Fire and ice
Village autopsy
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Vol. 102 No. 16 • Friday, Feb. 25, 2011
Slots to talk about
Established 1908
WEST WEEKEND EDITION
photo Dan Toulgoet
Earth
tones
Grandview/¿uuqinak’uuh elementary has reinvented itself as an Earth School by integrating themes of water, forest, earth and sky into its curriculum —story by Naoibh O’Connor
YOUR SOURCE FOR LOCAL NEWS, WEATHER AND ENTERTAINMENT! WWW.VANCOURIER.COM
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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
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11 I
COMMUNITY EDUCATION PROGRAM
PREPARING FOR HEALTH CAREERS
Aboriginal Pre-Health Program
photo Dan Toulgoet
A worthy trade
NAOIBH O’CONNOR Builders Keith Sashaw and Neil Griggs are involved in a construction and development project to help restore a damaged trade school in Port au Prince, Haiti. BY
N E W S
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12th & Cambie: Green line
BY MIKE HOWELL Former mayoral contender Jim Green says he voted reluctantly for slots in Vancouver, but argues no real harm was done.
Suite and sour
BY CHERYL ROSSI The city’s plan to give essential workers priority for rental suites at the former Olympic Village is being shelved because of lack of interest.
O P I N I O N
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Watch the skies
GEOFF OLSON Why are we looking for non-existent alien radio signals in space when tantalizing evidence suggests ET is calling on us at home. BY
E N T E R TA I N M E N T
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Picks of the week
COURIER STAFF This week’s arts and entertainment highlights include dance festivals, winter festivals and a visit from the Bob Dylan of Iran. BY
Graduates of the Aboriginal Pre-Health Program earn both academic credit and conditional acceptance to SFU. CONTACT
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BY SANDRA THOMAS A Vancouver resident representing Canada in the annual Mr. Gay World has a strong focus on human rights and hockey outfits.
B.A., M.Sc., RAUD, RHIP, AUD(C), FAAA Registered Audiologist President
News: What’s in a name¿
BY NAOIBH O’CONNOR How did Grandview/¿uuqinak’uuh elementary get its unique aboriginal name? There are two different stories.
BBB Rating A+
Entertainment: Pillow talk
BY JO LEDINGHAM Part Kafka, part Brothers Grimm, The Pillowman is a jagged, funny and scary play.
Entertainment: Oscar nitpicks
BY JULIE CRAWFORD With 10 flicks duking it out for Best Motion Picture, this year’s Academy Awards is more like a marathon.
O N T H E C O V E R Denny Wallace, a seven-year-old student at Grandview elementary. The Vancouver Courier, a division of Postmedia Network Inc. respects your privacy. We collect, use and disclose your personal information in accordance with our Privacy Statement which is available at vancourier.com or by calling 604-589-9182. For all distribution/delivery problems, please call 604-439-2660. To contact the Courier’s main office, call 604-738-1411
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in this issue
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
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Roughly 60 per cent of student population is aboriginal
‘Earth School’ focuses on environmental themes G
Naoibh O’Connor Staff writer
R
ainwater drips as if from a broken tap off the corner of the First Nation long house roof into a concrete barrel. Droplets barely ripple the surface of six-inch deep water pooled above a bed of rocks, sand and debris. Fidgety Grade 2 and 3 students gather around Brent Mansfield on this cool late-January morning at Grandview/ ¿uuqinak’uuh elementary. Mansfield, the school’s garden project coordinator, hoped for more of a downpour for today’s lesson, but a drizzle will do. “The water is collecting here,” he points to the nearly full barrel. “Have you guys seen it before when it comes down really fast? When it rains really hard, it’s going to come down really fast… Right now you can’t even feel the rain, but there’s a little bit on the roof and it falls down and it collects right here. If it keeps going, this is going to overflow.” Mansfield quizzes students on how to store more of the water for future use. “What if we dug a really big hole and collected it underground?” he suggests. “When it’s really hot out here we could have a pump or something that would run to the garden. Then we’d be able to water our garden in the summer with the rain.” The 30-year-old’s talk on rainwater collection is more than an isolated lecture. It’s part of Grandview’s broader focus on water this year, which included giving students water bottles to avoid using plastic. They’re also raising money to build a well in Cambodia in a town principal Gloria Raphael has visited and teachers are trying to incorporate lessons about water into the curriculum. The East Side school has re-invented itself as an “Earth School,” focusing on four environmental themes that rotate annually: water, forest, earth and sky. The concept
Garden project coordinator Brent Mansfield teaches Grandview/¿uuqinak’uuh elementary students about rainwater collection. photo Dan Toulgoet was officially implemented last September. Then, in late January, Grandview inked a $100,000 deal for a natural “playscape” on its grounds to complement the revamped education program. The $100,000 grant, funded by ING Direct, will see Ontariobased Bienenstock Natural Playgrounds redesign the school’s landscape. Organizers hope to collect a further $150,000 to pro-
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duce a $250,000 budget for the new outdoor space—another way to connect students to the world around them. But connection isn’t a problem today. Hands-on learning is a hit. As Mansfield speaks, giggling students cup their palms to capture water droplets mid-fall before the liquid slips through their fingers and splashes into the shallow barrel below.
randview elementary is an 85-year-old inner city school on Woodland Drive at Fourth Avenue—two blocks east of the Clark Drive truck route and one block west of Commercial Drive. The school, an unremarkable three-storey building on a sprawling property, serves one of the poorest neighbourhoods in Vancouver. Roughly 60 per cent of the student population is aboriginal. Despite its ordinary exterior, the building’s front doors open to a welcoming space for 170 kindergarten to Grade 7 students, their families and staff. The entrance foyer’s black leather couch and comfortable chairs, surrounded by colourful aboriginal paintings and student artwork, create a living room-like atmosphere. Today, Grandview’s youth and family worker and its audiologist are hosting the weekly Friday morning sing-along for students using the piano stationed beside the seating area. Mansfield says encouraging students and their families to hang out at the school for activities is central to Grandview’s educational philosophy. It’s equally devoted to “experiential learning” and these values are at the heart of its transformation into an Earth School. The new identity actually evolved out of projects launched more than a decade ago when staff hooked up with two University of B.C. masters students studying education and landscape architecture to turn the schoolyard into an outdoor classroom and community gathering space. That effort produced a small children’s garden, a community garden, the long house and an ethno-botanical garden. Mansfield, a teacher and longtime garden enthusiast, landed Grandview’s garden project coordinator job in 2008—a position funded by Vancouver Coastal Health for the past eight years. Continued on page 5
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
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Portland trips inspire teachers to reinvent East Side elementary
Continued from page 4 Since 2008, he’s built on the earlier initiatives by expanding the children’s garden from four to 15 plots, enlarging the community garden from 24 to 36 plots and preparing a pumpkin patch for harvest next fall. Another small plot, to illustrate different varieties of wheat, is in the works. But it’s two trips Mansfield and a couple teams of Grandview teachers made to Oregon in 2009 and 2010 that solidified plans for its full-scale makeover into an Earth School. The groups visited Sunnyside Environmental School, a popular kindergarten to Grade 8 magnet school in Portland that operates based on three rotating themes: rivers (biology), forests (botany) and mountains (geology). It also has flower and herb gardens. The Vancouver teachers adopted the theme idea, tweaked it to suit their students, and presented the rationale behind the Earth School plan to the school district in the spring of 2010—board policy allows schools to theme themselves if the concept meets students’ needs. “It’s curriculum that’s integrated around the environment,” Mansfield says. “A key part of our school plan is around engagement—how do we really see our kids owning what they’re doing, being excited about it. I believe all of us, but especially kids, need to do that in a way that’s handson—whether that’s through the garden or through cooking, or whether that’s through building something.” Incorporating the four themes into the curriculum is relatively simple, he says. “The reality is, almost every concept
This hand-carved chair in McCleary Playground in Toronto, was made by a Bienenstock designer from an elm tree that was felled because it had Dutch elm photo courtesy of Bienenstock Natural Playgrounds disease. you can choose to connect to or integrate around the environment. Water is like that. There are ways teachers are talking about water in relation to health. Every student now has their own water bottle, so we’re talking about the importance of water for our own health and alertness and the amount of dehydration that happens, but we’re also connecting it to the fact we
don’t want plastic water bottles—we want to reduce our waste,” he explains. Grade 3 students study plants in science class, Mansfield adds, which easily lends itself to lessons about the school garden and rainwater collection. Grandview is looking to partner with its West Side sister school— Queen Elizabeth annex—to work on these projects. Mansfield envisions installing an
underground cistern with a hand pump—an idea he hopes is considered during consultation on the new playground design. Today’s lecture is about setting the groundwork. “We’re talking about what do we use water for in the garden—when does it rain and when do we need to water and realizing that these are at different times. So, if we’re trying to reduce our water use, what are some ways we can do that in the garden. Most of them probably realize it, but sometimes it’s just connecting those dots for them.” Ultimately, Mansfield believes students retain information when it’s matched with hands-on work that can be applied to everyday life and that this approach will also improve students’ overall attitude about school. “As you experience, you’re able to conceptualize and understand. It also creates pride and ownership in what the school’s doing. Much of it is about relationships. As much as we’re encouraging our kids to learn in a way that honours the earth and to understand the connections, it’s also about the culture of the school,” he says.
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lmost two years ago, Toronto-based Bienenstock Natural Playgrounds approached the City of Vancouver about creating a natural playspace in the city—ING Direct was offering a $100,000 grant for the project. Vision Vancouver Coun. Andrea Reimer, a former Green Party school trustee, suggested Grandview elementary as the ideal site due to its Earth School plan, and the need for greenspace in the neighbourhood. Continued on page 6
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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
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Playground business touts natural playscape
Continued from page 5 “We were particularly interested in seeing investment go into a neighbourhood that didn’t have a lot of greenspace,” explains former Bienenstock vice president Bruce Sudds, who recently left the company to work for Toronto Waterfront. He describes the Bienenstock’s philosophy as a “100mile diet for playgrounds.” Native plant species and local materials are incorporated into design schemes, which are intended to encourage collaborative, imaginative and creative play. Designs are always drawn up with community input. “The starting point for us is let’s reconnect with nature… we source out local flora, we source out local stone, and so on, to use in the space so children have the opportunity to not only [see] soaring trees and flowers and shrubs, but beautiful boulders from the area and have that experience,” Sudds says. “We usually create an undulating topography—it’s more fun for the kids, with pathways running through it.” Bienenstock likes to reserve 25 per cent of the area for shade to produce a more “bucolic” setting that also provides enough space for running and gross motor play. The company uses different types of ground surfaces and suggests including art walls and musical instruments, such as whale drums or bongos. “The highest rates of [injuries] are happening on traditional playgrounds. Traditional playgrounds are also only promot-
“TRADITIONAL PLAYGROUNDS ARE ALSO ONLY PROMOTING GROSS MOTOR PLAY.” Bruce Sudds
ing gross motor play and they’re leaving out the majority of children,” says Sudds, adding that research shows green public spaces and natural playgrounds are best for child development and for urban communities. The final design of Grandview’s grounds will depend on community feedback, as well as the final budget, but consultation starts in early March and construction could begin as early as this summer. The work typically takes between three and four weeks. “When we’re done our work, the project’s not done. It’s now what you do with it,” Sudds says. “It’s about ownership of the space. People have got to want to have it. They’ve got to feel like they were part of creating it and that they can live and be in it in the ways they want to be in it.” Sudds is convinced a natural playscape is a perfect fit with Grandview’s new identity as an Earth School and its renewed focus on the environment. He cites an anecdote about American designer Rusty Keeler, who used to work for a playground com-
pany. “[Keeler’s] aha moment came when he was asked by someone in the company to design the perfect piece of playground equipment. He sat at his chair and finally kicked back and started laughing. He realized he was drawing a tree.”
B
ack in a tiny office at Grandview elementary, Mansfield is undeniably optimistic about the school’s future and how the educational changes will affect student learning. He expects it might also transform other people’s opinion about the East Side school, but that’s only a side benefit. “At the end of the day, it’s about the students and their families,” he says. “We’ve always been the little school that just kind of plugs away and does great things and hasn’t really worried if anybody knows about it. We’ve just focused on the best for our students, but at the same time we want our students to be proud of how others see us. What we’re doing with the Earth School, as well as this playground, really gives us the opportunity to be seen a little bit differently—to be seen as an innovator, to be seen as a school that really opens up to the community.” See related story at
vancourier.com noconnor@vancourier.com Twitter: @Naoibh
Ten questions. Three strengths. One opportunity. LET’S TALK ABOUT TOMORROW Simon Fraser University has launched envision SFU to develop a strategic vision that reflects SFU’s strengths and enhances its reputation as a student-centred, research-driven and communityengaged institution. Help us shape an exciting future for SFU. Visit www.envision.sfu.ca to have your say.
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
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news
12th & Cambie
with Mike Howell
Thanks a slot
You would think a former politician would no longer need to be “wishywashy” when it comes to expressing an opinion on a major civic issue such as a casino proposal. But former Vision Vancouver councillor Jim Green, who ran unsuccessfully for mayor in 2005, is not taking sides in the debate over whether to allow a mega casino adjacent to B.C. Place Stadium. “I’m not a hundred per cent on either side of this thing,” Green told me this week and asked rhetorically whether he had become “wishy-washy” for sitting on the fence. I contacted Green because he was one of the councillors who voted in January 2004 to allow slot machines at the Edgewater Casino, which became the first casino in the city to get the machines. Green voted with then-mayor Larry Campbell and current councillors Tim Stevenson, Raymond Louie and David Cadman in favour of the slots. Then-councillors Peter Ladner, Tim Louis, Anne Roberts and Fred Bass voted against.
Former Vision Vancouver councillor Jim Green, seen here at Woodward’s related event, can’t make up his mind on Paragon Gaming’s casino proposal. photo Dan Toulgoet Later that year, a majority of council, including Green, voted to allow slots at Hastings Racecourse. That left Vancouver with two locations where people could play the so-called one-armed bandits. Now Paragon Gaming Inc., which bought Edgewater in 2006, wants to build a mega casino adjacent to B.C. Place Stadium. The plan calls for 150 games tables and 1,500 slots, making it the biggest casino
in Western Canada. So what’s Green think? Here’s the wishy: “I don’t like gambling, I don’t gamble but I don’t think it’s my right to tell people they can’t.” And the washy: “But I don’t like some of the results of people getting addicted to gambling.” However, he said, opponents of slots in the 2003/2004 debate
predicted dire consequences for people and the city, if Edgewater got the slots. That, Green said, hasn’t occurred. “All of the things that the opponents were screaming about—the prostitutes and the muggings and all of that—as far as I know, never appeared. It just didn’t happen.” Before he voted for slots at Edgewater, Green travelled to Edmonton, Windsor and Quebec to
visit casinos. “I went to visit every casino I could and I didn’t see any negative impacts around the neighbourhoods.” He said he voted for slots to preserve jobs at the casino, create jobs at the casino for Downtown Eastside residents and bring in more revenues for the city—and all of that happened. At the time, the slots proposal was supported by the B.C. Federation of Labour, the Vancouver and District Labour Council and 88 charities. And it’s the charities that Green worries about, knowing the government cut gaming grants across the province from $156 million in 2008/2009 to $112 million in 2009/2010. He noted a group of comedians volunteered their time at a fundraiser Monday night at the Vancouver East Cultural Centre, which was affected by the cuts. “It’s just not right,” Green said. “It’s a worldknown organization and they’re getting screwed by the government that should be helping them.” If council approves Paragon’s proposal, Green said the city should work out a deal with the provincial government that ensures a specific amount of the casino profits will go directly to arts’ organizations. A public hearing on the casino proposal is scheduled for March 7. mhowell@vancourier.com Twitter: @Howellings
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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
opinion
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WEB POLL NATION Go to www.vancourier.com to vote Should city council delay its decision on the controversial casino proposal to allow for more public consultation? Last week’s poll question: Have you taken steps to prevent your child from encountering online predators?
Yes 44 per cent No 56 per cent This is not a scientific poll.
It seemed odd and I wasn’t the only one to notice it—a gathering of more than 100 people to witness what could be best described as an autopsy conducted while the body was still showing signs of life. The gathering was made up mostly of urban planners and planning students. The not-quitedead body was the Olympic Village. The inquest by a panel of interested parties was to determine “lessons learned” from this near-death experience. As the first panelist (Vision Coun. Geoff Meggs) observed, no issue has taken up more council or city staff time than this development. Not homelessness, not affordable housing, not bike lanes, and not—so far anyway—the expansion of gambling and the proposed casino. When the Olympic Village disaster broke the surface during the 2008 municipal election, it looked like a gift for Vision. It has proven to be anything but. Before we get to the prognosis, first let me introduce the panel of examiners. Aside from Meggs, there was Michael Geller, the main guy who built Simon Fraser University’s housing development known as UniverCity. His opposite number, from the University of B.C., was also there. Nancy Knight is an academic at UBC and in charge of the aggressive building plan now going on to create housing out of endowment lands. Finally, there was Doug McArthur, a senior public policy wonk at SFU. To be clear, there was no new information except news earlier in the day from Real Estate Agent Sans Frontier Bob Rennie telling us condos were
allengarr once again selling. Rennie was brought in first by the developers and then more recently by the receivers. He was tasked with trying to breathe a bit of life into the development, which at that the point looked like it was slipping away, referred to increasingly as a ghost town. He was also in the audience—along with city officials including city manager Penny Ballem—and declared in a tone attributed to some kind of medical breakthrough: “I am here to protect the asset.” Aside from that, what the evening provided was context. And stuff the city could have, should have and would have done if it wasn’t so overtaken by greed and hobbled by hubris and a lack of experience. The whole process of developing the south shore of False Creek was conceived more than two decades ago in a city document titled Clouds of Change, which explored how to make Vancouver
a greener city. In 1994, it was decided False Creek would become a sustainable development. Interestingly, when the agreement was signed to tie the development of the south shore of the creek to the Olympics by using it as the Athletes Village, it hardly made it onto the media’s radar. But that was the beginning of the pickle the city would find itself in. Of course you know much of the rest: Without pointing any fingers, there was the decision to get rid of the affordable housing and much of the social housing, the decision to build at LEED gold and platinum standards, the outrageous amount paid for the land, the developer going over budget as construction costs soared, the real estate bubble bursting, the lack of effective city oversight on the project, the New York hedge fund that bailed on the financing, the extraordinary act of the provincial legislature that allowed the city to become the main lender on the project and, finally, the city forcing the developer into receivership. If there was a single lesson learned on which the panel agreed, it was this: The model, with politicians making detailed decisions and city staff there to implement them, simply failed. A model along the lines used by SFU and UBC has proven far more effective. Each institution created an armslength body with a board and staff experienced in building, financing and marketing real estate. By the time the city brought in outside expertise two and a half years ago, the project was already on life support. agarr@vancourier.com
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
opinion MEDIA IGNORES UFO TESTIMONY
Compelling evidence suggests we are not alone in universe The “Drake Equation.” Although it sounds like a nerd’s way of calculating male ducks, it’s actually a chalkboard procedure for estimating the number of detectable extraterrestrial civilizations in our galaxy. Astronomer Frank Drake’s 1961 formula contains a lot of guesswork. The first variable is the rate of star formation in the Milky Way. The second variable is the number of stars that have planets. The third is the average number of planets that can potentially support life, and so on. The final variable is the estimated length of time that an extraterrestrial civilization sends detectable radio signals into space. Yet it’s even debatable that advanced beings would employ a communication technology familiar to 20th-century humans. “To search expectantly for a radio signal from an extraterrestrial source is probably as culture bound a presumption as to search the galaxy for a good Italian restaurant,” wrote author Terence McKenna in 1983. Astronomers fiddling with the Drake equation have come up with wildly varying estimates for ET civilizations in our galaxy, from millions to none (Drake himself estimated 100,000). But this month the odds became a bit less rubbery. Working from a miniscule section of the sky, the Kepler Space Observatory has revealed data on 1,235 potential extrasolar planets, with 54 in the life-friendly “Goldilocks Zone” (not too hot, not too cold). There may be up to 50 billion planets in our galaxy alone, astronomers say. In other words, it could be like Star Trek out there. There have been some other spacey reports lately. Several videos posted in late January to YouTube reveal a brilliant object hovering momentarily above the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, before departing instantly up into the night sky. The varying clips, said to be from video cameras and cellphones, all match up in imagery and timing. On Internet forums, it’s been like The Jetsons meets the Dead Sea Scrolls, as armchair ufologists dissect the clips with Talmudic overkill. The lack of corroborating testimony from other witnesses is suspicious, however. As the focal point of all three monotheistic religions, this is one of the most heavily visited tourist spots on Earth. If an alien craft showed up in the Holy Land for an interstellar high-five, it should have been seen by dozens, if not hundreds, of gobsmacked witnesses. So was this a hi-tech hoax or an offworld howdy? I’m sure it will be debated for years to come. I’m more impressed by visual reports of UFOs that predate
letter of the week
geoffolson the digital age, such as a 1964 incident at Vandenberg Air Force Base. First Lt. Robert Jacobs was in charge of photographing missile launches at the base, and one day the Chief Science Officer at Vandenberg, Maj. Florenz J. Mansmann, called the lieutenant to his office. With strangers in civilian clothes present, Mansmann pulled down a screen and played a high-resolution film of a missile flight from a few days earlier. Miles above Earth, a saucer-shaped object came into view, performed a circular motion around the final stage of an Atlas F missile and shot a beam at it, sending the dummy warhead spiraling out of control. The science officer asked for an explanation, and the lieutenant confessed he didn’t have one (Mansmann has confirmed the story). Years later, Jacobs shared this anecdote with the Disclosure Project, a decade-long forum for retired U.S. military, government and aviation officials to break their silence on UFO activity, including violation of airspace over nuclear installations. Last September, CNN’s website streamcast a twohour DP press conference from The National Press Club in Washington, D.C. The whistleblower event was completely ignored by major print media, with the exception of the Washington Post, which dispatched staff humour columnist John Kelly. Like a cross between Dave Barry and Forrest Gump, the Post columnist editorialized that he liked The National Press Club events because they serve good cookies. (The dismissive article’s title: UFO visits? Hmmm. Cookies? Yummm.”) A sniggering U.S. newspaper press has virtually ignored five decades of credible UFO reports from solid witnesses, including astronauts Gordon Cooper and Buzz Aldrin. Yet the press genuflects before the government-funded SETI program (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence). Since the 1960s, SETI researchers have scanned the skies with radio telescopes, looking for alien talk shows. All they have found is static. An unsourced quote from Albert Einstein comes to mind: “Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I’m not sure about the universe.” www.geoffolson.com
According to one reader, scofflaw dog owners sometimes hurl abuse at citizens who note their intransigence. photo Dan Toulgoet To the editor: Re: “City ready to get tough on scofflaw dog owners,” Feb. 16. Thanks for covering this subject. Music to my ears that the city is finally going to take action against irresponsible dog owners. I have walked for years in Jericho Park (on-leash park) and always see dogs off-
leash, and when I tell their owners (politely) it is an on-leash park I usually get a load of abuse or indifference. I just don’t know where certain dog owners get their sense of entitlement—that the rules are not for them. Janet Mackie, Vancouver
Critical Mass bike ‘events’ rude and selfish To the editor: Re: “Letter of the Week,” Feb. 18. Courier letter writer Silvi Wool is correct. Critical Mass is not “an absolute joke.” It is no laughing matter at all. But it is hardly “an event” as she called it. Under the guise of bike transport promotion, it is designed to inflict maximum disruption and shows no regard for other people’s lives. The rights and freedoms—in reality, privileges—that we enjoy in this country put the onus squarely on our shoulders as free citizens to act with responsibility, decency and respect towards each other. I participated once in Critical Mass but the complete disregard that we showed towards vehicle and pedestrian rights was not what I envisioned. Cars were blocked from passing on green lights and pedestrians had to wait to cross streets until we had collectively passed. I have friends who ride in it because it is “fun.” They are intelligent, responsible, socially conscience people. But it perplexes me that they don’t weigh the impact of their “fun” on other people. It is easy to get caught up in things when the people negatively affected are faceless and nameless. Perhaps it would be instruc-
tive for Critical Mass riders to have conversations with some of the people whose lives are thrown into chaos because of the rides. Then, with the “do unto others” adage in mind, they might re-examine what she calls their “not so readily apparent motives” for what they are doing. Russ Husum, Vancouver
••• To the editor: In response to Silvi Wool’s defense of Critical Mass as an “event, just like dance parties, jazz clubs, theaters and Buskers.” I’m afraid not. There are a few fundamental differences. I can plan around any of the aforementioned “events” and choose a route accordingly. Not so with Critical Mass. Most of these true events are held in private venues and/or have permits, as well as clearly planned itineraries. Again not so with Critical Mass. The fact that you made some new friends, and perhaps did some future good work, is not justification for the inconvenience and rude behaviour imposed on others. It’s still just rude and selfish behaviour cloaked by a dubious connection to a largely unspecified noble aim. A political activist rallies for a cause. Exactly which cause is served by Critical
Mass? There have never been announced leaders of Critical Mass, as they do not want to deal with two problems. This way nobody can be held accountable for lawbreaking, and no cause is tarnished by association with this group. I am curious if you would still feel good about this “event” if instead of “meeting new friends” it resulted in you missing a flight. The least likely way to get my (and other people’s) support is to alienate and infuriate. That is all this “event” seems to accomplish. Except of course expanding your social network. Alan Moody, Vancouver
••• To the editor: The letter writer who suggested breaking the traffic laws by staging Critical Mass celebrations is a good way to make new friends might try a slightly different approach. Why not simply hang out in brothels and gambling or drug dens and meet the underworld of our society? I would assume the peddlers of sin are more than happy to make new acquaintances. As the vintage expression puts it succinctly, “If you run with dogs, don’t be surprised if you catch fleas.” Rick Angus, Vancouver
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news
VPD eyes hundreds of businesses
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Police report identifies potential terror threat
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Approximately 300 Vancouver businesses sell products, offer services or store goods that could be used by a terrorist to launch an attack, according to the Vancouver Police Department’s year-end report on its operations for 2010. Last year, 45 of the businesses signed on with the VPD as part of a program called Operation Securus. The goal of the program is to train business operators how to detect and report potential terrorist activity, including suspicious transactions. The report, which accompanies the VPD’s 2011 draft business plan, does not identify the businesses, services or the products in stock. Some terrorist attacks around the globe have been committed by people using store-bought chemicals and military hardware. The report and plan went before the Vancouver Police Board Feb. 16, without any discussion on the terrorism information from police or board members. The documents were co-authored by inspectors Rick McKenna and Bob Stewart who noted the program was not adequately staffed because of budget constraints. “The light-duties member who has been assigned to facilitate this program has been away sick for several months and has not been replaced during this absence,” they wrote. “Subsequently, no new businesses have signed up in 2010.” As well, the documents say “terrorism awareness training” wasn’t fully delivered in 2010 but is being developed this year by the department’s criminal intelligence section in collaboration with its emergency and operational planning section. The documents don’t say whether any of the business operators involved in Operation Securus have identified terrorist activity. However, the VPD’s criminal intelligence section shared 45 “files” in 2010 with the B.C. Integrated National Security Enforcement Team. The report doesn’t indicate the nature of the files or whether any were related to the 2010 Winter Games, although all patrol officers were given “terrorism identification lectures” prior to the start of the Olympics last February. Information regarding the location of the businesses in the program and the commodity or service they provide, and location of “critical infrastructure” in Vancouver, are entered into a special VPD database. “This allows analysts to provide investigators with a geospatial analysis of an ongoing investigation or suspicious circumstance,” the report said. “It also provides commanders assigned to the departmental operations centre a heightened ability to assess risk in assigning resources to a critical incident or event.” Although some of the protests during the 2010 Winter Games resulted in damage to businesses and property, there were no terrorist attacks in the city. The biggest threat reported publicly was when a 48-yearold man used bogus credentials to get within steps of U.S. vice-president Joe Biden, who was seated in a VIP section during the opening ceremony of the Games. Police transported the man, who wasn’t armed, to a psychiatric facility. As the Courier revealed in February 2007, the U.S. government has at least 12 agents, including members of Homeland Security, working in Vancouver to help combat cross-border crimes such as drug and gun smuggling, fraud rings, child pornography and terrorism. An FBI agent told the Courier at the time that the “vast majority” of his work in Vancouver was focused on terrorism but he declined to reveal any cases related to the city. The agents don’t have powers of arrest and are prohibited from carrying guns. mhowell@vancourier.com Twitter: @Howellings
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
news
Vancouver-based charity will manage reconstruction project
Benevolent ‘builders’ head to Haiti Naoibh O’Connor Staff writer
Builders Without Borders and the Canadian Construction Association have joined forces to help finance and supervise a small reconstruction project at a trade school in Haiti. The school, called Ecole Lakay, is located in Le Soleil, one of the poorest neighbourhoods in Port au Prince. It offers instruction in carpentry, cabinetry and electrical installation, but was damaged in the devastating Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake, which killed hundreds of thousands and caused massive destruction. Builders Without Borders, an 11-year-old nationally registered charity with its headquarters in Vancouver, was approached by the Canadian Construction Association about a year ago to work together to help the poverty-stricken country. “They contacted us and we helped identify a project,” explained Neil Griggs, president of Builders Without Borders. Griggs has visited Haiti twice for the joint initiative and witnessed the damage first hand. “It was traumatic to look at because most of the buildings had collapsed. The school has over 1,000 students a day in the section that we’re working on and most of the buildings had collapsed. The workshops, fortunately, were only single-storey and suffered less damage but I’ve never seen anything like that so close up before,” he said. The two organizations hope to raise $500,000 to cover construction costs—close to $300,000 has already been raised. “It isn’t a large amount because it’s a separate facility at the school—it’s not the main buildings and dormitories or other things,” said Griggs. “This is simply workshops that are rather like a large warehouse, so it’s a simple structure and it didn’t get significantly damaged. But it needs to be reinforced and they wanted some additional area added to it—another 300 square metres of workshop space.” Once construction starts it should take
BC HYDRO POLE RENEWAL PROJECT BC Hydro is pro-actively replacing 1000 existing wooden poles in Burnaby and Vancouver. These poles are reaching their end of life, which is up to 50 years old. BC Hydro is replacing the poles to ensure system reliability, and to ensure public and BC Hydro crew safety. This project will conclude at the end of May 2011. You may have noticed the wooden replacement poles are being dropped on boulevards and in front of homes, and close to replacement pole locations. The poles are not being dropped on private property. Teams of contractors or crews are now dropping the poles, and another team of contractors or crews will be replacing the poles.
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less than six months to complete the job, according to Griggs who said the main challenge will be to find labour and materials. “Our role is to manage the project, manage the process and manage the design in the sense that it will be done by Haitians, but the review will be done by engineers here who are familiar with construction codes, earthquake codes,” he said. Griggs is working with the Selesian Order in Haiti—a Catholic group that’s involved in charity work focused on children, which runs the school. Keith Sashaw, president of the Vancouver Regional Construction Association, a CCA chapter, said it’s an ideal project for the construction association. “We think the fit is extraordinary in terms of working on a trades school. It’s one thing to give money to an organization or to a community, but what we’re seeing here is an opportunity to train people to help rebuild their own country. By linking with the trades school, it’s almost like a gift that keeps on giving,” he said, noting the CCA’s Quebec chapter has been particularly involved in the initiative because of the common French language. He said association members are pleased to work with Builders Without Borders and are satisfied donations are going directly to the project. “It’s not a lot of money but the impact on the community and people involved is huge.” noconnor@vancourier.com Twitter: @Naoibh
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Neil Griggs
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“IT WAS TRAUMATIC TO LOOK AT BECAUSE MOST OF THE BUILDINGS HAD COLLAPSED.”
no set schedule as to when poles will be replaced. We would like to thank—in advance—the public for their patience during this
STYLE report
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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
community briefs Sounds of taiko
A taiko concert for the Britannia Volunteer Program is being held Feb. 25, at 7 p.m. at Britannia secondary auditorium. Experience an innovative contemporary Japanese taiko drumming performance featuring North America veteran drummers Leslie Komori and Eileen Kage and youth taiko groups Chibi Taiko and Tetsu Taiko. The event is free for Britannia Volunteers. Tickets are $5-$15 available at Britannia at 1661 Napier St. Proceeds benefit the volunteer program at Britannia Community
Centre. Visit britanniacentre.org for more details.
Free lung lecture
Do you have shortness of breath and/or cough up sputum? Lung health experts, including physicians, will speak on the prevention, diagnosis, treatment and management of chronic lung diseases including asthma and chronic obstructive lung disease at s free forum Feb. 27. The forum will be presented in English and Mandarin or Cantonese at the Chinese Cultural Centre, 50 East
Pender St. from noon to 4 p.m. To pre-register, go to successbc.ca or call 604-684-1628.Walk-ins are welcome.
China’s first feminist
A documentary film on modern China’s first feminist screens at UBC March 1. The free screening and filmmaker’s discussion of documentary Autumn Gem is at the Asian Centre Auditorium 1871 West Mall at 7 p.m. Autumn Gem tells the story of the “Chinese Joan of Arc” Qiu Jin (1875-1907), a radical women’s rights activist
who attempted an armed uprising against the corrupt Qing Dynasty. She became the first female martyr for China’s 1911 Revolution and is celebrated as a national heroine today. Filmmaker Rae Chang will attend the screening. For more information, visit autumn-gem.com.
Green team wants you
Looking for a hands-on way to conserve the environment? TheLower Mainland Green Team is a group of people from across the Lower Mainland who get together
once a month (sometimes more) to help an environmental group, non-profit organization, charity or city tackle an environmental issue that needs co-operation and teamwork to get done. Some activities include pulling invasive plants, planting trees/native plants, riparian restoration, beach/river/ lake clean up, harvesting organic fruits/veggies, trail building/maintenance and restoration of wildlife sites. For more information, email lowermainlandgreenteam@yahoo. ca or visit meetup.com/The-Lower-Mainland-Green-Team.
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
news
Central Park
with Sandra Thomas
Shaky situation
I was relieved to hear COPE park board commissioner Loretta Woodcock was unhurt after the devastating earthquake that struck Christchurch, New Zealand earlier this week. Woodcock was in Christchurch on vacation with her husband Feb. 22 when the 6.3 magnitude earthquake hit, killing more than 98 people. At least 225 were still missing as of yesterday. The morning of the quake Woodcock managed to post a message on Facebook letting friends know the couple was OK. “Was in Christchurch New Zealand during the earthquake today and managed to drive out of the city driving south to Banks Peninsula today,” she wrote. “Still feeling the aftershocks as I type this…” I wonder if after Woodcock’s experience in Christchurch she’ll consider tackling the issue of emergency preparedness across the city when she returns home. It will be interesting to hear first hand how our city can expect to deal with a crisis of that significance.
Green days
A new volunteer group is looking for members interested in helping the environment. The goal of the Lower Mainland Green Team is to make a positive impact on the environment by holding events, such as
ones dedicated to pulling invasive species, planting trees, beach, river and lake cleanups, trail building and restoration projects. The group will meet at least once a month across the Lower Mainland, but I know locally there are several projects planned for Jericho Park and Pacific Spirit Park. For more information, contact lowermainlandgreenteam@yahoo.ca.
Out standing
In Wednesday’s edition of this column I wrote about the park board’s $100,000 Vancouver Sport Hosting Grant dedicated to the Vancouver 2011 North American Outgames. The Outgames will include 18 sports sanctioned by the Gay and Lesbian International Sport Association of North America, based out of Montreal where the first World Outgames was held in 2006. I didn’t have room in that column to include comments from Vision Vancouver park board vice-chair Constance Barnes who made the announcement last week on behalf of the park board and city. Barnes, liaison to the city’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Association, told me she was delighted to announce the grant at a fundraising event for Outgames athletes last week. “The park board is really excited to be working with this fabulous group of people,” says Barnes. “These Games celebrate diversity, accessibility, inclusiveness, respect and fairness.” Barnes adds she expects the Outgames to leave a lasting legacy in Vancouver. sthomas@vancourier.com Twitter: @sthomas10
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
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news
Only 15 of 252 suites rented to cops, nurses and other essential service workers
Olympic Village marketers ditch ‘essential’ tenants plan Cheryl Rossi Staff writer
Filling the city’s market rental apartments at The Village on False Creek with essential services workers hasn’t worked. In January, 283 applicants had signed up for a waiting list to get into 126 market rental units given priority by the city to essential workers, including police officers, teachers and nurses, at the former Olympic Village. But as of this week, only 15 of 252 suites the city owns at the project have been rented to essential workers, and 41 of the suites have been rented overall. “We’re fully engaged in going out to the general public now,” said Thom Armstrong, executive director of the Co-operative Housing Federation of British Columbia, which through its COHO Property Management spinoff, is recruiting tenants for the suites on behalf of the city. COHO started hosting weekly open houses for the two rental buildings at the Village Feb. 16 and is printing pamphlets that advertise the suites. Olympic organizers returned the site, which housed the Athletes Village during the 2010 Winter Olympic
Games, to the city April 7, 2010. City council decided two weeks later, with only two days notice to the public, that it would designate 126 units it owns for below-market housing and 126 as market rentals, for an additional $32.1 million at the massively over-budget development. Priority for the market rentals was to be given to essential workers. But interest has been slower than expected. The first occupants got their keys the week before Christmas. Armstrong said in the first week of January that he expected most of the units to be rented by the end of March, with the last rented by as late as summer. Now he hopes half of the 252 units will be filled by the end of March. Armstrong said some of those who aren’t signing leases want more upscale amenities. The 252 suites don’t include dishwashers and only some larger units include in-suite laundry. “These are non-market housing units so the idea was that they wouldn’t be finished like upscale condos and that’s showing up in some of the reactions,” he said. A market one-bedroom rents for $1,601, a two bedroom for $1,902, a three-bedroom for $2,096 and a fourbedroom for $2,368.
Only 10 people attended the Feb. 16 open house and six submitted applications. “What we’re noticing, and it’s quite dramatic, is the buzz from the relaunch, [marketer Bob] Rennie’s and then the receiver’s [sales] relaunch of the Village has very dramatically increased the number of hits on the websites and the number of emails and phone calls we’re getting,” Armstrong said Feb. 21. He believes it will be easier to attract essential service workers to replace tenants once the buildings are full. Armstrong expects information sessions about the co-op to begin in the first week of March. He said Feb. 24 COHO has received more than 1,200 emails of interest about co-op housing. Vision Vancouver Coun. Geoff Meggs says he doesn’t believe the city’s decision to give priority to essential service workers delayed filling the city’s apartments at the project. “I’m very proud that we said that we should try to put first responders in city facilities, if possible, without subsidy because it’s good to have them close to the job, if we can do it,” he said. crossi@vancourier.com
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This offering is only available for strata lots in Bridge at The Village on False Creek and in Kayak at The Village on False Creek. Pricing and availability is subject to change without notice. Please speak to the Village on False Creek sales representatives for more details. All images used are for illustrative purposes only and may not be accurate. E.&O.E.
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EW16 THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Awards of Excellence - BC Hydro Power Smart – New Construction Program - 2010 Winner for Sustainable Communities · The Award for Excellence in Urban Sustainability - The Globe Foundation - March 2010 · American Green Building Council - LEED Platinum Community Certification by the USGBC for its extraordinary commitment to designing & constructing the most energy-efficient neighborhood in North America - June 2010 · LEED Gold Certification for all of the buildings · Readers’ Choice Award for Best New Condo Development in Vancouver 2009 - The Georgia Straight · Readers’ Choice Award for Best New Condo Development in Vancouver 2010 - The Georgia Straight · Good Wood Award - Honorable Mention for environmental and social responsibility - The Forest Stewardship Council · Recognition Award for tremendous contribution to Building Opportunities with Business - Building Opportunities with Business · Vancouver Regional Construction Association awards ceremony (awarded OCT 2010).
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
Inc me
news
Class Notes
with Naoibh O’Connor
Building bridges
Heritage Vancouver’s relationship with the Vancouver School Board appears to be on the mend, just days after the independent conservation group accused the district of not protecting heritage schools, according to its annual Top 10 Endangered sites list. Sir Guy Carleton, Lord Kitchener and J.W. Sexsmith elementary schools were ranked the top three most threatened heritage buildings in the city and the organization added that its entire list could have been made up of schools. But on Tuesday, Heritage Vancouver president Donald Luxton met with VSB staff to discuss his concerns. Luxton called me Wednesday to say he’s encouraged by the discussion. “They’re interested in being a little more open about what they’re doing and tackling some of the issues were talking about. We had a very frank
discussion with them and I think there was some progress,” Luxton said. “They’re working on a larger plan, which is what we’ve also been looking for and anticipating. There’s nothing to respond to at this point, but they said within several months there should be an overall plan for exactly what they’re hoping to do. That’s been part of the problem—the uncertainty about their approach and what they’re trying to do and why. There is actually a lot of work going into it so I would say I came out of the meeting hopeful that we can have some positive discussions.”
Emergency planning
New Zealand’s tragic earthquake this week has the VSB reminding families to prepare for an emergency. The district cited a New Zealand Herald article that pointed out 72 hours after the quake, 40 per cent of Christchurch was without power, 80 per cent of the city was without water supply, boil water advisories were in place, the population was being asked to collect water if it rains and not to flush toilets to avoid contaminating the remaining water supply. Sewage was also becoming a concern. Families should have enough sup-
plies to be self-sufficient for 72 hours after such an emergency. See the VSB website for links to family emergency pans, emergency supply lists, emergency preparedness for your pets and the VSB’s emergency preparedness page.
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Gender identity
Trustees voted unanimously on Monday to support Bill C-389, which adds gender identity and gender expression to the list of prohibited grounds of discrimination in the Canadian Human Rights Act. The bill also adds gender identity and gender expression to the Criminal Code dealing with hate speech and sentencing for crimes where hate was a motivating factor. The motion was made by COPE trustee Jane Bouey. “Students who don’t feel safe find it difficult to learn, and often drop out. That is exactly why in February 2004 the Vancouver School Board passed groundbreaking policy that all students and employees, whatever their real or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity, have the right to learn and work in an environment free of discrimination and harassment,” she said in a press release. noconnor@vancourier.com Twitter: @Naoibh
EW17
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get your sight on our site
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DAVID BERNER
The tough questions – asked & answered!
Shaw Community TV Channel 4
Tuesdays 10:30pm • Wednesdays 8:30pm • Fridays 2:30pm • Mondays 4:30am
POLITICS HEALTH CARE LAW & ORDER TAXATION ADDICTIONS SENIORS CITY PLANNING EDUCATION
EW18
THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
cycling
Road rage incident reported to police
Motorists mostly respectful of bikes
Psoriasis if you have it...
you should come.
The Canadian Skin Patient Alliance invites you to a free information session on Psoriasis. Join us for an interactive discussion with Dr. Harvey Lui, a leading Dermatologist who specializes in psoriasis. Learn what new research has discovered about psoriasis, and hear what other psoriasis patients are doing. If you want, share your story to see if you have considered all your options. Get answers to your questions! If you have psoriasis, you owe it to yourself to learn more. Join us for a Free info session, seating is limited
REGISTER TODAY
call toll free 1 877 505-CSPA (2772) or register online www.psoriasis-doctors.ca Unrestricted educational grant provided by Janssen Inc.
Monday, March 7th 2011 Century Plaza Hotel & Spa, 1015 Burrard Street, Vancouver Sign in: 6:30 - 7:00pm
Event: 7:00 - 9:00pm
While out on a recent cycle, I was thinking about a fresh topic for this column. I began to ponder the countless motorists whose respect for cyclists goes unnoticed. There are more cars that get along with bikes than there are cars that want to beat up bikes. The column I was preparing to write would have been an ode to the many motorists who play nice with cyclists. It wasn’t long after that happy series of thoughts that I was the victim of road rage; I suppose it could also be called bike lane rage. This was not just a wag-of-the-finger or a curse out a rolled-down window encounter between a cyclists and an irate motorist. Not a chance. I was pedaling up a hill in a bike lane. A vehicle coming from behind swerved to brush me with its passenger side mirror. The mirror grazed my jacket and I nearly fell over. The vehicle then abruptly turned right into a drive way, cutting me off and forcing me to slam on my brakes to avoid crashing into it broadside.
jeffreyhansen-carlson As the vehicle drove down the driveway and I continued up the hill, I raised my right arm (with no middle finger extended) to communicate to the driver how absurd their behaviour was. It didn’t take long for the vehicle to turn around, accelerate back out to the street, catch up to me, pull right into the bike lane in front of me and come to a screeching stop. The passenger got out. He was a stereotypical tough guy. His choice vocabulary and body language made it very clear he wanted to fight. His closing words were, “If I ever see you riding your bike in my neighborhood again I am going to kill you.”
Not long ago, I was hit by a vehicle. I was unable to get its license plate number before it sped off. I vowed to myself then that should I ever be in a situation while cycling that the license plate number of a vehicle would come in handy I’d memorize it and rehearse it the whole way home. When the road rage incident drew to a close that’s exactly what I did. One glimpse of the vehicle’s license plate number and it was etched in my mind. I phoned the police when I got home. I was pleasantly surprised at how serious they took my complaint. An officer was on my doorstep before I had a chance to get out of my cycling attire. The officer asked what I’d like to do. I wanted the police to simply talk to the individuals involved and request that, in the future, they have more respect for cyclists. Even though this road rage incident ruined my day, there are plenty of motorists I’m proud to share the road with. Jeffrey@theroadiescholar.com
Water Main Construction
Cloudy Water Notice Introducing
February 28 to March 18, 2011 From Monday, February 28 to Friday, March 18, 2011, Metro Vancouver will be carrying out improvements to the 25th Avenue Water Main, which provides water to the City of Vancouver. To accommodate this work, Metro Vancouver and the City of Vancouver will be reconfiguring the flow of water in existing mains.
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These changes in flow within the City of Vancouver’s water distribution system may cause temporary discolouration and/or cloudiness in the water. These changes may be noticeable in the Fairview area of Vancouver. Residents in the area bordered by Main Street and Arbutus Street, and West Broadway and West King Edward Avenue may experience temporary episodes of turbidity (cloudiness) of the water during this time. Monitoring of water quality continues and the water remains safe to drink. Further notification will be provided should the situation change. Cloudy water episodes of this type usually do not last very long and the clarity of the water should return to normal within a short period of typical household water use. In order to avoid potentially cloudy water for drinking, you may wish to refrigerate drinking water ahead of time. For more information on water supply or water quality, please contact: Metro Vancouver Information Centre at 604-432-6200 Metro Vancouver Water Quality Information Line at 604-451-6010
Go to www.swarmjam.com to join a hive and find some great deals!
www.metrovancouver.org
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
garden
open meeting
March plantings can include beans, peas
Plant now for summer, fall harvests
March is the month when food gardening goes into high gear. Outside, seed of hardy vegetables such as peas and broad beans can be planted while inside we can start seed of tender food crops that need shelter until frost season is over. Coastal gardeners sometimes plant broad beans in the fall, but this can be a gamble unless you have well-drained soil and a south exposure. In other locations, drenching rains rot seed, sunshine is lacking and mice and voles make a meal out of the seed. When the weather is reasonable, early March planting makes it possible to harvest some broad beans before the black bean aphids arrive in June. Pinching out the tops is a double-edged solution—it saves the plants but puts an end to their growth, which would have resulted in more beans. Peas are also best planted in March because they germinate best in cool conditions. Lots of creatures love eating peas, especially rodents and birds. Planting thickly helps combat pea-eaters. Another useful ploy is to moisten the row and pop a plank on top of the sown seed. Be sure to check daily and remove the plank as soon as you see sprouts. Garlic is best planted in the fall, but you will get a
annemarrison crop if you plant in early March, although the garlic heads will be smaller than usual. Hardy greens that can be sown outside in March include corn salad, oriental greens and arugula. All can be sown as succession crops until late summer, although they tend to bolt when dry, hot days arrive. Arugula can be sown as a succession crop right up until October, though fall sowings are safer in a container where they can be moved into shelter if a cold snap strikes. Though kale is usually thought of as a winter crop, it’s a year-round favourite with people who like smoothies. Kale is rich in calcium and vitamins A, B and C and in smoothies and teams well with bananas. Some varieties, such as Redbor, are ornamental enough for a spot in the flower garden. Parsnips can be planted
at the very end of March. It helps to sow twice as much seed as you think you’ll need because parsnip germination usually runs at about 60 per cent. It’s best to buy fresh parsnip seed every year because it loses viability fast. Broccoli, lettuce and cabbage can be planted inside now then transplanted outside when frost danger subsides. Covering early broccoli with agricultural fleece is a great caterpillar protection. Broccoli for the fall harvest, which is started inside in summer and planted out in early August often escapes caterpillar infestations. Through March, leeks can still be started inside. So should celery because it’s a very slow grower. Peppers should also be sown inside in March for transplanting when the weather is thoroughly warm. Jalapeno and cayenne peppers are an easy and productive crop in a sunny, rich spot. Tomatoes and squash can be planted at the end of March so that transplants will be ready for the garden in mid-May. With both, there’s always the risk that plants will be ready to go outside before the weather is benign enough to receive them. Anne Marrison is happy to answer garden questions. Send them to amarrison@ shaw.ca.
Vancouver Coastal Health
Board of Directors Meeting in Vancouver When: Wednesday, March 9, 2011 from 8:30 am – 10:30 am Question & Answer Session starts at 11 am Where: Ballroom, The Holiday Inn, 700 Old Lillooet Road, North Vancouver
The Open Meeting includes a regular meeting of the VCH Board and an interactive Question and Answer session. The Question and Answer session, scheduled to start at 11 am, will provide an opportunity for the public to ask questions.
Webcast For those unable to attend in person, VCH is also making the meeting available live via the internet. Questions will be received during the broadcast or can be sent in advance. Visit www.vch.ca for details and the agenda. This is a valuable opportunity to connect directly with the VCH Board and Executive. Everyone is welcome to participate.
For more information, visit www.vch.ca or call 604.736.2033, toll free 1.866.884.0888.
www.vch.ca
read your STARS at
Astral Reflections
vancourier.com
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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
W21
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Get the latest in breast health and breast cancer by attending one or all four of these engaging info sessions, happening this March across the Lower Mainland.
L-R: Dr. Karen Gelmon, Dr. Sohrab Shah, Dr. Kristin Campbell, Dr. Frances Wong.
VANCOUVER - Tuesday, March 8th, 7:30 pm to 9:30 pm “New Treatments for Breast Cancer” with Dr. Karen Gelmon WEST VANCOUVER - Tuesday, March 8th, 7:30 pm to 9:30 pm “Molecular Investigations of Breast Cancer” with Dr. Sohrab Shah COQUITLAM - Tuesday, March 8th, 7:30 pm to 9:30 pm “The Role of Exercise in Breast Cancer Patients” with Dr. Kristin Campbell LANGLEY - Tuesday, March 8th, 7:30 pm to 9:30 pm “The Role of a Navigator with Breast Cancer Patients” with Dr. Frances Wong Learn a little and laugh a lot with stand-up comic and breast cancer survivor Jules Sesia, appearing at all four events!
Generously supported by:
Courier readers: Ron and Marilyn Moore Destination: Midi, France Favourite memories: The Moores steered a boat
Media Sponsors
Please RSVP to RSVP@cbcf.org to secure your seat today! www.cbcf.org/bcyukon | 604.683.2873
through the south of France on the Canal du Midi last fall. They moored outside the Malpas Tunnel and hiked up to the Oppidum of Ensérune, where the photo was taken. The site was occupied from 800 BC through to the beginning of the Christian era. The view in the distance is of the dried Montady Lake with its star-shaped drainage channels. The couple stopped here for geocaching.
Include the Vancouver Courier on your next vacation and send a photo (200 dpi or larger) of yourself and/or travel companion displaying an edition of the Courier, along with a brief description of your trip, your name and contact information to fhughes@vancourier.com.
KUDOS & KVETCHES DAILY: the blog
Because you shouldn’t have to wait twice a week to be
offended
NEW LISTING
vancourier.com
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Over the next few months we will be pruning and removing trees in the V6N and V6R Postal Code areas of Vancouver.
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Trees are pruned using the best arboriculture (tree care) practices. Skilled workers employed by BC Hydro are trained in both electrical safety and tree care. Only correct and proper techniques are used to eliminate any safety
get caught in our web…
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hazards. For more information about our current work or other vegetation management practices, please call Mike Chadwick, your area coordinator of Vegetation Maintenance, at 604 528 3297 bchydro.com
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EW22
THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
ASSOCIATED NOTARIES PUBLIC #202 - 2309 West 41st Avenue Vancouver, BC V6M 2A3 Office: 604-263-9317 • Fax: 604-263-9327
LEGACY 101: Succession Planning
Marny J. Morin • Joan Letendre
For families with wealth, or even of average worth but with a complicated or multi-tiered financial portfolio, succession planning helps to alleviate stress while keeping things organized and streamlined. But, how does it work? The goals of personal succession planning are related to, though slightly different from, those of business succession planning. They are related in that they seek to address the challenges of transferring property from one person to another in the most efficient way. But they are different in that personal succession planning is intended, first, to enhance the well being of the family as opposed to the business. Of course, often the two interests are aligned, and so personal succession planning is the first step in broader business succession planning. Some people shy away from a comprehensive succession plan because the planning itself requires that they think about unpleasant
morinletendre@telus.net
Wills • Real Estate Powers of Attorney • Representation Agreements Home & Hospital Visits Available Appointments are recommended but walk-ins are welcome.
OWEN C. DOLAN, Q.C. L AW C O R P O R AT I O N
• Legal Opinions on Probate Law • Incapacity Planning • Enduring Powers of Attorney • Living Wills • Representation Agreements • Committeeship Applications
#404 - 815 Hornby Street, Vancouver, BC V6Z 2E6 Ph: 604-684-6718 EXT #105 Fax: 604-684-2501 Email: owen.dolan@shawbiz.ca
issues: issues like natural disasters, death, disability, lawsuits, divorce, bankruptcies, incarceration, or retirement (among others). After all, these issues may affect you, a family member, or any one of your business and profession-
CAMERON & COMPANY 1110LAL
• Estate Planning & Charitable Giving • Will & Trust Planning • Challenges to Wills • Administration of Estates & Trusts • Advice to Executors, Trustees & Beneficiaries
Legacy
Your
MORIN & LETENDRE
Wills • Estates • Probate Enduring Powers of Attorney Brenda L. Cameron, b.a., l.l.b.,
Peter W. Brown B. COM. LL.B. LL.M. (CANTAB) BARRISTER & SOLICITOR
Barrister and Solicitor • Notary Public blcameron@telus.net
460 - 2609 Granville Street @ 10th Avenue Vancouver, B.C. V6H 3H3
Tel: 604.737.0977 Fax: 604.738.6789
al associates. The good news is, though, that while nothing can completely eliminate the stress or difficulty associated with these possible events, a good succession plan can dramatically alleviate its impact. A good succession plan will have slightly different elements for each person, but will generally include a will, buy-sell arrangements for business interests (usually contained in shareholder agreements or partnership agreements), a representation agreement, insurance packages, investment plans or trust arrangements. In putting the plan together, your planning expert will work closely with your accountants, investment advisors and other professional advisors to ensure that your interests are properly taken care of. Contact an estate planning professional for more information about succession planning services. Article provided by Bell Alliance – www.bellalliance.ca.
Preservation Through Education Help protect the environment and provide enriched learning opportunities to future generations by supporting NWPS. Your gift provides school based environmental education programs to young people throughout the Lower Mainland and BC that actively engages them in environmental stewardship projects to protect wildlife and wild spaces. Your support also assists with the development of our 240 acre bird and wildlife sanctuary located on Vancouver Island.
Contact us at 604-568-9160 or donate on line at www.northwestwildlife.com
REAL ESTATE WILLS & ESTATES REPRESENTATION AGREEMENTS FAMILY LAW CORPORATE LAW ROBSON LEGAL CENTRE 402 -1525 Robson Street, Vancouver, B.C. V6G 1C3 Telephone: 604-915-7075
PETER W. BROWN LAW OFFICE 2081 West 37th Avenue, Vancouver, B.C. V6M 1N7 Telephone: 604-261-0300
Email: peterwbrown@pwblawcorp.com
Kitsilano Chamber of Commerce Lifetime Achievement Award Recipient
Contact us at 604-568-9160 or donate on line at www.northwestwildlife.com
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
Legacy
EW23
Your SPOTLIGHT ON:
Legacy Society of the VSO compiled by Helen Peterson
Symphonic sound is music to our ears… and it will continue to enrich the lives of musicians, composers, and audience members for years, with the help of some very generous “friends.” Arts groups in Vancouver can’t continue to strive, and thrive, without the ongoing support of lovers and aficionados of orchestral offerings. Take note, sheet music doesn’t come cheap! So, let’s toot the horn of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra (www.vancouversymphony.ca), and let the music play, for generations to come.
Why leave a legacy?
Leaving a legacy ensures your generosity lives on beyond your lifetime. In doing so, you allow future generations of British Columbians to experience the thrill of live orchestral music as you have done. Planned gifts help shape the Vancouver Symphony’s future, ensuring the growth of its foundation. Income received helps make the VSO’s concert seasons possible. It allows 40,000 children to experience symphonic music annually and ensures that future generations will be able to delight in the music so obviously dear to their hearts.
Should I tell the Symphony of my intentions?
Each year the Vancouver Symphony receives bequest gifts from friends who did not tell the VSO they were remembering the Symphony in their estate plans. And you can be assured that the VSO’s staff would have been overjoyed to be able to thank them during their lifetime. Benefactors would probably also have appreciated knowing more about how their gift helps build the Symphony’s artistic strengths, expands its community and education programs and is able to share great musical experiences with audiences here and abroad. Membership in the Legacy Society is an important way to ensure the future of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra through a legacy gift, while receiving attractive tax and estate benefits that enhance your financial well being.
Are you responsible for the care of an aging family member? Are you planning for your future? Do you want to know how the decisions you make today will impact your family, friends and community? Do you want information about services available in the community that will support you and your quality of life?
Attend the Free Education Seminars & Open House: Dying to Know Before You Go: Quality of Life Planning, Community & Executor Support • Presentations by industry experts • Private consultations • Door Prizes • Refreshments • Date: Saturday March 5, 2011 • Time: 10:00 am to 2:00 pm Where: Bell Alliance Lawyers & Notaries Public #201, 1367 West Broadway (@Hemlock), Vancouver
“Providing for the future of the VSO is one of the most important things we can do for our community, our children and grand children. A gift or bequest to the VSO Foundation or Endowment Fund will help ensure the Symphony’s high-quality performances and education programs continue for generations to come.” Membership is granted to those who have chosen to make a planned gift to the Vancouver Symphony in one or more of the following ways: • A gift in Will with intention of cash, securities, stock, real estate, or tangible property • A designation of the VSO as beneficiary of life insurance • Life Insurance policies, RRSP, RRIF • Charitable Insured Annuities • Charitable Remainder Trusts and gifts of Residual Interest There are many benefits to becoming a member of the Legacy Society, including the satisfaction of knowing you have left a legacy of music and music education for generations to come, recognition events, and opportunities to meet the musicians and sit in on rehearsals. For further information contact Leanne Davis, vice-president and chief development officer - tel: 604684-9100, ext. 260; email: lea@ vancouversymphony.ca.
RSVP March 4 & Pre-book Private Consultations with our Industry Experts ph 604-873-8723 or e-mail smoore@bellalliance.ca Visit www.bellalliancetransitions.com/events for presentation schedule Industry Experts: BC Bereavement Helpline, Bell Alliance Lawyers & Notaries Public, Bell Alliance Transitions Bereavement & Life Management Support Inc., Cherie Williams Mediation, Home Care Assistance Inc., Home James Services for Seniors, Kearney Funeral Services, Living Through Loss Counselling Society, Lower Mainland Grief Recovery Society, Personalized Dementia Solutions, RN Hill Chartered Accountant, Seniors Voices International, Pierre Charlebois Agent Sunlife Financial, Tapestry at The O’Keefe – Arbutus Walk Donations will be collected in support of: Living Through Loss Counselling Society of BC, Lower Mainland Grief Recovery Society, Canadian Cancer Foundation & BC Bereavement Helpline.
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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
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3 4 1. Kicking off the Vancouver International Dance Festival (March 1-19), EDAM Dance’s latest Life Sentences showcases new works by Peter Bingham at the Roundhouse March 1-3. For info and tickets, go to vidf.ca or call 604-662-4966. 2. Not to be confused with the Fallcalypse or Summergeddon, which we’ve just made up, Granville Island’s Winterruption Festival features a cavalcade of sights and sounds Feb. 25 to 27. Performers include groove-laden Current Swell and Hayley Sales, sophisticated popsters the Zolas, Hot Jazz with Flaming Instruments, theatre, art and, sigh, fire dancers. More info at granvilleisland.com/winterruption.
3. Giving new meaning to the term arts and science, the Vancouver Cantata Singers perform at the Blusson Spinal Cord Centre, 818 West 10th Ave., for an innovative concert titled Cathedrals of Science. It all goes down Feb. 26, 8 p.m. For tickets, call 604-730-8856 or go to vancouvercantatasingers.com. 4. Described by the New York Times as “the Bob Dylan of Iran,” Mohsen Namjoo is probably easier to understand than the artist formerly known as Robert Zimmerman these days. Hear for yourself when the vocalist, composer and setar (Persian Lute) player performs at UBC’s Chan Centre Feb. 26, 7:30 p.m. Tickets at ticketmaster.ca or by calling 1-855-985-2787. For more info, go to caravanbc.com.
kudos & kvetches Message in a Hummer
It’s not every day that K&K reads a story about a “crime fighting Hummer” without infecting our computer with a nasty virus and coating our body in a thin layer of shame. But a recent story in the Vancouver Sun allowed us to do just that. According to the article, a Hummer seized from a Victoria drug ring has become the latest tool in the anti-gang campaign of the Abbotsford Police Department, which repainted the vehicle with a series of “strong messages” about the perils of gang life. Warnings include “Gang life is a dead end,” “Plan your future, not your funeral,” “This vehicle was seized from a drug trafficker” and, we’re guessing, the lyrics to Coolio’s “Gangsta’s Paradise.” Solicitor-General Rich Coleman is particularly stoked about the Hummer… let us rephrase that. At a news conference Wednesday, where he drove up in the rebranded Hummer, Coleman said the vehicle will show gangsters that police are coming for them and their toys. “Can you imagine the guy that is sitting in the Escalade at the traffic light who happens to be a drug dealer and looks over and sees this Hummer?” Coleman
said. Actually, yes, we can imagine it. And every time, the gangster looks over at the Hummer emblazoned with corny messages and laughs his butt off before peeling away and leaving the Hummer and its poor fuel economy in the dust. On the bright side, we can’t wait for Abbotsford to roll out its next anti-gang campaign involving Rich “Big Dawg” Coleman standing on the corner while wearing gold-chains, a velour tracksuit and an Ed Hardy T-shirt that reads “These clothes used to belong to one of the Bacon brothers, but now he’s sizzling in jail… oh snap.”
Swiss miss
Over the course of our chubby lives, one of K&K’s biggest regrets, and there have been many, is we’ve never eaten at Swiss Chalet. How could this be, we’ve asked ourselves. We’re a cultured and experienced bunch. We’ve eaten at Mr. Mike’s. We’ve dined at the feet of Fogg N’ Suds. We’ve read David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest. But for reasons we’re still trying to figure out, the savoury, tender flesh of Swiss Chalet is as foreign to us as our father’s respect… we’ve been working through some heavy stuff lately.
But then we received an encouraging email. Starting Monday, a television channel on Rogers digital cable will broadcast nothing but a rotisserie chicken rotating on a spit. Representatives for Swiss Chalet wouldn’t say how much they paid for the 24-hour roast chicken porn channel, which will air for at least three months, but similar to K&K favourite Burning Yule Log and The Arm programming at Christmas time, audiences will likely consist of shut-ins, irony fans and stoners. But, as with most rotisserie chickens rotating on a spit, there is a dark side—besides our bodies’ increased resilience to antibiotics. The Swiss Chalet rotisserie chicken channel is only available in Ontario. Sigh. So close, so close.
Slag hags
EW25
arts & entertainment
Picks of the week
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
Quick reminder: K&K is still accepting entries for our Let’s Slag a Vancouver Celebrity band name contest. Just like it sounds, submit your best madeup band names that creatively slag a Vancouver public figure. For example: Gregor Robertson’s Saddle Sore Ointment or Rick Cluff’s Meaty Baritone. Boo-ya! Send your entries to k&k@ vancourier.com. Winners announced March 9.
EW26
THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
the tipper
dining
r e s t a u r a n t
Cafeteria-styled haunt part of sustainable, local food revolution
Tipper’s Mullet...
Business in the front – Live Music Venue in the Back!
B R E A K FA S T, LU N C H & D I N N E R o p e n f ro m 8 A M d a i l y
30 2 FOR 1
the tipper %OFF ENTRÉES
Despite red decor, Commune is green all over The Hired Belly
(to a maximum of $25) when reservations are made for 4 or more guests. Not valid with in-house offers or specials or event nights.Valid until March 30,2011.
with Tim Pawsey
Gratuities based on TOTAL bill before discount.
the ENTRÉE with purchase SPECIAL of a beverage
the tipper
one per dining experience
(second entrée of equal or lesser value) Valid until March 30, 2011. Not valid with other coupons or other in-house offers or event nights. Gratuities based on TOTAL bill before discount.
2066 Kingsway (at Victoria)
phone: 604.873.1010 • www.thebottletipper.com
Walk into Commune Café (1002 Seymour St. at Nelson, 604-681-2151) and you can’t help but be struck by its clean lines, sparse décor and austere personality. But it doesn’t take long to pick up on the buzz at the “quick food” eatery, one of a growing number putting their energies more into what’s actually on the plate—and how it gets there—as opposed to the usual trappings of decor and service. Commune Café is bold beyond its striking grey and white decor, augmented with flashes of red at every turn— right down to the smart, crimson chairs. This popular, all-day, cafeteria-styled haunt is winning converts by the week for a number of reasons from its quick, creative and healthily conceived cuisine and free Wi-Fi to the smart selection of locally made ciders and other sips. Good B.C. wineries are at the fore and—take note wine gougers—fairly priced. You can get a serious glass of Tantalus Riesling for $9 or Herder Meritage for $8. We also like the focus on well made beer such as Central City’s Red Racer IPA. In fact, even the soft drinks are all Canadian. We recently checked out Commune’s busy brunch and were rewarded with perfectly soft poached eggs over a tasty jumble of chorizo, with peas, spinach, tomatoes and patatas bravas. Manager Andrew Stern says the café works hard to be as organic and sustainable as possible, concentrating mainly on free-range meats and organic produce, and only Ocean Wise seafood, as well as using environmentally friendly cleaning supplies and
THE MOST CELEBRATED FILM OF THE YEAR
7BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR BEST DIRECTOR Tom Hooper
BEST SCREENPLAY David Seidler
BEST ACTOR Colin Firth
DRAMA
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Geoffrey Rush
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Helena Bonham Carter
DRAMA
GOLDEN GLOBE® AWARD NOMINATIONS HFPA®
BEST ORIGINAL SCORE Alexandre Desplat
1 1BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR CRITICS’ CHOICE AWARD NOMINATIONS INCLUDING
“THE BEST FILM OF 2010.A MASTERPIECE.”
“A FILM THAT MAKES YOUR SPIRIT SOAR.”
“ONE OF THE BEST MOVIES OF THE YEAR.”
Commune Café is winning converts by the week for its sleek design and photo Tim Pawsey sustainable approach to food. compostable take-out containers. And the attention to detail shows. Local shrimp, tuna, wild salmon and sablefish rule the seafood options, which include an excellent wild smoked salmon sandwich with all the trimmings ($7). A robust, roast pumpkin soup is the perfect winter warmer, while more substantial plates range from Berkshire pork belly with braised red cabbage and apple sauce ($13) to hearty braised beef with red wine jus and creamed mashed potatoes ($15). A prime lure, the central communal table is in constant play, while those seeking a more separate setting can opt for the comfortable window booths. Regional, sustainable, local—more than buzzwords, they’ve ignited a culinary revolution and become a mantra by which to live for several restaurateurs, and more than a few poseurs as almost everyone these days likes to lay claim to the philosophy. However, those who really want to walk the walk, sign up with Green Table. It’s a Vancouver-based organization that works with restaurants
to ensure every step, from ingredients to dishwashing and take-out, is executed in the most sustainable manner possible. Even the decor comes under scrutiny. Witness Commune Café’s smart, natural cork, domed lampshades that cast a warm glow over evening tables. Who else is among the city’s greenest restaurants? It might just surprise you. O’Doul’s rethought its supply systems from top to bottom so much so that in 2009 it won both WHERE Magazine’s Green Table Award and WHERE’s Ocean Wise Sustainable Seafood Award. And Cactus Club employs a top down “Green First” philosophy in all of its outlets. Commune’s philosophy of offering soundly sourced, healthy ingredients at fair prices was once seen as the wave of the future, but for many these days, it’s the only way to eat. Commune Café may be smartly trimmed in proletariat red, but underneath it’s decidedly hipster green. info@hiredbelly.com
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
theatre
Mixed media piece so personal it feels like open heart surgery
Moving solo show shines light on love and death How to Disappear Completely
A Celebratio
Gospel Music
n of
Gail Suderman, Artistic Director
with special guests
Coastal Sound Youth Choir Carrie Tennant, Director
March 5, 2011 | 3:00pm & 7:30pm
Ryerson United Church, 2195 West 45th, Vancouver BC
At Wosk Second Stage JCC until Feb. 27 Tickets: 604.257.5145 ticketstonight.ca
Adults $25, Students/Seniors $18 • Group Rates Available Ticket Information/Reservations: tickets@goodnoisevgc.com or call 778-868-7762
www.goodnoisevgc.com
Reviewed by Jo Ledingham
Mery Erdal is in no imminent danger of disappearing completely. It’s true, she died 10 years ago, but her son Itai Erdal, known as one of the best lighting designers in the country, has immortalized her in this solo show, a mixed media theatre piece that’s so personal, it feels like open heart surgery. We learn as much about Itai Erdal as we do about his mother in How to Disappear Completely. How he went to film school in Vancouver after emigrating from Jerusalem but ended up designing lights for theatre and dance companies. How he’s travelled a lot, has a lot of entertaining stories to tell and is known by his friends as a “good storyteller.” He’s 37, single, wants marriage and children. But his career went on hold when, in September 2000, his mother was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer. Erdal flew back to Jerusalem to be with her and, aspiring documentary filmmaker that he was at the time, to record the process on film. In the first large video image we see of Mery—and we’ve been eager to see her—she’s wearing a bathing suit and sunglasses, and she’s sitting in a lounge chair on a beach. She has a full head of hair. A literature professor, she’s articulate and more than a bit scratchy, balking at the seriousness of Itai’s questions. She suggests that perhaps his sister Ayana, a poet, should do the interviewing. He persists, and when Mery claims that love and death are the two things we all think about, Itai asks, “What about money?”
EW27
PARK THEATRE
FIFTH AVENUE
DIGITAL 3D NOW AT THE PARK THEATRE
Biutiful
3440 Cambie at 18th 604-709-3456
Itai Erdal (right) describes his solo show How to Disappear Completely as celebration of his mother’s life, who died 10 years ago. “Money is just a means to get love or postpone death,” she replies. Her response tells us this is going to be an interesting journey. How to Disappear Completely is the culmination of hours of video footage, hundreds of photos, dramaturgy by Anita Rochon and direction by James Long. Erdal moves into the performance area in mismatched socks, holding a small portable lighting device in his hands. It’s natural that, as a lighting designer, he uses lighting as a way of describing his relationship to various people and experiences. He would, for example, illuminate his sister in Surprise Pink to soften her edges. He explains what the “shin-buster” can do, what side lighting or top lighting is good for. But his favourite is the Parcan, which, as it fades, its colour grows warmer and warmer. Now there’s a metaphor to hold on to. As a performer, Erdal appears completely at ease and totally engaging on stage. He pads around, adjusting and
moving lights, letting us know there are 79 lighting cues and we are, at that point, at number 22, opening and closing curtains behind which are the video clips (with projection design by Jamie Nesbitt). The performance is so candid, so straightforward, that to call it a performance seems silly. It’s Itai Erdal being Itai Erdal. After the 70-minute show, I asked him, “How do you live through, night after night, the death of your mother?” “It’s a celebration of her life,” he replied with a big smile. Produced by Chop Theatre (with development partner Rumble Productions) for the Chutzpah! Festival, this is intimate theatre that’s astonishingly brave and completely entertaining. Mery was right: love and death are the things we all think about. How To Disappear Completely inspires us to live like a Parcan, shining brightly then glowing warmly as we fade to black. joled@telus.net
2110 Burrard St. 604-734-7469
Vancouver’s only independent theatre with 3D
The King’s Speech
1:30, 4:00, 7:00, 9:25
Gluck’s Iphigenie en Tauride Metropolitan Opera: Live in HD
Sat, Feb. 26, 10:00 am 3131 Arbutus 604-604-738-6311
Unknown 4:00, 7:00, 9:20 + Sat & Sun 1:30
(No 7:00 show Mar 3)
OSCAR NOMINATION Best Actor – Javier Bardem & Best Foreign Language Film
1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 10:00 Incendies
GOLDEN GLOBE WINNER Best Dramatic Actor + 12 OSCAR NOMINATION
RIDGE THEATRE
In Spanish with Subtitles
OSCAR NOMINEE Best Foreign Film
In French & Arabic w/Subtitles
1:30, 4:20, 7:10, 9:50 Barney’s Version GOLDEN GLOBE WINNER Best Comedy Actor
1:10, 3:50, 6:50, 9:30 Another Year 1:20, 4:10, 6:45, 9:20 Cedar Rapids
1:40, 3:40, 5:40, 7:40, 9:40 (No 5:40 & 7:40 show Mar 2)
FEBRUARY 25TH - MARCH 3RD
w w w. f e s t i va l c i n e m a s. c a
stay connected
@
vancourier.com
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EW28
THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
quick spins
Hyper Cloud, war-torn Harvey, dramatic Dears Cloud Nothings
P.J. Harvey
The Dears
Carpark Records
Universal
Dangerbird
Dylan Baldi is the nerdy, nasally 19-year-old powerpop savant behind Cleveland, Ohio’s Cloud Nothings, and his scrappy new album is a jittery blast of hooks and teen angst that’s hard to resist. Sounding like he’s washed down a steady diet of Hüsker Dü, The Replacements and Superchunk with a gallon of Jolt cola, the 11 songs on Cloud Nothings’ self-titled sophomore album pogo along a frantic clip. But hyperactivity isn’t the same as being a spazz, and Cloud Nothings’ tightly wound tunes—at times recalling the snottybut-sweet lo-fi goodness of Jay Reatard and Wavves— are as precise as they are catchy. The only problem, and it’s a good one to have, is that Baldi’s rapid-fire power-pop assault leaves hardly any time to catch your breath before it’s all over and you’re reaching for the repeat button. —Michael Kissinger
Similar to 2000’s Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea, P.J. Harvey’s latest finds the singer-songwriter enamored, even consumed, by place. But instead of the hot streets and sexy bustle of New York City, Harvey has refocused her sharp gaze towards her home England. Which might explain why Let England Shake lacks much of the warmth and sensuality that’s marked previous albums. Singing about doomed soldiers, historic battles, war and death also tends to do that. Overall it’s a spooky, weird and thoroughly enchanting album, which at one point has Harvey mimicking what sounds like Middle Eastern vocal exercises while another track has her singing “England you leave a taste, a bitter one.” Sounds like someone could use a vacation. —MK
Led by charismatic frontman Murray Lightburn, Montreal’s The Dears have a habit of releasing sprawling Britpop influenced albums that favour dramatics over concise melodies, followed by concise Brit-pop influenced albums that favour immediacy over grandiosity. Degeneration Street, the band’s fifth record, finds The Dears, for the most part, back in sweeping epic territory. That’s not to say there aren’t plenty of heartpumping moments such as the Cure-like “5 Chords” or rocking moments such as the dark Radiohead riffing of “Blood,” the Pulp-y swagger of “Thrones” or the Motown shuffle “Yesteryear.” But there are also a handful of tunes, steeped in a thick ’70s rock groove, that tend to chew the scenery. And while the scenery can be enjoyable, sometimes you just want to get to where you’re going. The Dears play Venue March 5. —MK
Cloud Nothings
Let England Shake
Degeneration Street
Worship in Vancouver
FEBRUARY 2011
St. Helen's Please note temporary locations during renovations until further notice 11:15 am English Service at St. James 9:30 am Cantonese Service at St. James 9:30 am Mandarin Service at Kitsilano Community Centre St. James Community Square - 3214 West 10th Ave. Kitsilano Community Centre - 2690 Larch Street Church office - #407 - 2150 W. Broadway 604.732.1835 I www.lordsgrace.ca I info@lordsgrace.ca
Anglican Church
4405 W. 8th Avenue (Corner of Trimble) 604-224-0212
KERRISDALE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 2733 West 41st Avenue, Vancouver, BC www.kerrisdalechurch.ca/
Sunday Morning Services
Tel. 604 261-1434 • Email: kpc@telus.net Minister Rev. Steve Filyk
8:00 am Holy Communion 10:00 am Morning Worship & Sunday School & Nursery
Sunday Family Worship: 10:00 am Contemporary Service: 12:30 pm
The Rev. Scott Gould
Vespers 7:00 pm Wednesdays - All Are Welcome! -
“A thinking church with a warm heart!” Equipped Nursery Church School for ages 2+
Second Church of Christ, Scientist
FOURTH CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
WE'D LOVE TO WELCOME YOU! 10:30 am Sunday 7:30 pm Wednesday Service & Sunday School Testimonial Meeting
Sundays 10:30 a.m. Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Wednesdays 7:30 p.m.
2095 W. 43rd Ave., Kerrisdale
1900 West 12th Ave. ~ Tel/Fax 604-733-8040
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SENTINEL RADIO
AM 650 Radio - Sundays at 8:30 AM
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM #103 - 1668 West Broadway • Info 604-733-4310 Mon. - Fri. 10am - 3pm • Sat. 11am - 2pm
Celebrating how the Gospel of Jesus Christ changes our lives and our city 7416 Victoria Dr Vancouver, BC 604.325.8291
Sunday Service: 10:30 am www.harvestcitychurch.com
Childcare provided at all services Tel./Fax: 604-261-7515 Public Reading Room – Same Address Open 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. Tues., Thurs., Sat. Tel: 604-266-2111
Christianity: worth saving? www.knoxunitedvancouver.org
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
EW29
entertainment
Workshops, readings, DJs and the teaches of Peaches on deck
Utopia Festival encourages women to plug into digital culture State of the Arts with Cheryl Rossi
When Irwin Oostindie, the executive director of W2 Community Media Arts, attended parties and producers’ workshops W2 had been hosting, he noticed something. The events predominantly featured and attracted men. So Oostindie set out to change this pervasive phenomenon by help creating the Utopia Festival, Vancouver’s inaugural celebration of women and digital culture, with workshops, dance parties and performances taking place March 5 at W2 Storyeum. Sex-sure electronic music performance artist Peaches, throat singer Tanya Tagaq and more than 30 other international, national and local women artists will rock a pre-party to the 100th anniversary of International Women’s Day. The Utopia Festival welcomes women aged 15 and older to daytime workshops and seminars led by festival headliners, and men and women to a lunchtime mobile dance party and evening readings, spoken word, nighttime DJ and audiovisual performances. Social inclusion is a mandate of W2 so it only makes sense to Oostindie to foster
women’s forays into all levels of the music business. “If women are not having the opportunity to have their cultural lives reflected in the culture that they’re consuming, then that’s a very fundamental problem,” Oostindie said, pointing to the importance of creating amateur and professional support networks, including women-owned record labels, touring companies, booking agencies and venues. Maren Hancock (a.k.a. DJ Betti Forde), DJ Niña Mendoza and DJ and producer Andrea Graham (a.k.a. The Librarian) are co-curating the festival. Hancock, who started DJing in Vancouver in 1999, faced incredulous questions each night she “manned” the decks back then, including punters wondering where the real DJ was. But the aging club kid and academic who moved to Toronto in 2009 said she saw more women DJs hit our local scene starting in 2006. She hopes the workshops at the Utopia Festival will help get more women into producing, not just spinning music, something she hasn’t started yet. “I’m producing a PhD right now,” she said. “I study women and electronic music and I’m studying the ‘herstory’ of DJing in Canada. There’s a really famous book called Last Night a DJ Saved My Life, but it basically says women didn’t DJ in the past, which is not true.”
DJ Betti Forde performs at the Utopia Festival March 5 at W2 Storyeum. Hancock is excited that Tara Rodgers, author of the Pink Noises book and website, which feature interviews with women in electronic music, will open the conference via Skype. Peaches will provide a keynote address along with a question and answer session during the evening showcase, which includes performances by Tagaq and writers such as Hiromi Goto.
Then Peaches, Tagaq, Isis Salam, Forde and others will inspire women who will follow in their tracks until 4 a.m. Oostindie said W2 dubbed the festival Utopia for a reason. “So much of the development of technology is guided by military and patriarchal systems that surround us, that there’s a serious dystopia that we’re walking into.” Creating a world where women produce, use and design technology would improve the infrastructure of our lives, which technology is increasingly playing a role in, he said. Next year’s festival will focus on other forms of digital technology, although Hancock is happy this year’s spotlight is on women creating visuals and sound. “Music makes the world go round. Music conveys so many messages to the world,” she said. “And music is also very empowering and it’s also very sexual. And so to be a producer or a DJ controlling that is women having power. And the world doesn’t want that because then we won’t be able to do 80 per cent of the world’s labour but only own nine per cent of the world’s wealth and be f---ing trafficked and abused and f---ed over every f---ing place in the whole world.” Utopia Festival is providing mentored training on building a festival to interns. For more information about the festival and interning, see utopiafestival.eventbrite.com. crossi@vancourier.com
Presents:
An Elegant Evening of Piano featuring
Avan Yu
S U N DAY, M A R C H 1 3 , 2 0 1 1 - 7 : 3 0 P M Doors open at 6:45 for refreshments
March 4 BEASTLY.CA BEASTLYTHEMOVIE.COM YOUTUBE.COM/ALLIANCEFILMS FACEBOOK.COM/ALLIANCEFILMS
Check our Wednesday, March 2nd issue for details on how to win your FREE DOUBLE PASS to the advanced March 3rd screening of Beastly
Koemer Recital Hall, 1270 Chestnut Street Tickets $40 through www.vtix.com or call 778-279-4214 More info at: www.vwms.ca
THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 MMU
604-630-3300
N Y • 190
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CRIMINAL RECORD? Canadian pardon seals record. American waiver allows legal entry. Why risk employment, business, travel, licensing, deportation? All CANADIAN / AMERICAN Work & Travel Visa’s. 604-282-6668 or 1-800-347-2540
PARTAIK Frank Joseph,
Born April 25, 1927. Passed away peacefully on February 18, 2011 at 83 years old. Survived by Partner Odette Coulombe of 26 years and Wife Lillian Irene 30 years. Children Dan, Robert (predeceased), Lorelee, Ron & Chris, 8 grandchildren and 7 great grandchildren. Service at Guardian Angle Parish, 1161 Broughton St. Van B.C., March 2 at 2 p.m. In Lieu of flowers donationS to Red Cross in Franks name. Your jokes and humor will be greatly missed.
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remembering.ca
1010
DON’T LET YOUR PAST LIMIT YOUR FUTURE. Only PARDON SERVICES CANADA has 20 years experience GUARANTEEING RECORD REMOVAL. Fast, affordable, A+ BBB rating, Financing Available. ($45.50/mo.) Call for your FREE INFORMATION BOOKLET. 1-8-NOW-PARDON (1-866- 972-7366) RemoveYourRecord.com
1080
Introduction Services
M.S. Oriental Dating Service Meet lovely Oriental ladies. Since June 1987. 604-583-8800
1107
Singles Clubs
ENJOY A GREAT SOCIAL LIFE *** TGIF SINGLES *** Things to do, places to go, friends to meet. Dinners, dances, walks, trips, tennis, golf, etc... with fun people. Info. evenings Thursdays Call 604-988-5231 www.tgifcanada.com Singles Social Club • 50+ yrs. www.NorthShoreGroup.ca Info • Evenings • 604-987-2355
Announcements
Truly the experts in Mexico and Latin-America.
We tailor any special package Oaxaca- Maya Land-Machu PichuGalapagos-Wine Tours in Argentina/Chile. Since 1989
We know, we have been there.
PH: 604-685 3375 Fax: 604 685 3321 mexi-can@mexi-canholidays.com www.mexi-canholidays.com
FREE
Welcome Wagon Vancouver Spring 2011 Bridal Showcase
Reserve Your Seat Call Jane at 604-922-0612 or Register Online at www.welcomewagon.ca Sponsor tables still available call Bonnie 604-612-1096
1220
Wonder: The Foundation of Critical Thinking SUNDAYS: March 20th, March 27th, April 3rd and April 10th 1:30-3:30 PM
The Knox community is honoured to welcome as quest speaker and workshop leader, Sandy Gillis, the author of Thinking Woman and co-author of Introducing Critical Thinking. She will present a series of four Workshops with discussions exploring, through faith, the human quest for understanding, influenced by the writings of the Canadian philosopher Bernard Lonergan.
These FREE Workshops are Open to Everyone Knox United Church Fellowship Centre 5600 Balaclava Street (at 41st) Vancouver, BC 604-261-3747 For more info email: psalm119@telus.net
www.knoxunitedvancouver.org
Career Services/ Job Search
CAREER CONFUSION? FIND YOUR PASSION
Join our award-winning CAREER PLANNING PROGRAM Free to the Unemployed
www.transitionsprogram.ca
Programs start monthly
681-2774 Pender & Granville
434-1177 Boundary & Kingsway
Funded in whole or part through the Canada-British Columbia Labour Market Development Agreement
1240
General Employment
LABORATORY ASSISTANT
Acme Analytical Laboratories (Vancouver), a premier BC mining laboratory, is looking to fill various Laboratory Assistant positions in Vancouver. Must be able to handle up to 40 lbs as some heavy manual labor may be required. Experience in a lab environment an asset but training will be provided. Starting wage of approximately $12 (combination of base hourly rate and daily production bonus). Detailed descriptions of the various positions are available on Acme’s website:
www.acmelab.com
Interested parties should submit resume and cover letter by email as instructed on the website.
1240
General Employment
Become a Registered Personal Trainer. Earn up to $70/hr. Government Financial Aid may be available. Hilltop 604-930-8377 See our ad in todays paper under Education. PART-TIME PIER/AIRPORT CUSTOMER SERVICE AGENTS Needed from April 25-Sept 30, 2011. Must be available to work Friday’s and weekends. Computer proficiency and previous Customer Service experience is an asset. Email resume to hr.yvr@tmsgateway.com. Local interviews will be held March 4&5.
FISH PROCESSING LABOURERS
Sung Fish Co. Ltd. at 1795 Pandora St, Vancouver. F/T job. Clean & cut fish, unpack & pack fish on ice. Training incl’d. $10-$15/hr. 2 wks pd vacation. Fax resume: 604-255-4781 Email: sung@sungfish.com
Now Hiring
FLAGPERSONS & LANE CLOSURE TECHS
• Must have reliable vehicle • Must be certified & experienced • Union Wages & Benefits Apply in person 19689 Telegraph Trail, Langley fax resume to 604-513-3661 or email: darlene@valleytraffic.ca
FEATURED EMPLOYMENT EDUCATION 1403
Career Services/ Job Search
INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL Locations in Alberta & BC. Hands on real world training. Full sized equipment. Job placement assistance. Funding Available. 1-866-399-3853 www.iheschool.com
1410
Education
FOODSAFE 1 DAY COURSES – ONLY $62 BEST VALUE GUARANTEED Classes Every Sat, Sun & Monday Taught by Certified Public Health Inspectors ADVANCE Hospitality Education BC’s #1 Foodsafe Choice Since 2003!
604-272-7213
Sandman Inn 180 West Georgia St Date: April 10th Doors Open: 3:30 pm
remembering.ca
Optician Training *6-month course starts April 4th, 2011
BC College Of Optics 604-581-0101
www.bccollegeofoptics.ca FOODSAFE 1 DAY COURSES Guaranteed best value! Six Metro Vancouver Locations: Vancouver • Burnaby • Surrey • Richmond • Coquitlam • Maple Ridge All our Instructors are also working local Health Inspectors! Classes held each week & weekend! Course materials available in 6 languages. Same-day Certification. Visit our website at www.foodsafe-courses.com or call 604-272-7213 ADVANCE Hospitality Education – B.C.’s #1 Choice for Foodsafe & WorldHost Training.
1410
Education
FREE job search and training assistance for men and women
604-930-8377 Enter to win FREE TUITION for March class!!
Become a Registered Personal Trainer
• Earn up to $70/hr. • Government Financial Aid may be available.
Music/Theatre/ Dance
Cheryl Carruthers Piano Studio Lessons, all levels. 21 yrs exp. 604-732-3602 www.ccpianist.ca IN HOME OR STUDIO LESSONS Piano, Theory & other instruments. Allegro Music School 604-327-7765
1420
Unemployed? Working less than 20 hours per week?
Need ideas? We can help.
Hilltop Academy
1415
(604)
251-4473
www.sprottshaw.com
EMPLOYMENT
Coming Events
www.advance-education.com
Door Prizes Gift Bag for Brides Fashion Show Special Displays
Call our East Vancouver Campus
A division of Postmedia Network Inc.
Tutoring Services
HELPFUL MATH TUTOR Phone: 778-866-8877 Web: http://m101m.org
★COMPUTERS★
COMPUTER LESSONS FOR 50+ $30/hr Winter Special $210 /8hrs. Call Sol at 604-266-2414 Website: www.easypc.ca
Looking for a career in
Education?
Log on to working.com to find a job you’ll love.
Keyword: Education
YWCA Employment Resource Centre
5th Floor 5750 Oak Street (at 41st Avenue)
CALL 604.263.5005 ywcajobseeker.org
1240
General Employment
FROZEN INVENTORY Control Person req’d for Fish plant. Some exp. necessary. Apply in person at: Van Sea’s, 3777 Keith Street, Burnaby. 604-437-4070
Some great kids aged 12 to 18 who need a stable, caring home for a few months. Are you looking for the opportunity to do meaningful, fulfilling work? PLEA Community Services is looking for qualified applicants who can provide care for youth in their home on a full-time basis or on weekends for respite. Training, support and remuneration are provided. Funding is available for modifications to better equip your home. A child at risk is waiting for an open door. Make it yours. Call 604-708-2628 www.plea.ca
VANCOUVER’S LARGEST Lawn and Property Maintenance Company pays $120-$360 DAILY for outdoor Spring/Summer work. Hiring honest, competitive, and energetic individuals to fill our various 2011 positions. Apply online @ www.propertystarsjobs.com
1248
Home Support
F/T live-in experienced Caregiver/ Childcare $8.50/hr 40 hrs per/wk Caregiver training certificate req. Jessie or Cathy, 604-877-0738.
1250
Hotel Restaurant
Sapporo Ramen Shogun Jap. Rest. in Downtown is hiring a F/T Cook-Jap position. 3-5 yrs Jap. cooking exp. with knowledge of food req. Salary $17.50/hr (40 hrs/week). Resume - fax 604-988-9257 / shogunramen@hotmail.com
1270
Office Personnel
Funded in whole or part through the CanadaBritish Columbia Labour Market Development Agreement
Receptionist F/T
CUSTOMER SERVICE REP
Apex Aluminum extrusions is looking for a customer service rep who will be responsible for responding to customer inquires, taking and processing orders and ensuring that any problems customers are experiencing are resolved. Qualifications, minimum one year experience in metals industry. Experience using MS Office and specialized software. Excellent written and oral communication skills. Ability to calculate figures and amounts. Ability to solve practical problems in situations where only limited standardization exists. To apply, please email or fax your resume and a cover letter outlining why you believe you are a good Customer Service Representative. By email: bill@apexextrusions.ca • By Fax: 604-882-3517 Attention Bill • Do not phone about this position.
❍ TUNNELING SUPERINTENDENT ❍ Responsible for ground support, deep shaft heavy lifts and concreting of steel pipe in deep shafts. $2200+ weekly and company benefits, depending on experience. Initial North Vancouver project placement Temporary assignment, with possibility of permanent placement. Must have 5 years exp. in TBM tunneling projects including deep shaft work.
❍ ❍
Frontier Kemper Constructors ULC All replies to CAjobs@frontierkemper.com or Fax to 604 988 3633
❍ ❍
F/T Receptionist position available with professional engineering company in Burnaby. Successful candidates will have a strong command of English, excellent grammar and proofreading skills and a strong attention to detail.We are looking for a self-motivated individual who is also a team player with the ability to meet deadlines. We offer a positive environment and competitive pay. To apply and for more information visit:
www.jrsengineering.com We appreciate your interest, however, only those considered for interviews will be contacted.
1295
Student Employment
WANTED: Kids to sell chocolate bars after school & wknds. Earn up to $150/wk. 604-618-7780.
1310
Trades/Technical
LOGGING COMPANY looking for Owner Operator Logging Truck Contractors. Short log for Mackenzie area. Fax 250-714-0525 Phone 250-714-1191 ext 225, ben@bcland.com include references and capabilities.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
2135 2010
Appliances
Old Books Wanted also: Photos Postcards, Letters, Paintings. (no text books/encyclopedia) I pay cash. 604-737-0530
APT. & FULL SIZE
All Like New! Fridge, Stove, Washer, Dryer, Stacker
3025
Children’s Activities
100 & up
$
Delivery/Warranty avail.
604.306.5134 2060
For Sale Miscellaneous
3 KITCHEN displays for sale. Styles: Country, White Traditional, & Modern Fir/Stainless Steel. View them at Lonetree Kitchens, 2990 Arbutus St, Mon-Fri 9-5pm & Sat 10-4pm. FREE CATALOGUE 1-800-353-7864 HALFORD’S butcher equipment and supplies, leather, beads, craft kits, animal control equipment + trapping supplies. Order from our new web store and get free shipping until August 31, 2011. www.halfordsmailorder.com KITCHEN CABINETS, great cond, white, lrg kitchen/pantry, granite counters & island incl $1800 Appls $700. 604-926-6606
PURCHASE WATKINS Products FREE catalogue on request Independent Watkins Distributor Alison Platt, ID #385436 604-312-6679
2075
Furniture
UBC RESEARCH
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
3505
604-630-3300
Dogs
3507
Foster homes urgently req’d for rescued, abandoned & neglected dogs. Many breeds. www. abetterlifedogrescue.com PUREBRED LAB puppies Born Dec 25, 2010, 1st shots, dewormed, vet checked. black golden & blond. $550-$650. phone 604-308-4401 or 604-850-9690
STANDARD POODLE pups, CKC reg. brown, black & cream, Chwk. 604-823-2467 ..302-1761
★CATS & KITTENS★ FOR ADOPTION ! 604-724-7652
Dogs
Cares! The Vancouver Courier has partnered with the BC SPCA to encourage responsible pet guardianship and the humane treatment of animals. Before purchasing a new puppy, ensure the seller has provided excellent care and treatment of the animal and the breeding parents. For a complete guide to finding a reputable breeder and other considerations when acquiring a new pet, visit spca.bc.ca.
EDUCATION
We Believe in You.
Sprott-Shaw Community College has been training students in BC for over 107 years. We want you to be a success story too!
(Formerly Resident Care Attendant Program) Health Care Attendants and Community Health Workers have an important contribution to make to BC’s Health Care system.
Includes: Crisis Prevention Management & Palliative Care
Practical Nursing Program
YORKIE & Havanese X Toy size, 604-590-3727, 604-514-3474 www.puppiesfishcritters.com
3540
Limited Seats Remain for March 14th Ask about Special Incentives to students interested in the Health Care Assistant Program
Morning & Evening Classes Available Career Opportunities: Practical Nursing Free Biology Upgrading.
Sprott Shaw is the Largest Practical Nursing Trainer in BC and is one of the Largest in Canada!
Community Support Worker/ Social Services
Career Opportunities: Child & Youth Care Worker, Women’s Shelter Worker, Family Place Worker, Teen Pregnancy & Parenting Counsellor, Settlement/Newcomer’s Service Worker
5040
Business Opps/ Franchises
Pet Services
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! www.CanadianJobsFromHome.com
Janitorial Company offering CLEANING CONTRACTS CARPET RESTORATION/CLEANING Stain & Pet’s Odor Specialist Guaranteed Winter Special 15% OFF 604-536-7627 www.Emerald.ChemDry.ca
Health Products & Services
SENIORS ADVOCATE & Consultant. Housing & Care Options. For support call: 604-876-3906
4051
BOXER PUPS CKC reg’d, Ready Now, Fawn & White, Exc Pedigree, $900, 604-302-5052
HEALTH CARE ASSISTANT PROGRAM
Dogs
#1 JANITORIAL FRANCHISE Customers, (Office Cleaning), Training and support. Financing. www.coverall.com 604-434-7744 info@coverallbc.com
4020 ALL SMALL breed pups local & non shedding $399+. 604-590-3727, 604-514-3474 www.puppiesfishcritters.com
Cats
3508
3508
FILA/MASTIFF GUARD DOGS owners best friend. Intruders worst nightmare. all shots, $2000 each. ready now! 604-817-5957
Boarding
HORSE STALL IN SQUAMISH If you really want to spend time in nature with your horse by the Cheakamus River or close to Starvation Lake then board your darling at Ce-dar Farm in Paradise Valley. Approx 50 mins from the North Shore. Individual stall avail immed $475 mth, boarding incls feeding & cleaning 3 times daily. Ferrier & Vet visits extra. For details pls call 604-898-9101 or email: bioman@telus.net
5 PCE DINING ROOM SET, excellent condition, Pedi stool base w/ solid round glass top. $900. 778-580-5565 (New West)
To advertise call
3508
Wanted to Buy
Registered Massage Services
SWEDISH BODY MASSAGE & WAXING
$45/hr $109 Head to toe pkg. $78/2hrs Body+Facial or Waxing pkg. Brazilian Waxing from $35
3482 Main St. Van 604-376-1686
in all types of commercial buildings. Janitorial Training available. For info: 604-525-2117 Email: daniel@gogreencollege.ca
5060
Money to Loan
Has everything you need! Sleeps 4, complete kitchen, TV, VCR, DVD. Best swimming pool in Whistler, heated year round, jacuzzi, sauna, underground parking. Weekday Special: Sun - Thurs. $119/nt two night min. Info at 604-785-5672 or www.magellan.directvacations.com
Corporate Tax Returns $225 +up $20 and up for personal tax. Monthly bookkeeping $20 hr +. Specialize: construction; sm bus. accounting. Trevor 604-788-0396 Roger Chung, CGA Tax, bookkeeping, accounting, payroll, acct systems. #221 - 515 West Pender www.rogerchung.com 604 628-1960
Tax returns, bookkeeping, accounting and payroll service TaxOne 604 812 8900
• Fast, Accurate, Friendly • Year-Round Service • Accounting & Bookkeeping • Instant Tax Refund • US Tax & Corporate Tax • Monday-Friday – 9am-7pm Office Locations:
Vancouver: 2530 East Hastings Street, Vancouver V5K 1Z3 604-258-9499 Burnaby: 4331 Hastings Street, Burnaby V4N 1L6 604-293-1335
Call: 1-866-871-1040
604.777.5046
MINIMUM AD SIZE IS 1 COL X 1” — UNTIL MARCH 31, 2011
604-630-3300
CONNECTING COMMUNITIES
ONE CALL DOES IT ALL! From the City to the Valley
AUCTION CALENDAR
2020
Auctions
NEXT AUCTION: March 26, 9am CAN-AM AUCTIONS
Call Today
Industrial, Construction, Forklifts, Farm & Turf Equip., Fleet Trucks & Trailers, Lumber, Boats. See web for more! Cars & Trucks, 9am Start!!!
http://classified.van.net
6780 Glover Rd., Langley, BC • Phone: 604-534-0901
604-630-3300 Travel Destinations WHISTLER Ski in/Ski out 1 bedroom condo
Small Business & Personal Taxes
• Bookkeeping Services • Construction Specialist • Late Filers - GST & Taxes •Expect LARGER Refunds Sparkle Clear 604-433-1548
www.REALCARCASH.com
Metaphysical
4530
Accounting/ Bookkeeping
✔Do you Own a Car? ✔Borrow up to $10000.00 ✔No Credit Checks! ✔Cash same day, local office
Try the Best 604-872-1702
4060
5005
ACCOUNTING & TAXATION for small business, financial statements and personal taxes. SYLVIA SY, CGA 604-732-5511
Need Cash Today?
www. romancebeautyspa.com
*CONNECT WITH YOUR FUTURE* Learn from the past, Master the present! Call A True Psychic NOW! $3.19min 1-877-478-4410 (18+) 1-900-783-3800 Answers to all your questions!
Accounting/ Bookkeeping
5005
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
5070
TAX TIME
EW31
Located in Langley just minutes from Vancouver WE WELCOME INDUSTRIAL SMALLS. www.canamauctions.com
GIANT FOOD • RESTAURANT • BAKERY • DELI PIZZA • CAFÉ & BUTCHER EQUIPMENT AUCTION
PLUS: • Bailiff & Court Bailiff Seizures • (2) Forklifts – Toyota & Hyster • Large Air Compressors & Roof Top Units • Walk-in Coolers / Freezers & Combos
• Sign Making & Laminating Equipment • Pill & Pharmaceutical Equipment • Car / Truck Pad Lift • Large Selection Restaurant Tables & Chairs • Large Selection New & Used Equipment
2 DAY AUCTION
Saturday & Sunday, February 26th & 27th • 10 am
5020
Computer/ Internet
Viewing Times: Friday, February 25, 9:00 am - 4:30 pm Saturday & Sunday, February 26 & 27, 9:00 am ’Til Auction Time
COMPUTER SOLUTIONS 604-721-8434.. 15 yrs experience Cert. Prof. aplusconnectivity.ca
5035
Financial Services
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.
Call 1-866-690-3328
Early Childhood Education
www.4pillars.ca
Career Opportunities: Early Childhood Educator,
Child Care Supervisor, Child Care Centre Director
Get in. Get Out. Get Working. • SMALL CLASS SIZES • MONTHLY INTAKES • FINANCIAL OPTIONS • CAREER FOCUSED PROGRAMS • FREE LIFETIME UPGRADING • JOB PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE
Call our East Vancouver Campus
(604)
251-4473
www.sprottshaw.com
Find it in the Classifieds
FEATURING: New & Used S/S Refrigeration • Reach-In Coolers & Freezers • S/S Tables • Dishwashers • Ovens • Blast Chillers • Ranges • Flat Tops • Vac Packers • Meat Saws • Deck & Pizza Ovens • Huge Assortment Inserts • Small Wares • Glass Ware • Pots & Pans • True S/S Freezers • Cappuccino Machines • Several Pieces New Refrigeration • Coffee Brew Systems • Grinders • Canoppie • Plus Much More…
FOR FULL DETAILS & PICTURES VISIT: www.lovesauctions.com
LOVE’S AUCTIONEERS & APPRAISERS LTD. 2720 No. 5 Road, Richmond, B.C.
604-244-9350
THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
GARAGE SALES
REAL ESTATE 6007
BUSINESSES FOR SALE
6008
KELOWNA - Upscale Adult Resort 4 Jacuzzi Stes., 6 ½ baths. Salt pool, media room & sauna. Lake, mtn & city views. Private 2 bdrm. res. Fabulous semi-retired lifestyle. Turnkey. $1,549,000. 1-877-762-7831 ClassAct@shaw.ca
6008
6008-30
Sun Feb 27, 2-4pm, #207-8717-160th St. 2 BR, 2 yr old condo, 2 full bath. $259,000 Sutton Mala 778-859-4458
Burnaby
BY OWNER, 2 BR, 2 baths, 1044 sqft apt in Gilmore/Hastings area, corner unit, $385,000. Email jims8746@gmail.com
vancourier.com
6002 B
GARAGE SALE EVERYTHING FREE
Sat, Feb 26, 9am 4347 West 9th (enter through lane) HUGE DOWNSIZING SALE RAIN OR SHINE Sat, Feb 26th, 10-3 7165 Maple Street Lots of furniture, incl Vilas maple table & chairs, sofa & chair, teak bookshelves/end tables, large office desk, 30' sony TV, dbl bed. Also stationary bike, garden tools, golf clubs, china, and more home treasures.
K
INDOOR FLEA MARKET AT KILLARNEY COMMUNITY CENTRE Saturday, Feb 26 10am to 3pm This 'Community Garage Sale' is held in our gymnasium with over 65 vendors with a variety of goods. For more info, please visit our website at www.killarneycentre.ca or call (604) 718-8201.
To advertise call
604-630-3300
TAPESTRY THRIFT SHOP
1369 Kingsway (just west of Knight St) NG • Furniture • Houseware HI • Books • Knick Knacks SOMEFTOR NE! O RY • Jewellery • Accessories VE EAT ! E • Clothing for Women, Men GR ICES PR and Children
GARAGE SALE
Empty your Garage Fill Your Wallet
M A K E I T A S U CC E S S ! Call 604-630-3300
RENTALS MOVE-IN BONUS
GEORGIAN TOWERS 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 rentals@capreit.net www.caprent.com
bargains! SUNDAY February 27th, 2011 10:00 am - 3:00pm Admission: $1 1755 Barclay St, entrance off Denman King George Gym Downtown Vancouver
6508
Commission Savings of up to 50%
6020
Houses - Sale
6020-01
Real Estate
uSELLaHOME.com
Sell your home, only $99. 604-574-5243 Burnaby Highgate 2000sf 4br 3 1/2ba 1/2 duplex w/side suite $779K 418-1002 id5313 Delta Price Reduced studio condo, 19+ complex, pool, park, $99,900 597-8361 id4714 Langley Resort Living updated 1400sf 2br, 2ba gated tnhse $459K 882-3760 id5324 Maple Ridge spotless 947sf 1br condo above snrs cent 55+ $219,900 466-1882 id5262 New Westminster Price Reduced, 555sf 1br condo, view, $164,900 525-8577 id5081 Sry Sullivan Mews ground lvl 1200sf 2br 2ba tnhse, 55+complex $220K 834-6935 id5136 Sry Bear Creek Park Reduced 1440sf rancher, gated 45+ $279,900 597-0616 id5234 S Sry Open House Sun 2-4 15168-19th Ave, Spacious 626sf 1br 1ba 2yr old condo, motivated seller $265,900 961-1525 id5298 Sry Clayton 2yr old beauty 3000sf 6br 3.5ba w/2br bsmt suite $610K 612-9594 id5312 Vanc Mt Pleasant renod w/addition, potential for lg family, $1,079,000 732-0568 id5326
★
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
6005
MOVING?
6020
6508
Apt/Condos
990 BROUGHTON OCEAN PARK PLACE
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.
1 & 2 bdrms
COAL HARBOUR , ocean & mtn. view, 2 br+den, 2 balc. 980sf, 15th flr. indoor pool, gym, $2100, avail Mar 1, ns, np, 604-828-2268
Water & heat incl. Trendy area off Robson Street. Minutes to the beach. Move in bonus. Call for details.
OAK & 72nd, 2 br, new carpet, h/w, furnished, near transit & schools, incl heat/hotwater, N/p, n/s, refs, lease, 778-229-5378 $ 980/mth 604-518-0438
RENTALS 604-682 8422
Find your perfect home at
VANCOUVER
starting at $1050
www.caprent.com
househunting.ca
Do You Need Need Do You to Rent Your Property? $
60
Place Your Ad On-line at https://webads.van.net or call 604-630-3300
Houses - Sale
6020-01
* AT WE BUY HOMES *
We Offer Quick Cash For Your House
Damaged Home! Older Home! Difficulty Selling! Call us first! No Fees! No Risks! 604-626-9647 www.webuyhomesbc.com
● DIFFICULTY SELLING?●
No Equity/High Pymts/Expired Listing?
We Will Take Over Your Payment Until We Sell Your Property. No Fees!
(604) 812-3718 / www.GVCPS.ca
❏WE BUY HOMES❏
Any Price, Any Location Any Condition. No Fees! No Risk! Call Kristen today (604) 786-4663
www.HomeBuyingCenter.ca
www.bcforeclosures.com 5 BR home from $19,500 down $1,925/mo. 604-538-8888, Alain @ Sutton WC Realty W. Rock
6020-34
Real Estate Services
6020-38
6020-46 100% Full Service & Commitment to You Over 20 years of Real Estate Experience for You Special Discounted Fee Structure for You (Sellers) Current & Past Client References available to You
Carl Kung 604-726-2906 Direct
Vancouver Residential Specialist, Multiple Realty Ltd. “Successful Results based on Service, Integrity & Knowledge”
6508
Apt/Condos
6510
Co-ops
NS CO-OP 2 Bdrm Vacancy Apr 1. $2500 share purchase $1052 month. Family Oriented. Info: jouleesweet@hotmail.com
6522 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.
6510
Co-ops
NORTH BURNABY:
Pine Ridge Housing Co-op has opened its wait list for 2 BR & 3 BR Townhouses, $913 & $1072 with a $2,800 and $3,300 share purchase. Located in quiet forest setting on Burnaby Mnt. Close to SFU, schools, transit & shopping. Enjoy the feel of country living within minutes of the city. Sorry, no subsidies available. Community involvement expected. Download our appl form @ www.pineridgeco-op.bc.ca or send SASE to: #89, 8763 Ash Grove Cres., Burnaby, BC, V5A 4B8 Attn: Membership Ctee.
Furnished Accommodation
BACH, NR 41st/Cambie, own entry, wd, ns, np. $600 incl utils, net, TV & cable. 604-327-2909 HOMAWAY INNS Specializing in furn accom in the Westend Vancouver at reas rates. call 604-684-7811 or visit www.homawayinns.com
6540
Vancouver East Side
ATTENTION BUILDERS! Large corner lot 33’x147’, $$ south view $888k. Call Jas 604-727-4549 or 604-937-6692
Whether You Sell or Buy with me!
“I look forward to discussing your personal real estate needs & goals with you. Coffee is on me!”
Surrey
#48-15020-66A AVE, SURREY Senior Strata Complex, 55+, 2 BR Cottage, 2 bth, new appls, all reno’d, new roof, storage, $195 maint. per mo. incls elect & heat, $225,000 obo. 604-572-0036
FULL REAL ESTATE SERVICE & ADVICE
* * * *
Real Estate
★ ALERT: WE BUY HOUSES ★ Foreclosure Help! Debt Relief! No Equity! Don’t Delay! Call us First! 604-657-9422
S. Surrey/ White Rock
FOR SALE
Crescent Beach Estate
Call 604-630-3300 to place your ad
5,000 sq ft U shape Rancher on acreage, 5 BR, 5 bath, totally designer renovated, lrg in door pool w/exercise area. $1,575,000. Lve message at
604-535-8779
6030
Apt/Condos
44 Lines Lines 3 Times
Agents
THINKING OF SELLING?
Over 80 tables of fabulous
for more information
Proceeds to the Tapestry Foundation in support of residential & elder care at Mount St. Joseph, Holy Family, St. Vincent’s Langara, Brock Farhni, Youville Residence & Marion Hospice.
Apt/Condos
FLEA MARKET
Call 604-257-8333
OPEN EVERYDAY 10am - 5pm incl. SUNDAY
6508
VANCOUVER West End Community Centre and King George Secondary School are having a
Surrey
SRY, GUILDFORD. 2 BR, 1 bath, 850sf g/l T/H, f/p, patio. $175,900. Near schools, amens. By Owner 604-277-2512 or 604-657-3810
Condos/ Townhouses
6008-04
Condos/ Townhouses
6565
Office/Retail Rent
LADNER CORE Comm 400-4000 sqft. Short/long term. lancemcc@eastlink.ca 604-240-9340
6602
Suites/Partial Houses
2 BDRM ste, near UBC, n/s, n/p, avail March 1 $1150/mo. call 604-612-9031 2 BR bsmnt ste, approx 700 sf, reno’d, newer home, heat, h/w, elect, w/d incld, nr Joyce Skytrain, $1,000, immed. 604-782-0026
Lots & Acreage
ARIZONA BIG beautiful lots $99/mo, $0 down - 0 Interest. Golf Course, Nat’l Parks. 1 hour from Tuscon Int’l Airport. Guaranteed Financing! NO CREDIT CHECK! 1-800-631-8164 code 4040 or www.SunsitesLandRush.com
6050
Out Of Town Property
NORTH of GRAND PRAIRIE, AB 160 acres in the Peace River Region. Great hunters retreat, c/w retirement benefits of $6341.00 annually S.L.R. Approximately 140 acres merchantable timber, remainder open land. Great recreation property. Elk, moose, deer and bear have all been seen on this property. Perfect place for a summer or hunter’s cabin. $168,000. Call 780-567-4801
Houses - Rent
PANORAMIC VIEW 3 BR, 1.5 bath, large kitchen, dining & living room, gas fp, den & deck. 5 appls, $2250 incl utils. N/S, N/P. 1365 E. 36th. Avail March 1 Call 604-321-9578 STOP RENTING-RENT TO OWN No Qualification Required
ABBOTSFORD - 3262 Clearbrook Road, 3 bedrooms with 2 bedroom legal suite. Only $1,598/m. Low Down. Flexible Terms. (604) 626-9647 (604) 657-9422 www.wesellhomesbc.com
STOP RENTING-RENT TO OWN ● No Qualification - Low Down ● NEW WEST- 1722-6th Av 2 bdrm HOUSE w/1 suite 2 f/p, Long term finance, lrg fenced yard...$1,288/M SURREY- 6297 - 134 St. Solid 5 Bdrm HOUSE w/2 bdrm suite on 1/4 acre with mtn views.. $1,688M CHILLIWACK - 9557 Williams, 3 bdrm, 1 bath, cozy HOUSE on 49x171’ lot, excellent investment property in heart of town..... $888/M Call Kristen today (604)786-4663 www.HomeBuyingCenter.ca
HOME
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
5505 5505
Legal/Public Notices
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE is hereby given that Creditors and others having claims against the Estate of Henry Tyszkow otherwise known as Henry Tyskow and Andre Tyszkow, Deceased, who died on March 17, 2010, are hereby required to send them to the undersigned c/o #205 - 2922 Glen Drive, Coquitlam, British Columbia, V3B 2P5, before March 24, 2011, after which date the Executrix will distribute the said Estate among the parties entitled thereto, having regard to the claims of which she has notice. NANCY LOUISE SAMOHEL, Executrix of the Estate of Henry Tyszkow otherwise known as Henry Tyskow and Andre Tyszkow, Deceased NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS RE: ESTATE OF IVA MARIA BRICEL late of St. Vincent’s Hospital Langara, 255 West 62nd Avenue, Vancouver, British Columbia V5X 4V4 (the 'Estate') NOTICE is given that creditors and others having claims against the Estate are required to send them to the Executrix, Sandra Bricel Miller, at P.O. Box 11130, #3000 - 1055 West Georgia Street, Vancouver, BC, V6E 3R3, on or before March 25, 2011, after which date the Estate assets will be distributed having regard only to claims that have been received. EXECUTRIX: SANDRA BRICEL MILLER SOLICITOR: Bull, Housser & Tupper LLP NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS RE: THE ESTATE OF ROXIE JOAN WALLACE, DECEASED NOTICE is hereby given that Creditors and others having claims against the Estate of Roxie Joan Wallace, late of 999 57th Avenue West, Vancouver, British Columbia, who died on March 24, 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 April 2, 2011 after which date the Executor will distribute the said Estate among the parties entitled thereto, having regard to the claims of which he has notice. James Mercer Munsie Executor By: Richards Buell Sutton LLP Attention: Angela M. Spanjers
Introducing the
NEW
Buying or Renting, find a great place to call home.
Legal/Public Notices
NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS Re: The estate of MERION DOREEN SELWOOD, deceased, who died on the 1st day of November 2010, formerly of 3674 West 16th Ave., Vancouver, B.C. V6R 3C4. Creditors and others having claims against the estate of MERION DOREEN SELWOOD (aka 'Deen' Selwood) are hereby notified under section 38 of the Trustee Act that particulars of their claims should be sent to Roger Huyghe, Executor at #1, 3264 West 6th Ave., Vancouver, B.C. V6K 1X8 on or before March 21st, 2011 after which date the Executor will distribute the estate among the parties entitled to it, having regard to the claims of which the Executor then has notice. NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS NOTICE is given that creditors and others having claims against the Estate of Henry Genevieve Vincent Zaruba, deceased who died on March 11, 2004 are hereby required to send them to the undersigned administrator with Will annexed at the Suite 200, 100 Park Royal, West Vancouver, British Columbia before March 28, 2011 after which date the administrator will distribute the said estate among the parties entitled thereto having regard to the claims of which she has notice.
HOME SERVICES 8015
Appliance Repairs
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
8030
Carpentry
CARPENTER AVAIL for general work, clean & fast service. 40 yrs exp. 604-961-5906 or 732-0533.
8055
Cleaning
8060
8080
Concrete
L & L CONCRETE. All types: Stamped, Repairs, Pressure Wash, Seal Larry 778-882-0098
8073
Drainage
Crown Roofing & Drainage Residental Div. Roofing installations & repairs. 604-327-3086 DRAINAGE, SEWER & WATER Underground Video Inspection Call Tobias 604 782-4322
8075
ABSOLUTELY the ultimate full body massage. Female avail 8am - late. in/out. 604-771-4210 FOOT GODDESS DOWNTOWN First try $29/1hr Reg $45/1hr Full package $400/12hrs
The current choice serving the Lower Mainland for more than 15 years. All Kinds of Work and Reasonable Rates.
Specializing in drywall & textured ceiling repairs, drywall finishing, stucco repairs, painting. Fully insured.
Contact us today for a free estimate.
Foot and Body Massage
Licensed & Bonded
CITY LINK DRYWALL LTD WCB, liability insured. 20 yrs exp. Call Indy. Free Est. 604-780-5302
VICTORIA DRYWALL LTD. 25 yrs exp. Reno’s & New Constr. Call Bruno ★ 604-313-2763
1288 Granville St. Vancouver 604-331-0202 or 604-339-4933
MASSAGE FOR THE OLDER GENTLEMAN...
EXP CLEANING ladies avail 7 days/wk. Bonded. Vancouver, Burnaby, Richmond 604-928-0025
778-863-0811
40 plus
LIDIA’S EUROPEAN Cleaning. Res/Com. Specializing in detail cleaning. Bonded. 604-541-9255
RELAXING MASSAGE very clean/private. 9am-11pm, 7days, D/town & Kits. Anie 604-684-8773
QUALITY CLEANING. Exc refs. Res/com. Move in/out. Carpets + pressure wash’g. 778-895-3522
RELAXING SWEET FULL BODY MASSAGE 604-321-8296
**RELIEVE ROAD RAGE**
604-739-3998
SWEDISH MASSAGE Therapy 7 days/wk. Days/Eves, Flexible hours. Call Trent 604-719-4674
7010
Personals
8060
Concrete
CONCRETE SPECIALIST Sidewalk, Driveway, Patio Exposed Aggregate, remove & replacing
Wayne The Drywaller
Concrete Specialist. Garages, sidewalks, exposed aggregate & patios. Santino 604.254.5551
STABLE ELECTRICAL INC. Electrical Contractor Lic # 105893
778-908-2648
No Job too small, electrical and voice/data cabling. Res & Comm. Licensed Bonded – Insured - WCB
# 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
Find the professionals you need to create the perfect renovation.
Contr 97222. 40 years exp. 1 stop! Reas. rates! BBB. 778-988-9493.
ABACUS ELECTRIC.ca Lic Elect
ELECTRIC AVE Installations. Electrian lic# 99207, Res/comm, www.electric-ave.ca 604-215-0562
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.
to advertise call
604-630-3300
one mini, drainage, landscaping, stump / rock / cement / oil tank removal. Water / sewer line, 24 hours Call 341-4446 or 254-6865 BACKHOE, drainage, excavation, concrete driveway, sidewalk, pavers, retaining walls, bob cat, landscape trucking 604-833-2103
8090
Fencing/Gates
S&S LANDSCAPING & FENCING
Factory Direct Cedar Fence Panel for Sale & Installation 8291 No.5 Rd Richmond Call 604-275-3158 KB METAL PRODUCTS LTD. FENCE & GATES : CHAIN LINK & ALUMINUM ORNAMENTAL. ✫Free Estimate: 604-619-8434
8105
Flooring/ Refinishing
Hardwood Floor Refinishing Repairs & Staining Installation Free Estimates
HOME SERVICES
Tim Stephens' Astral Reflections Aries March 21 - April 19: Be ambitious Sunday/ Monday – but don’t seek co-operation before Sunday eve. Happiness, friends, flirtations and entertainment, hopes and wishes (especially about money and partnership) fill Tuesday/Wednesday – or they would, if you weren’t so tired. But the glimmers of all these are true, and they’ll grow as March progresses. Soon, very soon, an “explosion” of gratifying and intriguing events will occur in this area of friends and hopes. Retreat, rest, contemplate, plan and interact with government, institutions and “head office” – all is smooth, successful. A new plan emerges. Taurus April 20-May 20: These weeks hold happiness – especially this Thursday to Saturday. A dream comes true, friends gather ‘round, optimism fills you, and the horizon lifts to exciting new prospects! (Don’t expect huge popularity before June: the friends you gather will tend to be old faithful ones, especially males.) Wisdom, gentle love, legal affairs, far travel, intellectual and cultural involvements draw you Sunday (caution) and Monday (sweet luck). Get ambitious Tuesday/Wednesday: these days offer a good, productive start to a weeks-long phase that can promote you, or bring praise from higher-ups. Gemini May 21-June 20: Be ambitious these weeks, especially Thursday-Saturday. Higher-ups are impatient, critical – yet they might make a wish come true! Until June, you’re blessed with general good fortune, especially with friends, light romance, and in progressing toward a bright future. This is the time to wish and hope, Gemini! (A wish now gets answered in 16-28 months.) Mysteries, finances, sexual longings arise unluckily Sunday, luckily Monday. Intellectual, legal and travel affairs, gentle love, understanding and cultural involvements flow nicely Tuesday/Wednesday – they’ll be lucky all March.
Lic. 22308
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
Reasonable rates. 35 yrs. exp. For free estimates call Mario
253-0049
GENTLEMEN! Attractive discreet, European lady is available for company 604-451-0175
VINCE’S MAGIC Drywalling & textured ceiling repairs. Bonded 604-307-2295 / 778-340-5208 Quality Drywall Finishing. Textured Ceilings & Repair. Renov Specialist. No job too small. 837-1785
Excavating
Max: 604-341-6059
604-916-7729 JEFF
A.S.B.A. ENTERPRISE. Comm/ Res. Free Est. $20/hour includes supplies. Insured. 604-723-0162
Fully Guaranteed, Courteous & Reliable
• 24 HOUR EMERGENCY • REWIRE, HEATING & RENOS • SERVICE PANEL UPGRADES • CUSTOM DESIGN LIGHTING & MORE
macselectric@shaw.ca
Drywall
J.A. CONSTRUCTION
ALLY’S CLEANING SERVICE, serving North Shore & Vancouver for 15 yrs. Res/Comm. 604-725-9005
LIC. #41559 & #3377631
604-512-4178
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
Body Work
8087
# 1 BACKHOE, EXCAVATOR & BOBCAT
STEVE (Vancouver)
*Drywall * Taping * Texture * Stucco*Painting * Steel stud framing Quality Home 604-725-8925
7005
Electrical
A. FOUNDATIONS, Retaining walls, Stairs, Driveways, Sidewalks. Any concrete project. Free ests. Call Basile 604-617-5813
YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 service call. Insured. Lic # 89402. Fast same day service guaranteed. We love small jobs! 604-568-1899
Century Hardwood Floors 604-376-7224 www.centuryhardwood.com
8125
EW33
Gutters
@
YOUR HOME GUTTER SERVICES
Vancouver Division Since 1985
NO HST! til Feb. 28
• Gutter Installation Cleaning & Repairs • Roofing & Roof Repairs • Moss Control, Removal & Prevention 25 year Warranteed Leaf & Needle Guard
WINTER SPECIALS
WCB – Fully Insured 100% Money Back Guarantee
604-340-7189 EDGEMONT GUTTERS
• Sales & Installation of 5’’ Continuous Gutter • Minor Repairs • Cleaning
604-420-4800 Established 1963
Professional Powerwash Gutters cleaned & repaired Since 1984, 604-339-0949 Waters Home Maintenance Gutter Cleaning, repairs, windows Free estimate 604-738-6606
Clean Sweep?
ANYTHING IN WOOD Hardwood flrs, install, refinishing. Non-toxic finishes. 604-782-8275
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
8120
Glass Mirrors
Commercial/Residential 2837 Kingsway, Vancouver
Tel: 604-603-9655
Libra Sept. 23-Oct. 22: The emphasis lies on Cancer June 21-July 22: March – and especially work, health, machinery, “necessity,” and the wellThursday to Saturday this week – emphasizes gentle being of your dependents, all March, but especially love and understanding, legal affairs, far travel, this Thursday to Saturday, when a new project or intellectual,cultural and educational matters.Because duty might begin. A “help-mate” relationship might this is a time of love (and legalities) relationships also start – if you want to settle for this rather than loom significantly Sunday (unsuccessful, say no) and wait for or risk chasing a more romantic, passionate Monday (successful, say yes). Life’s depths, finances, link, OK; just be aware – and honest. Focus on mutually owned resources, intimacy, research, home, security Sunday/Monday. Romance, pleasure, dreams, sexual urges – any or all glide in midweek speculation and a wee winning streak Tuesday/ through March. All’s smooth here, minor progress is Wednesday! easy. You might start a new travel, legal, publishing, or educational project Thursday onward. Scorpio Oct. 23-Nov. 21: Romance, joy, pleasure, charming children, creative surges and risk-taking Leo July 23-Aug. 22: The accent lies, all March, urges, sports and games – these fill the weeks on mysteries, research, detective work, dreams, ahead, especially this Thursday to Saturday, hidden meanings, and the “unseen” connections when a new love (with a co-worker?) creative between people, intimacy, sexual urges, on finances, work or school program could begin. Do errands, investments, settlements, funding, lifestyle changes, communicate, handle paperwork and busy little health factors and diagnosis. A lot to think about, but tasks Sunday (careful, proceed slowly) and Monday let your thinking be intuitive, let your subconscious (all’s well). Retreat from the bustling crowd Tuesday/ take over, especially Thursday to Saturday, when Wednesday – you need a bit of down-home time, these deep things are highlighted. A legal, educational nature, gardening, etc. – this area will be filled with or travel matter might take an unexpected turn. sweetness for a few weeks. A love relationship will Tackle chores Sunday/Monday. Agreements favoured “get domestic” or end. Tuesday/Wednesday – affectionate meetings loom! Sagittarius Nov. 22-Dec. 21: Your home, children, Virgo Aug. 23-Sept. 22: The weeks ahead property, security and business foundations are feature exciting meetings, relationships, relocation emphasized over the three weeks ahead, especially possibilities, agreements and arguments, challenges this Thursday to Saturday, when a semi-important and opportunities – this Thursday to Saturday project could begin in these areas. (Semi-important highlights these, and might trigger a new bond or because it might have an effect on future love/ open a new door. (Yes, step through!) Romance, romance, or aid your “creative space” or – at the beauty, pleasure and exciting risk call Sunday (poor very least, it will soak up the energy that’s making results) and Monday (good results). Take a chance, you a bit temperamental on the home front.) approach someone who attracts you. Tackle chores However, do NOT buy (or move into) a new home and health concerns Tuesday/Wednesday – good now through April 1. (Long-term friction – and luck and grace affect this area now to late March. You obstacles to love – would result.) Money caution might be inexplicably excited by someone Thursday Ads continued Sunday – spend Monday. – or by an investment. on next page
604
630.3300
Store Fronts • Windows & Doors Broken Glass • Foggy Glass Patio Doors • Mirrors • Etc.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Sell it in the Classifieds! Ads
continued on next page
Feb. 27 - Mar. 5 Capricorn Dec. 22-Jan. 19: The weeks ahead are not supremely important, so you can hang up the stress hat for awhile. Keep busy, do errands, paperwork, communicate, but just glide. Sunday presents you with the same combination of career obstacles and determination that will be around for almost two more years. Monday offers ambitious success. Money’s featured Tuesday/Wednesday – your luck rises in this area until late March. You can splurge on a luxury or two. Begin communicating about or (lightly) researching property now – you might act soon (late April best for the new, earlier for the old.) Aquarius Jan. 20-Feb. 18: Chase money, buy/sell, seek new lucrative clients, deal with possessions for the few weeks ahead, especially this Thursday to Saturday, when a new project might begin in these areas. Memory, rote learning and sensual attractions are also favoured. Retreat, rest, contemplate what is permitted and what is not, Sunday/Monday. Applies to the law, ethics, etc. Your energy, charm and effectiveness bounce back late Monday night through Wednesday – start significant projects, seek favours, show yourself off. A subtle grace and attractiveness enters you now to late March. Others will notice! Pisces Feb. 19-March 20: You’re the star of the show this month – especially Thursday to Saturday, when your energy, charisma, effectiveness, leadership qualities and decisiveness make you a winner! Don’t waste this time – use it to start important projects, to impress important people, and to tackle problems you’ve found daunting in the past. Your will power is at a two-year height, especially about money-making and possessions. Your sex appeal soars also, all month! Gee, what could go wrong? Well, investments for one, sexual explorations, research, power-plays, collusion, secret actions – avoid these. timstephens@shaw.ca • Reading: 416-686-5014
EW34
THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
HOME SERVICES 8130
8160
Handyperson
Lawn & Garden
HEDGING GARDENING CLEAN-UPS PRUNING POWER RAKING AERATION
COVE RENOVATIONS ❍ flooring ❍ tile ❍ finishing ❍ painting
General Restoration Services
604-454-7978 www.cove-renos.com
DUNBAR LAWN & GARDENS
HANDY 'D' Home Services
Free Estimates
•General maintenance •Carpentry •Decks •Fences •Renovations
Whatever you need! Call 604-722-5684
604-266-1681
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
WCB • FULLY INSURED
EST. 41 YEARS
HEDGE SHRUB TREE & STUMP REMOVAL
Complete Home Maint./Repairs Certified Trained Pros. For that small job. Rates you can afford.
FREE ESTIMATE INSURED
224-3669
RJR Small Projects Division Part of RJR group
• Lawn Mowing • Aeration • Spring Cleanups • Hedging Visa / MC / Debit Accepted
604-347-7888
RENOS • REPAIRS
WILDWOOD LANDSCAPING Hedge Trimmimg & Tree Pruning & Hedge Removal Spring Up Chaffer Control & Lawn Restoration. Comm/Strata/Res Aerating & Power Raking. Free Estimates. 604-893-5745
BEST PRICE! Bath, kitchen, plumbing, flooring, painting, etc. Call Mic, 604-725-3127 ★ COMPLETE RENOS ★ If you need a helping hand call Frank the Handyman! 604-327-8070 C 604-802-3109
Heating
Lorenzo & Son Plumbing & Heating (604) 312-6311 Local Licensed Plumbers & Gas Fitters
8150
Superior Cove Tops & Cabinets
#3 - 8652 Joffre Ave, Burnaby
8155
GREENSTAR GARDEN Complete Lawn & garden care. Free estimates. 604-736-5791 JAPANESE GARDENER Landscape & maintenance, clean-ups, trimming. Reas, free est, 25 yrs exp 604-986-8126
LADYBUG GARDENING
Kitchens/Baths
Plywood Kitchen Cabinets & Refacing, Counter Tops • In business 50 years 604-879-9191
Landscaping
GREENWAVE LANDSCAPES ★ COMPLETE ★ Garden Maintance & Installation Edible Landscape Solutions
604-317-3037
greenwavelandscapes.ca
EXPERT SERVICE For everything growing on your property. 778 881 9549
Ny Ton Gardening yard & lawn maint. trimming, shrubs, hedging, power raking etc. 604-782-5288 Rakes & Ladders.. Lawns, trees, gardens, shrubs. Certified, Ins. & WCB, 604-737-0170 SPRING PROMO: $65.. Lawn aeration or power rake. Book now & we will fertilize your lawn free. www.luluislandlandscaping maintenance.ca or 778-223-6687 TREES • HEDGES • SHRUBS Pruning.Shaping.Removal. Fruit Topiary. Wolfgang 604-738-4016
YARD CLEAN-UP, lawns cut, hedges pruned, trees trimmed, power raking, aerating, rubbish removal, gutters. 604-773-0075
8175
Masonry
25 yrs exp. Oriental Landscaper
Tim:604-328-9487 778-829-7155 Tim:
Moving & Storage
8185
AFFORDABLE MOVING 1 to 3 Men
1, 3, 5, 7 or 10 Ton $ From
45 We accept Visa, Mastercard & Interac FREE ESTIMATES Seniors Discount
604-537-4140 www.affordablemoversbc.com
ADVANCE MOVING LTD
Oil Tank Removal
FLECK CONTRACTING LTD.
• Oil Tank Removal • Work complies with city bylaws BC Mainland • Always fair & reasonable rates • Excellent references
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
MASONRY and REPAIRS •Stone Walls •Bricks •Chimneys •Slate Patio/Sidewalk •Fireplaces & more. George • 604-365-7672
Get Your Garden Ready To Grow Find Lawn & Garden experts in the Home Services section
8195
Painting/ Wallpaper
8195
Painting/ Wallpaper
ARBUTUS PAINTING
VANCOUVER LTD. • Fully Insured • References • Green Products
Call Today!
604-338-2339 FREE ESTIMATES
arbutuspainting.com
garage, basement, backyard.
(604) 875-9072 873-5292
BEST RATE MOVING Experienced Movers with Affordable Rates! Starting 30/ hour Licensed & Insured $
• Local & Long Distance • Avail. 24/7 incl. holidays • Seniors Discount • Delivery to/from YVR Airport
604-787-8061
MOVERS.CA 604.682.2232
Since 1989
.com
604-732-8453
15% OFF
All Renovations and Restoration Work
604-723-8434
AAA Professional int/ext painter & wall paperer. Guar work. Free est. John 604-318-2059 (Kits) Andrew’s Painting & Wallpaper 25yrs exp. WCB/Ins. Refs Free est off seas. rates 604-785-5651 PainterOne Painting Interior/Exterior, Good Prices 604 812 8900
22 years in business
Hannah - 5 ⁄ yrs. old Jaxon Hannah 11 Jaxon - 3 ⁄ yrs. old14 Years Old Years Old 3
1
4
4
ALMA
Building & Renovation Ltd.
For all your Construction & Renovations
T&H PAINTING Int/Ext res/comm painting, power wash, gutters, Free Est., Guar. 778-316-7709
8200
Decks/Patios/ Railings
DECKS & FENCES, gates, front steps etc. John 778-998-5591 tarasoffconstruction.com West Coast Cedar Installations New or repaired outdoor cedar specialists since 1991 604-270-2358 or 604-788-6458
8220
Tony@Alma-BuildingAndRenovation.com
8220
Plumbing
Lorenzo & Son Plumbing & Heating (604) 312-6311 Local Licensed Plumbers & Gas Fitters
8240
Renovations & Home Improvement
731-8875
Services until Feb 28th 604-377-2503 www.popeyesmovingbc.com AMIGO'S MOVING. Delivery. Storage. No Job too Small or Big. Clean up, Garage, Basement. Call 604-782-9511 TWO BROTHERS MOVING Local & Long Distance 604-720-0931 • bc.moving@gmail.com • TwoGuysWithATruck.ca Moving, Storage, Free EST 604-628-7136. Visa, OK
GARAGE SALE
Empty your Garage Fill Your Wallet
MAKE IT A SUCCESS! Call 604-630-3300
Renovations & Home Improvement
CEDARWORKS
SUNDECKS FENCES • STAIRS
30 years exp.
731-7709
Additions ★ Renovations Concrete Forming ★ Decks Garages ★ Bathrooms Ceramic Tile ★ Drywall Hardwood Flooring
Complete Plumbing & Drain Cleaning Services
ATLAS The Reliable Plumber
8240
FERREIRA HOME IMPROVEMENTS
Plumbing
''Satisfaction Guaranteed''
Renovations
NORM, 604-466-9733 Cell: 604-841-1855
Winner of Gold & Silver Georgie Awards
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
from concept to occupancy
– Renovator Member of the Year
Winner of the National SAM Award
GET OUT YOUR LIST!
– Best Renovated Kitchen in Canada
CONFIDENT PAINTING LTD.
Int. & Ext. Specialist, 20 yrs exp. * Reas. Rates, High Quality * Fast, clean, with ref’s Licensed, Insured & WCB
• • • •
Licensed, Insured & Bonded Lic. Plumbers & Gas Fitters Over 20 years Experience Custom Renovations to Small Repairs
604-312-6311
❏ The kitchen’s too
Jean-Guy Bottin
Cell 604.626.1975
D&M PAINTING
Interior/Exterior Specialist Many Years Experience Fully Insured Top Quality, Quick Work Free Estimate
604-724-3832
When your house is great except…
Certified Plumber & Gas Fitter * Reno’s & Repairs 24 hrs/day * Furnaces * Boilers * Hot Water Heating * Reasonable Rates * Hot Water Tanks
604-731-2443 PLUMBER DRAINMAN Water mains - no digging method Sewer lines - no digging method Drain tiles Emergencies Plugged sinks & toilets Clogged sewer lines
604 - 7154903
small ❏ You need another bedroom ❏ The carport could be a two-car garage ❏ One bathroom just isn’t enough anymore
We Fix The “EXCEPTS…” Since 1978
604-987-5438
www.rjrrenovator.com
YOUR WAY
20% OFF All Moving
❑ Warranty ❑ References ❑ Fully Insured
(604) 228-4272
AJK MOVING LTD.
Moving. Storage. Deliveries Local & Long Distance MOVERS.... Residential. Commercial. Industrial. Truck for Clean-ups
Renovations & Home Improvement
Interior & Exterior Interior Special Free Est. - 15 Years Exp. Insured /WCB
24/7 Days A Week R Seniors Discounts EA TY All Work Guaranteed 8 YRRAN WA Also Furnaces, Gas Very Reasonable Rates
MOVING & DELIVERY EXPERTS!! Licensed, Bonded & Insured Single item to full house moves We Guarantee the Cost of Every Move Flat Rates always available A+ (604) 861-8885 BBB www.advancemovingltd.com Rating
8240
PRIMO PAINTING
604-724-3670
Abe Moving & Delivery & Rubbish Removal. Available 24 hours. Call Abe at: 604-999-6020
TREE SPECIALIST Tree Removal & Pruning Hedge Trimming Landscaping and Garden Maintenance Fully Est. Fullyinsured. insured. Free Free Est.
24 HOURS 1-800-4-MY-HOME • (1-800-469-4663)
Licenced & Insured Local & Long Distance
604-202-6118
8140
604-685-7112 ext 5101
8193
604
cont. from previous page
DJ PAINTING
Int/Ext. Com/Resid. Many Years Experience Top Quality Drywall Free Estimates
604-258-7300 cell: 604-417-5917
3 ROOMS FOR $299
For walls only includes 2 coats of top of the line Cloverdale Paint. No payment until job done. Over 20 years exp. 10% discount for apts. or condos. For free est. contact Larry 604-961-4391 L. Roberts Painting
Marty’s
Plumbing & Renovations Full Kitchen & Bath Reno’s • Plumbing Service - all types • H/W tanks • Plugged drains No job too small!
‘Old Home Specialist’
Steve ✔
604-324-3351
10% Off with this Ad! For all your plumbing, heating & reno needs. Lic Gas Fitter, Aman. 778-895-2005 ★ 3 Licensed Plumbers ★ 66 years of exp. 604-830-6617 www.oceansidemechanical.com BS & SONS gas heating & plumbing. Certified. Renos, h/w tanks, boilers, drains. 24 hrs. 671-6815
Painting & Decorating Ltd. NO JOB TOO SMALL Quality work est. 1973
Colour Consulting Included Free Estimate 604-733-2865
drytech.ca RENOVATIONS
PLUMBERS
604.662.8150
www.jasonsmithbuild.com
WWW.RENORITE.COM
Save Your Dollars!
✓ RenoRite 604-781-7695
Bath *Kitchen* Suites & More
MOZAIK MOZAIK HANDYMAN HANDYMAN SERVICES SERVICES LTD.
• Painting • Electrical • Plumbing • Tiling • Carpentry Carpeting
Tel: 739-8786, Cell: 716-8687 ~ FREE ESTIMATES ~
24/7 Building Maintenance Ltd Res & Comm Reno Specialist. www.reno247.ca 778-881-4357 A1 CONTRACTING. Bsmt, bath, kitchen cabinets, tiling, painting & decks. Dhillon, 604-782-1936 Additions, renos & new const. Concrete forming & framing specialist. Patrick 604-218-3064
❑ A Total Reno Company ❑ Homes ❑ Garages ❑ Sundecks ❑ Window Replacements ❑ Lifetime Sundeck Coatings
BEARING WALLS removed, floors leveled, cathedral ceilings, garage leveled, door and window openings. 604-787-7484
Showroom: 1230 West 75th Ave.
BATH/KITCHEN Renos, decks, fencing, home repairs. Home Improvment Centre. 604-240-9081
604-222-8453
AaronR CONST Repairs & Renos, general contracting. Insured, WCB, Licensed
604-318-4390 aaronrconstruction.com
Water Lines (without digging) Sewer Lines (without digging) Install. Drain tiles. 604-739-2000
Additions. Kitchens Bathrooms. Landscape Const. Design & Build Renovations
★ BATHROOM SPECIALIST★ Tiles, tub, vanity, plumbing, paint framing. From start to finish. Over 20 yrs exp. Peter 604-715-0030
KITCHENS, ADDITIONS, baths, replacement windows, 20 years experience. Steve, 604-218-0423 QUADRO CONSTRUCTION Additions & Reno’s. Over 20 yrs exp. Free Est. • 604-323-6193 www.dpdconstruction.com Renos, repairs, character home specialty. Dean @ 604-908-4813
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
HOME SERVICES 8250
8255
Roofing
RESIDENTIAL DIVISION LTD.
Tried & True Since 1902
• 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 www.crownresidentialroofing.com
@ YOUR HOME
MACROOFING.CA
Residential & Commercial Tar & Gravel to Torch On Conversion Shell Busey’s Referral Network ★ Govt Certified ★ 20 yrs exp Visa & MasterCard
ROOFING SERVICES Vancouver Division Since 1985
NO HST!
til Feb. 28 • Roofing & Roof Repairs • Duroid, Cedar, Torch-on • Moss Control, Removal & Prevention • Gutter Installation, Cleaning & Repairs
778-237-ROOF (7663)
NEW CANADIAN ROOFING LTD. Over 15 yrs experience All types of Roofing Reasonable Rates WCB Insured
WINTER SPECIALS WCB – Fully Insured
604-340-7189
drytech.ca
Rubbish Removal
Showroom: 1230 West 75th Ave.
604-228-7663
Disposal & Recycling
Eddy’s Tree and Hedging Pruning, tall hedge and schrub trimming, 778-838-4488
Trips start at
$49
MAGNOLIA TREE Service & Landscape, fence install, yard reno’s, excavating, irrigation 604-214-0661
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
A.J.K. MOVING Ltd. Special truck for clean-ups. Any size job Lic#32839 604-875-9072 DISPOSAL BINS: Starting at $99 + dump fees. Call 604-306-8599 www.disposalking.com
POINT GREY ROOFING LTD.
604-420-4800
• Cedar Shakes • Flat Roofing • Asphalt Shingles • Roof Maintenance
Stucco/Siding/ Exterior
COMMUNITY • NEWS
GL Roofing cedar shake, asphalt shingle, flat roofs BBB WCB clean gutters $80. 24/7 604-240-5362
Quality Home Improvement ★ Stucco ★ All Kinds. No Job Too Big or Small. 604-725-8925
782-2474
www.pointgreyroofing.com
10% OFF WITH THIS AD www.604rubbish.com
Free Est’s • Large or Small Jobs
604-379-2641 #1 Roofing Company in BC
Kitchen & Bathroom Tile Renovation Specialists Italian Artisans – Quality Work
All types of Roofing Over 35 Years in Business Call now & we pay ½ the HST SALES@ PATTARGROUP.COM
WWW.PATTARGROUP.COM
Tiling
604-RUBBISH * We Remove & Recycle Anything*
604-588-0833
8309
Rubbish Removal
★ NO HST ★
Tonino 778-322-ETNA Est. 1978
Abe Moving & Delivery & Rubbish Removal. Available 24 hours. Call Abe at: 604-999-6020
Established 1963
ALL CLEAR WINDOW & gutter cleaners. No streaks, no drips, right down to the corners. Quality work guaranteed. 604-519-0678
J. PEARCE STUCCO CONTRACTING. Residential / Commercial. 604-761-6079
8255
• Window Cleaning • Gutter Cleaning
WHITE ROSE Window Cleaning. Inside and out. Gutters cleared and cleaned too! 604-274-0285
Advantage Building Maintenance: •Roof •Chimney •Skylight Repairs •FREE Estimate 604-802-1918
(3862)
To advertise call
604-630-3300
AUTOMOTIVE
B.C. Couple guilty of exposing themselves to 2.6 million readers. With a Community Classified Ad, you will reach 2.6 million readers in 115 newspaper in B.C. and Yukon. If you are buying, selling or simply telling ... It pays to spread the word. For Formore more information, information callnewspaper this call this newspaper at: or:
604-630-3300 1-866-669-9222
2 Drive.
www.vancourier.com/autofind
AUTOMOTIVE 9105
Auto Miscellaneous
$0 DOWN & WE MAKE YOUR 1st PAYMENT AT AUTO CREDIT FAST Need a vehicle? Good or Bad Credit? Call Stephanie 1-877-792-0599 www.autocreditfast.ca DLN 30309
Scrap Car Removal
9145
Scrap Car Removal
Sports & Imports
9160
#1 FREE Scrap Vehicle Removal Ask about $500 Credit!!! $$ PAID for Some 604.683.2200
9150
Services & Repairs
WH MARINE & AUTO REPAIRS General Repairs, Brakes, Muffler, tune ups. All makes all models. 604-327-3213
9160
Sports & Imports
2007 NISSAN Sentra 2.0, reg and snow tires, dealer serv, 53000mi $8995 604 616 7256 NEED CHEAP AUTOBODY ? www.cheapautobody.ca 604-341-7738
9173
Vans
1997 GRAND Voyager LE, 7 seats, purple, auto, great cond. 298K, $1500 obo, 604-922-7367.
604 628 9044
2000 BENTLEY Arnage Royal Blue, Magnolia hide piped blue Totally immaculate, full records, dealership service history. My personal car, I bought it from the chairman of the Florida’s Rolls Royce owners club. 47,000 miles. $48,500 604-966-8300 No dealers
JACK−X ★ FREE Scrap Car Removal Top $$ for scrap cars. ★ Flat Rate Towing Service avail. Call ★ 604-720-0067
2002 MAZDA Prote´ge´, 154K, 4dr, auto, A/C, AM/FM/CD. Only $3,900. 604-351-8448
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.
THE SCRAPPER SCRAP CAR & TRUCK REMOVAL
CASH FOR ALL VEHICLES
604-790-3900 OUR SERVIC 2H
COMMUNITY • NEWS
E
2008 GRAND Caravan, red, stow & go, 43K, auto, 7 seats, $15,800, 604-922-7367..778-867-7367
9522
RV’s/Trailers
2011 CHAPPARAL (Lite) 5th wheel (268RLE) $33,800. 30 ft 3', lrg slide, elect awning,dining table + many extras. 604-943-0603
Find your car at 2006 HONDA Civic 2 dr coupe, 5 spd, ac, pw, pl, exc cond 114K, serviced. $8900 604-760-3667
The decal on your license plate is telling you ...
TIME FOR RENEWAL!
Support your
INDEPENDENT
Beautiful British Columbia
304 PLJ MARCH 2011
GNK INSURANCE • Home S E R V I C E S I N C . • Business
Two Easy Steps to Finding a Pre-Owned Vehicle
Contact the dealer, check out your new ride and drive home. Easy, right?
FRANCHISE TERRITORIES ALSO AVAILABLE
NO WHEELS, NO PROBLEM
Remember to have your AirCare inspection done on all 2001 or older models before you insure your car.
1 Click.
604-874-5296
Web: www.HireTheGardener.com Email: vancouver@hirethegardener.com
9145
INSURANCE AGENT.
1. Go to vancourier.com/autofind 2. Search by STOCK# 3. Get details & photos of cars you choose
Weekly Lawn Cutting Organic Lawncare Chafer Beetle Solutions Spring Yard Clean-Up
To place your ad in “Call the Experts" call 604-630-3300
Reasonable rates - Free Est. Pat 604-224-2112, anytime
8300
LAWN & GARDEN
Window Cleaning
JACK’S RUBBISH Removal Friendly, Fast & Cheap 604-266-4444
A Eastwest Roofing & Siding Re-roofing, Gutter, Free Est, BBB Member, 10% disc, Seniors Disc, 604-812-9721, 604-783-6437
Established 1946
8335
Edgemont Building Maintenance • Power Washing
RUBBISH REMOVAL
Call ThE Experts
Wildwood Tree Services, Exp Hedge Trimming and Removal & Tree Pruning. Free Est. 604-893-5745
ihauljunk.ca 604-782-4713 ★★ Best prices in town ★★
604-716-8528
MASTERCRAFT ROOFING Ltd. Right the 1st time! Repairs, reroofing, garage, decks. Hart 322-5517
Tree Services
Student Works
ROOFING
❑ Sloped: Lifetime Shingles ❑ Flat: Instacoat Rubber ❑ Sundecks: Lifetime Coatings ❑ Repairs: Leaks & Chimneys
8315
EW35
3295 West Broadway Vancouver, B.C. V6K 2H5
604-731-4684 www.
• Autoplan
www.gnkinsurance.com
To advertise your services in this Insurance Feature call Brenda Folk
604-998-1209 bfolk@canwest.com
604-734-2124 Underwriters
INSURANCE BROKERS
3159 Arbutus Street, Vancouver Monday - Friday 8:30 am - 5:00 pm Saturday 9:30 am - 3:30 pm
604-734-2124
www.underwriters.bc.ca
KITSILANO INSURANCE .com
Ask us about free delivery • Home • Travel • Boat • Business • Auto 2078 West 4th @ Arbutus (rear parking)
604-731-6331
EW36
THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
dashboard
Passenger van a well-kept secret waiting to be rediscovered
Mazda5 jumps to the future with 2012 edition davidchao
The Mazda5 looks and acts like a small minivan, but is actually classified as a compact car/wagon that’s based on the Mazda3 platform. transmission is optional ($1,200). The 2012 Mazda5 is offered in two trim levels, GS and GT. The base retail price is $21,795 and for that you get a well equipped van with climate control air conditioning, power windows, locks and mirrors and a tilt and telescopic steering wheel with audio controls. There’s an optional Convenience Package that includes Bluetooth hands-free connectivity, cruise control, trip computer, leather wrapped steering wheel and antitheft alarm system for $845. The top-line Mazda5 GT adds 17-inch alloy wheels, a body package with
day o t o d gs to n i h T m m Mo - Gy h t i i w nda nch u u y L nH atio n i t s - De eries ai oc und r y G H ion inat t s e -D
side sill extensions, fog lights, heated front seats with lumbar support on the driver side, heated side mirrors, an audio upgrade and Xenon headlights for $24,395. A Luxury Package upgrade for the GT includes power moonroof, leather seats and a fold-out second-row table for another $1,790. Mazda5 is a smart and affordable transportation idea with appeal beyond young family minivan buyers, as it’s also popular with mature buyers. And there’s a growing pool of these empty nesters and early retirees. Design—The feedback that
Mazda received from current Mazda5 owners (going into the 2012 redesign) was very clear— don’t change the basic concept, don’t make it bigger and keep the rear sliding doors. While its basic shape and dimensions are unchanged, the new styling theme was inspired by its nagare design culture, which means “flow” in Japanese. It’s most evident along the side panels, where swirling body creases have a sculpted-by-the-wind appearance that adds to an overall sense of motion. The dual sliding side doors are
designed to provide an ultra-light user feel with a very easy (single finger) movement. Up front, it now sports the happy-face first seen on the new Mazda3. At the back, it has a more-sculpted fascia with revised tail lights that wrap into the side panel and partially hide the hinge slot for the sliding door. The styling changes apparently do improve the overall aerodynamic efficiency (drag coefficient of 0.30) of Mazda5, which also translates into less drag and optimal lift characteristics at highway speeds.
Vancouver’s Only Full Service CANADA’S BEST SELLERS. Hyundai Dealership DRIVE ONE AND SEE WHY. #1 Ranked For Sales Satisfaction In The Lower Mainland 2011 SONATA GL
OWN IT FOR ONLY
$
165 1.9 with
BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT
STARTING FROM
24,214
% $
APR/72 MOS DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED
Stk# S011050 Do w nt ow
n
NOW OPEN
E 12th Ave
ay
sw
ng
Ki
* Price for 2011 Sonata GL is from $24,214. Sonata GL 6-speed with an annual finance rate of 1.9% for 72 months, B-weekly payment is $165. No down payment is required. Registration, insurance, PPSA, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and Destination charge of $1,565 includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. Offer available for a limited time and may change without notice.
445 Kingsway near 12th Ave in Vancouver
CALL 604-292-8188 www.DestinationHyundai.com
D#31042
The New Year that Mazda5 buyers are already celebrating is 2012. Yes, Mazda has skipped the 2011 model year entirely and early buyers of the new 2012 edition of its Mazda5 get what amounts to a bonus year as a current-year vehicle. Mazda has had the smaller six-seat passenger van market to itself in recent years, which is a little surprising as they are very popular in Europe. Any direct competition, remember the Nissan Access, has disappeared as cross-utility vehicles in various forms have been the centre of attention for its auto maker rivals. That said, while it looks and acts like a small minivan, Mazda5 is actually classified as a compact car/wagon, and it’s based on the Mazda3 platform. This also means that it conforms to the higher regulatory safety requirements of a car—it’s a subtle yet important difference. In addition to its obvious advantages of having a smaller vehicle when it comes to parking and general use in a busy urban setting, the Mazda5 offers excellent fuel economy. It’s powered by a new 2.5-litre, four-cylinder engine that produces 157 horsepower (replacing a 153hp, 2.3-litre). A new 6-speed manual transmission is standard and a 5-speed electronically controlled automatic
EW37
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
dashboard
Styling changes improve already impressive fuel-efficiency
Interior—Inside it remains as spacious as before and comes with three rows of flexible seating for six. The seating is tiered (theatre style) to give all occupants better forward vision. The third row is designed as an occasional use seating position that flows flat when not in use. The seats configured for two, three, four, five or six passengers, or up to 857-litres of cargo space. A low-profile fuel tank and a compact multi-link rear suspension allow good legroom for those sitting in the second and third rows. Safety—In addition to a standard electronic stability control system the Mazda5 comes with dual front and side airbags for first row passengers and side air curtains that protect occupants in all three rows of seats. The 2012 Mazda5 also comes with Brake Override a system that prioritizes the brake application over the gas pedal. If both pedals are accidentally pressed at the same time, the brakes will stop the vehicle. Performance—You really have to drive the Mazda5 to get a full appreciation of the finer points of this great little vehicle. It certainly provides a more entertaining and enjoyable driving experience when compared to a conventional
than the previous 2.3-litre engine. The low- to mid-range torque provided is excellent and it peeks at 163 ft-lb. and 4,000 rpm. It gives the new Mazda5 a linear, competent feel on acceleration and a more relaxed driving experience. My test Mazda5 came with the five-speed electronically controlled automatic, which also provides manual shift control. This transmission features Mazda’s Active lb. adaptive Shift protocol first used on the RX-8 sports car. Part-throttle downshifts can be made with a quick nudge of the gas pedal and when the car is braked aggressively the transmission also downshifts to also provide engine braking and a quicker exit from a bend. While the new Mazda5 uses the same suspension system as the previous generation with minor teaks, the spring rates have been increased to improve straight-line stability at highway speeds. Despite its long wheelbase, Mazda5 also has an impressively tight turn circle of just 11.2 metres. The score—The 2012 Mazda5 is a great little passenger van that’s fun to drive and a best kept (vehicle) secret whose time may have arrived, and is waiting to be re-discovered. With files from Bob McHugh. david.chao@leansensei.com
Inside, the Mazda5 remains as spacious as before and comes with three rows of flexible seating for six. Driver sight lines are generally very good with special thanks to a large back window and big side mirrors, although a backup camera would still be helpful. The front seats are bucket style with manual adjustments and excellent side
minivan. It starts with a great driving position that’s more car-like and an instrument panel directly in front, yet you’re seated higher. Tallerthan-average drivers may have an issue with legroom.
HUGE CLEAROUT ON NOW!!!
WHEN THEY’RE GONE, THEY’RE GONE. 2010 MAZDA 5
% 0 PURCHASE FINANCING
support to hold you firmly in place if you test the surprisingly capable handling limits of the Mazda5. A highlight of the new Mazda5 is undoubtedly the new MRZ 2.5litre engine that offers higher performance yet better fuel efficiency
FOR
NO
PAYMENTS FOR
$
90 DAYS
CASH
or
72 MONTHS
DISCOUNT OF $
4,000
Brand New
2011’S ARRIVING & ARE $5,000 MORE!
SAVE OVER $10,000 FROM MSRP
2006 COMMANDER LIMITED
2004 LIBERTY
DVD, leather, sunroof loaded!
$
500 OWNER
LOYALTY CASH ALSO AVAILABLE
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21,988
$
97/WEEK $0 DOWN
$
$
MARINECHRYSLER.COM FOR MORE GREAT DEALS
0
%
PURCHASE FINANCING FOR
72 MONTHS NO
PAYMENTS FOR
90 DAYS
or
CASH
DISCOUNT OF
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0% PURCHASE FINANCING
or
CASH
DISCOUNT OF
LOYALTY CASH
FOR
60
ALSO AVAILABLE
*see dealer for details.
MONTHS
2,500
$
$
250 OWNER
$
27,988
$
LOYALTY CASH ALSO AVAILABLE
PAYMENTS FOR
Ask about our all-new lower prices on the 2011 CX-7 and CX-9 Crossovers. With the first two payments on us (up to $800 on selected CX models) and owner’s loyalty discounts of $1000, they’re going like 2010’s*.
19,988
88/WEEK $0 DOWN
$
2009
604.433.7779
www.metrotownmazda.com
2009 2010
D 9493
19,988
76/WEEK $0 DOWN
$
Brand New
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Overlands, Limiteds & Laredos all in stock Starting from
37,980
$
12
to choose from
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$
All pymts plus all fees and taxes and are at 5.74apr ammort: ’07 – 60mo; ‘08-’09 – 72mo; ’10-’11 – 84mo.
450 SE Marine Dr. Vancouver
5775 KINGSWAY & IMPERIAL, BURNABY 5 min East of Metrotown
Only 35,400kms, loaded, rare!
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16,488
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$
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62/WEEK $0 DOWN
$
2010 300C
2010 MAZDA 3 GT
11,988
2007 GRAND CARAVAN SXT
VISIT
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CHRYSLER • DODGE • JEEP
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m a r i n e c h r y s l e r. c o m
D#9121
EW38
THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Be Part of what Millions Know!
1500
$
UP TO
OR
CASH BACK
Cash Purchase Only
CE
500 17,465 199* 0%
$ UP TO
2011 COROLLA
††
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purchase from:
$
* $
after cash rebate
Lease Finance included
visit
lease from:
finance from:
OR
/36 months
per mo./60 months at 4.9% APR
1290 Burrard Street 1-888-379-7046
toyotabc.ca
www.jpautogroup.com
modelBU42EP(A)
PLEASE READ THE FINE PRINT: *2011 Corolla Sedan CE BU42EP(A) MSRP is $17,965 and includes $1515 freight and pre-delivery inspection, tire levy, battery levy and air conditioning federal excise tax. Lease example:4.9% Lease APR for 60 months. Monthly payment is $199 with $1,958 down payment. Total lease obligation is $17,965. Lease 60 mos based on 120,000 km, excess km charge is $.07. Lease offer - Down payment, first monthly payment and security deposit plus applicable taxes are due at lease inception. A security deposit is not required, on approval of credit. † Cash Back Offer (Up to $1500 on Corolla) valid on retail delivery of select new unregistered Toyota vehicles, when purchased from a Toyota BC dealership. Non-stackable cash back offers may not be combined with Toyota Financial Services sub-vented lease or finance rates. Vehicle must be purchased, registered and delivered by February 28, 2011. See toyota.ca for complete details on all cash back offers. ††Cash back offer (2011 Corolla CE $500) valid on retail delivery of select new unregistered Toyota vehicles, when purchased, leased or financed from a Toyota BC dealership. Vehicle must be leased, registered and delivered by February 28, 2011. License, insurance, registration and taxes are extra for all offers. Offers valid until February 28, 2011. Pricing does not include HST. Lease offer - Down payment, first monthly payment and security deposit plus applicable taxes are due at lease inception. A security deposit is not required, on approval of credit. Visit your Toyota BC Dealer or www.toyotabc.ca for more details. Some conditions apply; offers are time limited and may change without notice. Dealer may lease/sell for less. In the event of any discrepancy or inconsistency between Toyota prices, rates and/or other information contained in this advertisement (or on toyotabc.ca) and that contained on toyota.ca, the latter shall prevail. Errors and omissions excepted.
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7 FORD FOCUS SEDAN
PFO4672
56,888 KMS,ECONOMICAL 5 SPEED
$7,995
06 FORD FUSION SE
PFO4506
52,413 KMS, 2.3 LTR, AUTO, 16 " WHEELS
$8,995
08 FORD FUSION SE
66 FORD MUSTANG COUPE
$15,995
65 FORD MUSTANG COUPE
$16,995
1FN7039A
‡
312 PER MO/ 48 MONTHS OR
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267 PER MO/ 48 MONTHS
07 FORD F150 SUPERCAB 4X4, XTR
54,549 KMS, 4.6 V8
‡
08 FORD F150 SUPERCAB 4X4
$19,995
04 FORD F250 SUPERCAB 4X4
$20,980
10 FORD RANGER SUPERCAB 4X4
$20,999
10 FORD ESCAPE XLT 4X4
$23,995
08 FORD F150 SUPERCAB 4X4
$23,995
PFO7047
33,535 KMS
25,026 KMS, SPORT TRIM, 4.0 LTR , AUTO
MF17416A
66 FORD MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE
139,256 MILES, RED, AUTO
†
08 FORD F150 CREW CAB FOOSE
$28,995
10 FORD SPORT TRAC 4X4
$28,995
10 FORD FLEX LIMITED
$35,995
08 FORD F250 SUPERCAB 4X4
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10 LINCOLN MKX
$39,995
11,869 KMS, POWER ROOF, ALL WHEEL DRIVE
4,891 KMS, POWER STROKE DIESEL, XLT TRIM
PF14695
07 FORD F150 LARIAT SUPERCAB
$24,995
10 FORD FUSION SEL AWD
$25,980
MSRP
10 FORD FUSION SPORT AWD
$25,995
S AL ALE PRICE PRIC CE SALE
59,065 KMS, LEATHER, PANORAMIC ROOF
08 FORD EDGE LTD AWD
$28,980
10 FORD ESCAPE LTD 4WD V6
$28,995
10 FORD ESCAPE LTD AWD
$29,998
10 FORD FLEX LTD AWD
$30,995
10 FORD EXPLORER SPORT TRAC XLT 4WD
$30,995
10 FORD FLEX LTD AWD
$34,980
10 FORD EXPLORER LTD AWD
$37,980
10 LINCOLN MKX LTD AWD
$39,980
60,114 60 KMS, NAV, DVD, LEATHER, MOONROOF
11,689 KMS, POWER ROOF, HTD SEATS, SYNC,
$
PF14695
BTA6705
21,449
PFO0817
BFN4803
9,868 KMS, 3.5L V6 POWER, LEATHER, ALLOYS, SYNC PFN9956
14 9 80 14,980
18,455 KMS, POWER ROOF, SYNC, 17"CHROME
YOU SAVE
6 469 6,469
$
PFO4581
BES6266
14,648 KMS, HTD SEATS, MOONROOF, 17" CHROME BES6238 21,910 KMS, PANORAMIC ROOF, SYNC, LEATHER
16,820 KMS, POWER MOONROOF, V8
1RA0236
BFL2206
7,218 KMS, PANORAMIC ROOF, LEATHER
BFL6094
BEX1594
BFL2212
27,471 KMS, 20" ALLOYS, DVD, POWER ROOF, 7-PASS BEX1575
PF21037
4.0L V6 ENGINE • 4 WHEEL ABS • ALL -TERRAIN TIRES • FOG LAMPS • ALLOY WHEELS • INTERMITTENT WIPERS • 5 YEAR WARRANTY • DUAL AIRBAGS • CD STEREO W/ MP 3 INPUT • TRAILER WIRING • GAUGE PACKAGE • 7200LB GVWR
Burnaby
877-850-9071 Dealer #8575
MON - THUR 8:30 AM - 9:00 PM | FRI - SAT 8:30 AM - 6:30 PM SUN 11:00 AM - 5:00 PM
www.coastalfordbby.com
$20,995
BES6238
$22,995
$
5750 Lougheed Hwy. at Holdom. Dealer #8573 TOLL FREE:
09 FORD E250 CARGO
40,7 40,716 KMS, 5.4L TRITON V8 POWER
PFO9079
BLI2145
$19,998
08 FORD TAURUS X LTD AWD
VEHICLE MAY NOT BE EXACTLY AS SHOWN.
PFO1630
13,595 KMS,V6, 4.0 LTR, POWER ROOF
08 FORD ESCAPE XLT AWD
PFO8343
$22,980
2011 FORD RANGER SUPERCAB SPORT
PFO3452
53,067 KMS, LEATHER PACKAGE
$19,995
PFC5033
29,545 KMS, MOONROOF,20" ALLOYS, LEATHER
1MU1973A
$28,990
09 FORD ESCAPE XLT 4WD
BFC5076
07 FORD F150 XLT CREW CAB 4WD
1.6 LTR • 6 SPEED AUTOMATIC • BLIND SPOT POWER MIRRORS • SYNC WITH 6 SPEAKERS • 2 WOOFERS AND 2 TWEETERS • CRUISE/SPEED CONTROL • 15" DROP ALUMINUM WHEELS • FRONT LED MARKERS • FRONT • KNEE,SIDE AND AIR BAG CURTAINS • TIRE PRESSURE •WARNING SYSTEM • TILT WHEEL WITH TELESCOPING STEERING WHEEL
$25,995
09 FORD F150 SUPERCREW 4X4
42,803 KMS, 5.4 LTR V8,
$17,995
07 FORD F150 XLT SUPER CREW 4WD $21,995
PFO8453
36,963 KMS, 5.4 LTR V8
10 FFORD FOCUS 4DR SES
40,3 KMS, 6.5" BOX, POWER PACKAGE 40,385
1FI1175
BES7119
31,582 KMS, POWER ROOF, LEATHER
$16,995
16,642 MI, POWER PKG, BULK HEAD, RUNNING BOARDS PFO1809 16,6
MF21072A
85,009 KMS, 5.4 LTR, XLT TRIM GROUP
10 FORD FOCUS 4DR SES
18,057 KMS, KMS AUTO, PONY PKG, POWER GROUP, ALLOYS 1MU3667A
47,8 47,854 KMS, V6 POWER, HTD SEATS, MOONROOF
222 PER MO/ 48 MONTHS
$19,995
PF18174
NOW $16,995
48,192 48,1 KMS, WELL EQUIPPED
4,00 000 00 0 DOWN DOWN OR TRADE TRADE 4,000
$
08 FORD MUSTANG COUPE
15,0 15,063 KMS, LEATHER, MOONROOF AND SYNC
‡
OR
$
VANCOUVER VANC COUVER P PRE-OWNED
10,246 KMS, LEATHER, MOONROOF, AUTO
1MU1973B
159,267 MILES, A CODE 289 V8, AUTO
19,892 KMS, ALL WHEEL DRIVE
$
$
10 FORD RANGER SUPERCAB 8,698 KMS, AIR AUTO
0 DOWN
1RA7127A
PFO7326
78,566 KMS, ONE OWNER
$
$13,980 $14,995
07 FORD ESCAPE XLT
2011 FORD FIESTA SE HATCHBACK SPORT†
$
69,538 MILES, 2 BRL, 289 V8, POWER STEERING
1,000 ON SELECTED VEHICLES
PFO0108
56,448 KMS, 2.3 LTR, 5 SPEED, POWER GROUP
$
WORTH OF NO EXTRA CHARGE FORD CUSTOM ACCESSORIES
WITH THE PURCHASE OR LEASE OF MOST NEW 2011 FORD TRUCKS
23,510 KMS, PANORAMIC ROOF, 20" ALLOYS, HTD SEATS BLI2151
Vancouver
530 Evans Ave. (off Terminal) Dealer #8575 TOLL FREE:
877-653-5020
MON - THUR 8:30 AM - 9:00 PM | FRI - SAT 8:30 AM - 6:30 PM
SUN 11:00 AM - 5:00 PM
www.coastalfordvcr.com
WISE BUYERS READ THE LEGAL COPY: *Cash purchase or lease a new 2011 FORD FIESTA SE HATCHBACK SPORT for $19,980. ‡$7,789 Option to Purchase 80,000 Kms Lease. *Cash purchase or lease a new 2011 FORD RANGER SUPERCAB SPORT a MSRP of $21,449 sale price $14,980 Offer ends February 28th 2011. Offers include freight and Air Tax but exclude license, fuel fill charge, insurance, PDI, PPSA, administration fees, any environmental charges or fees, and all applicable taxes. The new vehicle must be delivered or factory ordered from your participating Ford Dealer during the Program Period. This offer can be used in conjunction with most retail consumer offers made available by Ford of Canada at either the time of factory order or delivery, but not both. This offer is only valid at participating Canadian dealers. Only Ford lets you recycle your 2003 or older vehicle and get $ 2,300 towards a new Ford. This offer is in addition to incentives currently offered when combined with the $300 available from the Retire Your Ride program, funded by the Government of Canada on qualifying vehicles of model year 1995 or older. Visit ford.ca for details. This offer may be cancelled at any time without notice. See your Ford Dealer for complete details or call the Ford Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-565-3673. Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. – P.O. Box 2000, Oakville, Ontario L6J 5E4 Ad #56_11-02-25.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011 THE VANCOUVER COURIER
EW39
ONLY KIA South Vancouver offers:
1 YEAR FREE VEHICLE ADJUSTMENTS | LIFETIME FREE OIL & FILTER CHANGES | LIFETIME FREE CAR WASHES
NEW YEAR'S
THE
0
4
HURRY IN!
OFFER ENDS FEBRUARY 28
%
START THE YEAR
FINANCING FOR UP TO
84
MOS.**
ON SELECT MODELS
$$$
WITH SAVINGS!
ALL VEHICLES INCLUDE:
PAY
MP3/USB INPUT BLUETOOTH CONNECTIVITY°
UNTIL SPRING!
^
^ 2011 INTERNATIONAL TRUCK OF THE YEAR<
^
DOOR SEDAN
Rio EX shown
Forte Sedan SX shown
201 1
201 1
KIA FORTE
KIA RIO WAS
$
13,695
NOW GET UP TO
3,700
$
IN CASH SAVINGS
CASH PURCHASE PRICE FROM
9,995
$
‡
HWY: 5.8L/100KM (49 MPG) CITY: 7.1L/100KM (40 MPG)
The All NEW
Soul 4u shown
WAS
$
15,995
NOW GET UP TO
KIA SOUL
0
%
FINANCING APR
FOR UP TO
IN CASH SAVINGS
201 1
KIA SPORTAGE NOW GET UP TO
60
1,250
$
2,000
$
MONTHS*
IN CASH SAVINGS
PLUS
CASH PURCHASE PRICE FROM
14,745
$
201 1
Sportage EX Luxury shown
‡
HWY: 5.7L/100KM (50 MPG) CITY: 8.1L/100KM (35 MPG)
NOW GET UP TO
500
$
IN LOAN SAVINGS !
HWY: 6.3L/100KM (45 MPG) CITY: 7.7L/100KM (37 MPG)
HWY: 6.9L/100KM (41 MPG) CITY: 10.0L/100KM (28 MPG)
VANCOUVER’S ONLY KIA DEALERSHIP
KIA SOUTH VANCOUVER KIAVANCOUVER.COM
604-326-6868
396 S.W. MARINE DRIVE, VANCOUVER
• 10 minutes from Delta • 15 minutes from Surrey • 5 minutes from Richmond • 5 minutes from Burnaby • minutes from Downtown
**0% purchase financing available on select 2011 Kia models for up to 84 months on approved credit (OAC). 0% purchase financing available on all 2011 Kia Rio and Rio5 models for up to 84 months on approved credit (OAC). !“No Payments Until Spring 2011” (60-day payment deferral) applies to purchase financing offers on all new 2011 Kia models on approved credit (OAC). No interest will accrue during the first 30 days of the financing contract. After 30 days interest starts to accrue and the purchaser will repay principal and interest monthly over the term of the contract. ‡Cash purchase price for 2011 Rio (RO542B)/2011 Forte Sedan (FO540B) is $9,995/$14,745 and includes a cash credit of $3,700/$1,250 based on the MSRP of $13,695/$15,995. !Cash savings vary by model and trim. *0% purchase financing available on 2011 Soul for up to 60 months on approved credit (OAC). !Loan credit for Soul (SO550B) is $500 and is available on purchase financing only on approved credit (OAC). Cash credit for 2011 Sportage (SP75BB) is up to $2,000. Cash credits vary by model & trim. All offers exclude licensing, registration, insurance, delivery and destination, PPSA, other taxes, and dealer administration fees. Other dealer charges may be required at the time of purchase. Other lease and financing options also available. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Prices subject to change without notice. Certain restrictions may apply. Vehicle images shown may include optional accessories and upgrades. "Highway/city fuel consumption for 2011 Sportage (SP55AB) is 6.9L (41 MPG)/10.0L (28 MPG); 2011 Rio (RO542B) is 5.8L (49 MPG)/7.1L (40 MPG); 2011 Soul (SO550B) is 6.3L (45 MPG)/7.7L (37 MPG); 2011 Forte Sedan (FO540B) is 5.7L (50 MPG)/8.1L (35 MPG). The actual fuel consumption of these vehicles may vary. These estimates are based on the Government of Canada’s approved criteria and testing methods. Refer to the Government of Canada publication EnerGuide Fuel Consumption Guide. ^2011 Kia Sportage/2010 Kia Soul/2011 Kia Forte awarded the Top Safety Pick by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. The award is applicable to all 2011 Sportage models manufactured after March 2010. Visit www.iihs.org for full details. <2011 Kia Sportage named 2011 International Truck of the Year by Road & Travel. Visit www.roadandtravel.com for full details. °The Bluetooth® word mark and logo are registered trademarks and are owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc. Some vehicles advertised may include optional accessories or after-sale equipment and may not be exactly as shown. Some conditions apply to the $500 Grad Rebate Program and $750 Kia Mobility Program. See dealer for details. Information in this advertisement is believed to be accurate at the time of print. For more information on our 5-year warranty coverage, visit kia.ca or call us at 1-877-542-2886. Offers end February 28, 2011. KIA is a trademark of Kia Motors Corporation.
EW40
THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
e l a S 3 for
100% B C Owned and Operated
Seminars uver. and Events a t Alchemy & Elixir Health Group #320-1026 Davie St., Vanco Wednesda y, M herapist t arch 2, 6-7:30p m. Awareness of Disordered Eating with Lisa Tomlinson, MA, Psycho and Meliss .com a Furneaux, R lchemyelixir HN,BSc. Cost $10. To re gister call 604-683-2298 or email info@a
Mighty Leaf Artisan Teas
assorted varieties
Meat Department
Green & & Black’s Chocolate Bars assorted varieties
3/22.98
3/7.98
5.99
Danone Activia Yogurt
725ml
Broccoli
assorted varieties
3/9.99
3/29.97
Certified Organic, California Grown
Choices’ Own Gourmet Chicken Sausages
650g • product of Canada
1.98lb/ 4.37kg
no msg or gluten
454g • product of Canada
assorted varieties
.98lb/ 2.16kg
assorted varieties
select varieties
Nature’s Path Organic Puff Cereals
Certified Organic, California Grown
Gourmet Chef Fresh Soups
100g
15 count • product of USA
Kicking Horse Organic Fair Trade Coffee
Red Cara Cara Navel Oranges from Tule Classic
Kettle Foods Potato Chips assorted varieties
3/4.98
6.99lb/15.41kg
3/6.99
170g • product of Canada
Strawberries
From the Deli
220g • product of USA
Certified Organic, California Grown
3.98
Choices’ Own Organic Turkey Roasts Silver Hills Mack’s Flax Bread
regular, smoked or basil and tarragon
3/8.97
615g • product of Canada
reg 4.49
Organic or Conventional • prepacked or bins
3/3.99
Bocconcini Cheese
48g • product of USA
2.49/100g
assorted varieties
3/8.97
reg 3.29
3/9.99
Rice Bakery
28.99
3/7.98
1 kit
155-258g • product of USA
Pamela’s Gluten-Free Cookies
Natural Factors Hi Potency B Complex Bonus Bottle
Life Choices Perogies
3/6.99
Essential for helping the body to deal with stress and to maintain healthy skin, hair, eyes, and muscle tone in the gastrointestinal tract.
assorted varieties
150-170g • product of USA
3/9.99
18.99
454g
Milton’s Crackers assorted varieties
Brown Rice Bread
4.99
An excellent way to kick-start your healthy eating plan and lose unwanted pounds before the summer months!
assorted varieties
113-142g • product of USA
assorted varieties
10.99
Wild Rose Herbal D-Tox Kit
Annie Chun’s Soup Bowls
Wholesome Country Sourdough Bread
8" Strawberry Rhubarb Pie
regular retail price
assorted varieties
From Our Bakery 575g
20% off
Sahale Gourmet Nut Blends
500g • product of Canada
2.99
Whole Raw Almonds
assorted varieties
Liberté Méditerranée Yogurt
Bulk Department
3.79/100g
Luna Bars
454g
3/9.99
454g
226-283g
Earth’s Choice Organic Canned Tomatoes
3/4.47
398ml • product of USA
210caps
Seventh Generation Dish Liquids assorted varieties
3/8.97
739ml
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 February 24 to March 2, 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.