENT
RENTALS
APARTMENTS/CONDOS FOR RENT Ta= ZU$> e ^ >POR,_`kKcHBI` 2. GcC0K W2J ,2 =P+.-b .
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Guaranteed hourly wage + bonuses. Earn up to $20/hr. #kLL kR,S. ^TW
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TU#Ud Wk.gPOLLd Large 3 BR, 2 bath, main floor, appls, gas 5E.GaNK.R patio, parking, close to schools & transit. $1950 + 1/2 utls. NS/NP. Refs req’d. Avail July or Aug - negotiable. F`HcI_Hc__`I
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ADVERTISING POLICIES
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Now Hiring Experienced:
SUITES FOR RENT
All advertising published in this newspaper is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services offered are accurately described and willingly sold to buyers at the advertised prices. Advertisers are aware of these conditions. Advertising that does not conform to these standards or that is deceptive or misleading, is never knowingly accepted. If any reader encounters non-compliance with these standards we ask that you inform the Publisher of this newspaper and The Advertising Standards Council of B.C. OMISSION AND ERROR: The publishers do not guarantee the insertion of a particular advertisement on a specified date, or at all, although every effort will be made to meet the wishes of the advertisers. Further, the publishers do not accept liability for any loss of damage caused by an error or inaccuracy in the printing of an advertisement beyond the amount paid for the space actually occupied by the portion of the advertisement in which the error occurred. Any corrections of changes will be made in the next available issue. The Burnaby Now will be responsible for only one incorrect insertion with liability limited to that portion of the advertisement affected by the error. Request for adjustments or corrections on charges must be made within 30 days of the ad’s expiration. For best results please check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Refunds made only after 7 business days notice!
Today’s Puzzle Answers
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Call to place your ad
604-444-3000
To advertise call Call 604-630-3300 to604.444.3000 place your ad
SUITES FOR RENT
$<?[%X TXU=>d ^ >'> 0L2,:kLLSg :OS) #SKS,S.g, Garden of Atonement, $12,000/set, including transfer fee. F`HcGI^c___`
BUSINESS SERVICES
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
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EDUCATION
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BURIAL PLOTS
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burnabynow.adperfect.com
Beautiful Atrium with Fountain. By College, Shops & Transit/Skytrain. Pets negotiable. Ref req’d.
MARKETPLACE
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Place your ad online anytime!
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Hi-Rise Apartment with River View & Indoor Pool. _ $? 3 ^ $? %*kOLkjLS. Rent includes heat & hot water. Remodeled Building and Common area. Gated underground secure parking available. References required.
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RENT OUT YOUR EXTRA SPACE
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Call 604-444-3000 to book your ad
HOME SERVICES CLEANING
ELECTRICAL
$,-- %#,(#/!"$0 &.%)(' LEGAL SERVICES
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#?[W[V%X ?!#U?"& Why suffer Employment/ Licensing loss? Travel/Business opportunities? Be embarrassed? Think: Criminal Pardon. US Entry Waiver. Record Purge. File Destruction. Free Consultation 1-800-347-2540. accesslegalmjf.com
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REAL ESTATE
APARTMENTS / CONDOS-FOR SALE
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CONCRETE
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Perfect downsize opportunity, 55+ building, friendly desirable, quiet Montecito neighbourhood. 1 Bedroom, private cov’d patio, secure parking, storage, in suite laundry. $UUY k *OS)OJQ =U"%5; %569"56 4;5 6,065<"+ !650/2!"0/;<3 /< (/3!;: &/!5;3;40: "<8 (;)9$'*7
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FLOORING '%,$1..$ (2.., &#"04+840: 75)4/'& 2 6%4/+/+3 8+&%4-84%/*+ "'55 $&%/,4%5& *#093,/ '%,$1..$ (2..,+ ;-!67);6)55! !!!(05+%#'914'.!**.(0*, IV>=%XX%=[UV ?!l[V[>\[V]d Sanding. Free est, great prices. Satisfaction guar.F`HcG_DcEG`D
GUTTERS
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8_ %c#!?=[l[!" Licensed Electrician, Res/Comm New or old wiring. Reasonable rates. Lic #22774 F`HcDECcCICH
?S-,2.k,O2J ]U= ?U=& 9! 9%V= [=! Facia, Decks, Fence, Stairs ]+,,S. ]+k.h Stainless steel micro mesh gutter guard “Never clean your gutters again.” . .
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8_ $kiMP2S- 3 !'ik*k,2.=.SJiPLS-- 9k,S.LOJS$2jik,- 3 "+K0 =.+iM 3 %LL Wk,S.OkL "SLO*S.OS".kOJkQSA Video Inspection, Landscaping, Stump/Rock/Cement/Oil Tank & Demos, Tk*OJQd Pool/Dirt Removal, Paver Stones, Jackhammer, Water/Sewer, Line/Sumps, Slinger Avail, Concrete Cutting, Hand Excavating. $k-SKSJ,- WkhS ".g #Lk+hO21- $kiMP2S >S.*OiS
.
OUT OF TOWN PROPERTY
9S-, #2k-, #Shk. [J-,kLLk,O2JNew, Repaired, Rebuilt since 1991. Fences & Decks. F`HcEDDcFHGD cedarinstall@hotmail.com
jR8IEI`C Commercial & residential reno’s & small jobs.
EXCAVATING
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FENCING
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To advertise call
604-444-3000
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FIND HELP FOR YOUR PROJECTS
Home Services cont. on next page
BurnabyNOW THURSDAY July 4, 2019 37
HOME SERVICES GUTTERS
LAWN & GARDEN
.
SUMMER SPECIALS
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Gutter Cleaning, Power washing, Window Cleaning, Roof Cleaning Call Simon for prompt & professional service 30 yrs exp. 604 230-0627
HANDYPERSON
31 years experience
SUMMER CLEAN-UP
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@ Power Raking @ ?'N,.E B..Aa. 7.GN%E Hedge Trim & Tree Prune @ 9aH:.E B.IC @ 1..I @4HG 6H%a @V>aK' e \k+LOJQ 3 "+K0OJQ
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Complete Lawn & Garden Care
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Gutters vacuumed and hand cleaned 604-524-0667
604-729-8502
L%9V c ]%?"!V c =?!! Services. Yard Waste - Junk Removal. Power Washing.
604-319-5302
agardenerandagentleman.ca
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Paver stones, Hedges driveways/patios, ponds & walls, returfing, demos, yard/perimeter drainage, jack hammering. Old pools filled in, concrete cutting.
604.782.4322 LAWN & GARDEN
..
604-240-2881
All Work Guar. Free Est. John 604-616-2934
778-892-1530
www.constructbc.com
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Specializing in Bathrooms, Ensuites and much more Work within your budget
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PLUMBING
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classifieds. burnabynow.com
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604 - 787-5915 604 - 291-7778
www.treeworksonline.ca 10% discount with this ad
AUTOMOTIVE
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
GROOVY
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PUZZLE ANSWERS ON SEPARATE PAGE
PATIOS .
Patio Covers, Sunrooms, Vinyl, Railings Free Estimate
604-821-8088
BOWEN ALUMINUM
patiocoversunroomvancouver.com
BRING HOME IMPROVEMENTS
TO THE NEXT LEVEL
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REFER TO THE HOME SERVICES SECTION FOR ALL YOUR HOME IMPROVEMENT NEEDS
Grow Your Business
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604-724-3832
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SUN DECKS
A-1 Contracting. BC`AR LNA'R !%AK'.^ KNL%^.ACR A%a%^)R painting, decks and more.
604-626-6891
PAINTING/ WALLPAPER
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RUBBISH REMOVAL
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LANDSCAPING Greenworx Redevelopment Inc.
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ROOFING
604-251-3382
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RENOS & HOME IMPROVEMENT
Magic Star Painting
(.22"97 */"%-"# $ &";%39"#
A-1 Steve’s Gutter & Roof Clean and Windows & Repair from $98 !
PAINTING/ WALLPAPER
Call 604-444-3000
ACROSS 1. Bridge building degree 4. Catches 9. A heavy type of music 14. Original “Twilight Zone” host Serling 15. Rodent species 16. Finnish lake 17. Street (abbr.) 18. Home of the US Naval Academy 20. It held a convention once 22. Makes a loud, ringing sound 23. Cave 24. Lessening of something 28. MJ’s nickname “__ Jordan”
29. One’s way of doing things 30. Wings 31. Quotes as evidence for 33. Acts glumly 37. A man’s title kit sb rfhpc xdcb 39. Edible mollusk 41. Resembles a pouch 42. He/she checks your health 43. Nobel Prize-winning biochemist 44. Stop momentarily 46. Formerly (archaic) 49. Commercial 50. White vestment worn by clergy
51. Island people of the Mediterranean 55. Prices 58. On a line at right angles to a ship’s length 59. Where boats are parked 60. One who values reason 64. It might be on your driveway 65. Small Iranian village 66. Used to emphasize 67. Mathematical term (abbr.) 68. Long necked birds 69. Eyeglasses 70. When you hope to get there
13. The top of a pot 19. A type of meal 21. Lake __, one of the Great 24. Capital of Jordan 25. A type of logic 26. Khoikhoi peoples ljt ` xvpq bmhp fo edwupd mg Christian liturgies 31. Arrives 32. Lemur 34. Small bodies of still water 35. __ route 36. Breaks apart 40. A type of line 41. Caption that translates
45. Winged 47. Criticize severely 48. Leg bones 52. Monetary unit 53. 007’s creator 54. Accumulate 56. Establish by law or with authority 57. Breed of goat 59. Millisecond 60. Mock 61. Make older 62. Some don’t want to be given any 63. Wrath
DOWN 1. Portuguese district 2. An assembly of witches 3. Having few teeth 4. The act of going across 5. Nepalese dynasty 6. “Bye Bye Birdie” actress __-Margaret 7. What the princess found beneath her mattress 8. Pennsylvania transit organization 9. Winnie the Pooh creator 10. Riddle 11. Grads wear one 12. Body part
38 THURSDAY July 4, 2019 • BurnabyNOW
LANGLEY FARM MARKET PRODUCE
Local
BLUEBERRIES
RASPBERRIES
WHITE PEACHES
Product of B.C. (1 LB)
Product of B.C. (1 PINT)
Product of U.S.A.($2.84 KG)
7
1
$ 00
2 FOR
Local
3
$ 88
$ 29
lb.
Local
BI-COLOUR CORN
GALA APPLES
Product of U.S.A.
Product of U.S.A. ($2.18 KG)
99¢
5 FOR
lb.
3
$ 00
MEAT
Product of B.C. (1 PINT)
12.08KG.........................................
CUT FROM GRADE AA BEEF
13.18KG........................................
CHICKEN DRUMETTES
FRESH
8.78KG ..........................................
MANGO SWISS ROLL
5
$ 00
5
$ 49
/lb.
5
3 $ 99 6
$ 99
909ML ...........................REG $4.69
500G .............................REG $7.79
/lb.
HANS FREITAG
BISCUIT & WAFER
2
300G ..............................REG $3.69
3
SAN REMO
5
/lb.
284G ........................... REG $3.09
ea.
ea.
ea.
ROASTED TURKEY BREAST
100G .....................................................
FREYBE
CERVELATE SALAMI
100G .....................................................
ea.
5
2 for $ 00
BAKERY
$ 25
600G ...............................................
KALAMATA FIGS
ea.
2
$ 09
COCONUT BUN
100G .................................................
1
$ 15
ea.
CREAMY HAVARTI CHEESE
100G .......................................................
LEMON LOAF
450G ..............................................
2
$ 39
$ 99
(DESIREE/NOBLESS/NOBLESS NOIR)
$ 99
3
$ 49
FREYBE
ORGANIC SAUERKRAUT & CARROT
NATURAL HONEY (BUCKWHEAT)
$ 99
Product of B.C.(2 LB BAG)
DELI
EAT WHOLESOME
EAT WHOLESOME
SIRLOIN TIP STEAKS
MIX COLOUR PEPPERS
GROCERY
SIRLOIN TIP ROAST
CUT FROM GRADE AA BEEF
Local
GRAPE TOMATOES
2 FOR
ea.
1
$ 79
2
$ 99
ea.
Valid Thursday July 4th - Sunday, July 7th 2019 while quantities last.
WE ARE HIRING!
STORE HOURS: MONDAY TO SUNDAY: 8:30AM TO 9:00PM HOLIDAYS: 9:00AM TO 6:00PM
For the following positions: • Cashier • Produce: Vegetable Packer, Produce Stocker • Grocery: Grocery Stocker • Bakery: Baker Packer
BURNABY
7815 Kingsway
GIFT CARDS AVAILABLE IN STORE
LFM LANGLEY FARM MARKET
604-521-2883
For fresh and quality foods
Your Choice. Our Honour. Our Effort. Our Award. Thank you to all our valued customers for your ongoing support
For freshness & quality you can count on!