Vancouver Courier January 14 2011

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Fame game

PuSh it real good

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Vol. 102 No. 4 • Friday, Jan. 14, 2011

7 Gastown rising

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Established 1908

WEST WEEKEND EDITION

photo Dan Toulgoet

Cross fire

In the wake of another pedestrian fatality this week, the city hopes to improve safety at intersections and limit the number of pedestrians struck by vehicles on Vancouver streets —story by Mike Howell

YOUR SOURCE FOR LOCAL NEWS, WEATHER AND ENTERTAINMENT! WWW.VANCOURIER.COM


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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011


in this issue

FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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UP TO

50% OFF SALE Staged statistics

BY CHERYL ROSSI Using information gleaned from the 2006 Census, the stage production 100% Vancouver represents the city’s diverse demographic reality.

N E W S

7I 12 I

On the money

BY SANDRA THOMAS The B.C. Sports Hall of Fame recognizes a former park board commissioner for raising millions of dollars for B.C. athletes.

School honour

BY NAOIBH O’CONNOR An elementary school sets off a furious debate about learning and motivation after it cancels year-end awards ceremonies.

O P I N I O N

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Sobering thought

BY ALLEN GARR A tiny experiment in alcohol maintenance has meant a huge difference for one Downtown Eastside chronic alcoholic.

Tickle me Eno

BY GEOFF OLSON An evening listening to a talk by musical and art visionary Brian Eno is an entertaining trip with one of the great minds of popular music.

E N T E R TA I N M E N T

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Picks of the week

BY COURIER STAFF It’s a busy week of arts and entertainment as the PuSh Festival kicks off, novelist Tom Rachman reads and Crispin Glover weirds people out.

D I N I N G

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Gastown diet

BY TIM PAWSEY As Yaletown’s lustre fades, Gastown’s dining scene heats up thanks to newcomers such as Meat and Bread and Sea Monstr Sushi.

Style report

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Quote of the week

Students should not go to school to win; students should go to school to learn.” Chris Wejr, principal, Kent elementary school

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O N T H E C O V E R The scene of a pedestrian death at Nanaimo and Hastings Thursday.

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

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Seventy pedestrians, including one yesterday, have been killed in Vancouver since 2005

Hit-and-run victim left with two broken legs, cracked hip Mike Howell Staff writer

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t’s a route Bhajan Hayer had taken many times without incident. For more than a decade, the 72-year-old woman left her house near Memorial South Park and made the 40-minute walk to the Ross Street Sikh Temple, where she would worship and volunteer her time. Hayer’s route required her to cross East 57th Avenue at Ross Street. On Christmas Day, she set out in the morning and reached the intersection shortly before 11 a.m. As Hayer entered the crosswalk, she was struck by a grey Honda Accord. The impact left Hayer with two broken legs, a cracked hip, head injuries and bruises to her body. She’s expected to remain in hospital for several weeks. According to her family, Hayer doesn’t remember the collision and learned later that the driver of the Honda fled the scene. Last Friday, members of her family made a public plea for the driver to come forward. “The person should have stopped and offered assistance,” Hayer’s son-in-law Jewan Bassra told the Courier after issuing the plea at a recent press conference hosted by the Vancouver Police Department. Witnesses to the collision provided police with a description of the Honda, which is believed to have four doors, rusty rims and built between 1982 and 1986. It will likely have damage to the hood. Without the driver’s cooperation, police have resorted to

Bhajan Hayer’s family attended a recent VPD press conference about a Christmas Day hit-and-run while Mayor Gregor Robertson (top right) and Jerry Dobrovolny (bottom right), the city’s director of transportation, grapple with deadly pedestrian statistics. photos Dan Toulgoet contacting up to 400 owners of cars matching the description of the Honda. That’s 400 owners in Vancouver alone. “It’s a very lengthy and time consuming process,” said Const. Jeff Schell of the VPD’s collision unit. “It can be a benefit to myself and to the family if this driver just came forward and we could hear their side of the story.” The family knows Hayer could have been killed that day, adding to the number of pedestrians who die every year in the city after being struck by vehicles, including

another one yesterday at Nanaimo and Hastings. It was the city’s first pedestrian death this year. Statistics show 69 pedestrians were killed in Vancouver between 2005 and 2010. Five were killed last year, which is a significant drop from 2005 when 20 pedestrians died. But for all those who die on roadways, there are hundreds like Hayer who suffer serious injuries. Pedestrians injured in collisions in Vancouver reached 650 in 2009, according to statistics from the Insurance Corporation of B.C., which provided the

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Courier with a list of the top 10 locations in the city where pedestrians were injured between 2005 and 2009. Main and Hastings ranked No. 1 with 32 collisions involving pedestrians, followed by Commercial Drive and Broadway (22), Burrard and Davie (20) and Joyce and Kingsway (19). Victoria Drive and Kingsway rounded out the top five at 17 collisions. The ranking system included collisions that occurred at or near an intersection, although 81 per cent between 2005 and 2009 occurred at intersections.

The data is sobering news for Mayor Gregor Robertson, who recently introduced a motion at city council to improve safety for pedestrians, which he says are the city’s top transportation priority. “For me, it was the combination of seeing the ICBC and VPD statistics on pedestrian incidents and being really concerned that these problems persist and significant changes weren’t being made to reduce the impacts,” the mayor said of his motion, which he introduced in November. Continued on page 5

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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Intersection timers count down number of seconds for pedestrians

Continued from page 4 According to Robertson, there are 318,000 walking trips made every day in the city, with 41 per cent of residents in downtown and the West End either walking or cycling to work. By 2020, the city hopes to have at least 50 per cent of all trips made by walking, cycling or transit. The ambitious goal requires the necessary infrastructure and motorists to leave the car at home. For now, Robertson has left it up to city staff to identify high-crash locations involving pedestrians and setting “priority measures” to improve safety. Signal lights, crosswalks and curb bulges could be among those measures. While East 57th and Ross didn’t make ICBC’s top 10 list, the city agreed last week to install a pedestrian-controlled signal at the intersection. Hayer’s family’s reaction to the news was lukewarm. “It’s a good response,” said Hayer’s son Prem, “but it should have been there a long time ago. People have been asking for changes for many years.”

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he city’s engineering department reviewed the intersection nine times since 1993, according to Jerry Dobrovolny, the city’s director of transportation, who delivered the news to

According to ICBC statistics, 32 collisions involving pedestrians occurred at Main and Hastings between 2005 and 2009. photo Dan Toulgoet the Hayer family about the light planned for the roadway. Ten years ago, the city installed a marked crosswalk and added curb bulges to reduce the distance travelled across the intersection at East 57th and Ross. The city also added pedestrian signs on light poles and speed bumps on Ross. “It’s an area that is not the easiest to cross, but there’s worse in the city,” said Dobrovolny, noting the city has financial constraints and prioritizes intersections that need upgrades.

A review of an intersection includes studying data from ICBC, the VPD and speaking to TransLink and the public about concerns. Annually, the city installs up to 15 new pedestrian or cyclist-controlled signals. Last year, the city began installing countdown timers at intersections, which count down the number of seconds a pedestrian has to cross a roadway. All 10 intersections ranked in the ICBC list will or have received timers.

Main and Hastings recently received the timers, said Dobrovolny, noting the city’s standard time to allow a pedestrian to cross an intersection is 3.3 feet per second; the Canadian standard is four feet per second. “We’ve been using the slower standard for some time,” he said. “We’ll go out and review an intersection and increase the crossing time or make adjustments based on need. We sometimes get requests regarding visually impaired and we’ll add

audio signals to a crossing.” Dobrovolny said the city continues to examine what changes can be made at Main and Hastings and its corridor to improve safety for pedestrians. So why has the area been identified as the most dangerous in the city? The Courier put the question to Dobrovolny, the mayor, the head of the VPD’s traffic section and the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users, which conducted a city-funded study on pedestrian safety in the neighbourhood last year. Their answers were similar—lots of traffic mixing with lots of pedestrians, many of whom are suffering from a drug addiction or mental illness, or both. ICBC data cited the top contributing factors as “pedestrian error/confusion and ability impaired by drugs.” The drug users’ study, which was funded by the city, pointed out that Hastings Street is home to a large population of “vulnerable road users,” including seniors, families with children, people with disabilities, drug users and people with mental illness. The study surveyed more than 1,400 residents, with 32 per cent saying they had been hit by a vehicle in the Downtown Eastside. The study also suggested there is an underreporting of injuries. Continued on page 6

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Standard First Aid - CPR C with AED BC-SFC-AED Tu,W Feb. 01,02 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM S,Su Feb. 05,06 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM M,Tu Feb. 07,08 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM S,Su Feb. 12,13 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM Tu,W Feb. 15,16 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM S,Su Feb. 19,20 8:30 AM - 5:30 PMC S,Su Feb. 19,20 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM M,Tu Feb. 21,22 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM S,Su Feb. 26,27 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM Tu,W Mar. 01,02 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM S,Su Mar. 05,06 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM M,Tu Mar. 07,08 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM S,Su Mar. 12,13 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM Tu,W Mar. 15,16 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM S,Su Mar. 19,20 8:30 AM - 5:30 PMC S,Su Mar. 19,20 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM M,Tu Mar. 21,22 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM S,Su Mar. 26,27 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM Tu,W Mar. 29,30 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM S,Su Apr. 02,03 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM M,Tu Apr. 04,05 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM S,Su Apr. 09,10 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM Tu,W Apr. 12,13 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM S,Su Apr. 16,17 8:30 AM - 5:30PMC S,Su, Apr. 16,17 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM M,Tu Apr. 18,19 8:30 AM - 5:30PMC Tu,W Apr. 26,27 8:30 AM - 5:30 PM S,Su Apr30,May01 8:30 AM -5:30 PM Standard First Aid – Health Care Provider, BC-SFC-HCP S,Su Feb. 05,06 8:30 AM -5:30 PM

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21 23 25 26 26 28 30 01 02 04 06 07 08 09 11 13 15 15 16 18 20 27 29 30 30

8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PMC 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PMC 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PMC 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PM 8:30 AM -4:30 PMC 8:30 AM -4:30 PM

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

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Police note poor weather conditions, visibility Continued from page 5 Reasons for this include: • Drivers paying a pedestrian money to consider the matter resolved. • In the case of hit-and-runs, injured pedestrians didn’t see any benefit to reporting the incident since the identity of the motorist is unknown. • Pedestrians didn’t realize the extent of their injuries until well after the incident, or didn’t feel their injuries were severe enough to merit medical attention. • Because of negative past experiences, some injured pedestrians don’t want to deal with police or hospital staff. • Injured pedestrians who were in possession of drugs or had a warrant for their arrest wished to avoid the police. The respondents top four suggestions for making the neighbourhood safer for pedestrians were longer walk signal times, more drug treatment programs, more crosswalks and reduced speed limits along Hastings Street. Aiyanas Ormond, a community organizer with the drug users’ group, said the city’s installation of countdown timers at Main and Hastings is a good step but more initiatives are needed. Ormond suggested installing a crosswalk along Hastings between Main and Columbia, high visibility “zebra” markings at all crosswalks and implementing a six-block 30-kilometre per hour zone from Abbott to Jackson streets. “It may be true that people are suffering from all different kinds of impairment and are slower crossing the street, and maybe less conscious of it,” he said. “I mean that’s the reality of our neighbourhood. So we think the city should be bringing in measures to address that reality and not laying blame on individuals when they get hit by cars.”

“IF EVERYBODY DID WHAT THEY’RE SUPPOSED TO DO, THEN THERE SHOULD BE NO FATALITIES OR INJURIES.” Insp. Ted Schinbein

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hen a pedestrian is struck by a vehicle, it’s not always the driver’s fault, according to Insp. Ted Schinbein, head of the VPD’s traffic section, who noted it’s often split 50/50 between driver and pedestrian. “The unfortunate reality is, whether the pedestrian was right or wrong, they’re going to suffer greater consequences than the operator of the motor vehicle,” he said. This is especially evident among seniors, who account for nearly 50 per cent of all pedestrian fatalities annually in Vancouver. They often have hearing, vision and mobility challenges that make them more vulnerable when crossing the road, Schinbein said. In October 2010, a 78-year-old man died after he was hit by a van while crossing Renfrew Street. In November, an 85-year-old woman died after being struck by a car in the 1100-block of Station Street. Over the years, the VPD has led or participated in numerous road safety campaigns and offers a pedestrian safety program for seniors. In the spring, the VPD is expected to launch another initiative to reduce the number of pedestrian deaths and injuries. But Schinbein said a campaign cannot focus solely on enforcement and has to include education and improvements to roadways. Even so, he said, a pedestrian can be killed or injured anywhere in the city. “Toronto put millions and millions of dollars into [a pedestri-

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s of Thursday morning, police were still searching for the driver of the Honda that struck Bhajan Hayer on Christmas Day. They were also at the scene of the latest fatality at Nanaimo and Hastings. For the Hayer family, the collision has them focused on the need for better education on road safety for drivers and pedestrians. “Since this accident, we’ve all paid more attention in crosswalks,” said Jewan Bassra, Hayer’s son-in-law. “It’s never in your mind until it happens to you or somebody close to you. There needs to be more education as far as pedestrians’ rights or what they should be doing. The same for people who are driving. I don’t know how many people know that if a pedestrian is in a crosswalk, you’re supposed to stop.” mhowell@vancourier.com Twitter: @Howellings

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an campaign] and yet last January they had seven pedestrian fatalities in seven days,” Schinbein said. “You try and drill down and find out what all the factors are, but the reality is, it is random.” But police have noticed a pattern when fatalities and injuries are more likely to occur—at this time of the year, when days are shorter and the weather is poorer, making for less visibility. The safety tips are not new: Pedestrians should wear bright clothing, use marked crosswalks, make eye contact with motorists, stop using an iPod or cellphone when crossing and ensure an umbrella doesn’t obstruct their view. For drivers, they should obey speed limits, yield to pedestrians at intersections, ensure windows are not fogged to impede views and expect the unexpected when driving in a high pedestrian area. “If everybody did what they’re supposed to do, then there should be no fatalities or injuries—people shouldn’t be getting struck,” said Schinbein, who welcomed the drop in pedestrian fatalities in 2010 but is bothered that five people still died. “For me, one death is too many.”

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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news Central Park with Sandra Thomas

Almost famous

Former NPA park board commissioner Marty Zlotnik will be inducted into the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame at a special ceremony at the Vancouver Convention Centre Sept. 13. Zlotnik is being honoured with the W.A.C. Bennett Award for “his remarkable drive, vision and organizational ability” in significantly shaping B.C. sports for decades. I know from experience Zlotnik has been a tireless supporter of the Thunderbird Golf Society, the UBC Thunderbird Council and the Millennium Scholarship Breakfast. It’s estimated Zlotnik has raised millions of dollars for B.C. athletes. It’s nice to see Zlotnik being inducted alongside one of my all time favourite Canucks, Trevor Linden. Linden is being inducted in the hockey category and is described by the selection committee as “perhaps the most universally respected athlete in Vancouver sports history.” Way to go Trev. Twin brothers Gary and Paul Gait are being honoured for their contributions to the game of lacrosse, while Maëlle Ricker (snowboard-

ing) and Lauren Woolstencroft (skiing) are being inducted for their 2010 Olympic efforts. Ricker was the first Canadian woman to win Olympic gold on home snow, while Woolstencroft was the first Winter Paralympian to win five gold medals at a single Paralympic Games. In the “builder” category, Mike Jones was named for his Burnaby Mountain Wrestling Club, which so far has produced 18 Olympians, 28 national championship teams and more. Also being honoured in that category is Audrey Williams, considered to be one of the all time great figure skating officials from B.C. The Canadian Olympic Men’s Hockey Team “B.C. members” are being inducted into the team category, while the 1933 Chinese Students Soccer Team is being honoured as pioneers. Tom Larscheid is being inducted in the media category for 33 years of enthusiastic Canucks radio colour commentary. Larscheid also worked as the B.C. Lions’ colour commentator on CKNW from 1975 to 2000.

People projects

Community groups and organizations with capital project ideas involving any park board facility or park have until Jan. 28 to submit proposals. The park board is finalizing its 2012-2014 capital plan, which will be approved by voters in the November civic election, and is looking to resi-

dents for ideas on how the money will be spent. Submissions should include the goal of the project, the estimated cost, funding needed from the capital plan and funding from other sources if known or anticipated. Proposals also must include the project name, the partner park or facility, the name of the organization or individual, date of submission and contact information, including names, phone and fax numbers and email addresses. While all proposals will be assessed, not all will make the cut. Mail completed proposals and attachments to Megan Stuart-Stubbs, Vancouver Park Board, 2099 Beach Ave., Vancouver, V6G 1Z4; email to parkboard.capitalplan@vancouver. ca or fax to 604-257-8365.

Skate session

The park board is inviting skate park users and area residents to an information open house about the upcoming repairs to the Downtown Skate Plaza, located under the Dunsmuir/ Georgia viaducts. Some upgrades to the park include resurfacing the asphalt and repairing a portion of the granite copings, which is the edge that sits above a skateboard pool or ramp. The open house takes place Jan. 21 from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the Roundhouse Community Centre, Room A, 181 Roundhouse Mews. sthomas@vancourier.com Twitter:@sthomas10

Former park board commissioner Marty Zlotnik gets inducted into the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame, file photo Dan Toulgoet Sept. 13.

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EW08

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

opinion

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Evan’s story a sobering tale

www.vancourier.com

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All the civic affairs news that’s fit to blog

Kudos & Kvetches

Because you shouldn’t have to wait twice a week to be offended

Page Three

Your guide to the Courier on the web

Central Park

Digging up the dirt on park board and community

WEB POLL NATION Go to www.vancourier.com to vote Do you support the concept of an alcohol harm-reduction program for chronic alcoholics? Last week’s poll question: Do you agree with the assertion made by NPA supporters that Vision Vancouver is to blame for a recent rooming house fire?

Yes 37 per cent No 63 per cent This is not a scientific poll.

I met Evan Tuesday morning. He was sitting next to the elevator on the third floor of the Pennsylvania Hotel. He was holding an empty paper cup and waiting to go out to an appointment. The Pennsylvania is a recently renovated building at Carrall and Hastings run by the Portland Hotel Society (PHS). The third floor houses 10 people who have been “serial patients at hospitals.” They end up in emergency wards mostly for infections and concussions. Evan is a chronic, middle-aged alcoholic who suffers from lack of impulse control, diabetes and ulcers. In his drunken state, he has tended to fall down a lot. Typical of the men in this condition in the Downtown Eastside, he is aboriginal. A few moments before I met Evan, he just downed the ounce and a half of vodka that was in the paper cup he was holding. In another hour, a nurse would give him another ounce and a half of vodka, which is what the doctor ordered. Literally. Evan has lived in his small apartment on the third floor of the Pennsylvania since September. Before that, he lived at another PHS hotel, The Washington. And before that he spent more than a decade on the streets drinking anything that contained alcohol from mouthwash to hair spray. Typically, he got hauled to hospital by ambulance on an almost daily basis. (Imagine the cost of that.) Once he arrived, he’d get out of his stretcher and head for the closest hand sanitizer dispenser, take it off the wall and drink the contents.

allengarr He doesn’t do that anymore. Evan is now part of a very small harm-reduction program sponsored by the PHS and Vancouver Coastal Health that seems counterintuitive. To stabilize his life and help restore his health, he’s been given a comfortable place to live and regular amounts of “beverage quality” alcohol that is being prescribed by the same doctors that regularly monitor him. When this program started, according to the coordinator Russ Maynard, there were three men enrolled. One has since died because of the effects of his addiction. In the past three months, though, Evan has only been to the hospital twice. But more than that, his behaviour has changed dramatically. He now showers and shaves daily, eats regularly and says he enjoys the peaceful setting in which he finds himself. Maynard makes it clear that the program is

not designed to “cure” Evan. If he ends up sober that’s great. But the primary goal is what Maynard refers to as “palliative care.” We hear this term most used with folks who are terminally ill and don’t have long to live. In this case, it means care for a person who is chronically addicted but whose life can be made more comfortable, stable, and even pleasant, through an alcohol-maintenance program. I actually found out about this program at the Pennsylvania when I first ran into Russ Maynard in December. He was giving a presentation to a Vancouver symposium organized by the B.C. Civil Liberties Association and the Frank Paul Society to discuss sobering centres. You may recall Frank Paul was the aboriginal alcoholic who, a dozen years ago, Vancouver police hauled unconscious out of a drunk tank and abandoned in an alley where he died of exposure. Cops have come some distance since then although the problem of chronic street alcoholics remains. Rather than drunk tanks, members from five different B.C. police forces joined others who came to this symposium to hear native leaders advocate for more humane alternatives: sobering centres where alcoholics could be taken and monitored until they were safely mobile. And for alcoholics like Evan, alcohol maintenance, not in a clinic or a hospital but where they live. There are no plans yet for any sobering centres. But what little harm reduction treatment does exist thanks in part to Frank Paul’s legacy seems to be working—at least for Evan. agarr@vancourier.com

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letters

FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

opinion BRITON INVENTED AMBIENT MUSIC

Art visionary helped craft popular music Meet the king of freelancers. Musician, producer, visual artist, writer and curator Brian Eno was in Vancouver this week for an illustrated talk at the Vogue Theatre. I’m always interested in learning how someone has managed to avoid punching a clock for decades, while attaining immense critical acclaim, great popular appeal, significant academic respect, and a comfortable bank account. His demographic was reflected in the audience at the Vogue. If a bomb went off in the theatre Monday night, it would have made a serious dent in the local artist/hipster scene. The 62 year-old Briton, whose CV is almost as long as his full name (Brian Peter George St. John le Baptiste de la Salle Eno), told an adoring audience that he’s never held down a real job. He’s the contractual musical collaborator par excellence; a cueball-headed visionary with the entire globe as his sandbox. He had just flown in from Calgary, where he presided over the opening of his kaleidoscopic video installation 77 Million Paintings at the Glenbow museum. Tuesday morning he had a flight to Brazil. Eno first made his mark in the early ’70s as the fey, glamattired keyboardist for Roxy Music. He abandoned Bryan Ferry’s rising band for a solo career, and serial gigs producing big-name musical artists. If you ever hummed along to anything from Talking Head’s Remain in Light, David Bowie’s Berlin trilogy, or Coldplay’s Viva La Vida, then you have resonated with Britain’s cerebral Svengali. Years ago, I picked up a vinyl copy of a strange album called My Life in the Bush of Ghosts. I was already a big Eno fan, but I thought his 1981 collaboration with David Byrne belonged in the remainder bins, not the record charts. I recently gave the CD another spin, and it was a revelation. I was astounded at how contemporary MLBG sounds, with its sampling, pan-African rhythms and ambient textures—elements that wouldn’t be fixtures in popular music for years to come. Eno is like a time traveller: a guy who modestly sets the controls for 10 to 15 years into the future, returning to the present with something shiny and cool. From the first space shuttle flights to today’s networking sites, his electronic twiddling has coloured the soundtrack to our lives. Credited with inventing ambient music, he has even composed “music for airports”—which has actually been played in some airports. We’re talking about an artist whose

letter of the week

geoffolson work is pretty hard to avoid. At the Vogue, he employed a minimalist presentation of index cards and printouts to share his excitement about the recent discoveries of complexity theory. Nature’s collaborative, interconnected dynamic offers an alternative way of looking at things, beyond the top-down hierarchies in our culture, seen in everything from army divisions and classical orchestras. Eno noted there have always been alternative cultural models, such as West African music, with its naturalistic, call-and-response forms. Another is found in the “sonic landscapes” of rock music. The first few seconds of a Phil Spector song contains the whole song in microcosm, roughly, like a hologram. “Just as if you take a square inch of a Cézanne painting, it’s kind of a picture of the whole painting.” In his art school years, Eno decided he could paint “sound pictures” of his own. “It’s no accident that a lot of the music that came out of England in the ’60s and ’70s really came from art students who moved over to music. They understood that this new form was really a painting form—a sonic painting form.” The artist and producer went on to discuss our cultural obsession with controlling things, while forgetting to honour the opposite pole of control: surrender. The latter, which he defined as letting go and feeling part of something bigger than the self, has been identified by different cultures over time with religion, art, sex, or drugs. “If you know of any culture that’s linked all four at once, meet me after the show,” he quipped. Given his cerebral interests and chilly electronic soundscapes, the precisely speaking Eno comes across as more Apollonian than Dionysian. But I suspect his hedonistic side isn’t far below the surface. He concluded his talk by saying that one of the perks of his kind of artistic freelancing, putting on museum shows around the world, is that it gets the creator “nice girlfriends.” www.geoffolson.com

Executive director Mona Woodward says donations will allow the Aboriginal Front Door Society to remain open. file photo Dan Toulgoet To the editor: Re: “Charitable donations save aboriginal drop-in centre,” Jan. 7. Let’s see. A non-profit drop-in centre that uses more than 80 per cent of its funding to pay its staff to give advice, referrals and other services that are already offered by countless other government-funded organizations is begging for more funds. Well, I wonder if they ever thought about reducing their payroll and spending more on those who truly need help.

It amazes me that groups like this continue to receive funding even after they repeatedly have had financial troubles in the past. What happens when they run out of money again? I think another cover story on the Courier will soon follow. By the way, what qualifications does one need to become an executive director of a non-profit centre? The pay sure sounds good. Rob Gill, Vancouver

Pandora Street fire raises critical questions

To the editor: Re: “Blaming rooming fire on Vision a real NPA tragedy,” Jan. 7. I’m the furthest thing from an f**king NPA hack, yet I too want to see a broader investigation than Allen Garr prefers of the Pandora Street disaster. Fire and coroner officials will certainly determine how these three men died; I want someone to answer

for how they lived. The frayed lives and exploited circumstances of these victims need examination, not the extension cords. The owner of this house reportedly was ordered by the city to dismantle the multiple room aspect of this property, which he roundly ignored, all the while scooping up every dime of welfare payments from three addicts who had

lost the cognitive skills to fend for themselves or to seek out better housing options. Never mind investigating this tragedy from the ashes up—start from the top down. If there are issues of negligence or malfeasance over any part of this situation, everything needs to be exposed to the light of day. Ian MacRae, Vancouver

Cycling columnist peddles relevant information

To the editor: Re: “A man and bike love story,” Jan. 7. Just had to drop you an email to let you know how much I enjoy Jeffrey HansenCarlson’s column. It’s the first thing I turn to as I collect the Courier from my mailbox. I was just a casual mountain bike rider with a young family until a friend came to me last October with a plan to do the Ride to Conquer Cancer. I hesitated at first as I hadn’t done much riding since being a teenager some years ago. Then, after thinking for several days, I jumped on the bandwagon. We were riding 25-year-old steel (heavy) mountain bikes. Last February, we decided to take the plunge and purchase

a new bike. After riding numerous hybrids then one road bike, the decision was made! Road bike it was and no turning back. Since then, I have been reading HansenCarlson’s articles weekly. I can totally relate to every single item he’s touched on, with exception of the shaving of the legs. Waxing is much more effective. The most recent article on naming the bike hit close to home. My bike’s name is Chuck (as in Norris) and my friend’s bike’s name is Bruce (as in Springsteen). It’s really some sort of wonderful disease I think. I go a week and all I can think about is when I can get on that bike for a ride. Cheryl Lydyniuk, Vancouver

Million-dollar mental health van a ‘no-brainer’

To the editor: Re: “Mental health van would cost almost $1 million,” Jan. 7. This headline, in my opinion, slants the issue very negatively. How about

“Police estimate mental heath van will save $8 million a year.” (Figure derived from police estimate of $9 million, minus the $1 million quoted in the headline). This figure represents

only the policing costs. Add in the ambulance and hospital emergency service savings, and the proposal sounds like a no-brainer. Nancy Zegarchuk, Vancouver

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editor@vancourier.com Letters to the editor (1574 West Sixth Ave., Vancouver V6J 1R2, fax 738-2154 or e-mail editor@vancourier.com) may be edited by the Courier for reasons of legality, taste, brevity and clarity. To be considered for publication, they must be typed, signed and include the writer’s full name (no initials), home address, and telephone number (neither of which will be published), so authorship may be verified.


EW10

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

news

Public forum coincides with National Non-Smoking Week

Advocate touts smoke-free housing Cheryl Rossi

Staff writer

games comics quizzes puzzles get caught in our web…

v a n c o u r i e r. c o m

Rose Marie Borutski didn’t know she could request non-smoking housing when she applied for a subsidized home. She moved into Kiwanis Park Place in Surrey in July 2007 when spine and pelvis problems affected her mobility. She developed a “smoker’s cough” by October that she blames on secondhand smoke. By December, Borutski says she’d fallen out of bed from asthma attacks and had to start using an inhaler. At the beginning of 2008, Borutski and another tenant compiled a petition to inform her building managers, Crescent Housing Society, of the scope of the problem and suggest solutions. Borutski said their document was dismissed. By researching and connecting with subsidized and market renters and owners in strata buildings, Borutski’s learned she’s not alone in being ignored. She’s keen to share what she’s learned with others facing similar problems. “I didn’t know about the [smoke-free housing movement] from July to February and it was hell,” she said. “We need to know what’s going on at ground zero, what has been done, what are some of the success stories, what are some better ways of doing this and the fact that the obstructions are not [about medical] knowledge and legal, that’s a done deal.” Borutski has organized a community discussion forum on how to advance smokefree housing, Jan. 18 at St. Paul’s Hospital. It happens during National Non-Smoking Week, Jan. 16 to 22. She’s started a blog called Canadian PUSH for Smoke-free Housing, partly inspired by the American group People United for Smoke-free Housing, where she tracks cases in Metro Vancouver, the Fraser Valley and Ontario. Borutski says strata members can make

“WE NEED TO KNOW WHAT’S GOING ON AT GROUND ZERO.” Rose Marie Borutski

nuisance claims under common law and sue councils, boards and smokers if their appeals to building managers or strata executives fail. She says this approach has proven more successful that pursuing human rights complaints. She said managers and landlords have had success in making buildings smoke-free by bringing in others to identify the problems, offer help to smokers who want to quit and explaining that managers and landlords could be sued if they don’t take action. Borutski says the best way to make a strata building non-smoking is to start it that way. She points to North Vancouver’s 2006 Envy condo development. It was Canada’s first condo development to be designated nonsmoking that sold out “in record time.” Borutski has applied for low-cost housing at the Olympic Village, which she believes could have been a flagship for smoke-free housing. Thom Armstrong, executive director of the Co-operative Housing Federation of B.C. which will run a co-op in the village, said 228 of the 252 units are smoke-free with strict rules prohibiting smoking in common areas inside or outside the buildings, including on balconies. He added the state-of-the-art insulation and ventilations systems should prevent the drift of secondhand smoke from units where smoking isn’t restricted. B.C. Stats reported in 2007 that 18 per cent of British Columbians smoked in 2006. The discussion starts Jan. 18 at 6:30 p.m. in Providence Building, Level 1, Conference Room 6. crossi@vancourier.com


FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

EW11

news

Couple says heating problems resolved after accounting firm took over complex

Residents give Olympic Village big thumbs up Cheryl Rossi Staff reporter

Anthony and Lis Smith are pleased they bought at the Olympic Village. They put their first deposit on their “final stop” in November 2007 and moved in last summer. They concede most of their owner neighbours at the southwest edge of the village are “not that happy at the moment.” “They feel they’ve paid top dollar and now they are going to see places selling for less,” they said, finishing each other’s sentences. But the Smiths are content. “You always like to think it’ll go up but we’re honestly not bothered because we really feel we’ve got what we wanted,” Lis said. “If it was bought as an investment to flip, it’s another story, and that’s not our story… And if they do sell things cheaper, we’re going to be really pleased for people. We just want neighbours.” Many of their neighbours are renters. The Smiths opened an account Jan. 6 at the village’s TD Canada Trust bank that was populated by more employees than customers that

afternoon. They are fans of the spacious Legacy Liquor Store with its green wall. These are the only two operational businesses. Anthony, 73, a retired maritime lawyer, and Lis, 71, a retired social worker, previously lived in a townhouse near West Seventh Avenue and Hemlock. But they decided they wanted to live in a conveniently located home with views, without stairs, one that could accommodate a wheelchair, if need be, down the road. They paid $769,000 for their 1,008square-foot two-bedroom, two-bathroom, fourth-floor home with a flex space, before taxes and fees, which made the total price more than $800,000. They didn’t pay HST. Windows in their open kitchen and living room offer views to the Cambie Street Bridge and False Creek and a peek-a-boo view of Grouse Mountain. It’s a bright, welcoming space with environmentally friendly finishes, high-end appliances and rollout storage drawers. They say there were deficiencies in finishing touches that were less problematic than the only other time

they bought a brand new home, but Anthony, who’s president of the strata council, wouldn’t talk about deficiencies in the common areas, which include an exercise room, party room and board room in their building, and an exercise room, yoga room, pool, hot tub, sauna and steam room in another building. The Smiths said in the months leading up to the announcement that developers Millennium had entered into receivership on the project, getting anything fixed was a painfully slow process. Now that accounting firm Ernst and Young has taken over, problems, including those with their radiant heating system during the November cold snap, have been or are being addressed. Anthony said the firm’s representatives recently assured strata members that while new lower prices for the 480 unsold units at the village are expected in February or March, there would be no “fire sale.” Ernst and Young is to help the city recoup the $740 million owed to it for the Southeast False Creek development. crossi@vancourier.com

Anthony and Lis Smith paid more than $800,000 for their 1,008-square-foot Olympic Village condo. photo Dan Toulgoet

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EW12

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

news

Class Notes

with Naoibh O’Connor

Winners and losers

Should schools eliminate award ceremonies and honour rolls? Kent elementary in Agassiz and Forest Green School in Stony Plain, Alberta have done exactly that, according to news reports this week, including a blog entry by the Vancouver Sun’s Janet Steffenhagen. Kent elementary abolished

awards following a staff debate last June. Chris Wejr, its youthful principal, is unapologetic about the decision and the controversy that’s arisen. “Instead of our year-end awards ceremony, we decided to have a year-end honouring ceremony along with recognizing individuals throughout the year for their individual strengths and passions. Awards ceremonies are zero-sum, meaning that although they create a few winners, they create many losers,” he wrote in his blog this week to address the controversy. Wejr dismisses criticism that the school’s decision ignores the reality of competition in the real world, as well as suggestions

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that he might as well axe sport competitions as well. “The key difference between sport and learning is that you choose to play sports and you go in with the knowledge that there is a winner and a loser. Students should not go to school to win; students should go to school to learn. Students should not go to school to compete for some award at the end of the year; students should go to school to collaborate and learn from teachers and peers. We rob our children of intrinsic motivation by continually offering extrinsic motivators,” he wrote. Frankly, I was surprised to learn that some elementary

schools held year-end award ceremonies or had honour rolls. If I recall correctly, such ceremonies, as well as honour rolls, only started in junior high school (Grade 7) when I was in school. I also don’t remember students being all that concerned about winning or failing to win recognition. Send me your thoughts on the subject and your experiences about winning or losing awards in school. Should they be abolished? Should they be reserved for higher grades? Should students expect to be awarded for educational excellence or is that a flaw?

Does Wejr’s decision do a disservice to students by failing to prepare them for the “real world” or is he simply a forward-thinking principal. Wejr, meanwhile, isn’t prepared to back down. “We need to work to see the value and strength in every child, every day. If we resort to recognizing only a select few at the end of the year, we are failing the majority of our students. Let’s tap into our students’ interests and work to honour our students for the strengths and passions within each one of them,” he argues. noconnor@vancourier.com Twitter: @Naoibh

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

EW13

news

Vancouver Lifeguard School celebrates 75th anniversary

Lifeguards hone and tone for next summer Megan Stewart

Staff writer

Slushy streets and salt-stained galoshes don’t conjure thoughts of sunbathing and seaside leisure, but many Vancouver lifeguards are back to work this week to train for the summer season. In the 75th year of the Vancouver Lifeguard School, new and returning lifeguards build on their skills from now through April and vie for one of nearly 200 coveted positions to safeguard the city’s 11 beaches and four outdoor pools. For a 15-year-old Glenn Schultz, saving a drowning boy from a watery grave at Locarno Beach more than five decades ago led to a 50year career as a lifeguard. Now the man in charge of the city’s beaches and open-air pools, Schultz is the city’s top outdoor lifeguard. He also runs the school and hires the seasonal lifeguards. His introduction to the profession came by way of natural instinct and skill. Seated in the sun on a wooden raft, a teenaged Schultz looked on as another boy climbed out of the shallows and jumped off the opposite end into deeper water. When he didn’t resurface, Schultz peered into the water. “I looked down and

saw his eyes. He was trying to say something, trying to talk, but he couldn’t.” Schultz fished the boy out of the water. “Little did I know it would end up being a career,” he said last week, seated in an office at the Aquatic Centre with a giant window overlooking the paddling pool used by infants and parents. Photographs of Vancouver pools taken before and after the renovations we recognize today illustrate half a century as a lifeguard. Schultz remembers the days when access to a bathhouse cost 15 cents and bathers changed after work to hit the surf for a few hours on a sunny day. He signed up for the city’s lifeguard school and began his first patrols in 1960, four years before the National Lifesaving Society standardized safety requirements throughout the British Commonwealth. Vancouver’s outdoor crews are experienced and Schultz says about 80 per cent of his staff returns each year, including lifeguards who signed on in the ’60s and ’70s. All guards are tested at the beginning of each season. Today, lifeguard training emphasizes skills and fitness as well as prevention. Banning inflatable toys and mattresses from beaches and pools in the early 1970s was one of the best decisions the city made,

said Schultz. “Life-saving in B.C. is proactive. We try to stop the accident before it happens,” he said. The public relations requirements of the job are increasingly emphasized, given the need to enforce rules with diplomacy and discipline. And then, a lifeguard must be fit. “The have to be fit for any potential emergency situation and the work itself can be physically demanding,” said Sean Healy, the park board supervisor of aquatic services and also a lifeguard. “They move row boats, paddle boats, lift people and come to the aid of people in distress and all that is physically demanding.” Lifeguard skills competitions are an increasingly popular form of professional development encouraged by Schultz. Lifeguard Gail Findlay-Shirras represented Canada in Egypt at the recent world lifesaving championships and placed in the top 15. “[Competition] keeps you in shape so you can do your job,” said the 27-year-old Vancouverite. “If you’re struggling, I can get to you fast. If I’m frank and honest, I can get there faster than everyone but 10 people in the world.” mstewart@vancourier.com Twitter: @MHStewart

Longtime lifeguard Glenn Schultz once saved a drowning boy from a watery grave at Locarno Beach. photo Dan Toulgoet

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

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Public forums will focus on aboriginal education

District revisits aboriginal program idea Naoibh O’Connor Staff writer

equivalent aboriginal students necessary. “At that time they were considering a standalone school, even building a new school, that would be an aboriginal school. For various reasons it didn’t move forward but we felt it might be worth revisiting the concept of maybe even a school within a school like we do with our mini-school program,” Bacchus said. Mark Aquash, director of the Native Indian Education Program and assistant professor in the education department at UBC, supports the idea. “Providing more choices for aboriginal students, parents and the community can provide greater opportunity for student success,” he wrote in an email to the Courier. Aquash maintains community involvement increases self-determination and allows the Vancouver aboriginal community to participate in the education of youth who are currently not connected to the aboriginal community, which can motivate and create positive outcomes for individual students and their family. “The student begins to make those connections between being an academically successful student as a representative of their family and helping to lift their community from the many negative social challenges that both urban aboriginals and First Nations face every day.” Those who plan to attend a forum can RSVP to mlouie@vsb.bc.ca for planning purposes, but it’s not required. noconnor@vancourier.com Twitter: @Naoibh

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Years after the Vancouver school district considered then rejected starting an aboriginal secondary school, it’s contemplating another program with an aboriginal focus—possibly a mini school. Consultation starts later this month with two public forums—one at Point Grey secondary Jan. 24 at 6:30 p.m., and another at Templeton secondary Jan. 25 at 6:30. Jo-Ann Archibald, associate dean for indigenous education in the Faculty of Education at UBC, will facilitate the meetings. Board chair Patti Bacchus said it’s time to reconsider a program with an aboriginal focus without preconceptions of what it would look like. “We know that the mistakes of the past have been people thinking they know what would work for aboriginal students,” she said. A January 1996 school board report entitled, A Feasibility Study for a First Nations Secondary School for the Vancouver School System, concluded establishing a secondary school was not feasible at the time. Finding an academically balanced student body of aboriginal students who’d be interested in or who would choose such a school was considered unlikely. The report noted the aboriginal secondary student population was academically and socioeconomically diverse, geographically scattered and too small to recruit the 300 to 350 full-time

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

EW15

news

Report notes watershed shrinkage

Commissionercalls forBeaverLakeconservation COPE park board commissioner Loretta Woodcock is convinced that with the proper environmental care, Beaver Lake in Stanley Park could not only be preserved, but be modelled after Camosun Bog. Woodcock said local residents and environmentalists championed the years-long restoration of Camosun Bog located in Pacific Spirit Park with a keen interest in preserving the area, which was covered by a kilometre-deep glacier 10,000 years ago. “I want community groups to create a vision for Beaver Lake, just like they were inspired to do with Camosun,” said Woodcock. “We just need to figure out how to get there and what the public wants.” A recent report completed by the Stanley Park Ecology Society shows Beaver Lake, the largest watershed in the park, is rapidly shrinking and if left unattended could disappear by 2020. The lake was once home to the western painted turtle, but invasive species led to that reptile’s demise in the area. According to the society’s State of the Park report, Beaver Lake has been shrinking since the 1930s when the watershed and lake were permanently altered by the completion of the Stanley Park Causeway. Contributing to the damage was the introduction of invasive water lilies,

Loretta Woodcock accelerated sedimentation and an increase of aquatic plant growth, which depletes oxygen levels in the water. Woodcock is urging the park board to approve a short-term, $150,000 plan for Beaver Lake that would include public input, an environmental assessment and installing a boardwalk, similar to the one at Camosun Bog, to reduce further damage to the surrounding environment. The board will vote on the proposal Jan. 17. “In just 70 years, Beaver Lake has shrunk into a few small patches of open water where resident beavers are frantically digging out sediment in an attempt to raise water levels,” said Woodcock. “Those beavers are telling us they want the lake restored so it’s time the park board asks the public if they agree.” The last time any maintenance was completed on the lake was in 1929, highlighting the need for immediate action to preserve the watershed, while developing a long-term plan, Woodcock said. “For the first time since

1929, the park board has decided to take measures to increase the size and depth of shrinking Beaver Lake and is asking for the public’s support to do this,” said Woodcock. “This is visionary.” The park board is also considering staff recommendations that include an assessment of the water quality of Lost Lagoon, as well as a 10-year study of sediment removal there. Staff recommendations include continuing the ongoing restoration of the existing shoreline surrounding the Lagoon, including the removal of invasive species such as blackberries. Part of the 32-page report on Stanley Park includes a recommendation on how to tackle the problem of invasive plant species, such as chemical control for hogweed and knotweed, updating maps of invasive species and developing a program to increase awareness amongst staff, stakeholders and contractors. Other recommendations include replacing 50 existing undersized culverts beneath trails with ones large enough to accommodate wildlife, increasing vigilance against off-trail bike use, introducing bicycle barriers at the heads of minor official trails where erosion is a problem and obstructing unofficial trails with fallen trees. The report can be viewed at vancouver.ca/parks under the Jan. 17 park board meeting agenda. sthomas@vancourier.com Twitter:@sthomas10

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EW16

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

community briefs Book sale

20 from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at Banyen Books, 3608 West Fourth Ave.

St. Augustine’s Church holds its New Year colossal book sale Jan. 21 from 6 to 8 p.m., and again Jan. 22 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. It takes place in the church hall. Books will be selling at five paperbacks for only $2 and hardcover books for $2 each. There are more than 1,000 books for children, teens and adults. All proceeds go to St. Augustine’s Anglican Marpole Church. It’s at 8680 Hudson St.

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The Arthritis Society is putting on a free Rheumatoid Arthritis Symposium for people living in the Lower Mainland. A panel of experts, who help people living with rheumatoid arthritis better understand their condition, will conduct the one-day symposium. People attending will learn about current treatments, how to cope with chronic pain and manage fatigue, and discover the value and benefits of physical activity. The symposium is Feb. 5 from 1 to 5 p.m. at the Italian Cultural Centre, 3075 Slocan St. Refreshments are included. To register, call 604714-5550. Arthritis is the most common cause of long-term dis-

ing Denied Shores. The novel follows a Punjabi school teacher, a Canadian immigration inspector and his daughter, and a Vancouver farmhand. Join Malik and Liberal MP for Vancouver South Ujjal Dosanjh Jan. 16 from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. at the Joy Kogawa House (1450 West 64th Ave.) for an official book launch and signing. Space is limited. To RSVP, contact kogawahouse@yahoo.ca.

ability in Canada. More than $6.4 billion is spent annually on health care services, extended medical benefits, and lost wages due to arthritis and other musculoskeletal diseases. In B.C., more than 600,000 people have arthritis and it is the top reason why people seek medical care. For more information, see arthritis.ca.

Komagata Maru book

Nearly 95 years ago, a steamship used to transport coal arrived in the Burrard Inlet off shore of Vancouver. The Indian refugees onboard the Komagata Maru were British subjects but all were denied entry to Canada. Pakistani-born Vancouver novelist Tariq Malik channels the hostile realities of the period to tell the fictional stories of four historical characters in Chant-

Global Islam

To begin the 2011 Lifelong Learning Series of free public lectures on global Islam, the University of British Columbia has invited a renowned public speaker and professor of Islamic studies named one of 26 professors who lead the world. Shafique Virani of the University of Toronto will

discuss how the values of pluralism, education and dialogue can be put toward achieving stability, development and both peaceful and productive coexistence. Virani’s free public lecture, “Global Islam, Garbled Impressions: Fostering Understanding in a Divided World,” runs from 7 to 9 p.m. Jan. 15 at UBC’s Old Auditorium (6344 Memorial Rd).

Got an event?

Got a community event that’s happening within the City of Vancouver you’d like to share with our readers? Send it to events@vancourier. com. Events will be included on a space-permitting basis. School and charitable entertainment events are also welcome, but all other entertainment listings should be sent to mkissinger@vancourier.com.

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

STYLEreport

EW17

SPECIAL ADVERTISING FEATURE

JANUARY 2011

SLIMMING DOWN FOR 2011: DRESS THE PART compiled by Helen Peterson

Flying home from Florida the other day, I ended up watching about six episodes, over the two plane-ride duration, of Stacey and Clinton’s “What Not to Wear,” the popular show on TLC. I am always amazed at the transformations this fashionable duo is able to accomplish with people who, at the outset, seem hopeless. The women’s self-esteem, eroded from years of failed diets and frumpy habits, seems to “come alive” after the fashion advice, free shopping spree, and make-up and hairstyle makeovers. So, while you’re exercising and eating right throughout the year, if you’d like to

appear to be on your way a little bit sooner, follow this wardrobe advice from about.com, and make 2011 your year to really shine. If Mindy Cohn from the show Facts of Life can do it, anyone can! Remember: • Don’t cover up your figure with the ubiquitous tent dress. Simply follow the rules of proportion and accent your best features. • Choose darker colours as the basis of your wardrobe: navy, black, charcoal gray. • Use undergarment foundations: from all-inone shapers to control top pantyhose. • Focus on playing up your best features, for example showing off shapely legs with a knee-length skirt. • Choose fabrics that don’t cling, and avoid stiff or bulky textures. • Use accessories to draw attention to your face: scarves, earrings, etc.

• Avoid anything too tight or clingy. • Make sure you scale your accessories – from your handbag to your earrings – to your size. • Add small shoulder pads to sweaters and other knit tops to make them hang better. • Choose clean-lined clothing without big embellishment or buttons. • Prints should be scaled for your body – no ditzy prints if you are large. In general, it’s the space between prints that makes them unflattering, so look for prints that have overlapping images. • Don’t shy away from sleeveless garments, especially eveningwear that you can cover up with a shawl, sheer top or bolero jacket. • Don’t think that baggy clothes make you look slimmer. Body-conscious clothes that hint at your curves, without being clingy or tight, are the most flattering.

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EW18

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

STYLEreport

CORI MAEDEL

The COACH approach by Cori Maedel, contributing writer

Working It

Whether you’re a Mom wanting to get back in the workforce; an employee stuck in a dead-end job and looking for a way out; someone looking to change industries; a recent graduate looking for work; or a stay at home parent wanting to re-enter the workforce, coaching can work for you. But don’t be fooled into thinking that coaching will provide all the answers. Coaching doesn’t point out what’s right and wrong, or how to fix it when it breaks. On the contrary, coaching is about discovering your own answers. And what better way to start that journey than in the New Year? No matter what your situation, here are five ways coaching can help 2011 be your best one yet.

Discover what’s in your way

So often we prevent ourselves from doing what we really want to do. We get in our own way and stop ourselves from reaching our greatest potential. We surround ourselves with walls that we believe we can’t

All of our dreams can “ come true – if we have the courage to pursue them.” climb or conquer. Take a moment to ask yourself honestly: what’s in your way? Is it preventing you from following your passion or achieving your dreams? What steps can you take towards overcoming it?

Remove any negative voices holding you back

We all doubt ourselves from time to time, but occasionally we allow these doubts to have too much influence. Over time, if not addressed, our fleeting doubts can turn in to negative voices that hinder our progress and hold us back. I’m not suggesting you develop an inflated ego, but it’s time to stop thinking: “I can’t do this,” or “I’m not good enough.” Instead, whenever these negative voices threaten to take over, focus on offering yourself positive reinforcement, just like you’d offer to a good friend.

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Research has shown that focusing on developing our strengths rather than dwelling on weaknesses provides us with greater potential. Whether you’re seeking your place in the job market, looking for a new níche or just wanting overall improvement, focusing on your strengths is an ideal place to start. I recommend a great book called Strengths Finder 2.0 by Tom Rath, which not only helps you discover your top five strengths but also provides strategies for building on them.

Find your passion

Finding your passion is simply about aligning your goals with what you love to do; but, discovering your passion can be tough. You have to dig deep. Think about what you love to do with your spare time and if it’s something you could do full time. If it helps, ask yourself this question, “If I could do one thing for the rest of my life, what would it be?” Don’t be afraid to take time answering this; get away from the noise, find time to yourself, and start to envision what it is you see yourself doing.

Become who you were meant to be

You’ve knocked down the walls, silenced the negative voices, and discovered your strength and passions. With such a solid foundation there’s nothing to stop you doing everything you want to do and becoming who you were meant to be. As Walt Disney said, “All of our dreams can come true – if we have the courage to pursue them.” Cori Maedel is a certified executive coach with many years of H.R. experience. She is founder of The Jouta Performance Group Inc.; visit www. jouta.com.

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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EW20

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

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Subtle adjustments can prevent injury

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Bike fit a good investment for cyclists

If I were given a pair of shoes that didn’t fit, I’d toss them out and walk home barefoot. If I couldn’t do up a pair of pants I’d take them off and walk home in my tighty-whities. What excuse then could I possibly have for riding a bike that does not fit? If your bottom sees a saddle for more than a couple hours a week, you need to invest in a bike fit. The physiology of your body is the constant; in order to fit your bike, your bike needs to be tinkered with. Sounds easy, doesn’t it? Raise the seat a little bit; lower the seat a little bit. Done! Not so. Three weeks ago I developed pain in my left knee. My wife’s suggested taking a week off. Ha ha! When I rode, my knee became increasingly aggravated; it was trying to tell me something. I began to wonder if I needed a bike fit. When I left Tyler Dumont’s Physiomoves Physiotherapy Clinic, I had under my arm a bike that fit me perfectly. This was my first professional bike fit (cost $175); I’ve never felt the comfort, efficiency and power of the

jeffreyhansen-carlson perfect fit until then. Tyler is an avid cyclist and a physiotherapist—a tough combination to beat when you’re looking for insight into how your bike and body interact. The adjustments made were significant; the collection of changes to my bike’s geometry was done in a calculated fashion to match the mechanics of my body. I feel like I’m riding a different bike. In fact, I need to give my body an easy week or two to get used to it. We identified a proprietary biomechanical warble on the down stroke of my left leg. When I powered down through the pedal revolution my left knee left the Y-axis

and buckled inward. Dumont placed two shims in my left cycling shoe’s cleat. Immediately my left leg, from my ankle to my hip, began cycling properly. This subtle adjustment will correct a goofy hereditary flaw while not shifting the pain somewhere else. Those two shims trumped Darwin. Dumont is confident it was the warble in my left leg that was the primary cause of my knee pain. The split second unnatural motion caused my patella to track improperly and work under unnecessary stress. Injury was inevitable. I try to keep my passion for cycling simple and without the fuss. I must say, though, that having a professional bike fit demonstrated a very practical lesson: You’re doing yourself no favours riding a bike that is not optimized for your body. I could have ignored what my left knee was telling me, but if ignoring my knee is anything like ignoring my mother, a proverbial spanking was inevitable. I’m fortunate to have only had my hand slapped. Jeffrey@theroadiescholar.com

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

$ense SPECIAL ADVERTISING FEATURE

Protect your financial well-being: Ask the right questions

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ow more than ever, Canadians are in need of sound financial advice. Shopping is practically a national pastime, the economy continues to be uncertain, and many people can barely make sense of their bank statements. What’s a person to do? Seeking professional financial advice may be the key. But it’s important that Canadians know that in most provinces in Canada, there is no government regulation dictating who can call themselves a “financial planner” – it’s a buyer beware environment. “It’s never enough to go with instinct or hire someone simply because they appear trustworthy,” says Cary List, president and CEO, FPSC. “Referrals are good, but you should always check into a person’s credentials and professional history.” Financial Planning Standards Council (FPSC) offers the following tips for hiring a financial planner: • Narrow, aggressive or vague pitches should be approached with scepticism. Situations where significant life savings are allocated to an individual or that boast too-good-to-be-true investment returns should be considered red flags. • Ask about credentials. Beware of the alphabet soup of letters that don’t really mean anything when it comes to ethics, competence and the ability to provide sound advice and service. Certified financial planner (CFP) professionals must meet rigorous standards of education, examination, experience and ethics in financial planning.

• Make sure the individual is accountable to a professional body. Canadians can file a complaint with FPSC should they feel their certified financial planner has not lived up to her ethical obligations. • Insist on a written letter outlining specific terms of the engagement and never sign anything you aren’t clear about. Don’t accept somebody’s word – get it in writing.

EW21

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And remember: financial planning is about more than investing. It includes household budgeting, tax, retirement, estate planning, investing, debt and risk management. Visit www.fpsc.ca to read “10 Questions to ask Your Planner” or to find a certified financial planner professional in your community. INFO. COURTESY WWW.NEWSCANADA.COM

There’s more Financial $ense Watch for the Feb. 4 and 18 editions of the Vancouver Courier, where Financial Sense will showcase some moneysaving tips and RRSP / tax advantage info. from our prestigious finance experts, right here in Vancouver.

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Tuesday, January 18th, 2011 3:30pm-5:00pm KERRISDALE COMMUNITY CENTRE • 5851 W. Boulevard, Van.

Jim Doyle, CFP, CLU, CDFA, TEP, has been addressing the needs of successful professionals, business owners and retirees, providing extensive advice in the areas of investment, retirement and estate planning for over 21 years. As a Certified Financial Planner professional, Jim is known for his ability to take complex tax and financial planning concepts and make them easy to understand. He works collaboratively with your lawyers, accountants and other professional advisors. Along with his professional designations, Jim has been quoted in the National Post, Financial Times, the Province and the Vancouver Sun. He has appeared on the CityTV Morning Show and the Bill Good show. He has conducted seminars on financial planning for the Legal Education Society, as well as, appeared as a guest speaker at numerous other public seminars.

Seats are FREE but LIMITED. Call Trish Javier 604-682-5431, ext 243 (24 hours) to reserve seating


EW22

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

food talk

LAST 4! DAYS

French technique also leaves little mess

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After feasting on too many treats over the holidays, I’m all about eating light and healthy meals right now. But easing up on the fat and calories doesn’t mean I’m depriving myself of delicious food. Years ago, while taking cooking courses at Dubrulle—Vancouver’s beloved culinary school—I learned of an easy French cooking technique that produces flavourful and nourishing meals. Preparing food en papillote [pah-pee-YOHT] entails steaming lean cuts of chicken, fish, seafood, or vegetables in packages made of parchment paper, which is available in gourmet kitchenware stores and well-stocked supermarkets. Aluminum foil can also be used. Steaming is the ultimate low-fat cooking technique, but it has the reputation of producing humdrum diet fare. Cooking en papillote creates food with clean, vibrant flavours. The parchment packet keeps fragrant aromas in close contact with its edible contents. The recipe below can be adapted to a variety of ingredient combinations. Try it with fresh spinach, chopped tomato, or thinly sliced sweet peppers, fennel or mushrooms. Instead of soy sauce and honey, experiment with a splash of dry white wine, orange juice, or chicken or vegetable stock. Substitute garlic and gingerroot for fresh or dried herbs, or thin lemon slices and capers. Besides sole, other mild-flavoured, firm-fleshed fish, such as tilapia, snapper or cod, work well. Use the freshest fish your wallet can handle. Since my Dubrulle days, I’ve taught a number of patients the en papillote method and many were surprised at how quickly they could assemble dinner for themselves; ordering take-out pizza takes more time. But the real selling point tends

to be realized after the meal when clean-up involves fewer dirty pots and pans. The parchment paper or foil is simply tossed away. Now, how easy is that? Asian Sole en Papillote Serves four What You Need: • 2 small bundles of baby bok choy, chopped • 4 (6 ounce/ 175 grams) sole fillets • 1 medium carrot, peeled and sliced into match-stick pieces • salt and pepper to taste • 2 teaspoons vegetable oil • 2 to 3 drops sesame oil (optional) • 2 tablespoons low-sodium soy sauce • 2 teaspoons honey • 1 large garlic clove, minced • 1 teaspoon minced fresh gingerroot • pinch of red pepper flakes • 2 green onions, finely chopped What to do: Preheat oven to 425 F. Cut four square sheets of parchment paper, each measuring about 12x15 inches (30 x 38 centimetres). Lay sheets on a clean work surface and fold each sheet in half crosswise, crease with your fingers and then lay flat again. Divide baby bok choy among parchment sheets, mounding it on one side of the fold. Top with a sole fillet that has been seasoned with salt and pepper. Sprinkle carrot over each fillet. In a small bowl, combine vegetable oil, sesame oil (if using), soy sauce, honey, garlic, gingerroot and red pepper flakes. Drizzle evenly over each fillet. Sprinkle with green onion. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Fold over parchment paper leaving a little air inside so the ingredients can steam. Fold edges around each package to seal tightly. Put packages on a rimmed baking sheet and cook for about 12 minutes. If the fish fillets are thicker than an inch, you’ll need more cooking time. Open a package to check for doneness. The fish should be opaque in colour and flake with a fork. Transfer each package to a plate and open at the table. Serve with brown rice or quinoa and more veggies if desired. Linda Watts is a registered dietitian. Send her questions at wattslin@gmail.com.


3

1

4 2

1. Kicking off the new year with a breath of fresh air, the PuSh International Performing Arts Festival showcases groundbreaking work in the performing arts from Vancouver and around the globe, including Australia-based Circa. The jam-packed three weeks of innovative theatre, dance, music and art runs Jan. 18 to Feb. 6. For more information, go to pushfestival.ca.

2. Idiosyncratic actor/director Crispin Glover stops by Pacific Cinematheque for three days of enjoyable weirdness Jan. 14 to 16. The sureto-be-offbeat weekend includes Glover’s second feature film as a director It is Fine! EVERYTHING IS FINE, slideshows, Q&A sessions, a screening of Glover’s infamous directorial debut What Is It? and a book signing. For details and show times, go to cinematheque.bc.ca or call 604-688-FILM.

3. Vancouver’s Orchid Ensemble performs a multi-media concert featuring three new East-meets-West compositions combined with panoramic images of China’s Huangshan (Yellow Mountain) at the Roundhouse’s Performance Centre Jan. 15, 8 p.m. For tickets, go to ticketweb.ca or call 1-888-222-6606. 4. Two slowly dying industries come together in one room as London-born, Vancouver-raised writer Tom Rachman discusses and reads from his critically acclaimed debut novel The Imperfectionists Jan 17, 7 p.m. at Sitka Books and Art (2025 West Fourth Ave.), which we’ve just learned has changed its name to Ardea Books and Art. Makes sense. Set in Rome, the book follows the topsy-turvy private lives of the reporters, editors and executives of an international English language newspaper as they struggle to stay afloat. Good thing no one’s reading this. More info at sitkabooksandart.com.

kudos & kvetches Chain of Missile Command

If you spent a good portion of the 1980s hanging out at an arcade called The Wizard’s Castle, drinking chocolate milk and cursing your virginity, chances are you’re familiar with Missile Command. Celebrating its 30th anniversary this year, the classic Atari video game was as rudimentary as they come: players shot down pixilated aircraft, ballistic missiles and bombs before they destroyed the Lego-like “cities” on the ground. And yet, with no discernible plot, characters or anything vaguely human, Missile Command is slated to be adapted into a movie courtesy of 20th Century Fox. According to Variety, Missile Command is the third Atari game ready for its close-up after Universal Pictures acquired Asteroids and Sony Pictures Animation picked up Rollercoaster Tycoon. Ignoring the fact that movies based on video games are notoriously lame (hello Super Mario Bros.), if our shame-filled memory serves us correctly, Missile Command wasn’t even that great. In fact, we can think of dozens of arcade games better suited for the big screen. • Directed by Tim Burton, Frogger would star a completely transformed Johnny Depp as an

affected frog trying to make his webbed way across busy roads and rivers. Burton’s wife Helena Bonham Carter would play a smart-mouthed log. • Q*bert would star critically acclaimed actor Paul Giamatti as the orange, malcontented, titular character who spends the entire film leaping around stacks of multicoloured cubes, avoiding enemies and shooting projectiles out of his trunk-like snout. Think Sideways without the wine and more jumping. • And you thought Christian Bale’s turn as a crack addict who coulda-been-a-contender in The Fighter was Oscar-worthy. Wait until you see him transform his body for Punch-Out!, where he plays four vastly different pugilists, including the blonde-haired punching bag Glass Joe, the smooth on his feet, ebony-skinned Piston Hurricane, the ornery slab of meat Bald Bull and the deceptively complex Mike Tyson prototype Mr. Sandman. • Starring James Franco and directed by Danny Boyle, Paperboy unflinchingly details one particularly harrowing afternoon of a paperboy as he delivers newspapers to his suburban neighbourhood on his bike while attempting to avoid cars, fire hydrants, break dancers,

skateboarders, remote-controlled toys, a tornado, cats and eventually the Grim Reaper. The climactic scene where Franco is chased down by a swarm of bees will leave audiences gasping in disbelief.

Snowball effect

EW23

arts & entertainment

Picks of the week

FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

The snow is nearly gone, but let’s not kid ourselves—it was hell. On Tuesday night, we faced a deadly cold front brought on by CTV’s Tamara Taggart and Mike Killeen and barely endured the downpour of bluster and mayhem as news reporters predicted bluster and mayhem, sometimes as errant snowflakes came perilously close to landing on them. We switched to CBC, but the hypothetical chaos was too much. It was just as grim over at Global, but Chris Gailus’s baritone voice made us feel safe. In all, we withstood 20 chilling minutes of snow coverage— every excruciating detail about the weather Vancouver could expect, the weather Vancouver was experiencing at that very moment and how Vancouver was preparing for it. And don’t forget the following night’s chilly recap of all the snow that had melted away… coating the streets like clear blood. It’s a miracle we survived.


EW24

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

BEST BUY CORRECTION NOTICE To our valued customers: We apologize for any inconvenience caused by an error in our flyer dated: January 14 – January 20 Product: Garmin Nuvi 255W GPS Navigator. Please note that the incorrect product image was advertised for this product found on page 22 of the January 14 flyer. The correct product should be a Garmin Nuvi 255W GPS Navigator priced at $99.99 save $25, NOT a TomTom GPS, as previously advertised. SKU: 10110563/10106797

dining

FUTURE SHOP CORRECTION NOTICE Epson Stylus NX510 All-In-One Printer and Epson Workforce 630 All-In-One Printer 10132686, 10154866 On page 13 of the January 14 flyer, please note that these printers were advertised with the incorrect bundle price when purchased with any PC or Mac. The correct bundle price for the NX510 (10132686) is $39.99 and the correct bundle price for the Workforce 630 (10154866) is $79.99. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.

FUTURE SHOP CORRECTION NOTICE

HP Wireless Comfort Mouse (NP141AA#ABL)10127702. Due to higher than expected sales, please note that stock of this mouse advertised on the front cover of the January 7 flyer may be limited to unavailable in some stores. No rainchecks will be issued. Please see a Product Expert in-store for more details. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.

...that’s where the city’s finest omelettes are to be found. Jurgen Gothe, Vancouver Flavours on 100.5 THE PEAK Breakfast & Lunch • Open Daily 7am-3pm 2211 Granville Street @ 6th Ave 604-737-2857

WITH ACCLAIM LIKE THIS, THERE’S A NEW CONTENDER IN THE OSCAR® RACE

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Check our Wednesday, January 19th issue for details on how to win your FREE DOUBLE PASS to the advanced screening of THE COMPANY OF MEN

IN THEATRES JANUARY 21st

Gastown’s dining scene is enjoying a rebirth thanks to popular upstarts Meat and Bread with its porchetta sandwiches, cozy Sea Monstr Sushi and The Charles Bar. photos Tim Pawsey

Gastown’s dining scene heats up The Hired Belly with Tim Pawsey

Is Yaletown’s wane Gastown’s wax? A shift is afoot in Vancouver’s downtown dining scene, as the action shifts from Yaletown’s not-long-ago booming loading docks to an increasingly gentrified, less gritty Gastown. The city’s original heritage district now sports a wide variety of affordable dining. • Sea Monstr Sushi (55 Powell St., 604-681-2144). The upstart newcomer that’s a chopstick’s toss from Gassy Jack is more diner than sushi emporium. The space is barely wide enough to accommodate a line of slim sushi chefs, eight or so seats at the stainless steel bar and three tables—large by comparison—in back. At lunchtime, the room fills up fast— and “we’ve only got the bar available” soon becomes a familiar refrain. Never mind. The food comes quickly once ordered from the concise, onepager list. A change from your typical sushi menu, the food here is straight to the point, well thought out and adeptly executed. Flavours are as fresh and lively as the welcome. Lunchtime combos yield excellent miso soup in a wooden bowl, a “mini” though still filling por-

tion of chicken or beef teriyaki and rice; and a small but well organized sampling of various sushi pieces. Our California roll was moist and sensibly sized, and tuna, salmon and prawn nigiri ultra clean tasting. A necessity no doubt, the place is run with clockwork precision from the manager’s roaming iPad, which, thankfully needs no counter space. Total damage before taxes: $10. • If Sea Monstr is all about sushi, aptly monikered Meat and Bread (370 Cambie St., 604-566-9003) is a carnivore’s delight. And it’s equally impressively run. Why don’t more restaurants understand most people make up their mind about a place in the first 20 seconds of walking in? It’s easy to be lured by the bustle of this butcher-like joint, which offers a prompt welcome, along with a brief explanation of the daily specials and how things work. It’s simple: You line up in front of the guy making the city’s best sandwiches and instantly start to drool, which is why there’s a glass cover. By the time you get there, he says, “Porchetta and Salsa Verde?” and you likely say, “You bet,” or words to that effect, as he carves another impossibly tender portion off the herb-wrapped roast pork. When you bite into it, the crunch of the crackling is echoed by the perfect crust on the panini. Serious eating. Of course, you might also fall for the equally satisfying chipotle chicken sandwich with all the trimmings, or the meatballs, or the grilled cheddar.

Another nice touch are the smart wines, such as Sperling Riesling, Sea Cider and Blue Buck beer. Doing “simple” well is never as easy as it looks. Get it wrong and you’ll quickly be seen to under deliver. But these guys appreciate the value of understated quality—from the meat, the plain boards (with just a dab of mustard and sambal for garnish) that serve as plates to the minimalist space, with its yards of white tiles, impressive inlaid herringbone counter and tongue-in-cheek bric-a-brac. The antique punching bag and gloves are great, giving it a Rocky-ish touch. Geist and New Yorker magazines available for reading are an added plus. Ruling it all—and adding the final dimension—is the communal table. It’s the vortex of this busy space, which is a great spot to mix and mingle, or just hang out with a side of life’s little dramas. What these places have in common is they’re clean, well run and unpretentiously courteous; they don’t waste time; and the food is delicious and affordable. No wonder they’re popular. Add to that The Charles Bar (136 West Cordova, 604-568-8040) with its good eats under the “W” and private flat screens for catching a Canucks game, and Brioche Bakery Café (401 West Cordova, 604-682-4037) and its inventive Italian, with great scratch soups and more. Where there was little before, there’s now no shortage of good Gastown eating. info@hiredbelly.com


FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

EW25

theatre

Osimous Theatre’s inaugural production explores mistakes and second chances

Performers shine in funny and reflective Pavilion The Pavilion

At the Firehall Arts Centre until Jan. 23 Tickets: 604.689.0926 firehallartscentre.ca Reviewed by Jo Ledingham

Some mistakes just can’t be undone. Peter, in Craig Wright’s The Pavilion, broke Kari’s heart 20 years ago. Now, at their 20th high school reunion, Peter admits he knows he hurt her. But, says Kari, “hurt” barely touches what he did to her: her whole universe shifted. What Peter now offers—the flowers, the chocolates and the full tank of gas that could whisk Kari away from her golf-obsessed husband Hans—is way too little and far too late. “Sorry is just a noise people make when nothing else is happening,” says Kari bitterly. The Pavilion is the inaugural production of Osimous Theatre, founded by actor Bob Frazer, and his roots are showing—in a good way. This is a tight little three-handed ensemble piece that requires strong performance skills and a minimal set. When actor and Osimous company member Parnelli Parnes presented Frazer with this script, Frazer knew this was what his fledgling company needed: a good story that didn’t need a lot of bells and whistles. He put on his director’s hat (for the second time), recruited

In The Pavilion, Dawn Petten and Craig Erickson play old flames who get reacquainted other at their high school’s 20-year reunion. Dawn Petten (Kari) and Craig Erickson (Peter) and with Parnes as the narrator, he had his trio. The titular pavilion refers to the lakeside, 100-year-old building in Pine City, Minnesota, where the reunion takes place, but it stands, literally, for burning our bridges: the town’s firemen await the stroke of midnight when they’ll burn the building down to make way for a new development. Peter, now a

psychologist and the only grad to move away from Pine City, and Kari, stuck in a go-nowhere job and unhappily married to Hans, have tried unsuccessfully to burn their own bridges until this night. The play begins rather self-consciously poetically, but Parnes, in one of his best performances to date, keeps it from being saccharine with his whimsical delivery. And he shows his chops in the

multitude of roles he plays from the inebriated minister who believes, “Men only have so many feelings and life uses them up,” and Carla whose hard-hearted motto is “Never forgive” to dopesmoking Cookie who’s having an affair with the police chief’s wife. The real strength of The Pavilion is—and must be—in the crafting of Peter and Kari. They must both be sympathetic characters and, at

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times, that’s not as straightforward as it seems. Kari could be simply bitter and bitchy, but Petten brings such raw, heart-on-her sleeve vulnerability to the role that she rips out our hearts. Petten’s Kari is still walking wounded 20 years after Peter dumped her when she was 17 and pregnant. But Kari also gets off some wicked lines at Peter’s expense, and Petten delivers these scathingly. When Peter admits, for example, that he’s about to break up with his much younger girlfriend, Kari quips, “Why? Is she pregnant?” And it might be easy to think Peter is just a cad. Who does he think he is, turning up 20 years later expecting Kari to fall in love with him all over again? As a psychologist, as Kari points out, Peter’s woefully unconscious. But Erickson makes Peter so painfully aware of the mistake he made at 17 that what can we do but forgive him? He was a boy. Playwright Wright gives us an ending that moves beyond Peter and Kari’s story. The Pavilion is, finally, about the linearity of time. “There’s no going back,” the narrator reminds us and to wish time to begin again, to give us a second chance to avoid the mistakes we made, is to wipe out all the moments of beauty and joy we experienced, too. A good start for Osimous Theatre, The Pavilion is a gentle, often very funny, reflection on living with the choices we make. joled@telus.net


EW26

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

entertainment

Participants in 100% Vancouver recruited according to results of 2006 Census

Stats-inspired theatre production shows who Vancouver is really made of State of the Arts

with Cheryl Rossi

What would it look like if you put 100 Vancouverites who reflect the results of the 2006 Census on one stage? How would your perceptions shift as participants sort themselves into clusters according to their opinions, preferences and habits? Theatregoers who attend the Theatre Replacement/SFU Woodward’s production of 100% Vancouver, Jan. 21 and 22, will find out during the seventh annual PuSh International Performing Arts Festival. “What you see is a mass of people who are choreographed moment to moment because they’re responding to questions or to statements,” said casting director and dramaturge Tim Carlson. “And so it’s a beautiful thing to watch this sample population of a hundred ebbing and flowing and reacting in different ways.” As with 100% Berlin and 100% Vienna, which were produced by Berlin theatre company Rimini Protokoll, the first participant was chosen for her research expertise and knowledge about statistics. For the Vancouver production, that person is Patti Wotherspoon, an information specialist with InfoAction, Vancouver Public Library’s fee-based information

and research centre. Wotherspoon was friends with the production’s musical director who had introduced her to Carlson, and over a couple of beers accepted his offer to participate. She then had 24 hours to recruit another person, according to gender, age, marital status, ethnicity and neighbourhood in which they live, the search becoming progressively more difficult as the parameters narrowed, with the casting crew resorting to Craigslist to draw a few participants. “The chains tended to break after four people. I think maybe the longest chain we had was about 10 people and then we’d go back to within the PuSh or Theatre Replacement circle and go, ‘OK, who do we know that’s say an Indo-Canadian living in Killarney?’” Carlson said. “It’s that interesting thing about degrees of separation and seeing how we’re connected in this town.” Participants range from ages three to 88. They speak 21 different first languages. “Twenty-two if you include Chinglish, which is what one participant gave as his first language,” Carlson said. Twenty per cent of participants reported Chinese as their first language. “From recent immigrants from Mainland China, Hong Kong quite a while ago, one woman who was born in Chinatown and now isn’t intimately connected with the Chinese community, per se,” Carlson said. “In media or in conver-

As with 100% Berlin (shown here) and 100% Vienna, the local production of 100% Vancouver takes Census statistics and sees participants group themselves according to their opinions, preferences and habits. sation we say ‘the Chinese community’—well that population is now getting as diverse as say the population with a European background.” Only 16 per cent of the partici-

pants were born in Vancouver, 13 per cent elsewhere in B.C., 27 per cent elsewhere in Canada and 27 per cent in Asia. But the 100% productions not only focus on demographics but

also breathe life into statistics, providing a snapshot of a city as well as close-ups of the individuals who comprise it. Wotherspoon and eight other participants will perform monologues in 100% Vancouver, which is directed by Amiel Gladstone. Wotherspoon will speak about the value of the federal government’s recently scrapped long-form census. Another woman tells her tale of being a census taker in the Downtown Eastside, and others will share personal stories about politics, love and death. Books accompanied the European shows, but Vancouver’s version will be a photobook with 100 colour portrait cards of the participants posed with items that reflect their character in some way and their stats on the back, alongside essays by Rimini Protokoll, local journalist Frances Bula, New York City-based essayist George Pendle and Carlson. Fillip, a local, thrice-yearly publication of art, culture and ideas will release the photobook. For her picture, Wotherspoon was photographed with her two 20-year-old cats. “It’s the classic crazy librarian thing,” she said. Some recruits posed with sentimental heirlooms, others with everyday items such as running shoes. “I think three people chose their BlackBerries,” Carlson said. 100% Vancouver is at the Fei and Milton Wong Experimental Theatre at SFU Woodward’s. For more information, see pushfestival.ca. crossi@vancourier.com

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EW28

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

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EW29

FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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PART TIME Mature receptionist wanted for 2 days/week in South Vancouver, Please send resume to Sound Hearing Clinic. Attn: Mark Hansen. #207 - 1160 Burrard St. Vancouver, BC V6Z 2E8

1290

Sales

First Pinnacle Alarm Inc.

DOOR-TO-DOOR SALESPERSONS

All Areas of British Columbia. Experience preferred. Fluent in english. Permanent, full time and Weekends. $13/hour galarmjobs@gmail.com

1300

Teachers/ Instructors

EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGIST A Community of Learning and Achieving” HORIZON SCHOOL DIVISION # 205 invites applications for a : Educational Psychologist Check our website at www.hzsd.ca for details.

1310

Trades/Technical

AUTOMOTIVE MACHINIST required for Kamloops Machine Shop. Experience to service heavy duty diesel engine components. Full benefits package, competitive wages. Fax to: (250) 828-9498. DLE IS CURRENTLY ACCEPTING resumes for 3rd or 4th year Technicians/ Journeymen, and a motivated counter parts person. Email resumes to: kwiebe@douglaslake.com or Fax: 1-250-782-5286 Experienced Insulation Installers, Foam Sprayers and Fire Stoppers required for established insulation company. Vehicle required. Top rates paid. Fax brief resume to 604-572-5278 or call 604-572-5288. FULL - TIME Certified HEAVY DUTY MECHANIC required by Bailey Western Star & Freightliner. Experience in service and repair of trucks, trailers and equipment. Fax resume to 250-286-0753 or Email employment@baileywesternstar.com

GASFITTER / SERVICEMAN Required Immediately. Gasfitter Furnace Serviceman. Fax resume to 250-787-1320 Call: 250-787-1361. This is a full time position in Fort St. John with excellent future for the rite person.

School District No. 38 (Richmond)

“Helping to make our schools a safe and welcoming environment.” The Richmond School District is looking for the following casual employees: Noon Hour Supervisors for Elementary and Secondary schools to supervise students in school buildings and grounds during the lunch break. The shifts will be for 1.5 hours per day on those days that the students are in attendance at school. Applicants must have experience supervising adolescents and elementary school-aged children, plus they must be able to report to any school location on short notice. First Aid and other related training such as conflict resolution or non-violent crisis intervention would be preferred. The rate of pay is $20.80 per hour, which includes 4% holiday pay. Please quote competition # NHS001-11-02. Food Services Aides provide food services and instructional assistance in the preparation of meals within a teaching cafeteria, therefore excellent communication skills are essential. Preference will be given to applicants who have completed a food preparation program and the Food Safe Program. At least one year experience in food preparation and service is required. The rate of pay is $19.08 per hour which includes 4% holiday pay. Please quote competition # FSA001-11-02. Applications are available at the School Board office between 8:30am and 4:30pm. Please submit a completed application form by 4:00 p.m. on January 28, 2011 to: Personnel Services, Richmond School Board, 7811 Granville Avenue, Richmond, BC, V6Y 3E3.

P R O P E R T Y

M A N A G E D

B Y

General Manager Chartwell Select Renaissance Retirement Residence, KAMLOOPS Use your related management experience to take charge of the overall operation, management and marketing of our full-service, luxurious retirement residence. Your organizational development, marketing, sales and financial management, including budgeting, background will come to the forefront in this challenging leadership role. Please e-mail your resume, in confidence, quoting reference #VC-H3MGT, to Corporate Office, Human Resources, at careers@chartwellreit.ca. To learn more, please visit www.chartwellreit.ca. Thank you for your interest. Only candidates selected for an interview will be contacted. No phone calls, please. Respect

Empathy

Service

Excellence

Performance

Education

If you have submitted an application within the past six months, you need not reapply. We appreciate the interest of all applicants, but only those being considered for interviews will be contacted. For more information regarding the Richmond School District please visit www.sd38.bc.ca OUR FOCUS IS ON THE LEARNER

TRUTH IN ''EMPLOYMENT'' ADVERTISING Postmedia Community Publishing 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.

working.com JOBS • CAREERS • ADVICE

Why work here? Our motto — Whole Foods, Whole People, Whole Planet — emphasizes our vision reaches beyond food retailing. Our deepest purpose as an organization is helping support the health, well-being, and healing of people, customers, team members, and the planet. We recruit the best people we can to become part of our team. We empower them to make their own decisions, creating a respectful workplace where people are treated fairly and are highly motivated to succeed. Are you passionate about food?

Visit our website today to learn more. FORTUNES’s 100 Best Companies to Work For®

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Vancouver. Richmond. Surrey. Abbotsford. Where do you want to work?

Commitment

Trust


EW30

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

REAL ESTATE 6020

6020

Houses - Sale

6020-01

Houses - Sale

6020-01

Real Estate

uSELLaHOME.com

Real Estate

www.bcforeclosures.com 4 BR home from $18,000 down $1,800/mo. 604-538-8888, Alain @ Sutton WC Realty W. Rock

$99 can sell your home 574-5243 Delta Price Reduced studio condo, 19+ complex, pool, park, $99,900 597-8361 id4714 Hope 6 condos 805sf-1389sf all 2br, 2ba from $99,900-$135,900 309-7531 id4626 Maple Ridge spotless 947sf 1br condo above snrs cent 55+ $219,900 466-1882 id5262 Sry Sullivan Mews ground lvl 1200sf 2br 2ba tnhse, 55+complex $220K 834-6935 id5136 Sry E Newton 1 acre lot with 2600sf 6br 2.5ba bungalow $479,900 778-549-2056 id5198 Sry Bear Creek Park Reduced 1440sf rancher, gated 45+ $279,900 597-0616 id5234

6025

Industrial/ Commercial

Great Investment Ppty Chilliwack 6100sf character bldg. Use rental areas/Community Ctre/mfg/retail/ club/church. $657,000. Remax Marina Williams • 1-800-226-8693

6035

★ ALERT: WE BUY HOUSES ★ Foreclosure Help! Debt Relief! No Equity! Don’t Delay! Call us First! 604-626-9647

Mobile Homes

14X70 - 3 BR new reno Hope,

immac, lrg open plan,5 new appl,grt bath, nr town/hosp , adult only, some finance avail $79,900 604-867-9011

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6040

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5040 5005

Corporate Tax Returns $225 +up $20 and up for personal tax. Monthly bookkeeping $20 hr +. Specialize: construction; sm bus. accounting. Trevor 604-788-0396

Cut Your Debt by up to 70% DEBT Forgiveness Program Avoid Bankruptcy, Stops Creditor Calls. Much lower Payments at 0% Interest. We work for You, not Your Creditors.

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6052

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househunting.ca

6002

Legal Services

#1 IN PARDONS Remove your criminal record. Express Pardons offers the FASTEST pardons, LOWEST prices, and it’s GUARANTEED. BBB Accredited. FREE Consultation Toll-free: 1-866-416-6772 www.ExpressPardons.com

Music/Dance Instruction

EXPERIENCED PIANO TEACHER

Agents

THINKING OF SELLING? Commission Savings of up to 50% ★

Full Service Commitment Complimentary Market Evaluations 27 Years of Award-Winning Sales Experience C Peter A L 604-290-1002 L Amex Broadway West Realty

Maureen Clare 604-228-8388

Preschools/Kindergarten

Vancouver Montessori School E S TA B L I S H E D 1 9 7 2

Preschool: Extended Day: Elementary:

Children ages 3-5 Children age 5 Children ages 6-12

A Montessori education provides your child with an integrated, individualized and academically challenging program that meets his/her changing developmental needs from year to year. Childhood happens once. A Montessori education ensures that your child will make the best of hers/his.

Parent Meetings Meetings 2011 (RSVP) Parent 2007 (RSVP)

ExtendedDay Day & & Elementary Extended ElementaryOrientation Orientation th at 7:00 p.m. Feb. Feb. 17 15th at 7:00 p.m.

PreschoolOrientation Orientation & & Registration Preschool Registration st at 7:00 p.m. Feb. 17thth at at 7:00 7:00 p.m. p.m. & & Mar. Mar. 31 Feb. 15 15th at 7:00 p.m.

8650Barnard BarnardStreet, Street,Vancouver, Vancouver, B.C. B.C. V6P V6P 5G5 8650 5G5

Phone: 604-261-0315

w w w. va n c o u ve r m o n t e s s o r i s c h o o l . c o m

Tim Stephens' Astral Reflections Aries March 21 - April 19: Remain ambitious to Wednesday – last-minute advances (especially Sunday and Wednesday) can be strong ones. You might have to struggle with foundational, home or family issues, though. The government, head office or an institution could offer splendid help Wednesday. (Take power naps Monday/Tuesday.) A month of social joys, friends, entertainment, flirtation (that can build to deep love) optimism and joie de vivre begins Thursday! And four months of great good luck starts Saturday, in love, travel, law, education. You’re on a roll! But settle into chores Friday eve, Saturday. Taurus April 20-May 20: A long, mellow period draws to a close. You might face – but more likely your close friends, associates face – a pulling apart between key people Monday/Tuesday. (E.g., your friends split up.) This is mostly gradual, deep: but look for clues, and seek early “accommodations,” as this is a decade-long trend. You might have to choose between love and casual friendship. Rest, tend to home matters Wednesday eve to Friday morn. A month of ambition begins Thursday (but first rest, to Friday). Romance, pleasure visit Friday eve, Saturday. Saturday to June 4, “head office” is your friend. Gemini May 21-June 20: Continue to chase facts/secrets, investments and sensual desires to Wednesday noon. You energy’s high Sunday. Buy nothing (nor invest) Monday nor Tuesday before 5 p.m. (PST). Thursday begins a month of gentle love, understanding, legal solutions, far travel, higher education or intellectual pursuits and publishing. Be curious Wednesday to Friday, ask questions. Friday eve and Saturday bring rest, domestic affairs, quietude. But Saturday also starts four months of social expansion, new friends, flirtations, wish fulfilment and happiness! And these four months kick off another 92!

COMMERCIAL MORTGAGES Having difficulty obtaining Financing?

Martinique Walker, AMP

Verico Assent Mortgage Corp Call: 604-984-9159 Toll Free: 866-984-9159

Cancer June 21-July 22: A long month of opportunity and opposition ends Thursday. You probably feel you didn’t accomplish much, as this period began in confusion. But you have Sunday (planning) and Monday to Wednesday (action) to grab some last chance(s). Remember, independence, no; interdependence, yes – for now. Thursday begins a month of secrets, research (detective work) large finances, investments, lifestyle, health and sexual changes and commitments. And Saturday kicks off a period, through early June, of tremendous career and prestige benefits – both trends (change and career luck) combine soon! Leo July 23-Aug. 22: Sunday’s happy, optimistic, friendly. But heavy chores still weigh on you through Wednesday. Just plunge in, get ’em done. DON’T start a new work project Monday or before 5 p.m. Tuesday. A month of fresh horizons (and emotional fresh air) arrives Wednesday night. You’ll experience opposition and opportunity – both intense. So be diplomatic yet eager. Saturday begins a four-month phase of great luck in far travel, higher education, publishing, legal affairs, cultural venues and love. You might fall in love and marry – swiftly! Focus on money, spending, earning Saturday. Virgo Aug. 23-Sept. 22: Be ambitious Sunday, or mingle with higher-ups. A month of romance and creativity draws to a close by midweek. Take care with friends, hopes, plans Monday to Tuesday suppertime – pursue all these afterward. Retreat, rest and contemplate your future Wednesday afternoon to Friday morning. Despite your uncertainty about job performance/stability, all looks fine. You begin a month of work and health issues Thursday. More importantly, you enter a four-month phase of great luck in investments, sexual liaisons, life changes and commitments, Saturday. (A clue Wednesday eve.)

5070

Money to Loan

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Let me take your application now for a Rate Hold up to 3 - 4 months. Refinance / Consolidate Now.

Martinique Walker, AMP

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Children’s Activities

3025

UBC RESEARCH

Now accepting adults, children, students & children with special needs. Dunbar area. References available.

3050

Real Estate Investment

5060

Money to Loan

Maureen Clare

Okanagen/ Interior

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HOMEWORKERS NEEDED!!! Full /Part time positions available - Will train. On-Line Data Entry, Typing Work, E-mail Reading, PC/Clerical Work, Homemailers, Assembling Products. HURRY, SPOTS GO FAST!

CHILDREN 3010-03

5070

#1 JANITORIAL FRANCHISE Customers, (Office Cleaning), Training and support. Financing. www.coverall.com 604-434-7744 info@coverallbc.com

www.CanadianJobsFromHome.com

Financial Services

5035

KELOWNA EXEC. 6 bdrm/7 bath completely furnished w/o rancher entertainers dream; 4 bdrms have ensuites, stunning lake/city/ mountain views. Gorgeous landscaping, sauna & salt pool. $1.5M. 1-877-762-7831

High Pymts/Expired Listing/No Equity?

Accounting/ Bookkeeping

Business Opps/ Franchises

Vision Laboratory at Children’s Hospital needs volunteers (4-12yrs) with good vision and hearing for a study on visual perception. Study involves computer games. Honorarium paid. Call Jenn at 875-2345 x 7853

Celebrate all your family occasions in the

Mike

& Er are arrival thrilled to ica Brow of the announ ne ir bea utiful ce the baby boy

Natha n John Brow ne

bor at 9:4 n June 20 4 p.m . weighi th, 2006 We wou ng 8 lbs ld like thank . 9 oz. you to to send Sus

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O'Hare special and Ericks at Rid Bobby , Han to ge Me thehis wonder friends all ws ful nur nah, their ado wants the Hospita ses help and it to know he made suppor l for all t.

BIG

60

The families of 1947 – September 19,

Mega ber 19, 2007 n Whi Septem te & Daniel Hunter Are pleased to announce their engagem ent which took place May 20, 2007 while in Hawaii.

Congra atulations Megan & Daniel

Wedding to take place March 9, 2008

Congra

tulation

Naom Robinsoi n

s

U.B.C. Grad Bachelor uate, Science, s of Dean’s n’ List, atte tt Law w Scho nding ol U.B. Fall ll 2007. C.

Happy

Love from rom your fam all a

th 50

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ry Anniversa

ad &D a) Mom & Grandp andma (Gr

Love, All our an, Rick, Sus Brian Kate &

Call: 604-630-3300 to book your ad!

5505

Legal/Public Notices

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS Re the Estate of LINDA MARY GERTRUDE STEFANSON otherwise known as LINDA MARY G. STEFANSON, LINDA M. STEFANSON and LINDA STEFANSON, Deceased, who died on on June 23, 2010 at Vancouver, British Columbia Creditors and others having claims against the Estate of LINDA MARY GERTRUDE STEFANSON, otherwise known as LINDA MARY G. STEFANSON, LINDA M. STEFANSON and LINDA STEFANSON, late of late of 5024101 Yew Street, Vancouver, BC, V6L3B4, are hereby notified under section 38 of the Trustee Act that particulars of their claims should be send to the Executor, c/o 2900- 550 Burrard Street, Vancouver, V6C 0A3, (Attention: ANNA LAING) on or before February 15, 2011, after which date the Executor will distribute the estate among the parties entitled to it, having regard to to the claims of which the Executor then have notice. NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS NOTICE is hereby given that Creditors and others having claims against the Estate of Mark Alexander Boleslaw Goertz also known as Mark Alexander Goertz, Marek Aleksander Boleslaw Goertz, Mark A. Goertz, Mark A. B. Goertz and Mark Goertz, Deceased, late of 1702 - 82 Ridout Street South, London, Ontario N6C 5H6, who died on July 5, 2010 at London, Ontario, are hereby required to send full particulars of such claims to the undersigned at 510 - 1040 West Georgia Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6E 4H1, on or before February 12, 2011, after which the Administrator will distribute the said Estate among the parties entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims of which the Administrator then has notice. Carolyn M. Coleclough, solicitor for Royal Trust Corporation of Canada, Administrator for the Estate

classified.van.net

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Libra Sept. 23-Oct. 22: Sunday’s wise, mellow. Your ambition surges Monday to Wednesday, but take care with this Monday. Tuesday has obstacles to overcome (involving home or career foundations) but you can succeed – especially after supper and into Wednesday lunchtime. Thursday brings a month of celebration, optimism, flirtation, entertainment and social joys! Even better, Saturday starts a four-month phase of lucky opportunities, especially in marriage, love and relocation. Enjoy yourself WednesdayFriday, but Friday eve and this weekend, retreat, rest and contemplate: significant times loom! Scorpio Oct. 23-Nov. 21: A restless, social month is ending. Thursday starts four weeks of quiet contemplation, physical sluggishness and domestic affairs. Sink into these, rest and refresh your soul, as February to June will bring a huge pile of work. Sunday’s mysterious; you might sense someone’s secret. This is a good, stable day to invest, work out a budget, or hold a private conversation. Monday to Wednesday is mellow,but holds barriers and problems before 5 p.m. (PST) Tuesday – and succeeds after that, especially in legal, educational and romantic arenas. Be ambitious Wednesday eve to Friday. Sagittarius Nov. 22-Dec. 21: You can find out where you stand with a crucial person Sunday. Financial and sexual obstacles arise Monday to dusk Tuesday; solutions appear after this, through Wednesday mid-day. A mellow, understanding mood steals over you Wednesday eve to Friday – love, intellectual pursuits thrive. Thursday starts a month of travel and communications, errands, emails, details, paperwork. More exciting, Saturday begins four months of great luck in romance, creative projects, far travel, with children and speculative projects. You’ll be offered happiness! Be ambitious Friday eve, Saturday.

5505

Legal/Public Notices

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS RE: THE ESTATE OF THELMA HENRIETTA CHRISTINA ATKINSON, DECEASED NOTICE is hereby given that Creditors and others having claims against the Estate of Thelma Henrietta Christina Atkinson, late of 3263 Blenheim Street, Vancouver, who died on June 23, 2010 are hereby required to send them to the undersigned Executor c/o 700 - 401 West Georgia Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6B 5A1, on or before February 19, 2011 after which date the Executor will distribute the said Estate among the parties entitled thereto, having regard to the claims of which she has notice. Christine Dryvynsyde Executor By: Richards Buell Sutton LLP Attention: Angela M. Spanjers

7005

Body Work

ABSOLUTELY the ultimate full body massage. Female avail 8am - late. in/out. 604-771-4210 RELAXING MASSAGE very clean/private. 9am-11pm, 7days, D/town & Kits. Anie 604-684-8773

RELAXING SWEET FULL BODY MASSAGE 604-321-8296

**RELIEVE ROAD RAGE**

604-739-3998

7010

Personals

GENTLEMEN! Attractive discreet, European lady is available for company 604-451-0175

Clean Sweep?

Sell it in the Classifieds!

604

630.3300

Jan. 16 - Jan. 22 Capricorn Dec. 22-Jan. 19: Tackle chores Sunday: pick the ones that will free you for more ambitious projects later. Relationships confront you Monday to Wednesday. These contain some opposition and frustrations through twilight Tuesday, then generate healing, solutions – and love – after that. Chase mysteries Wednesday eve to Friday morning – research, invest, study lifestyle changes, get your health diagnosed. Thursday’s fortunate. This day begins a month of money – buy, sell, seek more lucrative clients. Saturday begins a four-month stretch of great luck in real estate, home, family and security issues. Aquarius Jan. 20-Feb. 18: Romance – of a quiet, stable kind – or kids or creative pleasures – call Sunday. Be careful with chores Monday to Tuesday twilight. The danger: wasted effort. Tasks speed swiftly to conclusions Tuesday night and Wednesday. Thursday ends a month of weariness, solitude and obligations, as it starts four weeks of surging energy, heightened charisma and effective action! Start important projects soon, ask favours, show yourself off! (But first be diplomatic Thursday/Friday, and “sense secrets” Friday/Saturday.) Saturday begins four months of travel, talk and much paperwork. Pisces Feb. 19-March 20: Spend Sunday at home or in nature – all is restful, steady, quietly inspiring. Take care with romance, creative projects and gambles Monday to Tuesday dusk – these are fine, even lucky, then to Wednesday mid-day. (An 18-month “dead end” in romantic and creative zones ends this March.) Thursday begins a month of obligations, lowered energy and dealings with “head office.” Now to late February, rest, be charitable, contemplate and make plans for the future. Work smart, not hard. Saturday starts a four-month period of money luck – maybe big money luck! All things weave together. timstephens@shaw.ca • Reading: 416-686-5014


HOME SERVICES 8015

Appliance Repairs

8080

Electrical

8125

VAN APPLIANCE SERVICES Repair home appl. Low rate guar. Permit/Lic. Tom 604-323-8063

8020

Blinds & Draperies

BLACKOUT DRAPES. Cut light 100%. Save energy. Dampen sound. Innovative fabric in 42 colors. Free est. 604-506-6230

8055

Cleaning

ALLY’S CLEANING SERVICE, serving North Shore & Vancouver for 15 yrs. Res/Comm. 604-725-9005 A.S.B.A. ENTERPRISE. Comm/ Res. Free Est. $20/hour includes supplies. Insured. 604-723-0162 Butterfly Cleaning ™ Home, Moving out, Carpet cleaning. Ask for Erika 604-781-4374 EXP CLEANING ladies avail 7 days/wk. Bonded. Vancouver, Burnaby, Richmond 604-928-0025 H.C. Office / House Cleaning Quality & Experience. Bonded & Insured. 604-725-0856 QUALITY CLEANING. Exc refs. Res/com. Move in/out. Carpets + pressure wash’g. 778-895-3522

8058

Computer Services

COMPUTER SOLUTIONS 604-721-8434.. 15 yrs experience Cert. Prof. aplusconnectivity.ca

8060

Concrete

Coastal Concrete

PLACING & Finishing • Forming • Site Prep • Old Concrete Removal • Excavation & Reinforcing • Re-Re Specialists 30 Years Exp. • Free Estimates

Rick: 604-202-5184

CONCRETE SPECIALIST Sidewalk, Driveway, Patio Exposed Aggregate, remove & replacing

#1167 LIC Bonded. BBB, lrg & sm jobs, expert trouble shooter, WCB, low rates, 24/7. 617-1774. A. LIC. ELECTRICIAN #19807 Semi-retired wants small jobs only. 604-689-1747, pgr 604-686-2319 A Lic’d. Electrician #30582. Rewiring & Reno, Appliance/Plumbing. Rotor Rooter & Hydro Pressure Jetting Service, 604-255-9026 - 778-998-9026 Free Estimates / 24 Hr Service ABACUS ELECTRIC.ca Lic Elect

Contr 97222. 40 years exp. 1 stop! Reas. rates! BBB. 778-988-9493.

Electrician Lic#95323, Bonded, Affordable Com/Res. No Job too small. 25 yrs exp. 604 727-2306 LIC. ELECTRICIAN #37309 Commercial & residential renos & small jobs. 778-322-0934. YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 service call. Insured. Lic # 89402. Fast same day service guaranteed. We love small jobs! 604-568-1899

8087

Excavating

# 1 BACKHOE, EXCAVATOR & BOBCAT

8105

Flooring/ Refinishing

THE ART OF HARDWOOD FLOORS Installations Refinishing & Repairs Dust Free. Affordable Rates! Free Estimates.

Century Hardwood Floors 604-376-7224 www.centuryhardwood.com

ALLNEWFLOORS.COM Hardwood, Laminate. Professional Install/Refinish.. 604-715-8455

L & L CONCRETE. All types: Stamped, Repairs, Pressure Wash, Seal Larry 778-882-0098

ANYTHING IN WOOD Hardwood flrs, install, refinishing. Non-toxic finishes. 604-782-8275

Drainage

ALL WORK GUARANTEED

J.A. CONSTRUCTION

Specializing in drywall & textured ceiling repairs, drywall finishing, stucco repairs, painting. Fully insured.

604-916-7729 JEFF

CITY LINK DRYWALL LTD WCB, liability insured. 20 yrs exp. Call Indy. Free Est. 604-780-5302 *Drywall * Taping * Texture * Stucco*Painting * Steel stud framing Quality Home 604-725-8925 PATCHING, TEXTURE / smooth ceilings, plaster walls. Small jobs. 25 years exp. Call 604-671-9901 VINCE’S MAGIC Drywalling & textured ceiling repairs. Bonded 604-307-2295 / 778-340-5208

8080

Electrical

The current choice serving the Lower Mainland for more than 15 years. All Kinds of Work and Reasonable Rates.

Contact us today for a free estimate.

Max: 604-341-6059 Licensed & Bonded

Artistry of Hardwood Floors

Refinish, sanding, install, dustless Prof & Quality work 604-219-6944 INSTALLATION REFINISHING, Sanding. Free est, great prices. Satisfaction guar. 604-518-7508

Drywall

Lic. 22308

WINTER SPECIALS • Gutter Installation Cleaning & Repairs • Roofing & Roof Repairs • Moss Control, Removal & Prevention 25 year Warranteed Leaf & Needle Guard

CALL NOW for 25% OFF WCB – Fully Insured 100% Money Back Guarantee

604-340-7189 Waters Home Maintenance Gutter Cleaning, repairs, windows Free estimate 604-738-6606

8130

Handyperson

TRUSTED HOME IMPROVEMENTS Save the HST! Call for details.

604-878-5232 SINCE 1997

Complete Home Maint./Repairs Certified Trained Pros. For that small job. Rates you can afford. RJR Small Projects Division Part of RJR group

Repairs & Staining Installation Free Estimates

CONCRETE & MASONRY Stairs, foundation, sidewalks & driveway + blocks, bricks & stonework. Tom 604-690-3316

8075

Vancouver Division Since 1985

604-202-6118

A. FOUNDATIONS, Retaining walls, Stairs, Driveways, Sidewalks. Any concrete project. Free ests. Call Basile 604-617-5813

Crown Roofing & Drainage Residental Div. Roofing installations & repairs. 604-327-3086

YOUR HOME GUTTER SERVICES

Call: 604-240-3344

Hardwood Floor Refinishing

8073

@

one mini, drainage, landscaping, stump / rock / cement / oil tank removal. Water / sewer line, 24 hours Call 341-4446 or 254-6865

Reasonable rates. 35 yrs. exp. For free estimates call Mario

253-0049

Gutters

8120

Glass Mirrors

RENOS • REPAIRS

BEST PRICE! Bath, kitchen, plumbing, flooring, painting, etc. Call Mic, 604-725-3127

8140

Heating

Lorenzo & Son Plumbing & Heating (604) 312-6311 Local Licensed Plumbers & Gas Fitters

8150

Kitchens/Baths

Counter Tops, Custom Cabinets & Refacing • In business 50 years 604-879-9191

Commercial/Residential 2837 Kingsway, Vancouver

Tel: 604-603-9655

8125

Gutters

EDGEMONT GUTTERS

• Sales & Installation of 5’’ Continuous Gutter • Minor Repairs • Cleaning

604-420-4800

#3 - 8652 Joffre Ave, Burnaby

8155

Landscaping

GREENWAVE LANDSCAPES ★ COMPLETE ★ Garden Maintance & Installation Edible Landscape Solutions

604-317-3037

greenwavelandscapes.ca

Established 1963

DYNAMIC GUTTERS & Exteriors. Full seamless gutters. Installation repairs & soffits. All jobs guaranteed. Fully insured, bonded, WCB. Will beat any competitors price. 604-439-9417 Professional Powerwash Gutters cleaned & repaired Since 1984, 604-339-0949

TREE SPECIALIST

Lawn & Garden

HEDGE SHRUB TREE & STUMP REMOVAL FREE ESTIMATE INSURED

Tim:604-328-9487 778-829-7155 Tim:

Moving & Storage

AFFORDABLE MOVING 1 to 3 Men

1, 3, 5, 7 or 10 Ton $ From

45

We accept Visa, Mastercard & Interac Licenced & Insured Local & Long Distance

FREE ESTIMATES Seniors Discount

604-537-4140

WILDWOOD LANDSCAPING Tree & Hedge Pruning. Hedge removal. 604-893-5745

AJK MOVING LTD.

8175

Masonry

NORTHLAND MASONRY. Rock, slate, brick, granite, pavers. 20 yrs exp on the N. Shore. No job to small.. Will 604-805-1582

8180

Home Services

BE COOL! COLD FEET? Talk to Someone You Trust.

CENTRAL AIR INSTALLED FURNACES CONDITIONING Sears also installs ROOFING, WINDOWS, WINDOW COVERINGS & CARPETING

www.affordablemoversbc.com Moving. Storage. Deliveries Local & Long Distance MOVERS.... Residential. Commercial. Industrial. Truck for Clean-ups garage, basement, backyard.

(604) 875-9072 873-5292 Abe Moving & Delivery & Rubbish Removal. Available 24 hours. Call Abe at: 604-999-6020 A. Z. MOVING $60/hr, 2 Men & 1 Ton Truck. Exp, Lic. Specialize in small moves. 7 days a wk. 604-837-7785 AAA ADVANCE MOVING Experts in all kinds of Moving, Storage & Packing. Different from the Rest. 604-861-8885 AMIGO'S MOVING. Delivery. Storage. No Job too Small or Big. Clean up, Garage, Basement. Call 604-782-9511

TwoGuysWithATruck.ca Moving, Storage, Free EST 604-628-7136. Visa, OK

Need help with your Home Renovation?

604-685-7112

Find it in the Classifieds!

To advertise call

604-630-3300

RENTALS Apt/Condos

6508

Apt/Condos

1450 WEST GEORGIA ST.

1 & 2 bedrooms

starting from $1150 Heart of Downtown, easy transit access. Large gym, laundry on every floor, dishwashers in all suites, in/outdoor parking.

RENTALS 604-669-4185

204- 5725 Agronomy Rd. UBC 2 br corner, 2 bath, 900sf, granite, balc. lease, ns, np, $2300, now, Eric 604-723-7368 Prop Mngt BACH SUITE 55 plus. or older, $550 incl heat & a $650 w/patio not incl heat, coin wd, ns bus route, Rupert/5th. 604-255-7707 BEAUTIFUL SUITES Marpole area. Bach, 1 & 2 BRs. Newer kitchens & baths. H/W flrs, balcony/patio. $800 & up. Incl heat, h/water, 2 appl. 604-327-9419.

rentals@capreit.net www.caprent.com

990 BROUGHTON OCEAN PARK PLACE VANCOUVER

Bach & 1 bdrms starting at $1050

Water & heat incl. Trendy area off Robson Street. Minutes to the beach. Move in bonus. Call for details.

RENTALS 604-682 8422

www.caprent.com

1 BR, Kerrisdale, newly reno’d, 750sf, 5 appls incld wd, large patio, ug prkg, heat incld, ns, avail now $1200, 604-732-3989

1105-1146 Harwood St 1Br, 1 bath, shared wd, 500sf, leave, np, ns, avail now, $1100. Eric 604-723-7368 RP Prop Mngt

Oil Tank Removal

FLECK CONTRACTING LTD.

• Oil Tank Removal • Work complies with city bylaws BC Mainland • Always fair & reasonable rates • Excellent references

Painting/ Wallpaper

8195

TOP PAINTING Winter Special: 20% Discount

Residential • Commercial Free Estimates • Top Quality

JOE 604-782-1377

For Free Estimates Call

Off: 604-266-2120 Cell: 604-290-8592

Serving West Side since 1987

STORMWORKS

● Oil Tank Removal ● Recommended ● Insured ● Reasonable Rates

2 PAINTERS available. Honest, Reliable & Prof. 778-877-7045 www.pastandpresent.webs.com MILANO Painting 604-551-6510 Int/Ext. Good Prices. Free Est. Written Guar. Prof & Insured.

604-724-3670 Painting/ Wallpaper

8195

D&M PAINTING

Interior/Exterior Specialist Many Years Experience Fully Insured Top Quality, Quick Work Free Estimate

T&H PAINTING Int/Ext res/comm painting, power wash, gutters, Free Est., Guar. 778-316-7709

Paving/Seal Coating

8205

ALLEN Asphalt, concrete, brick, drains, foundations, walls, membranes 604-618-2304/ 820-2187

604-724-3832

DUSKO PAINTING Int/Ext. Com/Resid. Many Years Experience Top Quality Repair Drywall Free Estimates

604-258-7300 cell: 604-417-5917

AAA Professional int/ext painter & wall paperer. Guar work. Free est. John 604-318-2059 (Kits)

6522

Furnished Accommodation

12TH & Quebec, Clean, Quiet, furn’d room, lady only, n/s, n/p, $425 incls utls. 604-576-1746

MOVE-IN BONUS

GEORGIAN TOWERS

8193

EW31

TWO BROTHERS MOVING Local & Long Distance 604-720-0931 • bc.moving@gmail.com •

ext 5101 24 HOURS 1-800-4-MY-HOME • (1-800-469-4663)

25 yrs exp. Oriental Landscaper

Tree Removal & Pruning Hedge Trimming Landscaping and Garden Maintenance Fully Est. Fullyinsured. insured. Free Free Est.

8185

224-3669

6508

Superior Cove Tops & Cabinets

Store Fronts • Windows & Doors Broken Glass • Foggy Glass Patio Doors • Mirrors • Etc.

8160

FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

LANGARA GARDENS

601 West 57th Ave, Van Spacious 1, 2 & 3 BR Rental Apartments & Townhouses. Heat, hot water & lrg storage locker included. Many units have spacious patios & balconies with gorgeous views. Tasteful gardens, swimming pools, hot tub, gym, laundry, gated parking, plus shops & services. Near Oakridge Centre, Canada Line stations, Langara College, Churchill High School & more. Sorry no pets. www.langaragardens.com

Call 604-327-1178

info@langaragardens.com Managed by Dodwell Strata Management Ltd.

HOMAWAY INNS Specializing in furn accom in the Westend Vancouver at reas rates. call 604-684-7811 or visit www.homawayinns.com

6540

Houses - Rent

3 Bdrm Homes! Rent TO OWN! Poor Credit Ok, Low Down. Call Karyn 604-857-3597 STOP RENTING-RENT TO OWN ● No Qualification - Low Down ● COQUITLAM - 218 Allard St. 2 bdrm HANDY MAN SPECIAL!!! HOUSE, bsmt/2 sheds....$888/M NEW WEST- 1722-6th Av 2 bdrm HOUSE w/1 suite 2 f/p,Long term finance, new roof, RT-1..$1,288/M SURREY- 6297 134 St. Solid 5 bdrm HOUSE w/2 bdrm suite on 1/4 acre lot with views... $1,688/M CHILLIWACK - 9557 Williams, 3 bdrm, 1 bath, cozy HOUSE on 49x171’ lot, excellent investment property in heart of town..... $888/M Call Kristen (604)786-4663 www.HomeBuyingCenter.ca

6545

Housesitting

TAKE CARE of your home as you would or better housesitting, care of pets, plants Mature, reliable, ref’s 778-554-6091

6595

Shared Accommodation

6595-15

South Burnaby

BBY, S. Friendly female seeks a roommate to share ½ duplex near Metrotown. Accomodations include furnished room, hydro/ cable/’net. Sh’d laundry. NS/NP. $550/mo. Immed. 604-722-6701

ADS

continued on next page

6595

Shared Accommodation

6595-20

Coq./Poco/ Port Moody

ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 1800 sqft Townhouse in Port Moody, w/d, laminate floors, $585 incls utils, cable & internet, parking, indoor pool, nr SFU & Lougheed Mall. Suits professional working person or student. References Required. Avail Now. Call 778-846-5275

6602

Suites/Partial Houses

1 BR lwr Capilano Rd; $750 w/ loundry, utils (no cable); close to shops and bus. No Pets; avail Jan.15 604 987-9175 2 BDRM main flr ste, $850, Renfrew & Charles, priv entry, laundry, big kitc,no pets/smokers, Brand New. 604-908-9726 2 BR bsmt ste, renovated bright, own wd, new appl, nr bus, shops/ schools, ns np $900 avail now. PNE area 604-737-0164

2 BR upper main flr. 57 & Knight area, large storage & garage, washer only, ns, np, $1100+utils, avail now, 604-763-2672 3 BDRM g/l bsmt ste, bright, clean, spacious, $1300 inc hyd, cbl, w/d, nr amens, Fraser/30th, n/s, cat ok, Feb 1, 604-879-9244 KERRISDALE, MODERN 1 br garden ste, 48th & Yew. all appl, incl w/d, alarm, nr bus, shops, UBC, suit quiet person, N/S N/P, avail Feb 1 $975. 604-250-1522

LANGARA, LRG 2 BR bsmt ste, Own W/D, new lam flrs, f/bath, quiet. Avail Feb 1. $1100 incls utls/cable. NS/NP. 604-321-0042


EW32

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

HOME SERVICES 8220

8240

Plumbing

Renovations & Home Improvement

Complete Plumbing & Drain Cleaning Services 9129 Shaughnessy St.

3

604

1

8220

4

4

Plumbing

❑ Warranty ❑ References ❑ Fully Insured

* Reno’s & Repairs 24 hrs/day * Furnaces * Boilers * Hot Water Heating * Reasonable Rates * Hot Water Tanks

604-731-2443

8240

Renovations & Home Improvement

10% Off with this Ad! For all your plumbing, heating & reno needs. Lic Gas Fitter, Aman. 778-895-2005

Repairs & Renos, general contracting. Insured, WCB, Licensed

BS & SONS gas heating & plumbing. Certified. Renos, h/w tanks, boilers, drains. 24 hrs. 671-6815

aaronrconstruction.com

PLUMBERS

Water Lines (without digging) Sewer Lines (without digging) Install. Drain tiles. 604-739-2000

Lorenzo & Son Plumbing & Heating (604) 312-6311 Local Licensed Plumbers & Gas Fitters

SUNDECKS FENCES • STAIRS

30 years exp.

731-7709

YOUR WAY

drytech.ca RENOVATIONS

‘Old Home Specialist’

22-BUILD (222-8453)

604-324-3351

Showroom: 1230 West 75th Ave.

#1 IN RATES & SERVICE Licenced local plumber. Plug Drains, Reno’s 1-877-861-2423 A1 CONTRACTING. Bsmt, bath, kitchen cabinets, tiling, painting & decks. Dhillon, 604-782-1936

AUTOMOTIVE 9135

Domestic

1998 LINCOLN Mark 8, excellent condition, 82,000 km, $11,000 obo 604-988-0327

Parts & Accessories

4 AUDI RIMS. Spec size is 235/45R17. Will fit 225/45R17 or 255/45R17. FIT FOLLOWING VEHICLES: All A3, A5, A6, A8 or TT models. All S4 models to 2008. S6 models 2007-2009. S8 models 2007-2009. A4 - ONLY 2WD. 4 Alloy Rims & 20 Stainless Lug Nuts = $2867 retail. Mint condition $795 OBO 604-220-2269

9145 2002 OLDS Alero V6 146kms sedan, Auto, White grey int, exc cond, s/r, p/l, p/w, ABS, fold down back seats. $4,500 604-329-7946

Winner of Gold & Silver Georgie Awards

– Renovator Member of the Year

Scrap Car Removal

#1 FREE Scrap Vehicle Removal Ask about $500 Credit!!! $$ PAID for Some 604.683.2200

• BBB • RCABC • GAF/ELK Master Elite Contractor • Residential Roofing • Liability Coverage and WCB • Designated Project Managers • Homes & Strata • Third Party Inspection Installations & Repairs Call 604-327-3086 for a free estimate •• 24 Hr Emergency Service Quote code 2010 for a 5% discount

8240

9145

Scrap Car Removal

❏ The kitchen’s too

small

❏ You need another

bedroom

❏ The carport could be ❏ One bathroom just

isn’t enough anymore

We Fix The “EXCEPTS…”

604-987-5438

www.rjrrenovator.com

9145

Scrap Car Removal

THE SCRAPPER Cash for junk cars! $100 to $1000 Ask about our $500 Credit!

Visit our website @ www.surreyscrap.com Free tow, no wheels, no papers no problem! Hassle free friendly service. 2 hr service in most areas.

604 628 9044

*FREE SCRAP CAR PICK UP* Pay $ for some complete cars. No wheels no problem. 209-2026 JACK−X ★ FREE Scrap Car Removal Top $$ for scrap cars. ★ Flat Rate Towing Service avail. Call ★ 604-720-0067

2 Drive.

1. Go to vancourier.com/autofind 2. Search by STOCK# 3. Get details & photos of cars you choose

SCRAP CAR & TRUCK REMOVAL

CASH FOR ALL VEHICLES

604-790-3900 OUR SERVIC 2H

9155

E

Sport Utilities/ 4x4’s/Trucks

1994 CHEV 3/4Ton with dump box, auto, exc working cond. 320K, $6200, 604-270-3933

Sports & Imports

2001 JAGUAR S-Type 3.0 V6, Auto, Black on white, 139km, $6998 obo. Tel: 778-322-3598 2005 LEXUS ES330, 4 dr Sedan, grey, auto, fully loaded, 6cyl. 44K, $22,500 obo, 604-616-3296 NEED CHEAP AUTOBODY ? www.cheapautobody.ca 604-341-7738

9173

Vans

97 GRAND Voyager LE 3.8L AWD Leather n/s Alloy 221K $3999 obo 604-939-3316

Contact the dealer, check out your new ride and drive home. Easy, right?

www.vancourier.com/autofind

Roofing

#1 Roofing Company in BC

FERREIRA HOME IMPROVEMENTS

Smarter Buyer. Better Car.

604-588-0833

SALES@ PATTARGROUP.COM

Additions ★ Renovations Concrete Forming ★ Decks Garages ★ Bathrooms Ceramic Tile ★ Drywall Hardwood Flooring

WWW.PATTARGROUP.COM

NORM, 604-466-9733 Cell: 604-841-1855

drytech.ca drytech.ca

GET OUT YOUR LIST!

ROOFING/ RE-ROOFING Leak Repairs & Chimney Repairs

''Satisfaction Guaranteed''

We do all the fussy little jobs no one else wants to do. Complete home repairs. Workmanship and your Satisfaction Guaranteed. Est 1983. Ralph 682-8256

SAVE $ 604-228-ROOF (7663) Showroom: 1230 West 75th Ave.

Georgie Award for Best Renovation & Design Complete Renovations / Additions Kitchens / Bathrooms

Cell: 604-839-7881

604-728-3009

McNabb Roofing

Roof Leaking?

Best Price!

UNLIMITED RENOVATIONS

K. PASIFIC RES Call Now

COMPLETE RENOVATION & CONSTRUCTION SERVICES Free est.

778-893-0540 www.UnlimitedRenovations.ca ★ BATHROOM SPECIALIST★ Tiles, tub, vanity, plumbing, paint framing. From start to finish. Over 20 yrs exp. Peter 604-715-0030

30 years experience

778-846-0196 MACROOFING.CA

Residential & Commercial Tar & Gravel to Torch On Conversion Shell Busey’s Referral Network ★ Govt Certified ★ 20 yrs exp Visa & MasterCard

778-237-ROOF (7663)

BEARING WALLS removed, floors leveled, cathedral ceilings, garage leveled, door and window openings. 604-787-7484 D & M RENOVATIONS, Flooring, tiling, finishing. Fully Insured. Top quality, quick work 604-724-3832 EXPERT PAINTING, tile setting, flooring: laminate/lino/tile/etc, decks, fences, landscape design etc. Reas, exc refs. 604-818-7536, cell 604-989-2907 dave_mac40@hotmail.com BATH/KITCHEN Renos, decks, fencing, home repairs. Home Improvment Centre. 604-240-9081

Advantage Building Maintenance: •Roof •Chimney •Skylight Repairs •FREE Estimate 604-802-1918 CHOICE Roofing 604-807-7312 Specializing in New, Re-roofing & Repairs. Quality assured. GL Roofing cedar shake, asphalt shingle, flat roofs BBB WCB clean gutters $80. 24/7 604-240-5362

Roofing

@

YOUR HOME ROOFING SERVICES Vancouver Division Since 1985

WINTER SPECIALS

JJ ROOFING, Repair specialist, Reroof, New Roof. Seniors disc. WCB, fully ins. 604-726-6345 MASTERCRAFT ROOFING Ltd. Right the 1st time! Repairs, reroofing, garage, decks. Hart 322-5517 Topside Roofing 604-290-1650 Quality Workmanship. Prompt, Prof Service. Insured. Call Phillip

8255

Rubbish Removal

• Roofing & Roof Repairs • Duroid, Cedar, Torch-on • Moss Control, Removal & Prevention • Gutter Installation, Cleaning & Repairs

604-RUBBISH

CALL NOW for 25% OFF

Free Est’s • Large or Small Jobs

WCB – Fully Insured

604-340-7189 A North West Roofing Specialist in Re-Roofing & Repair, Free Est payment plan avail, WCB, Liability Insured Jag 778-892-1530

$49

B i n s f ro m 7 - 2 0 y a rd s a v a i l .

John 778-288-8009 10% OFF with this ad

RUBBISH REMOVAL Reasonable rates - Free Est. Pat 604-224-2112, anytime

8295

Snow Removal

RESIDENTIAL & Light Commercial. Salt available. 2 hr min, $60/hr. Call 604-230-9500

8300

Stucco/Siding/ Exterior

J. PEARCE STUCCO CONTRACTING. Residential / Commercial. 604-761-6079 Quality Home Improvement ★ Stucco ★ All Kinds. No Job Too Big or Small. 604-725-8925

8309

Tiling

JS TILES & STONE Res/Comm. Heated floors. Free est. 604-719-7682 T.G. TILES Marble, Slate, Granite Entry, kitchen, bath, patio, stairs. Prof Installation 604-760-7991 TILE-RIFIC TILING & PAINTING Slate, Glass, Ceramic Specialist. Quality Work. 604-831-4013

8315

Tree Services

MAGNOLIA TREE Service & Landscape, fence install, yard reno’s, excavating, irrigation 604-214-0661 Treeworks 15 yrs exp. Tree/ Stump Removal, Prun’in & Trim’in & View Work 291-7778, 787-5915 www.treeworksonline.ca Wildwood Tree Services, Exp Hedge Trimming and Removal & Tree Pruning. Free Est. 604-893-5745

8335

Window Cleaning

Edgemont Building Maintenance • Power Washing • Window Cleaning • Gutter Cleaning

JKB CONSTRUCTION LTD. COMPLETE RENOVATIONS

604-728-3009 jkbconstruction.com

Trips start at

• TAR & GRAVEL •TORCH-ON MEMBRANE •FIBREGLASS / ASPHALT SHINGLES, RESIDENTIAL, and COMMERCIAL 35 years experience ★NO HST★

www.jkbconstruction.com

8250

Two Easy Steps to Finding a Pre-Owned Vehicle

8250

All types of Roofing Over 35 Years in Business Call now & we pay ½ the HST

9160

1 Click.

Renovations & Home Improvement

– Best Renovated Kitchen in Canada

When your house is great except…

Student Works

Disposal & Recycling

www.crownresidentialroofing.com

Winner of the National SAM Award

Since 1978

★ 3 Licensed Plumbers ★ 66 years of exp. 604-830-6617 www.oceansidemechanical.com

1998 EAGLE TALON ESI, 170k, 2.0 L, excellent condition, 5 spd, no accidents, silver exterior, grey interior. $3900. 604-763-3223

Renovations

a two-car garage

Full Kitchen & Bath Reno’s • Plumbing Service - all types • H/W tanks • Plugged drains No job too small!

9125

RESIDENTIAL DIVISION LTD.

604-318-4390

CEDARWORKS

Plumbing & Renovations

Steve ✔

Rubbish Removal

Tried & True Since 1902

from concept to occupancy

AaronR CONST

Certified Plumber & Gas Fitter

8255

Roofing

.com

20 years in business

Hannah - 5 ⁄Hannah yrs. old Jaxon 11½ 14 Jaxon - 3 ⁄ yrs. old Years Old! Years Old!

731-8875

604-312-6311

8250

732-8453

All Renovations and Restoration Work

24/7 Days A Week R Seniors Discounts EA TY All Work Guaranteed 8 YRRAN WA Also Furnaces, Gas Very Reasonable Rates

Licensed, Insured & Bonded Lic. Plumbers & Gas Fitters Over 20 years Experience Custom Renovations to Small Repairs

Renovations & Home Improvement

Since 1989

ATLAS The Reliable Plumber

• • • •

8240

782-2474

* We Remove & Recycle Anything*

10% OFF WITH THIS AD www.604rubbish.com

Abe Moving & Delivery & Rubbish Removal. Available 24 hours. Call Abe at: 604-999-6020 A.J.K. MOVING Ltd. Special truck for clean-ups. Any size job Lic#32839 604-875-9072

604-420-4800 Established 1963

ALL CLEAR WINDOW & gutter cleaners. No streaks, no drips, right down to the corners. Quality work guaranteed. 604-519-0678


FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

EW33

dashboard

Electric vehicle to make history as first zero-emission car sold in North America

Nissan breaks ground with powerful Leaf

It’s a historic automotive landmark; the first mass produced zero-emission car sold in North America will be... the Nissan Leaf! Unlike a hybrid, the Leaf relies solely on its electric power source for propulsion. It can seat up to five adults and can be driven on a highway as well as in the city —just like a normal car. “Like many companies today, Nissan is seeking a more balanced relationship between people, vehicles and nature,” said Allen Childs, president of Nissan Canada. “The Nissan Leaf is a very strong step in that direction.”

The Leaf’s charging points are hidden under a small door located in the front of the car and the plug connects to an on-board charger. The battery can be charged up to 80 per cent of its full capacity in 30 minutes when connected to a dedicated DC fast charger.

The Lowest Price in Auto Service!

$19.95 • Oil, Lube, Filter........................................$24.95

Brand New

up to 5L Castrol 6T 10W30

Rear a/c, 17” alloy whls, middle pwr windows, leather strg whl w/audio controls

$

• Special Service ......................................$29.95

Hemi, leather, sunroof, nav, DVD, loaded!

$

Replace spark plugs, set timing, adjust idle speed

$

2007 LIBERTY RENEGADE

25,988

Leather, sunroof, light bar, rare, 41,000 kms!

$

98/WEEK $0 DOWN

$

23,988

2009 PATRIOT

Bucket pwr seats, hemi, 36,000 kms

12,488

$

41/WEEK $0 DOWN

We also service

Brand New

12,988

CAB SPORT 4X4

only 15,700 kms!

28,988 97/WEEK $0 DOWN

$

Pentastar engine, Remote start, alarm. Uconnect, Quadra trac II, hill descent control, skid plate group, full size spare – loaded!

DVD, only 54,000 kms!

$ 49/WEEK $0 DOWN 2009 RAM 1500 CREW

80/WEEK $0 DOWN

2011 GRAND CHEROKEE LAREDO

87/WEEK $0 DOWN

2007 CARAVAN

$

$

$

22,988 $

Leather, heated seats, 13,600 kms!

Oil, lube, filter, radiator flush, tire rotation, tune up, top up all fluids, safety check

$

CHOOSE FROM 2010 GRAND CHEROKEE LTD EITHER ONLY: Demo Hemi, navigation, 18” chrome wheels, $ quadra drive II,

39,672 121/WEEK $0 DOWN!

$

back up camera, my gig, uconnect, sunroof, tow grp, demo.

m a r i n e c h r y s l e r. c o m

01048516

• tires • battery • starter • alternator • c.v. joint • front end • replace transmission • engine work • fuel system • shocks & struts

CHRYSLER • DODGE • JEEP D#9121

604 251-2600 • 830 CLARK DR. (at Venables)

60/WEEK $0 DOWN

$

2010 CHALLENGER

Timing Belt Parts & Labour ................from $199 Muffler Special ..............................from $58.95 Front or Rear Brakes Parts & Labour from $68.95 Clutch Special Parts & Labour ............from $350 Complete Service Special ..................from $95

DISCOUNT AUTO

$

75/WEEK $0 DOWN

• Tune Up ....4 cyl. $48.95 | 6 cyl. $58.95 | 8 cyl. $68.95

Repair Centre

17,999

24,800

2007 GR CHEROKEE OVERLAND

JOURNEY

4 whl ABS, traction control, side curtain air bags, keyless, media center

$

Engine flush, top up all fluids, tire rotation, safety check. Oil, lube, filter.

• • • • •

Brand New

GRAND CARAVAN WITH DVD

450 SE Marine Dr. Vancouver

1.866.308.4595

All pymts plus all fees and taxes and are at 5.74apr ammort: ’07-‘08 – 72mo; ‘09-’10 – 84mo.

davidchao

While Nissan sees its primary role as bringing new product to the market, in order for the electric vehicle (EV) to succeed and for production volumes to grow, key partnerships (governments, utility companies and other stakeholders) will be vital in the building of a viable charging station network, in order to move to a zero-emission society. The Leaf goes on sale through selected Nissan dealers in the U.S. later this year. The Canadian edition of Leaf, which will come with a special winter package that includes heated seats and steering wheel, is scheduled to arrive next fall, as a 2012 model. Nissan already has pre-sale orders for the entire first-year production run of 20,000 units. It will be able to ramp up production to 300,000 annually, if demand for the Leaf continues to grow. If that level of production is achieved, the economies of scale will really start to kick in and the price should start to drop. Leaf’s list price in the U.S. is a hefty $32,780 US, but that’s offset buy a $7,500 federal environmental Continued on next page


EW34

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

dashboard

Canadian Leaf comes on line this fall with special winter package

Continued from previous page tax credit for anyone who buys a zero-emissions car; some states offer additional tax rebates. When you then factor in the fuel savings, the car starts to look even more attractive. Nissan estimates U.S. electrical costs will be about $2.64/100 miles on average, at a rate of 11 cents/24 kWh. The Leaf is based on a stretched version of the Nissan B-platform (used by Versa) and it was designed specifically for its Lithium-ion battery pack, which is in the centre of the vehicle, under the floor. The battery is a unique flat design with four cells and 48 laminated modules. It weighs about 250 kg (600 lbs.) and comes with an eightyear/160,000 km warranty. The electric motor that drives the Leaf’s front wheels is a highresponse 80kW AC synchronous motor that can generate 107 horsepower and 207 lb-ft of torque. This combination gives the Leaf a rated driving range of 160 kilometres (based on the U.S. LA4 cycle) on a single charge. According to Nissan, 90 per cent of Canadians commute less than 90 km a day. The actual real-world driving range of the Leaf depends on a multitude of factors, including where, when and how it’s driven. Use of its

The Nissan Leaf can seat up to five adults and can be driven on a highway as well as in the city —just like a normal car. Econ mode extends the driving range considerably and travel distances way beyond its rated

range are certainly possible. Leaf’s battery can be charged up to 80 per cent of its full capac-

%.1& 0*/ $,*#.& (,&.

WHEN THEY’RE GONE, THEY’RE GONE.

!-0")+'(

2010 MAZDA 5

% 0 PURCHASE FINANCING

ity in 30 minutes when connected to a dedicated DC fast charger. Charging at home with a 240V

(dryer or stove type) outlet takes about eight hours. Using the standard 120V wall connection takes 20 hours to recharge a completely depleted battery pack. The charging points are hidden under a small door located in the front of the Leaf and the plug connects to an on-board charger. A regenerative braking system also helps increase driving range. Leaf’s electric motor acts as a generator, converting energy lost during braking or deceleration into battery energy. Leaf is the most car-like electric vehicle I’ve driven to date and I would put it on par with a Toyota Prius in terms of handling. At low speeds (below 26 km/h) it makes a humming sound from a speaker at the front of the vehicle to alert pedestrians, which automatically turns off when the vehicle’s speed reaches 31 km/h. It’s a bold move by Nissan, and by getting in early, it can take advantage of pent-up demand for a fully roadworthy and affordable electric car. Beyond the so-called “early adopters and green-intenders,” it’s going to be interesting to see how many “everyday” car buyers are prepared to also open their wallet to buy a Leaf. With files from Bob McHugh. david.chao@leansensei.com

FOR

NO

PAYMENTS FOR

$

90 DAYS

CASH

or

72 MONTHS

No charge wheel balancing with winter tire purchase.*

DISCOUNT OF $

4,000

500 OWNER

LOYALTY CASH ALSO AVAILABLE

le n cab o e l a ! S s to o chain

2010 MAZDA 6

0%

PURCHASE FINANCING FOR

72 MONTHS

or

CASH 4,000

%

$

1500 OWNER

$

LOYALTY CASH ALSO AVAILABLE

2010 MAZDA 3 GT

0

DISCOUNT OF

PURCHASE FINANCING FOR

NO

60

PAYMENTS FOR

90 DAYS

t our Ask abou es! oil chang

MONTHS

or

CASH

DISCOUNT OF

2,500

$

$250 OWNER LOYALTY CASH

ALSO AVAILABLE

* Valid on all Goodyear, Dunlop, and other brands available in store. Not valid at any other location. Must bring in this ad. Offer expires: February 15, 2011. Appointments available.

NO

PAYMENTS FOR

90 DAYS

*see dealer for details.

Ask about our all-new lower prices on the 2011 CX-7 and CX-9.

5775 KINGSWAY & IMPERIAL, BURNABY

1750 Clark Drive @ 2nd Avenue Vancouver, BC V5N 3G2

5 min East of Metrotown

2009

604.433.7779

www.metrotownmazda.com

2009 2010

D 9493

Goodyear Ultra Grip Ice WRT

Tel:

604.255.8494


FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

EW35

Meet WINTER Head On Canadian Tire Auto Service offers Complete Service for all vehicles

Grandview Highway

(2 blocks west of Boundary Road) 2830 Bentall Street / 604-431-3570

Auto Parts: 604-431-3571 Auto Service: 604-431-3572 / Tires: 604-431-3573 Over 500 FREE parking stalls Auto Centre Hours: Mon-Fri 7am-7pm, Sat & Sun 8am-6pm

Download Coupons at www.canadiantire.ca

Cambie & 7th

Kingsway & Victoria Dr.

Auto Parts: 604-707-2294 Auto Service: 604-707-2291 Open Mon-Fri 7am-7pm, Sat 8am-7pm, Sun 9am-7pm After hours Auto emergency 604-707-2292 Plenty of parking

Auto Service: 604-257-6392 Open Mon-Fri 8am-7pm, Sat 8am-5pm, Sun 10am-5pm

2290 Cambie Street / 604-707-2290

Visit our Online catalogue at www.canadiantire.ca

2200 Kingsway / 604-257-6510

Heather & Marine Dr.

8729 Heather Street / 604-257-6487 Auto Service: 604-257-6587 Open Mon-Sat 8:30am-5pm


EW36

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 2011

100% B C Owned and Operated

s e c i Healthy Cho Se

minars and Events: Wednesday , Jan 19, 6-7:30 erapist p m. Understanding Self Sabotage with Lisa Tomlinson, MA, Psychoth at Alchem 404. y and Elixir H l 604-720-2 ealth Group, #320-10 26 Davie St. Vancouver. Cost $10. To register cal

Dairyland Organic Milk

skim, 1, 2 or 3.25%

Fancy Lemons

Kettle Baked Potato Chips

4.29

Meat Department

assorted varieties

2L • product of Canada

1.99

Certified Organic, California Grown

3/.99

Whole Organic Chickens

4.99lb/ 11.00kg

113g • product of USA

Oasis Health Break and Premium Juices

Juice Carrots from Fountainview Farm B.C. Grown, Certified Organic

assorted varieties

2/7.00

MaraNatha Smooth Almond Butter

product of Canada

5.99

1.75L - 1.89L

10.99

340g • product of USA

Nature's Path Premium Cereals assorted varieties

assorted varieties

1.49/100g

200-310g

Liberté 2.5% Yogurt

reg 2.19

three varieties

2/5.00

Avalon Organic Cottage Cheese 1 or 2%

500ml • product of Canada

Salad Crunchy Mix Gravity Bins & Pre-Packaged

20% off

4.99

3.99

Traditional Medicinals Organic Teas

200g • reg 7.99

Extra potent, an excellent formula for traveller's parasite protection as well as general use by youth, adults and seniors.

16.99

reg 5.49

assorted varieties

2/7.98

From Our Bakery

La Tortilla Wraps

3.99

White Only

2.99

Veggie Patch Appetizers

500g

assorted varieties

Blueberry Oatmeal Muffins

5.99

package of 6

Rice Bakery Brown Rice Soda Bread

4.99

500g

Burns up to 12 times the calories! Helps to manage appetite and cravings, reduce body fat, and will enhance mental acuity, focus and concentration.

assorted varieties

Organic Country French Bread

2/8.00

18.99

398ml • product of USA

200ml

450g

Uncle Luke’s Organic Syrup (Formerly Luc Bergeron) three varieties

5.99

Omega 3 fatty acids in a delicious lemon flavour, making it suitable for children, adults and seniors.

2/4.98

assorted varieties

90 caps

Ascenta NutraSea Fish Oil

assorted varieties

Liege Gourmet Waffles

4.99

29.99

368-496g

Wolfgang Puck Organic Soups

255-283g • product of USA

180 caps

Brad King’s Ultimate Calorie Burn

Dietitia n Top Ch ’s oice

20 bags • product of USA

regular retail price

Natural Factors Double Strength Acidophilus & Bifidus

Allegro 9% Probio Light Cream Cheese

assorted varieties

700-750g • product of B.C.

Bulk Department

assorted varieties

500g

2/6.98

1.98lb/4.37kg

Allegro Light Cheeses

4.99

Rogers Deluxe Granolas

Imported

Choices’ Own Haida Cakes

2/3.98

300-400g • product of Canada

25lb Bag

Hot House Grown Red Tomatoes on the Vine

907g

From the Deli

Wasa Crispbreads

2/7.00

16.98

Grande Prairie Bison Burgers

Artesian Acres Organic Kamut Pasta assorted varieties

250ml • product of Quebec

2/5.00

454g • product of Canada

Nature Clean Liquid Dish Soap three varieties

2/6.00

575ml • product of Canada

choicesmarkets.com Kitsilano

Cambie

Kerrisdale

2627 W. 16th Ave. Vancouver 604.736.0009

3493 Cambie St. Vancouver 604.875.0099

1888 W. 57th Ave. 1202 Richards St. Vancouver Vancouver 604.263.4600 604.633.2392

Yaletown

Prices Effective January 13 to January 19, 2011.

Choices in the Park

Rice Bakery South Surrey

2595 W. 16th Ave. Vancouver 6855 Station Hill Dr. 604.736.0301 Burnaby 604.522.6441

3248 King George Blvd. South Surrey 604.541.3902

Choices at the Crest 8683 10th Ave. Burnaby 604.522.0936

Kelowna 1937 Harvey Ave. Kelowna

250.862.4864 Note Area Code

We reserve the right to limit quantities. Not all items may be available at all locations. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.


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