NEWS 3
CRIME 5
ARTS 11
Trustee seat will remain vacant
Stabbing targeted, cops say
Performers sought for star search FOR THE BEST LOCAL
COVERAGE WEDNESDAY JUNE 14, 2017
There’s more at Burnabynow.com
LOCAL NEWS – LOCAL MATTERS
RECYCLING FAILURE
GO TO PAGE 23
TEMPORARY ART
Are you mixing your peels with garbage? By Tereza Verenca tverenca@burnabynow.com
Burnaby residents would get a failing grade for recycling if marks were handed out after a special recyling audit last year. More than half of Burnaby residents’ garbage is contaminated with recyclable or compostable waste, according to a select 2016 audit. The City of Burnaby studied 100 single- and two-family households from each collection zone over two weeks last summer. The study showed garbage had a contamination rate of 52 per cent, consisting of yard material and food scraps (40 per cent) and recyclable materials (12 per cent). “We’ve had the food scraps program in place since 2010, so doing an audit and seeing that 60 per cent of the residents aren’t setting out their food waste is pretty significant,” says Tracey Tobin, an environmental services officer with the city. The audit, included in the 2016 solid waste and recycling annual report released last week, showed 85 per cent of
THAT’S A LOT OF CHALK DUST: Chalk art work by Wayne and Cheryl Renshaw of Santa Clara, California was part of The Chalk Art Experience, a twoday festival held at Bonsor Recreation Complex over the weekend. The festival gave folks a chance to check out art by local and international artists and also enjoy live music on two stages. For more photos, see page 3 and check out www.burnabynow.com. PHOTO JENNIFER GAUTHIER
Continued on page 9
POLITICS
Liberal MP votes against pipeline Beech:‘I did promise that I would take my constituents’ voice to Ottawa and not the other way around’ By Tereza Verenca tverenca@burnabynow.com
Terry Beech was one of two Liberal MPs who voted against a motion in support of Kinder Morgan’s proposed Trans Mountain expansion project in the
House of Commons last week. Conservative MP Mark Strahl introduced the motion, which affirmed that the $7.4-billion pipeline expansion project has social licence to proceed, is critical to the economy and the cre-
ation of thousands of jobs, is environmentally sound and should go ahead as planned. It passed by a vote of 252 to 51, with all Liberal MPs backing it except for Beech, the MP for Burnaby NorthSeymour, and Hedy Fry, the MP for Vancouver Cen-
tre. “I do understand the government’s position. They’re trying to balance the economy and the environment. ... But at the end of the day, I did promise that I would take my constituents’ voice to Ottawa and not the oth-
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er way around. I was very vocal about that before the (federal) decision was made, and this is just a matter of me being consistent with my position on that issue,” Beech said of his nay vote. The local MP has never taken a yes or no stance on
the project. Instead, Beech referred the media and constituents to a report he presented to the Trans Mountain ministerial panel last August. The first chapter, on the topic of social Continued on page 3
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Newsnow BIG CHALK, BIG ART
NOT YOUR CHILDHOOD CHALK ART:
Clockwise from above: Vancouver artist Emily Gray works on her creation during The Chalk Art Experience, which ran at Bonsor Recreation Complex June 10 and 11; Lori Escalera, an artist from Vista, California, creates her work; the Kokoma African Heritage Ensemble performs for the festival; a larger-thanlife work by Ever Galvez of Placentia, California takes shape. ALL PHOTOS JENNIFER GAUTHIER
‘It’s a very complex issue’ Continued from page 1 licence, states “people of Burnaby North-Seymour on balance stand opposed to this project, and that the community does not grant its permission for this project to proceed.” “(My vote) is a reflection of the report I wrote,” Beech told the NOW. “The reason I say that is because it’s a very complex issue. I literally spent years reading tens of thousands of pages of reports and talking to thousands of people, and I don’t think this issue is as easy as a yes or no answer. ... We need to look at the whole package of what the government is trying to do (to) balance the economy and the environment.”
Beech pointed to the “unprecedented” and “very progressive” changes that are underway to protect the environment for future generations, including transitioning to a low-carbon economy and restoring protections in the Fisheries Act. “Every day we’re trying to get that balance right,” he said. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced his cabinet’s approval of the expansion project last November. In January, Premier Christy Clark said Kinder Morgan had met the province’s five conditions. When asked if there’s been any backlash from his Liberal colleagues or the prime minister him-
self as a result of his opposing vote, Beech chose not to comment. He also declined to comment on B.C.’s minority government and whether the B.C. NDP-Green alliance could stop the project, only saying, “it’s an interesting time for provincial politics.” Twinning the pipeline, which will transport raw bitumen from Edmonton to Burnaby, will triple capacity to 890,000 barrels of oil per day. Tanker traffic in the Burrard Inlet is also estimated to increase sevenfold. Construction is expected to start this September, with a completion date of December 2019.
EDUCATION
Vacant city trustee seat will not be filled By Cornelia Naylor cnaylor@burnabynow.com
The Burnaby school board will be down a trustee until the next municipal election in October 2018. Trustee Katrina Chen was elected MLA for Burnaby-Lougheed in last month’s provincial election, but she will not resign her school board seat – a move that would have triggered a byelection. Instead, she requested an unpaid leave until Jan. 2, 2018, after which time a byelection will no longer be required under the Local Government Act. The school board’s remaining six trustees unanimously approved the leave at a meeting Tuesday. “I guess our feeling was more around the cost,” chair Ron Burton told the NOW. “If
the city wants to run a byelection, we could tag on, but we don’t want to incur the cost on our own.” Both city council and the school board are made up entirely of members of the Burnaby Citizens Association, an NDP-affiliated civic party. With the election of Chen in BurnabyLougheed and Coun. Anne Kang in Burnaby-Deer Lake, both bodies are down a representative. Last month, civic candidate and Metrotown Residents Association founder Rick McGowan, who ran unsuccessfully against Kang for the B.C. Greens, said a byelection could open up local government in Burnaby. “It’s a good opportunity for somebody who’s not part of the BCA to get elected,” he said.
4 WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 • BurnabyNOW
City now
Online map tracks progress of pipeline
FOUR TEAMS Team Orange
Team Green
Team Red
Team Blue
Wilderness Committee has launched a tool to track Kinder Morgan construction and associated protests Tereza Verenca tverenca@burnabynow.com
The Wilderness Committee has launched a new online map that will track the construction of Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain expansion project as well as any protests. Km-watch.ca features a detailed route of the $7.4-billion Edmonton-toBurnaby pipeline. It also shows drinking water aquifers and intakes, nearby schools and endangered species habitat. “I think the worst case scenario would be for Kinder Morgan to start this thing
We want folks to have all the information they need …
... and for people not to know,” says Peter McCartney, a climate campaigner with the non-profit, which has been a longtime opponent of the project. “We want folks to have all the information they need to get together and stop this pipeline.” The twinning project
would triple capacity to 890,000 barrels of oil a day and increase tanker traffic sevenfold. Construction is scheduled to start this September. However, there are many factors at play. The prime minister and Alberta’s premier stand by the pipeline, while the newly minted NDP-Green alliance have vowed to stop it with “every tool available.” There are also numerous court cases involving First Nations groups and cities like Burnaby. Kinder Morgan, meanwhile, announced it’s proceeding with the project.
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MILLER LAW Knife attack: Burnaby RCMP and paramedics attend the scene of a double stabbing in North Burnaby Sunday afternoon. Police say the attack was likely targeted. PHOTO RYAN STELTING
Two men stabbed in North Burnaby attack Police believe attack was targeted, not random A double stabbing in North Burnaby sent one man to hospital Sunday. Police were called to 4143 Parker St. at about 2:30 p.m. for reports of a stabbing. They found two men who had been attacked with a knife. A male suspect fled the
scene on foot. A police canine unit searched the area, but police were unable to locate the man. “We don’t believe it was random,” Burnaby RCMP Staff Sgt. Maj. John Buis told the NOW. “We believe it was targeted to these individuals.”
One of the victims was taken to hospital with minor injuries, while the other refused to cooperate with police and declined treatment, Buis said. The victims did not make the call to police or provide a description of the suspect, according to police. – Cornelia Naylor
25
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Let Us Guide You Through The Maze PROBATE AND ESTATE ADMINISTRATION WILLS AND ESTATE PLANNING POWER OF ATTORNEY TRUSTS CORPORATE AND REAL ESTATE
Memo: If you’re going to ride a stolen bike, wear a helmet A man riding a bike down Canada Way on June 6 probably wishes he’d worn a helmet. The man was stopped by Burnaby RCMP traf-
fic services at about 2 p.m., according to police, and it turned out he was wanted on a Canada-wide warrant for allegedly failing to comply with a court order.
The bike he was riding also turned out to be stolen, police said. They said the man was of no fixed address but was reportedly living in Burnaby.
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6 WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 • BurnabyNOW
Opinion now OUR VIEW
Don’t hold your breath for $10 daycare Families seeking daycare relief may be watching their children graduate from high school before seeing any meaningful changes in B.C. This wouldn’t be a big deal if young families weren’t already tapped out paying for mortgages, but a second mortgage in the form of child care fees is making life even less affordable. What’s more, there is a daycare shortage in Burna-
by, with many working families struggling just to find a spot. The truth is Canadians aren’t big on paying for other kids’ daycare and that’s why we have the patchwork system we have now. Even the federal government’s much vaunted daycare plan is targeted mostly to lowincome and marginal communities. While that’s good and needed, your average family is not likely to see
much benefit. There is great ambivalence towards universal child-care supports in this country, unlike in some European countries, where it’s seen as an important pillar of society. Here, child care is seen as an individual responsibility. Thus, tax credits are typically used to transfer money to families instead of a break on daycare fees. Subsidies are only for those in
the lowest income brackets while efforts are made to boost the number of daycare spaces through grants to operators, but those amounts rise and fall depending on the economy, government commitment, election cycle, etc. In B.C., the $10-a-day plan proposed by the New Democrats is in jeopardy because of what is likely to be a short-lived NDPGreen partnership. Even if
that plan were to succeed, it would take years to fully roll out, while a switch back to a B.C. Liberal government or any downturn in the economy would kill it. In Quebec, where a $7-aday plan gets the most attention, the realities of such a scheme have not lived up to the promise. Public daycare spots are limited, just as they are here, because governments are only willing to put so much mon-
ey into daycare; thus, only about a third of families get access to them, creating long waiting lists and concerns about substandard care. So for B.C. to get a longterm, universal daycare plan, such as the NDP has pledged, is a tricky proposal at best and, sadly for thousands of families, may even be a non-starter.
MY VIEW KEITH BALDREY
B.C. legislature still up in the air The only certainty that exists in B.C. politics right now is that we know the date when the legislature is being recalled. But that’s about it. There is a throne speech planned for that first day, June 22. But we don’t for sure yet whether it will be delivered because it is not absolutely certain the 87 MLAs can find a way to accomplish the first order at hand: electing a Speaker from among themselves. Mike de Jong, the B.C. Liberal government house leader, did drop broad hints last week that his side would follow convention and put up one of their own members for the job, but he didn’t come right out and confirm that happening. But let’s say they resolve the Speaker issue and get to the throne speech. The next bit of uncertainty is when there will be a vote on it. There could be the normal week or so of debate, and then a vote. Or, the Opposition could move an amendment voicing rejection of the speech. In short, while it appears the B.C. Liberal government is in imminent danger of falling out of power, the exact date on which that may occur is far from clear. Perhaps the biggest uncertainty of all is how Lt.Gov. Judith Guichon intends to respond to various scenarios that unfold. It is common wisdom that, if the Clark government does indeed fall, Guichon will turn to NDP leader John Horgan to see if he can form a stable government. The key word here, from Guichon’s point of view, is “stable.” She wants to see strong evidence
that whoever she turns to can provide that stability on an ongoing basis. Can a one-seat majority provide that stability? Consider how the B.C. legislature operates. The house spends most of its time in the “committee” stage to examine and debate pieces of legislation and the spending estimates of government ministries. Under the rules of the Westminster parliament system, the speaker doesn’t sit in committee and in fact leaves the chamber. When that happens – assuming an NDP speaker – the B.C. Liberals will have the same number of MLAs (43) as the combined forces of the NDP and the B.C. Greens. But the NDP and Greens would need to appoint a deputy speaker to chair that committee. Suddenly, the B.C. Liberals would have a numerical advantage: 43 seats to 42 (the deputy speaker only votes in the event of a tie). Does that kind of scenario provide stability? According to B.C. Green leader Andrew Weaver, his side is toying with changing the rule that says the speaker must not sit in committee. But an arbitrary change of such a fundamental rule may be seen as a naked power grab, and who knows how the lieutenant-governor would view such a move. Maybe another election hovers into view (or maybe not). The house returns June 22. We know that for sure, but not much more, and all this uncertainty will last quite a while yet. Keith Baldrey is chief political reporter for Global B.C.
’TWAS SAID THIS WEEK ...
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I did promise that I would take my constituents’ voice to Ottawa and not the other way around. MP Terry Beech, story page 1
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Former cop conned by thief A bold, smooth-talking thief duped a former police officer out of a circular saw in March. A stranger appeared at Fred Brent’s door asking to borrow a skil saw. The 30-something man addressed him by his first name and mentioned having talked to Brent’s neighbour, George. He said he lived down the street. Brent got suspicious after the saw, loaned out at about 2 p.m., hadn’t been returned by dinnertime. He knew he’d been duped after knocking on doors at the end of the street.
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BurnabyNOW WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 7
Opinionnow Proportional system would favour B.C. cities
If you can’t afford child care, then stay home
Dear Editor: I was a bit alarmed reading the request for electoral reform as put forward by Iain Macanulty on June 9 (We need voting reform, Inbox, Burnaby NOW). The population of British Columbia is 4.6 million. 3.1 million, or 67 per cent of the population, resides in the Greater Vancouver area and Vancouver Island. Yet the total land mass occupied by the Greater Vancouver area and Vancouver Island represents a paltry 0.6 per cent of the province. As has become increasingly common in recent elections, the British Columbians who reside in the city areas of the southwest corner of the province desire to turn the rest of B.C. into a park, while the people whose livelihoods depend on developing and managing our resources wish to have continued access to jobs that aren’t in the city. Lest anyone forget, the “21st-century economy” so desired by the Greens and presumably the NDP, relies on our province’s resources – the only reason we have wind power, solar and a growing technology sector is because we are able to mine our resources to provide engineering companies with the raw materials to make wind turbines, solar panels and computers. We also do it the highest environmental standards in the world. Do we really want to create our 21st-century economy based on resources from parts of the world that have no regard for sustainability? Don’t bring in a electoral system that is not representative of our province, but only of those who live ignorantly and so detached from reality in B.C.’s cities.
Dear Editor: Why should taxpayers have to pay more in taxes each year for a proposed child-care program? The taxpayers have to suffer for problems caused by fellow taxpayers with children who do not know how to budget their personal lives. These people go and sell their home and buy another home with a larger mortgage payment. They trade their car in for a new car with payments lasting seven years. They decide to buy new furniture, paying for it by a credit card. Every weekend they go out to a restaurant for a family dinner and pay for the dinner with a credit card. Their lifestyle has now caused that both parents now have to have a job, all of the time forgetting that someone has to watch over the kids, another cost added to their underfunded lifestyle. These taxpayers should realize that you cannot have your cake and eat it too. If they did not over extend themselves financially, daycare would not be needed because one parent would be able to stay home with the children, until the children reach the age of where they attend daily school. Just plain old economic sense. The proposed child-care plan sounds great to these taxpayers in severe debt, but the plan also costs all taxpayers to pay more in taxes. Quebec is the only province in B.C. that has a taxpayer-funded child-care program. The program started in 1997 at a yearly cost of $300 million per year. In 2015, that same program was costing the taxpayers of Quebec $2.6 billion per year. In eight years, the cost of the plan has increased 767 per cent. In summary, you debt-ridden taxpayers need to sit down with a financial consultant and totally forget about a taxpayer-funded child care plan. Joe Sawchuk, by email
Sally Gillies, by email
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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.
8 WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 • BurnabyNOW
City now Students earn honours for French public speaking Cornelia Naylor
Speaking of winners: Moscrop Secondary Grade 9 French immersion student Sarra Pirmohamed poses with Canadian Parents for French B.C. Yukon president Diane Tijman after Pirmohamed won first place at the Concours d’art oratoire.
cnaylor@burnabynow.com
A speech about B.C.’s fentanyl crisis was among four speeches by Burnaby students that took first place at a provincial French public speaking contest last month. Moscrop Secondary student Sarra Pirmohamed won the Grade 9 immersion category at the Concours d’art oratoire provincial finals on May 6 in Surrey for a speech titled “La crise du fentanyl en Colombie-Britannique.” Other first place winners from Burnaby included École Alpha Secondary’s Cole Diepold in the Grade 10 immersion category, École Seaforth Elementary’s Troy Cheah in Grade 7 early immersion and Moscrop’s Matiguida Sylla in the Grade 9 Francophone category. Second-place honours went to Burnaby North Secondary’s Laura Lu in Grade 10 core French.
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City now
BurnabY !
Residents can be fined $250 for waste violations Continued from page 1 households put out their garbage bins, 73 per cent put out their blue boxes (mixed containers) and 41 per cent put out their green bins (yard materials and food scraps). To reduce contamination, the city moved to bi-weekly garbage collection in April, with recyclables and compostable waste still picked up weekly. While it’s too early to know how every-other-week pickup has impacted the diversion rate – the amount of waste diverted from the landfill – Tobin tells the NOW there’s been an upward trend over the last couple of years. She says the 2015 diversion rate for green waste and recyclables was around 50 per cent, while the diversion rate last year was 53.3 per cent. The goal is to reach 80 per cent by 2020. “We’re well on our way to get to 80 per cent diversion for the city,” says Tobin. “We want people to keep doing what they’re doing. We’d really like them to take
a deeper look at some of the materials that they might not be recycling – so some of the things you could drop off at our eco-centre, or items that you could drop off at any of the provincial depots.” The city will do another audit on the same 100 households in the next few
We want people to keep doing what they’re doing
months to see what this year’s trend looks like. Failing to separate waste means the city, and ultimately taxpayers, could face fines from Metro Vancouver, the organization responsible for disposing of the region’s waste, according to Tobin. “When we haul the garbage to a Metro Vancouver facility, Metro Vancouver has their own inspectors on site, so what could hap-
pen is our trucks could be flagged to be inspected, meaning they will ask us to empty our loads,” she explains. “Their inspectors will review our loads, and if we breech the threshold that they allow for materials in our garbage stream, then the city automatically receives a violation.” For example, a truck load of garbage can’t contain more than five per cent of organic material. Otherwise, it’s a 50 per cent surcharge of what the total load costs. Residents, meanwhile, could face a $250 fine if they receive one too many violation notices for not properly disposing their waste, recyclables and compost. Unsure when collection day is? The City of Burnaby has an app that provides reminders and allows users to locate drop off depots. There’s also a feature that allows for the reporting of missed collection, graffiti, street light outages and more. To download the app, visit my-waste.mobi/ Burnaby/.
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10 WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 • BurnabyNOW
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MUJI on its way to city Cayley Dobie cdobie@burnabynow.com
A popular Japanese retailer known for its simple but functional goods is coming to Burnaby this summer. MUJI recently announced plans to open its first Western Canadian store and has chosen Metropolis at Metrotown. MUJI, which translates to “no-brand quality goods” was founded in Japan in 1980 and has since opened 800 stores worldwide. The Burnaby location will offer household goods, apparel and food, according to a press release. “Since we opened our first store in Canada in 2014, we received many requests from Vancouver and we know that people have been waiting for us,” said Toru Akita, president of MUJI Canada, in the release. “We are extremely excited to finally bring MUJI to Western Canada. While we know we already have fans in Vancouver, we hope to also share our philosophy with people who don’t know us yet.” MUJI opened its first Canadian store in Toronto in 2014 and has since opened two more Ontario locations. The Burnaby store will be the biggest Canadian location at 7,770 square feet.
Household name: Japanese retailer MUJI, known for its simple but functional goods, is opening its first Western Canadian store in Burnaby this summer. PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
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When it comes to the perfect office space, BOSS Business Centres offers more than just a beautiful building in a central location. That is because BOSS – which stands for Business Office Services and Solutions – also gives clients access to a wide range of services and amenities, such as shared reception and administrative support, boardrooms, a fully equipped gym, rooftop patio, and more, according to BOSS owner Julian Clark. Office space alternatives: Finding a solution you can be proud to call your own Growing small businesses: Five ways BOSS Business Centres can help Be a boss: Knowing when to lease and when to go month-to-month “What we like to make sure our service and our space are things Clients can be proud to call their own,” he says. BOSS Business Centres primarily has five types of clients, according to Julian, such as the professional, the entrepreneur, the counsellor, the satellite office and the non-profit or government agency. Each of these clients has different needs – the counsellor or therapist needs comfortable furniture to meet with clients, dimmed lighting and a quiet and private environment, whereas the professional needs the full range of highend office support and services to run their business. “We’re an extension of their business, whether we’re answering their calls for them, whether we’re qualifying those calls, whether we’re handling their couriers, whether we’re greeting their guests, whether they’ve rented space exclusively and want different kinds of furniture, we do all that for them,” Julian
says. BOSS Business Centres also provides clients with a welcoming ambiance, according to Julian. Creating a sense of community is important. BOSS hosts muffin days in the common area, so clients can grab a quick bite together, and wine and cheese nights in December. “We really try to foster a friendly environment enabling meaningful connections between our clients,” Julian says. “We like to say we’re offering more than the four walls.” But in the end, it all comes down to offering clients an ideal space in an ideal location, easily accessible by SkyTrain, bus, and the highway. BOSS’s first business centre is on the fifth floor of a Class A building attached to Production Way SkyTrain station. That centre includes 34 offices, six of which can be used hourly, while the others are sublet month-to-month. And BOSS also has a technology business centre with nine offices on the sixth floor. BOSS Business Centres is located at 3292 Production Way in Burnaby. For more information on the office space and services they provide, contact them by email or check out their website at bossbusinesscentres.com.
StandOUT is a content marketing program designed to introduce exceptional local businesses to readers in our community. For more information on how your business can StandOUT, contact the Burnaby Now at 604-444-3030 or lgraham@burnabynow.com ‘Seated bocce’ with players Dominic, Mary, Gisela, Ina.
Join us for f a tour on Sunday, S d July 16, 2017, leaving our lobby promptly at 1:30, with refreshments served in our elegant dining room after. Please register by phone in advance to confirm your attendance as space is limited.
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BurnabyNOW WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 11
Artsnow
Strut your stuff for Nikkei talent search Julie MacLellan LIVELY CITY jmaclellan@burnabynow.com
Got talent? The Nikkei Matsuri Star Talent Search is seeking talented performers to take part in this year’s competition. The final rounds of the competition are held during the Nikkei Matsuri festival, which runs Sept. 2 and 3 at the Nikkei National Museum and Cultural Centre. Leading up to that date, performers can audition on Sunday, June 25 or Sunday, July 16. Auditions run from 1 to 5 p.m. both days.You have to apply 10 days before each audition to take part. All kinds of performers from all cultural backgrounds are welcome. Check out all the details at
Pull out a favourite activity involving food .... Just be sure to kill someone off.
www.nikkeimatsuri.nikkei place.org.You can also find an application form there if you want to audition. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED Interested in the arts? Looking for a way to contribute to your community? The Burnaby Arts Council is seeking volunteers to help out with a number of positions. The arts council’s June newsletter details some of the group’s needs. Among the positions being sought are a volunteer coordinator and a gallery coordinator,
along with someone to create the arts council’s newsletter. “Volunteers are an integral part of the success of the outstanding work of the Burnaby Arts Council,” the newsletter says. “In the last couple years, we have dramatically increased the capacity and effectiveness of the organizations and all of our exhibitions, events and projects.” Interested? You can find out an application form at www.tinyurl.com/Deer LakeGallVolunteers, or call 604-298-7322. WRITING CONTEST OPEN FOR ENTRIES The Burnaby Writers’ Society is serving up murder with a culinary twist for its annual writing contest. The society’s writing contest is now open, with submissions due by July 31. The theme? Cooked to Death – a.k.a. the abovementioned murder, with a culinary twist. “Draw on your rage at being trapped by cable companies into watching hours of cooking competitions. Pull out a favourite activity involving food – anything goes – baking bread, making soups, exploring ethnic foods, you name it. Just be sure to kill someone off,” a contest write-up explains. Got you thinking? Then start writing – there are prizes of $200, $100 and $50 available, plus a newsletter subscription and membership for an honourable mention. All genres of writing are welcome. Entry fee is $10 for one entry, or $25 for three entries. Mail entries, along with a cheque, to Burnaby Writers’ Society, 6584 Deer Lake Ave., Burnaby, V5G 3T7. See www.burnaby writersnews.blogspot.ca for all the details.
SEARCHING FOR STARS Vancouver Shooting Star Cosplay brings anime singing and dancing to centre stage at last year’s Nikkei Matsuri festival. Performers are being sought to take part in this year’s Matsuri Star Search talent competition. PHOTO NOW FILES
SUMMER MANGA CAMP OFFERED FOR TWEENS Here’s one for the young artist in your home. The Nikkei National Museum and Cultural Centre is offering a Manga Summer Day Camp for kids aged nine to 12. It’s set to run Monday to Friday, July 10 to July 14 at 6688 Southoaks Cres. Sessions run 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. Manga, for the uninitiated, is a popular genre of illustration in the world of comics, originating in Japan. The camp offers a week of Japanese culture and arts with a special focus on manga. Kids will enjoy workshops by a variety of Vancouver-area artists sharing their knowledge of illustration, storytelling and design. Instruction is in English, and registration is limited to
20 kids, so be sure to sign up early. For details, check out centre.nikkeiplace.org/ summer-day-camp. THEATRE UNDER THE STARS RETURNS Musical theatre fans, you can enjoy some Burnaby talents onstage with Theatre Under the Stars this summer. The popular outdoor musical theatre company returns to Stanley Park this season with two productions: Mary Poppins and The Drowsy Chaperone. Local performers Caleb Lagayan and Kurtis D’Aoust appear in Mary Poppins, while Kai Bradbury and Braedan Saucy are in The Drowsy Chaperone. Theatre Under the Stars runs from July 7 to Aug. 19
at Malkin Bowl, with the two productions alternating evenings. Mary Poppins, of course, is a musical version of the iconic classic tale of the magical nanny who changes the lives of her young charges, Jane and Michael Banks. It stars Ranae Miller (previously seen on the Burnaby stage as Princess Fiona in Align Entertainment’s Shrek the Musical) as Mary Poppins, along with Victor Hunter as Bert, Russell Roberts and Lalainia Lindbjerg-Strelau as Mr. and Mrs. Banks, and Lola Marshall and Nolen Dubuc as Jane and Michael. The Drowsy Chaperone is a musical parody that centres around a musical theatre fan, alone in his onebedroom apartment, who puts on a treasured cast re-
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cording. As he listens, the characters of the fictitious 1928 musical spring to life – filling his living room with movie stars, gangsters, divas and more. It stars Shawn Macdonald and Caitriona Murphy, along with Shannon Hanbury, Stuart Barkley, Blake Sartin and Dimitrios Stephanoy. Tickets range from $30 to $49. All shows are at 8 p.m., except on fireworks nights, when they begin at 7 p.m. See www.tuts.ca or call 1-877-840-0457. Do you have an item for Lively City? Send arts and entertainment ideas to Julie, jmaclellan@burnabynow.com, or find her on Twitter @juliemaclellan.
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12 WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 • BurnabyNOW
Artsnow SAVE THE DATE – JULY 13
GALLERY RECEPTION
WHAT’S UP? The Burnaby Art Gallery is turning 50, and you’re invited to join in the celebration. The gallery is holding a garden cocktail reception on Thursday, July 13 from 7 to 9 p.m. to mark the anniversary and to kick off a new exhibition, The Ornament of a House: 50 Years of Collecting. WHAT’S THE EXHIBIT ABOUT? The new exhibition has been curated by Ellen van Eijnsbergen and Jennifer Cane, and it features master works from the City of Burnaby’s permanent art collection. Included in the exhibition are historic works by European masters Francisco Goya and Rembrandt van Rijn, as well as contemporary works by top B.C. artists, including Susan Point, Bill Reid, Gordon Smith and Jack Shadbolt. Along with the exhibition, the gallery is releasing a deluxe publication The Ornament of a House,
featuring 50 high-quality reproductions of the selected works alongside 50 essays. WHAT’S SPECIAL ABOUT THE GALLERY? The Burnaby Art Gallery has resided in Ceperley House, a heritage home dating back to 1911, surrounded by manicured lawns and gardens at Deer Lake, since Canada’s centennial year in 1967. Since then, the gallery has been dedicated to collecting, preserving and presenting contemporary and historical
visual art by local, national and international artists. The gallery is a leader, in particular, in the collection and preservation of work by artists who choose to work on paper – the only public art museum in Canada that’s dedicated to works on paper. The gallery cares for and manages more than 5,000 works of art in the city’s permanent collection.
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Preserving art: The Burnaby Art Gallery, in Ceperley House, is celebrating its 50th anniversary in July. PHOTO NOW FILES
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BurnabyNOW WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 13
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VA L E D I C T O R I A N S 2017 CELEBRATING BRIGHT FUTURES FOR THE CLASSES OF 2017 Graduation is a time of reflection. A time to celebrate and a time to look toward the future. Thanks to the high schools in Burnaby, the Burnaby NOW celebrates this time through the words of the valedictorian’s from the Grad Class of 2017. What follows are excerpts from their respective speeches.
ABORIGINAL E D U C AT I O N VA L E D I C T O R I A N : LY R I C P R E F O N TA I N E
Graduates of 2017 we are done, we made it, and if you’re anything like me you are one hundred percent ready to move on from the halls and classrooms of your high school and break out running at whatever life throws at you next. Our time for asking to go to the washroom and being declined are over. Whether you are moving on to college or university, starting a job, or taking a gap year, we have our entire lives ahead of us to igure out where we want to be. Follow your dreams, ful ill your bucket lists, and above all live the way you always wanted to. I strongly believe I wouldn’t be standing here in front of all of you with the honour of being the valedictorian without my support system, so let’s take a second to thank our elders, friends and family because without them who knows where we would be today. And to all our teachers, I would like to thank them for putting up with us and believing in us even when we didn’t quite believe in ourselves. I would also like to thank my favourite Canadian artist who got me through all my tough times, Drake. We started from the bottom, now we’re here! Congratulations grads of 2017
ALPHA S E C O N D A RY S C H O O L VA L E D I C T O R I A N : PHILMAN YEUNG
We are going to face bigger problems, feats that seem impossible to overcome. The world is in a state of uncertainty - but it always has been. We used to think that we’d magically get our lives together once we hit the old age of 18, but we realised that is not the case. We’re going to have to face the world head-on; except now we’re kinder, smarter, and stronger than we ever thought we could be. In the brief time we’ve spent in high school together, we truly made the experience ours. We should always remember to reminisce about the fun times, and the journey we’ve had together. Here is my inal word of advice to you: Life and change is beautiful. Don’t forget that. There are good people in this world, and know that you are one of them. There’s a quote from my Grade 7 graduation yearbook that is still pretty relevant for today. It goes like this: “Graduation is only a concept. In real life every day you graduate. Graduation is a process that goes on until the last day of your life. If you can grasp that, you’ll make a difference.”
14 WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 • BurnabyNOW
BRITISH COLUMBIA SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF VA L E D I C T O R I A N : E T H A N B O LT O N
I grew up in Prince Rupert, attending a public school there. I had no deaf friends there. I came to BCSD when I was 13 years old. Here I am able to communicate in ASL, and have deaf friends. I was able to learn more, and socialize with my friends. Many of us experienced the same thing. BCSD supports us all with ASL, Deaf Culture and socialization. We cherish our school BCSD. I would like to thank my parents for their ongoing support. Thanks to my family and dorm staff for supporting me throughout secondary school. I would like to thank the BCSD staff: teachers and support staff for their wonderful support in school. I would not have made it this far without your help. Now we will graduate and go out in to the world. Some of us will go to college. Some of us will get jobs and work. Whatever our plans are, we will keep BCSD in our hearts, and keep in touch.
B U R N A B Y M O U N TA I N S E C O N D A RY S C H O O L VA L E D I C T O R I A N : JUNE LEE
Sometimes, it was the everlasting tire of Sunday night regrets crammed into inishing a project you de initely had more than a month to do. Perhaps, in these times it felt as if good times would never come again. But we are at the end of the road now, and we stand hand-in-hand facing college and university applications, or entrance into the working world and we wonder if maybe, just maybe, this was the easiest part of it all. The bumps and bruises of your adolescence are yours and only yours – they are there to wear with pride as you embark on your future endeavours. You have experienced high school in a way that no other Burnaby Mountain grad ever has; not just the ones sitting beside you, but any grad who has ever walked the halls of BMSS. In this time, Burnaby Mountain has been, is, and will be the place we know as home. For every footstep and handprint you made, for your laugh that ills the halls, this grad class is full of athletes, musicians, dancers, debaters, scholars… you have made an impact on Mountain as much as it has on you. When you walk through the school one last time, each eager memory will jump at you from every door, echo through the halls and land in what is now a part of your past.
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BURNABY CENTRAL S E C O N D A RY S C H O O L VA L E D I C T O R I A N : EMMA BUCHANAN
We are moving beyond the point in our lives where we just have to follow what is expected of us. These next years are going to be exactly what we make of them, and I think we can make them amazing. I look out into this crowd and I see people with ambition, intelligence and genuine heart. I think I speak for us all when I say that this is a bittersweet goodbye, because we will miss the sweet sound of “it’s collab tomorrow”, or “it’s a work study period”, or “it’s a sub, we’re not really doing anything.” Many of us may be moving on this fall, but I think it’s important to take a look back at what we’ve survived. We’ve made it through a lot. To give you some context, when we started high school in 2012, “We Are Never Getting Back Together” was #1 on the Billboard charts. Remember her? Taylor Swift? Kind of a one-hitwonder if you ask me. We also survived the rise and fall of Vine, which is honestly still a little too painful to talk about, so let’s just move on. Great apps may come and go, but as Winston Churchill once said, “success is not inal, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.” We might need some of that courage coming up. The future might feel vast and scary right now, but I believe in us. If we survived ask.fm, we can survive anything.
B U R N A B Y N O RT H S E C O N D A RY S C H O O L VA L E D I C T O R I A N : B I L LY L I N
Four years and eight months ago, our fathers and mothers brought forth for us, upon this very city, a new level of education at Burnaby North, conceived in opportunity, and dedicated to our values of Excellence, Discovery, and Service. We have proved our excellence in all aspects, may it be in Ultimate Frisbee, Soccer, Trivia, Debate, or our everyday academics - I’m looking at you, Daniel Lu! We’ve shown other schools how skilled we are and how formidable we are; but more importantly, we’ve shown ourselves how capable we are. We have proved also our dedication to discovery, with our extensive course options, we’ve explored all aspects of the world, and then some. In science class, we have discovered the mechanics of miniscule, taught to us from the great minds of Versteeg, Shim, and the ever so admirable McPhee. We’ve also discovered whole new sides of ourselves that we never thought we would see, perhaps during a stressful test, but also maybe when we’re helping others understand something that we ourselves once struggled to understand. Finally, we have most de initely ful illed our promise to serve our school and our community. From our numerous clubs like Leos Club, Christmas Cheer, We Youth Help, and more, to our awesome student government led by the ever sassy Kathy Xu, we have dedicated countless hours of our own free time to help others succeed.
BurnabyNOW WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 15
BURNABY SOUTH S E C O N D A RY S C H O O L VA L E D I C T O R I A N : M I K E AYA S T E R E F E
Among all the feelings of hope and planning for the future, all of us have at least experienced some form of adversity. I, myself, have already seen signi icant losses among my friends, classmates, as well as personally. As a graduate of divorced parents and a person who has lost three family members over the course of three years, it has not been easy. However, I am proud to say that these hardships have not slowed me down. In fact, they have inspired me to work harder, encourage others to work harder, and show how anyone can achieve anything, no matter the circumstances. You may have failed a physics test once, twice, or three times. Maybe you didn’t have the con idence to ask your crush out, or failed to pass your road test miserably. Do not fret on these roadblocks. Rather, understand that life is going to ind a way to test you. At times, you may feel that life is unfair. The urge to quit during these times are the highest, but don’t give in; whatever your dream is, if it’s important to you, then ight for it. Just remember that there is more than one way to achieve your dreams; I want you to go ind that path and embrace it. There will surely be roadblocks; however, they are not there to deter you from your goals. Rebels, please keep this in mind. When a vine meets a wall, does it stop growing? No, it does the unthinkable; it de ies gravity and climbs the wall. I ask each and every one of you to climb the many walls you will meet over the course of your lives. My challenge to you is this; do not let high school be the best ive years of your life.
CARIBOO HILL S E C O N D A RY S C H O O L VA L E D I C T O R I A N : NICOLAS WILLIAMS
Cariboo has been a very special second home for us, somewhere where we could all grow up into the people we are today. For those of us who’ve spent much more than the allotted six hours walking these halls, it has truly become Hotel Cariboo. When you spend that much time in one place, there is no way you can ignore the fact that it has shaped the person you are today. We are given an impossible challenge: navigating the real world, something even Planning 10 couldn’t prepare you for. There’s no way to sugar coat it, we all have a dif icult journey ahead. Sometimes, life is going to feel like a game of connorball – projectiles lying at your head from all around, your doctor refusing to get up and save you? That’s basically you juggling all life’s challenges while your boss yells at you from some big comfy chair, never doing any actual work. In all seriousness, I have faith in each one of you, and I know you will all do incredible things. You may not know what those things are yet and you may not know what you want to do with the long years ahead. Stephen Colbert once said: “Life is an improvisation. You have no idea what’s going to happen next and you are mostly just making things up as you go along.” So don’t worry about big plans or dreams: get out there, use everything you’ve learned along this incredible journey, and bring a piece of Cariboo out into the world.
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 2017 AND THEIR VALEDICTORIANS!
BYRNE CREEK COMMUNITY SCHOOL VA L E D I C T O R I A N : G I O R D A N D U L AY
Look around you today and cherish this moment. Let’s think about the bonds and lasting friendships that have been formed over the years and all the different types of friends that we have met at Byrne Creek that shared our journey. Together as we embark on a new chapter we must not forget the memories we have created together, all the moments of success but also the various challenges that we faced in high school. There is no such thing as fail in life. FAIL is “First Attempt in Learning.” It is just life trying to move us in another direction. These “failures” teach us to learn from our mistakes and grow, after moving on; ind a purpose. Not from Justin Beiber’s album PURPOSE, but the purpose that gives a reason and shows intention, the purpose in contributing to something bigger. Purpose creates happiness. Still, most of you don’t know what you want to do right after high school or what your purpose is, but you do. You have already found a purpose from the things you love. The things you enjoy doing is what sets you apart from others. You own your life and your decisions are your own. As cliché as it sounds, do what you love. Dreams do come true.
MOSCROP S E C O N D A RY S C H O O L VA L E D I C T O R I A N : N A S S E E M VA Z I N K H O O
Finishing the race in irst, second or third place is not the most important thing, in the big picture; it pales in comparison to what it reveals about the human spirit. Running isn’t just for the sport; school is not just for the marks. It’s about building our own character and becoming greater individuals. It’s not how we place, but how we run, that we run, and who we are along the way. Whether experiencing our irst “A,” or our irst “F,” our irst crush or our irst heartache, getting our driver’s license or our irst job, how we navigate our way through these de ines us. Soon we will all be running different races; sprints, biathlons, triathlons, relays, 5Ks, and 10Ks. Amazing races… college, university, work, travel, and community service. The fact is, we will always be racing, chasing after different opportunities that lead to academic, athletic, or artistic pursuits. School wasn’t easy, but that which is hard fought is most worthwhile. At the end of the marathon, we’re done, drained of energy, dehydrated. We’ve handed in all our assignments, completed our inal exams, and are hungry for the next challenge, whatever that is for you. I wish you luck with your next race, graduates of 2017. Thank you and bon nuit.
16 WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 • BurnabyNOW
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Q A HOWARD LOUIE
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How often will my hearing aids need to be repaired?
It is not uncommon for a hearing aid to require some degree of service each year, which is why hearing aids are sold with warranties and STUART LLOYD repair coverage. Due to their Owner & Hearing position inside your ear or behind it, Instructor Practitioner hearing aids are exposed to many environmental factors including: humidity, earwax, moisture, and debris. Each of those factors can adversely affect your hearing aids’ performance. Cleaning your hearing aids daily will reduce the number of repairs they’ll need. Also, scheduling routine appointments with your hearing professional will help ensure optimal performance over the lifespan of your hearing aids. Your hearing is a precious gift, don’t take it for granted! Schedule a hearing aid servicing or free hearing evaluation with Stuart today! #205-5066 Kingsway, Burnaby BC, V3H 2E7
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PREARRANGEMENT Protecting the ones you love. There are so many conversations in our daily life. Some are easy, some are hard. Perhaps the hardest and most uncomfortable conversation for many people is regarding our death. When a death occurs and no plans have been made, family members have to answer difficult questions that they may not have considered or discussed with their loved one. All of those complex situations of the future suddenly become reality. There are two questions that will never be answered: “What would they have wanted?” and “Did I do the right thing?” There is a solution and an easier conversation! Talking to a professional advisor to pre-plan now can lead to a lifetime of peace of mind, simply remember that it is all about protecting the ones you love. Pre-arrangement then becomes an easier topic. For many of us, protecting the ones we love has been an important part of our lives. We protect them by caring for their well-being and planning for their future. If we buy life insurance, home insurance and car insurance to prepare for things that might happen, doesn’t it make even better sense to plan for something that will happen? Planning before a time of need is in fact more about protecting the ones we love, than about death. During the prearrangement, family members can share their preferences and wishes on funeral and cemetery options and decide together, rather than leaving their loved ones to make these decisions at the beginning of their bereavement and grief. Prearrangement allows costs to be frozen at today’s prices and also provides various payment options to meet the family’s budget, rather than a full payment at the time of loss. When a death occurs in any family or among friends, the grief can be tremendous and the healing time very long. Prearrangement will have a positive impact on family and friends simply because you have already made your own decisions. This peace of mind provides benefits far beyond the dollars spent. The most memorable memorials are the ones we plan ourselves. Leave your Legacy.
ASK A PRE-ARRANGED ADVISOR
Q A
What is a Pre-planning Advisor?
Pre-planning Advisors are trained funeral and cemetery professionals who reach out to communities; provide valued information through seminars, and group or individual presentations; assist families to review or make their ALICE TSUNG estate plan; create a blue print of their Manager, Community & final arrangements by recording and Prearrangement Services pre-paying; and encourage people to communicate their final wishes with family members. Through this process, families can make decisions together, guarantee the cost, choose the best payment option to fit their need, provide peace of mind and protect their loved ones from facing extra emotional stress at the time of need. Being a Pre-planning Advisor is a meaningful and rewarding career with comfortable benefits and compensation. Please email to Alice.tsung@dignitymemorial.com Or call 604-7620390 if you are interested to join us. FOREST LAWN & OCEAN VIEW CEMETERY & FUNERAL HOME Burnaby 604-762-0390 Contact: alice.tsung@dignitymemorial.com or 604-328-6079 • www.dignitymemorial.ca
Q A
Why would you need a Power of Attorney?
We live in a world where people are living to older ages than ever before. Unfortunately, the older we STEPHEN M. MILLER, get the greater the chance that we LAWYER will suffer from a disease, injury or illness that renders us incompetent. If you take no action to plan for this, your loved ones may be forced to go to court to become your guardian (at great expense) or the Provincial Government may take control of your financial affairs. A Power of Attorney (a “POA”) is a simple legal document where you may appoint an attorney (being a person or persons of your choice) to manage your legal and financial affairs. You can decide when the POA is to take effect, the extent of the authority your attorney may exercise and whether your attorney may be paid for their services to you. Miller Law
500 – 5050 Kingsway, Burnaby | 604-428-5850 | www.millerlawcorp.ca
ASK A PHARMACIST
Q A
How do I take care of my skin during summer?
June 20th is the first day of summer. While there’s much to enjoy outdoors, remember the sun gives out UV radiation that can damage your skin. Wear Elaine & Miguel sunscreen daily, even when it’s Your Pharmasave cloudy. The Canadian Dermatology Pharmacists Association recommends using a minimum SPF 30 sunscreen. Seek out shady spots, use sunglasses, wide-brimmed hats, long-sleeved shirts, and pants or long skirts. Some lifestyle habits put you on your skin’s bad side too. Smoking can make your skin sag and cause wrinkles. Nicotine can stifle blood flow and deny the skin of oxygen and nutrients. Alcohol dehydrates and can give skin a sallow, dull appearance. If you consume caffeine equivalent to 4-7 cups of coffee, this can cause dehydration, leaving your skin thirsty and more prone to drying and dullness.
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ASK A REALTOR®
Q A
Hope you enjoyed last month’s What’s Hot in North Burnaby. This month, we will review What’s Hot in South Burnaby.
Sitting atop the Metrotown plateau, Sun Towers is a 41-storey building offering one to three bedroom homes JENNY WUN PREC slated to complete in 2020. Their Associate Broker first tower is now 90% sold, but their second tower is coming soon. Don’t miss out on Sussex built by Townline, another 41-storey luxurious building centrally located just one block north of Metrotown Metropolis. In a quiet pocket, we are all waiting this summer for Southgate City, a 60-acre master-planned community just at the tip of the Edmonds neighbourhood. Call the West One Real Estate Team today at 604-961-3559 to help with your condo purchase. Call or email Jenny Wun at 604-961-3559 or jenny@jennywun.com. Follow her on Twitter @JennyWun and on Facebook @ Jenny Wun Real Estate Marketing
BurnabyNOW WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 17
City now Making a meal out of math class Cornelia Naylor cnaylor@burnabynow.com
In an age of alternative facts and fake news, Burnaby South math students are taking nothing for granted. Chipotle Mexican Grill, an American restaurant chain with a restaurant in Metrotown, serves only a few items, but the company’s promotional material claims combining them in different ways actually gives customers 65,000 choices. Teacher Amos Lee presented the restaurant’s claim to his Pre-Calculus 12 class Friday to verify as part of their learning on combinations and permutations. First, though, he took them to eat at the restaurant during their math block Thursday. The first time he did this three years ago, Lee expected to foot the bill himself (“As a school, we don’t have money to do these types of things,” he said), but the restaurant stepped up and offered the meals free of charge. Usually, he brings 30 stu-
dents; this year, he brought 60 – but the restaurant didn’t flinch. “I’ve got teachers in my family,” area manager Jay Timms told the NOW. “My mom was a teacher; my aunt was a teacher; one of my good friends is a teacher, and I know how hard they work. And at Chipotle, we want to support our community and any opportunity that we have to help kids that’s fantastic.” Does he know for sure whether the items at his restaurant can make up 65,000 different combinations? “I’ve heard that before,” he said. “I’ve never gone through and actually figured it out, but there’s definitely a lot of combinations you can make from our food.” For Amos, teaching kids real-life critical thinking skills to test such claims fits in with the requirements of the new B.C. curriculum, but, more importantly, it also equips kids for the misinformation age. “In the age of (Donald) Trump and fake news and how people say we are not
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SPRING SPECIALS OIL CHANGE SERVICE ALL SEASON TIRE SPECIALS Eat up: Burnaby South math teacher Amos Lee, bottom right, joins students at the Metrotown Chipotle. PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
teaching critical thinking in school, I thought this would be a good way for me to address those issues in my math class,” he said. Well? Can you get 65,000 combinations out of the items offered at Chipotle?
That depends on how you interpret what constitutes a choice, according to Lee. His students calculated there could actually be as many as 786,432.
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Communitynow It’s a wheelie great fair Tereza Verenca HERE & NOW tverenca@burnabynow.com
Bike enthusiasts, this one’s for you. There’s a bike fair at Gilmore Community School on Friday, June 16 from 6 to 9 p.m. There will lots of prizes and activities, including an obstacle course, a challenge-yourfriend race, a repair station, a decorate-your-bike station and more. Do note that attendees bringing their two wheels must wear a helmet in order to ride at all the stations. Make sure you don’t miss the Trials Stars performance by Jeff Anderson and Steve Dickin. The pair is well known for their worldclass bicycling skills. The event is also a fundraiser. Folks can donate a bike, tricycle, helmet or bike parts and the Burnaby Lougheed Lion’s Club will use all donations to make bike presents for children in need. Call 604-540-4424 to donate.
TOWELS NEEDED Got some extra towels? The Wildlife Rescue Association of B.C. needs them for its animal care centre. “We use them for all sorts of reasons – cleaning, bed padding, animal handling – and we’re running a bit low for this time of year,” reads a post on the group’s Facebook page. “We’re in need of large and small towels, hand towels, face cloths and rags.” Donations can be dropped off at 5216 Glencarin Dr. LOVE TO LIP SYNC? If your lip syncing skills are near perfect, the Burnaby Association for Community Inclusion (BACI) wants to hear from you. BACI is hosting a lip sync battle on June 23 as part of its summer barbecue. Anyone interested in showing their stuff is asked to register before Friday, June 16 – either at BACI reception (2702 Norland Ave.), by emailing lipsync@gobaci. com or by calling 604-2997851. Walk-ons on the day
of will not be allowed. The barbecue is on from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Everyone is welcome. There will be music, free food and live entertainment. There’s no parking on site (except for those with wheelchairs), but there will be a shuttle bus running from the 8-Rinks parking lot. CPAS RECOGNIZED Congrats go out to Jennifer Liang and Lauren Melton of Burnaby. They were two of the 13 B.C. Chartered Professional Accountant students who made the national honour roll for their outstanding results on the common final examination. “These students represent the future of the accounting profession in British Columbia, and I congratulate each and every one of our new graduates,” says David Hallinan, chair of the Chartered Professional Accountants of British Columbia’s board of directors. The students’ achievements were recognized at a ceremony on May 27.
Do you have an estate plan for your family? Estate planning is often neglected, despite its importance. Whatever your age and assets, an estate plan can help preserve your assets, settle your estate quickly and tax efficiently, and reduce the burden on your loved ones. Join us for a complimentary seminar to learn about the key components of estate planning.
June 28, 2017 1:30 pm –3:00 pm
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BurnabyNOW WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 19
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abynow.com They’re brin ging art into the living ro om GO TO PAGE
27
Third annual event brings Heights artists and residents together By Julie MacLel
jmaclellan@burn lan abynow.com
T
For the past three years, a years group oup of ar artists ists from North Bu urnaby naby has been Nor helpin helping to redefine the community’s ys perception of art art. Living Room Art rt in the Heights is making a return retu n to the h neighbourhood this weekend to help pro prove that art isn’t ar n’t just for galleryvisiting elite – a gallery it’s it one, everywhere.s for everyThe third annual e t is bring ng together event bringing a multidisciplin isciplina ary ry evening o of arts and entertaiinment, nment, se set for Saturday y, Oc Oct. 15 5 ffrom 5 to 9p p.m. m in a pr privatee hom home me at 4115Ya 115Y le St. t Living Room Art is spearheaded byYunu Vertti, a filmmaken Perez er original ly from Mexico came to BurnabCity who y via Houston,Texas – where she was the production manager fo for a similar living room art roo Continued on page 8
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Civic politicia ns and the provincial governm ent continue their joust over affordable housing in Burnab Last week, Housin y. g Min-
ister Rich Colema n wrote to the Burnaby ity” for the governm NOW to “adent. dress” housing Coleman added issues facing the city. ince is commit the provted to work In the letter, he in partnership with ating and preservi said creby to create more Burnang affordaffordable able housing housing in the will region. to be an “absolu continue (To read the letter te priorin its entirety, see page 7.)
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Coleman also of the projects listed some ing-led replacem in Burnaby that the provinc units at Cedar ent of 90 Place. e has partnered on “Rest assured and helped fund, includin is not forgotte , your city g $29 million n,” Coleman for the new George said. “We will continue to Derby Manor and work with the another $33 municip million for the ty and other partner aliB.C. Houss to find innovative yet pragmatic so-
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the NOW to Petra, Jordan. The southern city is famous for its rockcut architecture and water conduit system. Want to be featured in Paper Postcards? Email your pics to postcards@burnabynow.com.
Whether it’s the best prices at the markets, special occasion events, daily specials at a local restaurant or just marketing the products and services each issue is packed full of ads from local businesses using the Burnaby NOW to reach their target market. VOLUNTARY SUBSCRIPTION PROGRAM IS LIMITED TO CURRENT DISTRIBUTION AREA
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20 WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 • BurnabyNOW
Artsnow NOW FULL DAY AGES 5-9
ARTS CALENDAR TO SUNDAY, JUNE 25 Charley’s Aunt, a Vagabond Players production of the classic British farce, at the Bernie Legge Theatre, Queen’s Park, tickets $17, $15 for seniors and youth. Shows run Thursday to Saturday at 8 p.m., with Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. Info and tickets: www. vagabondplayers.ca/tickets, or call 604-521-0412. TO SATURDAY, JULY 1 Fragments, featuring the mixed-media work of Mila Kostic and Shari Pratt, at Deer Lake Gallery, 6584 Deer Lake Ave. Gallery open Tuesday to Saturday, noon to 4 p.m., with free admission and parking. Info: www.burnabyartscouncil.org or 604-298-7322. TO SUNDAY, JULY 2 Tara Nicholson: Arctic Claims, a photographic exhibition, and Les McKinnon: Reflecting on Headlines, at the Burnaby Art Gallery, 6344 Deer Lake Ave. Info: www. burnabyartgallery.ca.
Beauty of Japanese Culture Viewed Through the Lens of Kimono, an exhibition at the Nikkei National Museum, 6688 Southoaks Cres., curated by Hitomi Harama. Special events include Kimono history talk on June 24, 2 p.m.; shibori (pleat and bind) dyeing workshop on July 23 at 2 p.m.; kogin zashi (Japanese embroidery) workshop on Aug. 19 at 2 p.m.; osikumono (small kimono fabric craft) workshop on Aug. 26 at 1:30 p.m. Gallery open Tuesday to Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. (closed Canada Day). By donation. Info: www. nikkeiplace.org. SUNDAY, JUNE 18 Opera on a Sunday Afternoon, a concert presented by Burnaby Lyric Opera, 3 p.m. in Studio 103 at Shadbolt Centre for the Arts, 6450 Deer Lake Ave., featuring Emma Parkinson,
Chloé Hurst and Tamar Simon with work from La Bohème, Carmen, Madama Butterfly, La Traviata, Don Pasquale and more, directed by David Boothroyd. Tickets: $15, 604-205-3000 or tickets.shadboltcentre.com.
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The Lion King, 2 p.m. in the James Cowan Theatre at Shadbolt Centre for the Arts, presented by Artspace Children’s Art Centre, tickets.shadboltcentre.com. THURSDAY, JUNE 22 Live at the ’Bolt: Hummingbird Brigade, featuring composerclarinetist James Danderfer and his contemporary big band take on the New Orleans brass band tradition, featuring 16 of Canada’s finest jazz musicians, 8 p.m. at the Shadbolt Centre for the Arts, $18. Info: www. shadboltcentre.com.
TO SUNDAY, JULY 23 Arnold Shives: People, an exhibition of prints, part of the Burnaby Art Gallery’s off-site exhibition series at the Bob Prittie (Metrotown) branch of Burnaby Public Library, 6100 Willingdon Ave. Info: www.burnabyartgallery. ca.
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BurnabyNOW WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 21
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A cherished friend is missing from the garden. Francesco Aiello died on March 20. He was a founding member of the Burnaby and Regional Allotment Garden Association (BARAGA), a large community garden with 372 plots located in South Burnaby. Born in Amato, Italy in 1925, Frank immigrated to Canada to make a new life. During the last three decades of his life, chances are you would find him working on one of his family’s plots in the northwest corner of BARAGA. “Frank was friendly and welcoming when Larry and I moved to the plot next to his in 1994,” recounted Joan Campana. “He would often come over to where I was weeding and we’d visit for a few moments – or longer, if I could get him to tell a story. He was always ready to answer gardening questions.” Frank embodied the true spirit of community.
“Our new plot was overrun with weeds and under water for several months in the spring,” Larry Johnston remembered. “Frank helped me install a big ‘O’ drainage pipe in the pathways from my plot and between the two that he was gardening. We dug up the pathways, down several feet, laid the pipe and covered it with plastic and refilled the trench. Once the drain pipe was connected to the drainage ditch, I was able to garden. Frank’s plots were raised high enough that he did not really need the drainage, but he pitched in to help.” Frank was 92. But you would never know it. Campana remembers him “walking along the top beam of the A-frame roof of his greenhouse.” She rushed over to express concern. “He just gave his usual broad smile, shook his finger at me, and said he was fixing something. He would have been in his late 70s.” “Frank did not drive,” Johnston recalled. “He came to the garden by bus. One
Growing a community: Frank Aiello in June 2002. Aiello, who died in March, was a founding member of the Burnaby and Regional Allotment Garden Association. PHOTO JOAN CAMPANA, CONTRIBUTED
day he came into the garden carrying a large beam on his shoulders. It had been left by the road and he carried it all the way to the plot himself. When I asked him how he managed it, he said it was what he had done at work every day.” Heidi Rose said she will miss Frank’s “quiet generosity.” “I miss the fountain of knowledge, his gardening advice so softly given to this novice gardener. I will remember always his warm welcome on my first day at
the garden more than a decade ago. Frank said that people who work hard on the land were bound to be good people, and we should always help each other. I’d like to help spread that optimism and kindness.” Our northwest corner of BARAGA is certainly not the same without Frank, his wife Maria and son Luigi, who all died in the last 18 months. Monica Jones is a gardener at BARAGA. An extended version of this story is online at www.burnabynow.com.
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FRIDAY, JUNE 16: “Ember Skies” Midsummer Eve Kick-off Party and DJ Night 19+ JUNE 17-18: Paavo Nurmi Run Saturday morning Viking Village Cultural Displays Shopping Kiosks Dancing Bonfire Beer Garden Music Midsummer Pole Traditional Scandinavian Foods Volvo Club Wife Carrying Contest Kids Activities Scandinavian Community Centre, 6540Thomas Street, Burnaby (604) 294-2777 Directions: Kensington Ave & HWY #1; Exit 32 Eastbound or exit 33 Westbound from HWY #1 We acknowledge the financial support of the Province of British Columbia
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22 WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 • BurnabyNOW
Community Getting the best bloom for your buck in the garden
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VISIT CHOOSENISSAN.CA OR YOUR LOCAL RETAILER •
FACTORY APPROVED OFFERS END JUNE 30TH
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raniums do. Preferring cool sun on the east or southeast side of the house during summer, they are forgiving virtually everywhere. b. Perennial geraniums or Cranesbill: A ground hugging perennial plant that will bloom from May until September. Look for the variety Rozanne, the perennial plant of the year in 2008 for good reason. There are many varieties to choose from that range in colour from magenta, blue, violet and pink. Mark Cullen is lawn and garden expert, member of the Order of Canada, author and broadcaster. Follow him on Twitter @MarkCullen4. License, registration, insurance and applicable taxes are extra. Offers are available on approved credit through Nissan Canada Finance for a limited time, may change without notice and cannot be combined with any
that. Lots of annual flowers don’t bloom that long: nasturtiums, lobelia and calendula have much shorter bloom cycles. The variety Becky was the perennial plant of the year in 2003. This is like an academy award for a plant, they don’t get any better. 4. Geraniums: You are now saying, “the annual or perennial geraniums?” and my answer is “take your pick.” They are both excellent garden performers. a. Annual geranium (pelargonium): There are no plants on the market that produce such reliable colour as ge-
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mens are some aphids. The finches love the aphids, so I am not fussed about them. Growing to about 80 centimetres high, the original Bee Balm is a winner but there are many introductions that have been developed by the “hand of man” that are outstanding garden performers. Look for the Balmy series including Lilac, Purple and Rose. Also Grand Parade is a winner. Loves the sun, tolerates up to half a day of shade. 3. Shasta Daisy (Leucanthemum x superbum): Most varieties of Shasta Daisies bloom from June to September. Think about
SR Turbo CVT Premium (RL00). All Pricing includes Freight and PDE charges ($1,795/$1,600) air-conditioning levy ($100), applicable fees, tire tax, manufacturer’s rebate and dealer participation where applicable.
The months of May and June create quite a flurry of activity in the garden and at garden retailers. There is a temptation to just buy everything that looks good right now. Well, hold on for a moment. There are many plants that will provide great value for the investment. Some produce lots of bloom reliably the first year, continue to grow in size with the passage of time, are reliably winter hardy, have very few insect or disease prob-
summer-long colour, pick up the Stella series, which are known to bloom for the longest possible stretch, usually about six to eight weeks. 2. Monarda (Bee Balm/ Oswego Tea): This native plant blooms for up to eight weeks and attracts hummingbirds and honey bees.You can cut it and bring the flowers indoors, and if that isn’t enough, you can make fine tasting tea with it. Earl Grey knew this, which is why you find it listed in the ingredients in his original blend. Medicinal, winter hardy and the only insects that I have found on my many speci-
CVT at 0%/0% lease APR for 39/39 months equals monthly payments of $255/$212 with $1,995/$995 down payment, and $0 security deposit. Lease based on a maximum of 20,000 km/year with excess charged at
Gardening with Mark
lems, and after a few years you can dig them up, divide them and plant the divisions around your yard (or give them away). Here are my top four favourites: 1. Daylilies (Hemerocallis): Unbeatable for reliable blooms in a sunny location. I planted about 50 daylilies around my new garden 11 years ago and all of them have outperformed, each year growing in flower count. I do separate them every four to five years, to help restore their vigour. Look for any variety that suits your colour palette. And if you want reliable,
Offers available from June 1 – June 30, 2017. Payments cannot be made on a weekly basis, for advertising purposes only. *Representative monthly lease offer based on a new 2017 Rogue S FWD/2017 Sentra SV
Mark Cullen
BurnabyNOW WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 23
Sportsnow
Sport to report? Contact Dan Olson at 604.444.3022 or dolson@BurnabyNow.com
Haley ready to move on Burnaby guard reflects on NCAA run, decision to leave NMS Dan Olson
dolson@burnabynow.com
The rollercoaster ride that was 2016/17 for New Mexico State sophomore Jermaine Haley will be something he’ll remember for a long time. The Burnaby native, who requested his release from the NCAA basketball program last month after the Aggies lost their coach to the cross-state rival University of New Mexico, can look back at a conference title and a short but electric taste of NCAA March Madness and feel a sense of achievement. Now comes the hard part. The six-foot-seven guard is mulling his options, and expects to choose his next step in what he hopes is a path to the NBA. “I haven’t decided yet,” the 20-year-old Haley told the NOW. “My coach (fellow Canadian Paul Weir) left and he was the one who brought me there. “I can’t lie, it’s been tough. Once I find the right place for me, I will feel a great relief and get comfortable to play again.” After having red shirted his first season at the Las Cruces campus, Haley made the jump to the Aggies roster this past year, posting a 3.9 points per game average. Although often coming in off the bench, Haley still racked up 46 assists over 34 games. He started half the team’s 30 games and averaged almost 22 minutes per contest. That run saw the team capture the Western Athletic Conference title for the fifth time in the past six years, before bowing out in the opening round of the NCAA championships in a loss to No. 3 seed Baylor. New Mexico actually led 40-38 at halftime, but Baylor ramped it up in the second half en route to a 91-73 decision. They finished with an impressive 28-6 record in Weir’s first season as a head coach, after serving 10 years as an assistant. Going from a practice player as a first-year student to a crucial role player last season was an intense learning experience, Haley said. “It was incredible. I went to play at a conference championships and March Madness. Those are two experiences we Continued on page 24
Just wide: The Burnaby Lakers’ Jackson Decker fires a shot just wide as New Westminster Salmonbellies goalie Tye Belanger, with team captain Curtis Hodgson at his feet, sprawls to cover the angle during last Thursday’s Western Lacrosse Association showdown at Queen’s Park Arena. PHOTO JENNIFER GAUTHIER
Lakers leave coach wanting more
Burnaby trumps NewWest convincingly before falling to visiting Maple Ridge crew Dan Olson
dolson@burnabynow.com
The vagaries of the Western Lacrosse Association have opened the eyes of Jim Milligan. The Ontario transplant, who took over the coaching and general managing duties with the Burnaby Lakers a few months ago, was well aware of the competitive nature of the B.C. game and its athletes, having coached against them over 11 years while with Peterborough. But there’s a different degree of understanding when you get kneedeep into the circuit and its precious parity. “The skill level is very good. I knew about that,” said Milligan, who skippered his team to an impressive 14-9 victory over New West last Thursday, only to fall 1210 to defending champion Maple Ridge a day later. “My adjustment has been slow, and I’ve got to show more patience. I think it’s going to be a slow process.” The two different results seemed to mirror earlier results. A nearfull lineup in New West, with only a handful of players absent, created winning conditions that were revealed over the final 25 minutes. While Burnaby only trailed once – with the ’Bellies scoring the game’s first goal – the two teams spent much of the second period
trading tallies until Dane Stevens and Tyler Digby counted markers late in the frame to give the Lakers a 9-7 advantage. Scott Jones made it a three-goal lead early in the third, and while New West temporarily narrowed the gap, the Lakers salted away the win with a barrage of late tallies, including three into an empty net. Stevens finished with three goals and four helpers, while Cam Milligan also registered a hat trick. Shaun Dhaliwal tallied a pair, with Jones connecting for a goal and four assists. Jason Jones chipped in a goal and three helpers, while other markers came off the sticks of Spencer Bromley, Jackson Decker and Eli McLaughlin. Eric Penney, meanwhile, turned back 37 shots from his former team. A day later, without Scott Jones or Stevens in the lineup – or Rob-
ert Church, Peter McFetridge and Justin Salt, either – the Lakers found themselves playing pursuer as Maple Ridge never trailed. After a middle period where the two teams swapped goals and the Burrards exited up 8-7, Digby evened up the score just 47 seconds into the final frame. But a pair of strikes by the visitors, including Owen Barker’s shorthanded goal with 13:33 left in the third, put Burnaby on its heels. They kept it close, but Maple Ridge exacted its revenge for a loss in the opening week. “We didn’t have as complete a lineup as we had in the first game of the back-to-back,” said coach Milligan. “We had a few holes and Maple Ridge did a good job exploiting them.” Digby notched three goals and McLaughlin picked up a pair, with singles by Matt Beers, Jason Jones, Matt Spanger, Spencer Stevens
and Dhaliwal. While nearly every team was still missing at least one key player heading into this week, Burnaby’s best possible lineup could be on the floor now with the end of the National Lacrosse League season. “If we work together, we have the players that can compete with anyone,” said Milligan. The only fly in the ointment? That darn parity, which was underscored Saturday when Coquitlam handed Victoria its first loss. At 3-2, Burnaby is tied for second place with Maple Ridge, two points better than three other teams. They visit Langley tonight, then Coquitlam on Saturday. “Both teams scare me,” said the coach. “They are teams that work hard, they’re young and athletic. ... On any given night anyone can win.”
McEwen cashes in try for Canada Burnaby Lake Rugby’s Carolyn McEwen scored and Canada gave it a strong push but couldn’t protect the lead in the second half en route to a 27-20 loss to England in the second game of the International Women’s Rugby Series in New Zealand on Monday. After falling behind 12-3, Canada closed the gap with a march that included McEwen’s try prior to halftime. Down by five entering the second half, Karen Pagu-
in propelled Canada into the lead when she intercepted a pass and ran the length of the field for a try. Magali Harvey added a convert to make it 17-15. But England replied promptly, then matched another Harvey penalty kick with a late try. “We definitely stepped it up but it’s still not enough,” captain Kelly Russell said. “We need to play the full 80 minutes and we need to fight for 80 minutes.”
24 WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 • BurnabyNOW
Sportsnow
Sport to report? Contact Dan Olson at 604.444.3022 or dolson@BurnabyNow.com
Guard makes progress in NCAA Continued from page 23 achieved as a team and things I’ll never forget. “We came together from all over the place, different places but everyone got along great.” Among the highlights included a season-high 16 points in February against Northern New Mexico, and a 15-point performance Jan. 12 against Grand Canyon University. But Weir’s decision to leave after one season and join the Aggies’ hated rival in Albuquerque has sent a ripple effect through the program, resulting in the hiring of a new NMS coaching staff and the loss of a handful of Weir’s recruits. New Mexico State can block any inter-conference transfer requests, making it unlikely that any player will follow him north from Las Cruces. The focus now for the Burnaby South alumnus is to find a place where he can quickly prove his worth, at another university or in Europe. “I had a lot more responsibility, I gained a lot of confidence and learned a lot thanks to my coaches and teammates. ... I improved myself and worked hard.” For now, he’s trying to stay focused on the end goal, which is to continue building his game to a level where a pro opportunity is on the horizon. “I just want to go somewhere they’ll
Intermediates to host USA Mark your calendar – the Burnaby intermediate A Lakers will be hosting a U.S. box lacrosse all-star team on July 12, 8 p.m. at Bill Copeland Sports Complex. Tickets are $5 for adults and $2 for seniors and students. All minor players in game jerseys and under-12 children are free.
Carrier
Week Congratulations to of the
SOPHIA LEE Sophia receives a gift card courtesy of
SOLO DISTRICT Lougheed & Willingdon (next to Whole Foods) On the lookout: Burnaby’s Jermaine Haley, shown scanning for an opening during the regular season, is now preparing to decide where he’ll play for the upcoming season. PHOTO JON LOK/
NEW MEXICO STATE
treat me how I want to be treated, and help me prepare for the next step and
If you are interested in becoming a carrier please call 604.398.3481
my dream of playing in the NBA,” he said.
A LOT GOES INTO YOUR WEBSITE MAKE SURE CUSTOMERS CAN FIND IT The Down Syndrome Research Foundation would like to thank all sponsors, donors, volunteers and 825 participants who made the 21st Annual Run Up for Down Syndrome a huge success. Through your support, a record breaking $115,000 was raised to empower individuals with Down syndrome to reach their full potential. On behalf of our board of directors, staff, volunteers, families and students, thank you for standing “Together. Hand in Hand.” with all who are walking the journey of Down syndrome.
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BurnabyNOW WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 25
Your Community
MARKETPLACE Or call to place your ad at
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George was born July 29th 1918 in Winnipeg, Manitoba and passed away May 24th 2017 in Vancouver, British Columbia. He is survived by his two daughters, Linda and Georgia, two grandchildren Meaghan and Duncan and three great grandchildren Brianna, Claire and James. George and his wife Marguerite owned and operated Waterman’s Building Supply in Burnaby. During those busy years they would spend the weekends at their cottage in Birch Bay. After they sold their business, George and Marguerite enjoyed many trips to faraway places and winters in Palm Springs.
As you share the stories and the memories of how they lived their lives and how very much they meant, may you ďŹ nd comfort...
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is hiring Automotive Electrical Mechanic Permanent, Full time job. Wage - $ 28.00 per/h 4LJMMT SFRVJSFNFOUT &YQFSJFODF NJO ZFBST (PPE &OHMJTI &EVDBUJPO 4FDPOEBSZ TDIPPM .BJO EVUJFT &YBNJOF XPSL PSEFST GPS NBJOUFOBODF PG WFIJDMFT BOE discuss work to be performed with the manager; Identify electrical and/or electronic problems with vehicles using computerized diagnostic and other testing devices; Adjust, repair or replace electrical and electronic systems/parts/components using hand tools and automotive repair equipment; Use testing equipment to ensure that repairs and maintenance of vehicles are effective and made to manufacturer’s specifications; Complete reports to record work performed on a vehicle; Confirm with the manager repairs and maintenance performed. $PNQBOZ T CVTJOFTT BEESFTT BOE KPC MPDBUJPO 2VFFOT "WFOVF /FX 8FTUNJOTUFS #$ 7 . 8 1MFBTF BQQMZ CZ F NBJM BNBZBLTFSWJDF!HNBJM DPN
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BRING HOME THE BACON
TRUTH IN ''EMPLOYMENT'' ADVERTISING Glacier Media Group makes every effort to ensure you are responding to a reputable and legitimate job opportunity. If you suspect that an ad to which you have responded is misleading, here are some hints to remember. Legitimate employers do not ask for money as part of the application process; do not send money; do not give any credit card information; or call a 900 number in order to respond to an employment ad. Job opportunity ads are salary based and do not require an investment. If you have responded to an ad which you believe to be misleading please call the Better Business Bureau at 604-682-2711, Monday to Friday, 9am - 3pm or email inquiries@bbbvan.org and they will investigate.
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26 WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 • BurnabyNOW
LEGAL
PETS
GARAGE SALES BRENT GARDENS
LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICES By virtue of the Warehouseman’s Lien Act. Mundies Towing, Storage & Service (1976) Ltd. will dispose of: .
1) 1978 AMCLIPPER MOTORHOME VIN# F34BD7V080316 RO: KARSEN LIAM MURPHY 2) 2008 HONDA CIVIC VIN# 2HGFA16278H100496 RO: ZHIHAO LIU Units may be viewed and bids to be submitted on MONDAY JUNE 26, 2017 at 5917 Thorne Avenue, Burnaby, BC between 10:00am to 3:00 pm. All written bids to Mundies Towing 5917 Thorne Ave, Burnaby, BC V3N 2T8. . .
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FOR SALE - MISC SAWMILLS from only $4,397 Make money & save money XJUI ZPVS PXO CBOE NJMM $VU lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE *OGP %7% XXX /PSXPPE Sawmills.com/400OT &YU 05 STEEL BUILDING SALE “MEGA MADNESS SALE!� 20X23 $5,780 25X25 $6,312. 30X31 $8,175. 33X35 $9,407. One End Wall Included. Check www.pioneersteel.ca for more prices. Pioneer 4UFFM
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BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
FINANCIAL SERVICES GET BACK ON TRACK Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We lend! If you own your own home you qualify! Pioneer AcceptanceCorp. ### NFN www.pioneerwest.com 604-987-1420
Call 604-444-3000 to book your ad MARKETPLACE
RENTALS
Real Balance Accounting
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! *O EFNBOE DBSFFS &NQMPZ FST IBWF XPSL BU IPNF positions available. Get the online training you need from BO FNQMPZFS USVTUFE QSP gram.Visit:CareerStep.ca/MT PS UP TUBSU USBJOJOH GPS ZPVS XPSL BU home career today!
Check the Classifieds for a comprehensive listing of Garage Sales in your area!
Bookkeeping Services $20 per hour Hands On Accounting
.
FINAL MOVING SALE JUNE 17, 9AM−3PM 809 Eighth Avenue, New West. Don’t miss this great opportunity! Lots of unique items, books, DVDs, ornaments, paintings, art, kitchen, furniture, toys and much more!
Check the classifieds for Education opportunities
ACCOUNTING/ BOOKKEEPING
Something for Everyone!
Roll Call!
MUSIC/THEATRE/DANCE
BUSINESS SERVICES
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)J 3JTF "QBSUNFOU XJUI River View & Indoor Pool. 1 BR & 2 BR Available. Rent includes heat & hot water. Remodeled Building and Common area. Gated underground parking available. References required.
CALL 604 525-2122 BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES
BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES
HOUSES FOR RENT Bby, 2BR upr ste, 3897 Yale 4U FYUSB MSH OJDF WJFX MSH rec room, 2 f/p, NS/NP, Jul 1, VUJMT
WANTED TO RENT WANTED New West 2 BR Upper w/1 BR bsmt with kitch for SR lady & family to share. &YD SFGT
THE BUY T SELL T FIND T IN CLASSIFIEDS I I I
BUY T SELLIT FINDIT I
BUY SELLIT FINDIT IT
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AUTOMOTIVE
DOMESTIC CARS
LEGAL SERVICES CRIMINAL RECORD? Why suffer Employment/Licensing MPTT 5SBWFM #VTJOFTT PQQPS tunities? Be embarrassed? Think: Criminal Pardon. US Entry Waiver. Record Purge. 'JMF %FTUSVDUJPO 'SFF $POTVM UBUJPO accesslegalresearchinc.net
MORTGAGES GROUP OF RETIREES will land first and second loans on viable projects. New retirees looking for investment opportunities are welcome to join us. 604-836-6098.
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
GROOVY
Your Clunker is someone’s Classic.
GUTTERS
HANDYPERSON
HOME SERVICES
CARPENTRY
ELECTRICAL
* Reno’s * Bsmt Refinish * Drywall * Bath Tiles Windows * Doors * Stairs. $BMM /PSN
#1 A-CERTIFIED Licensed Electrician, Res/Comm New or old wiring. Reasonable rates. Lic #22774 604-879-9394
CLEANING Honest, Reliable Cleaning Lady will make your home TQBSLMF IS
CONCRETE DALL’ANTONIA CONCRETE Seniors discount. Friendly, family CVTJOFTT ZST
TODAY'S PUZZLE ANSWERS
EXCAVATING
DRAINAGE DRAINAGE Services & more Claudio’s Backhoe Services Dry Basements+ 604-341-4446
.
#1 Backhoes & Excavators Trenchless Waterlines Bobcats & Dump Truck & All Material Deliveries
Drainage, Video Inspection, Landscaping, Stump/Rock/Cement/Oil Tank & Demos, Paving, Pool/Dirt Removal, Paver Stones, Jackhammer, Water/Sewer, Line/Sumps, 4MJOHFS "WBJM $PODSFUF $VUUJOH )BOE &YDBWBUJOH Basements Made Dry Claudio’s Backhoe Service
604-341-4446
ELECTRICAL FLOORING Electrical Installations Renos & Repairs. BBB Member.
www.nrgelectric.ca
604-520-9922 YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call. Lic#89402. Fast same day service. Insured. Guar’d. We love small jobs. 604-568-1899
classiďŹ eds.burnabynow.com
A to Z CERAMIC TILES Installation, Repairs, Free Est. 604-805-4319 INSTALLATION REFINISHING, Sanding. Free est, great prices. Satisfaction guar.604-518-7508
GUTTER CLEANING ROOF CLEANING WINDOW CLEANING POWER WASHING
30 yrs experience WCB/Liability insured
Simon 604-230-0627
A-1 Steve’s Gutter Clean & Repair from $98 ! Gutters vacuumed and hand cleaned 604-524-0667
HANDYPERSON
LAWN & GARDEN
BC GARDENING 25 Years Exp. t -BXO (BSEFO .BJOU t Power Rake, Plant, Prune t 5SFF 5PQQJOH 5SJNNJOH t $-&"/61 .03&
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All Work Guar. Free Est. Donny 604-600-6049
GREEN THUMB
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HANDY ANDY Handyman services. Odd jobs. Bathroom Reno’s (WHATEVER)
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Landscaping Lawn & Garden Services t (SBTT $VUUJOH t 5SFF 5SJNNJOH t 1SVOJOH t 8FFEJOH $MFBOVQ Satisfaction Guaranteed
604-729-8502
FIND HELP FOR YOUR PROJECTS
A Gardener & A Gentleman Lawn, Garden, Trees. Prune. $MFBO VQ +VOL.604-319-5302
BurnabyNOW WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 27
HOME SERVICES LAWN & GARDEN
PAINTING/ WALLPAPER
MICHAEL
A.S.U. Enterprises
Gardening & Landscaping t -BXO $VUT BT MPX BT $15 t 5SFF 5PQQJOH t 5SJNNJOH t /FX 4PE 4FFE t1MBOUJOH t $MFBOVQ NPSF t (VBS E 'VMMZ *OT E -JD E 8$#
*Painting *Power washing *Free estimates *Owner/operator *20 yrs exp *20% off ext painting Terry 604-376-7383
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604-240-2881
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All Work Guar. Free Est. John 604-616-2934
D&M PAINTING
604-724-3832
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A-1 Contracting & Roofing NEW & RE-ROOFING "MM 5ZQFT t $PODSFUF 5JMF 1BJOU 4FBM t"TQIBMU t 'MBU "MM .BJOUFOBODF 3FQBJST WCB 25% Discount t Emergency Repairs t
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Refer to the Home Services section for all your home improvement needs
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Rick 604-329-2783
Always Reddy Rubbish Removal ~ SPRING CLEAN-UP~
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778-892-1530
Residential / Commercial t 3FTQFDUGVM t 3FTQPOTJCMF t 3FMJBCMF t "GGPSEBCMF 3BUFT All Rubbish, Junk & Recycling needs. +PIOTPO t 778-999-2803
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HANDYPERSON
PUZZLE ANSWERS ON SEPARATE PAGE
PAVING/SEAL COATING
PLUMBING
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TREE SERVICES Pruning, Hedge Trimming Tree & Stump Removal GU #VDLFU 5SVDLT 604-787-5915 604-291-7778 XXX USFFXPSLTPOMJOF DB 10% discount with this ad
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28 WEDNESDAY June 14, 2017 • BurnabyNOW
HAPPY FATHER’S DAY 100% BC Owned and Operated | Prices Effective June 15 to June 21, 2017.
Two Burnaby Locations: 8683 10th Avenue & 8620 Glenlyon Parkway, Marine Way
PRODUCE
MEAT Organic California Grown Strawberries
Mexico Grown Hass Avocados
Whole Organic Chickens
9.90kg
1.78 each
454g package
Australian Grass Fed Free Range Tenderloin Steaks Aged 21+ Days
4.49lb
3.98
48.48kg
21.99lb Organic Red and Yukon Gold Potatoes from California New Crop
Organic Black Seedless Grapes from Mexico
8.77kg
Fresh Halibut Steaks
RWA* 11.00kg
46.27kg
4.99lb
2.27kg (5lb) bag
3.98lb
Pork Shoulder Blade Steak
20.99lb
7.98 *RWA – raised without antibiotics
WELLNESS Whole Earth & Sea Vitamins and Supplements
Special Price!
Assorted Varieties Assorted Sizes
15% off
Regular Retail Price
New Chapter Wholemega Omega-3 or Herbal Supplements
Marine Way Only at Choices Markets rnaby 8620 Glenlyon Parkway, Bu
Assorted Varieties Assorted Sizes
25% off
Regular Retail Price
Enerex Serrapeptase 120,000 SU
.68lb
47.99
us Bon e! l Bott
120 Capsules + 30 Capsules Free
DELI DELI Organic Bananas
Farmcrest Non-GMO Specialty Roasted Chicken and Your Choice of Two 12 oz Deli Salads
1.50kg
19.99
BAKERY Bakery Buns assorted varieties 380g
4.49
COUPON!
GROCERY Maple Hill Free Range Large Eggs 1 dozen product of Canada
Spend $50 and receive
SAVE
4.49
Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream and Non-Dairy Dessert assorted varieties 473-500ml product of Canada
SAVE
4.99
ONE FREE 4L Jug of Choices Organic Milk
Hardbite Potato Chips
GT’s Organic Raw Kombucha
skim, 1%, 2% or 3.8%
assorted varieties
assorted varieties
22% product of Canada
Markets 5205. Valid at all Choices to cashier at checkout. PLU per person pon cou one it Lim 7. Please present this coupon 201 purchases. Expires June 28, touts accepted. locations. Excludes Lottery be used, no copies or prin Only original coupon may e. valu cash No . visit per
www.choicesmarkets.com
40% 5.99
SAVE
UP TO
29% /ChoicesMarkets
3/2.97 50g 3/6.99 150g
@ChoicesMarkets
/Choices_Markets
SAVE
20%
480ml +deposit +eco fee product of USA
2/7.00
Non-Dairy