SUNDAY
December 14 2014
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Heavy Metal LIVE 13
Spectrum Mothers SPORT 29
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Blustery night caps stormy week 3,000 homes lose power, tree on Causeway closes bridge BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
Just when we thought we were out of the woods, heavy winds started blowing the trees down. What was supposed to
be the tail end of a storm week ended up creating a blustery mess across North Vancouver and West Vancouver Thursday night. “For four hours, right across the North Shore,
all the crews were busy with dealing with windrelated hazards,” said Mike Cairns, assistant chief with District of North Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services. “From 8 p.m. to midnight, I think there was close to 50 calls across the North Shore from medical aid calls to downed power lines and trees across roads and
transformers blowing. We had multiple areas of power outage.” BC Hydro was tasked with restoring power to close to 3,000 properties in North Vancouver and West Vancouver, most of them due to branches coming down on wires. At one point in the night, a tree blew down across the Stanley Park
Causeway resulting in the Lions Gate Bridge being closed. West Vancouver police took to social media, encouraging people to stay home if possible. Though there was plenty of concern from municipal staff that the storm might result in flooding, the North Shore generally “got off lucky” in the words of
West Vancouver fire chief Martin Ernst. The Village of Lions Bay, however, remained in a water crisis as of Friday afternoon. Landslides badly damaged one of the small municipality’s water intakes and reduced the other one to steady but reduced capacity. See Lions Bay page 5
Seniors’ facility staff rally on wages JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com
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Approximately 80 Inglewood Care Centre employees rallied outside the seniors’ facility Thursday to protest what they say are the low, stagnant wages offered by employer Carecorp. After more than 12 months of failed contract negotiations, the Hospital Employees’ Union served strike notice in November, prompting Carecorp to pursue mediation through mid-January. Job action is currently suspended. However, if a new contract isn’t commensurate with the salaries and benefits of union workers in other long-term care facilities, a strike is a distinct possibility, according to Neil Monckton, communications officer with the Hospital See Benefits page 5
A2 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
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Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A3
FOCUS
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Seaspan’s $155 million upgrade atVancouver Shipyards is fuelling renewal of the industry
JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com
You don’t have to go far to see the most visible sign of Seaspan’s $155 million two-year overhaul of Vancouver Shipyards. Just look up — way, way up. Since the spring, a massive new gantry crane — the largest in Canada — has stood 80 metres tall on the shipyards site at the foot of Pemberton Avenue. Its presence on the North Vancouver waterfront sends a message: that the shipyards are back as an economic engine, on a scale not seen since massive federallysupported contracts halted 30 years ago. This time around, Ottawa is again fuelling the resurgence of the West Coast shipyard industry, with its national shipbuilding program. In 2011, Seaspan won the right to negotiate contracts to build seven federal non-combat ships, worth an estimated $8 billion. Those ships include two massive navy joint support ships and a polar icebreaker.
Heavy metal
But to ready itself to do that work, the shipyard had to reinvent itself. It had to “go big.” The $18 million gantry crane is indicative of that new scale. It was shipped in three pieces from China in a heavy lift ship. To put it up, the company contracted by Seaspan to provide it had to first take apart a second 1,600-tonne 110-metre-tall crawler crane in Russia, put it on a ship, then offload it at Lynnterm Terminal. “It took 82 trucks to get it from Lynn Terminal to our property,” said Tony Matergio, vice-president and general manger of Vancouver Shipyards. “It’s just a monster.” The crawler crane is long gone now, but the permanent gantry crane, dubbed “Big Blue”, will do the heavy lifting when building for the first national shipbuilding contract gets underway next year. Its job will be to move massive pieces of ship, weighing anywhere from 80 to 300 tonnes, into place for final assembly. That approach to building ships would be foreign to those who
worked at places like Burrard Dry Dock and Versatile Pacific — North Vancouver’s iconic shipyards of the past. “If you wind the clock back quite a number of decades, ships were built one piece of wood or one piece of steel at a time and erected on the berth,” said Matergio. “Pipefitters and electricians would show up when the ship was floating.” Those days are gone, he said. Today, large shipyards operate more like manufacturing plants, building modular pieces on what is essentially an assembly line. Vancouver Shipyards has gone from a yard that mainly built and repaired barges and small vessels to one designed for large ship construction — a very different facility. To help with the design of the new system, Seaspan brought over experts from STX Korea — a huge modern shipyard — for advice early in the process. “For shipyard design, part of it is how much land you have to deal with. Part of it is the particular type of ships (you will be building),” said Matergio.
“Shipyards are designed to build the particular product they’re good at.” In the new shipyard, steel plates that arrive on a flatbed truck come first to the sub-assembly building, where they are cut by two new state-of-theart computer-controlled cutters, including a plasma cutter. Steel is brought to the shipyard as it’s needed. “Years ago we’d buy all the steel for the ship the same day and it would show up and we’d store it,” said Matergio. “We don’t do that anymore. We just have it delivered as required.” A computer program with instructions on how to cut each piece of steel is transmitted to the robotic cutter remotely from the shipyard’s technical office. The machine is extremely accurate — down to millimetres, said William Clewes, Vancouver Shipyards’ director of operations. When it comes out, each piece of cut steel is automatically etched with a number indicating which project it is for and how it fits together with other components. Then it gets collected with other pieces
needed for the next step in assembly and put together in a kit. Once the shipbuilding program is fully up and running, there’ll be pieces of steel continuously moving on to the next station. Most parts of the shipyard will operate 16 hours a day, five days a week. Everything in the subassembly building is new, said Clewes. “Including the building.” About two-thirds of the $155 million spent modernizing Vancouver Shipyards and about $15 million spent on Seaspan’s Victoria Shipyards — where final sea trials and testing of vessels will take place — was spent on new buildings and facilities. One-third was spent on equipment, which came from countries around the world. A new 1,000-tonne Nieldand cold forming press in the forming shop next door, for instance, came from Holland. It’s technology used throughout the world that allows shaping of steel into three-dimensional pieces without heating it — even the two-inch thick steel
that will eventually be used for the polar icebreaker. Another centrepiece of the modernized shipyard is the “panel line” — where large flat pieces of steel are welded together and reinforced with angle bars. A robotic single-sided welder at one end of this assembly line can weld two 18-millimetre thick plates together in one pass — and take a fraction of the time it would have before — 20 minutes as opposed to several hours. As the large steel panels move down the conveyer, hydraulic arms press angle bars into place on the panel, where they are automatically “tack welded” into place before moving down to a final station where a robotic welder with six welding heads can weld three bars at a time. There are fewer people doing this work than there would have been on the task in the past. Each machine generally has one welder and one crane operator. But neither Clewes nor George MacPherson, president of the B.C. See Skilled page 9
A4 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
Parliament passes national fitness bill WestVan MP-sponsored bill leads to creation of national health day CHRISTINE LYON clyon@nsnews.com
Mark your calendar: June 6, 2015 is a day to get off the couch and get active. The first Saturday of every June will now be known as National Health and Fitness Day after the House of Commons this week unanimously approved a bill sponsored by John Weston, Conservative MP for
West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea to Sky Country. Weston has long championed the creation of an annual day to promote health and fitness in Canada and teamed up with B.C. Conservative Senator Nancy Greene Raine to introduce a bill that would do just that. Raine, an Olympic gold medal skier and Canada’s Female Athlete of the 20th Century, tabled the private members bill in the Senate
obesity and inactivity at $7 billion. “We should not be burdening our health care system with the results of unhealthy lifestyles. Education also plays a big role, and quality physical education will be increasingly important to ensure children grow up with the skills needed to enjoy physical activities,” Raine states in a press release. “We always aimed to rally our nation to be the fittest nation on earth, and this is a giant leap in the right direction,” Weston said.
last December. Citizens and municipalities across the country are encouraged to mark National Health and Fitness Day with events that promote the use of local health, recreational, sports and fitness facilities. The newly established day aims to inspire Canadians to become fitter. The bill is also an attempt to curb the growing trend towards sedentary living. Canada’s Public Health Agency recently pegged the cost of health care for cardiovascular problems and diabetes arising from
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NOTICE OF ROAD CLOSURES City of North Vancouver Bylaw, 2014, No. 8379 (Closing and removal of highway dedication and disposition of a portion of Low Level Road in exchange for Port Metro Vancouver lands to be dedicated as road) and
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LOW LEVEL ROAD - HIGHWAY CLOSING AND DISPOSITION An dre w's
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TAKE NOTICE THAT pursuant to Section 40 of the Community Charter, the Council of the Corporation of the City of North Vancouver, at the Council meeting of December 15, 2014, intends to adopt Bylaw No. 8379 and Bylaw No. 8382 to do the following:
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BYLAW NO. 8379 and BYLAW NO. 8382
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City of North Vancouver Bylaw, 2014, No. 8382 (Closing and removal of highway dedication and disposition of a portion of Low Level Road)
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1) Stop up, close and remove the highway dedication on the portions of road dedicated on Reference Plan 3184 DL 274 and 273, Plan 9978 DL 273 and Plan 972 DL 274 Group 1 New Westminster District, totaling 0.541 hectares, and as shown in bold outline on Reference Plan EPP42065, prepared by Tyler Fox, BCLS, MMM Geomatics Professional Land Surveyors, dated September 25, 2014, and as shown on the sketch as Parcel “B”. PARC EL 'B'
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PARC E L 'C'
Parcel 'B'
Burrard Inlet
PARC E L 'B'
Parcel 'C '
2) Stop up, close and remove the highway dedication on the portion of road dedicated on Reference Plan 3184, DL 272 and 273 and dedicated on Reference Plan BCP35127, DL 272 and 273, and established (see B45815) on Block 28, except part in Reference Plan 3184 and Plan 14164, DL 272 and dedicated on Plan 3875, DL 272 all of Group 1 New Westminster District totaling, 1.721 hectares, and as shown in bold outline on Reference Plan EPP42068, prepared by Tyler Fox, BCLS, MMM Geomatics Professional Land Surveyors, and dated September 25, 2014, and as shown on the sketch as Parcel “C”.
APPLICANT: THE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF NORTH VANCOUVER Bylaw No. 8379 and Bylaw No. 8382 may be inspected at the City Clerk’s Department, City Hall, between the hours of 8:30 am to 5:00 pm, Monday to Friday, except Statutory Holidays. Any questions or concerns regarding the Highway Closing and Disposition Bylaws should be directed to Ian Steward, Property Services Coordinator, Community Development, at 604.983.7358 or isteward@cnv.org.
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Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A5
Benefits reduced, says HEU
From page 1
Employees’ Union. “These wages are not even a living wage,” he said. “It’s not a dirty little secret, but it’s certainly an unpleasant surprise when people find out what’s been going on with these workers.” An Inglewood care aid earned $15.82 per hour in 1994. Two decades later, the hourly wage for a starting care aid at the West Vancouver centre is $15.83. But while salaries are stationary many benefits have been reduced and some pensions eliminated, according to the union.
Low wages ensure a high turnover rate among the centre’s 200 employees. That constant state of flux sometimes affects the facility’s 235 residents, according to Monckton. “The quality of care is not what it could be,” he said. Employees are frequently not replaced on sick days, resulting in care aides and licensed practical nurses working shorthanded, he added. Carecorp has yet to offer any increases to salary or benefits, according to the HEU. “We’d like to just get a deal and they’d like to get on with their lives but until
we have a fair deal I think they’re pretty much dug in,” he said. Essential service levels at the centre would be maintained in a strike, according to Monckton. Unicare, which oversees seniors facilities in B.C. and Alberta, is the owner of the Inglewood Care Centre, although services were contracted to Carecorp in 2011. The HEU may demand more transparency from Unicare before signing a contract, according to Monckton. “If they’re saying there’s no more money then what they need to do is put all their financial records
on the table,” he said. “If there’s a bigger funding problem we need to know.” The Inglewood employees have worked through “great instability,” according to Monckton. “There’s been several contract flips and every time there is everybody gets laid off. A new contractor comes in and hires people back and then we re-unionize,” he said. The Inglewood Care Centre provides care for residents who can’t live independently due to chronic illness. The centre opened in 1964 and is staffed by 250 workers. Carecorp declined to comment for the story.
Lions Bay told to conserve and boil water
From page 1
Residents have been under a boil water notice and strict water conservation orders from Vancouver Coastal Health since Wednesday. “Resident compliance with water restrictions will be absolutely critical into
the weekend. Use only what water is absolutely necessary,” a recorded message posted by village staff stated on Friday afternoon. Despite the overall nastiness, there weren’t any local weather records set. West Vancouver accumulated 123
millimetres of rain since Monday, which is a lot but doesn’t meet the threshold for a rainfall warning, according to Environment Canada. “I think the thing that jumps out at me is not that any one storm was a record… What really stands out to me is there
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were three storms,” said Doug Lundquist, Environment Canada meteorologist. “From Monday until early (Friday), there were three storms and each one gave an incredible amount of impact. A lot of rain. A lot of wind and it was just one after the other.”
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A6 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
VIEWPOINT PUBLISHED BY NORTH SHORE NEWS A DIVISION OF LMP PUBLICATION LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, 100-126 EAST 15TH STREET, NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. V7L 2P9. DOUG FOOT, PUBLISHER. CANADIAN PUBLICATIONS MAIL SALES PRODUCT AGREEMENT NO. 40010186.
Blinded science S
omeone in our government must think scientific researchers have had it too good for too long. How else to explain the murky new plan that sends lab coats to tap dance for funding from the private sector before they can get on with their research? Traditionally, hordes of hopeful scientists applied to the Canadian Institutes of Health Research for funding. Grants would be given to the brightest 15 per cent following a grueling peer review process. But now scientists may need to find 50 per cent of their funding (and this doesn’t include administration or overhead, traditionally paid for by philanthropists) from some other source before the institute will pony up their share. Essentially, this plan forces scientists to be salesmen. Besides the fact that
MAILBOX
their energy would be better spent over a microscope than cold-calling money men, we can’t help but wonder if ideas of great merit will be discarded simply because they aren’t marketed well. If you’ll forgive us for being flippant: Would you buy a used car from someone who looked like Albert Einstein? Science and the private sector have and will continue to collaborate. However, this feels a bit like a poorly arranged marriage. Financial empires have been built on products that are ruinous to our health and environment. Can we really expect those same empires to fund the research that may pinpoint the causes of disease or ecological degradation? In science, failure is said to be the greatest teacher. If that’s true, we should learn a lot from this new funding approach.
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Taxi cabs provide valuable service Dear Editor: Re:Taxi Firms Must Adapt or Accept Their Fate, Oct. 31 mailbox. In response to the (letter writer’s) complaints about North Shore Taxi in support of Uber: I am a non-driver who is taxi dependent and have never had a complaint about their service. My transportation consists of my legs, bus or taxis which
has proven to be far cheaper than owning a car. I have never waited longer than 10 minutes for a taxi.When referring to the lack of safety specific to taxis never being available, did the writer do his research about the North Shore Taxi account services? People can get an account so they can be picked up in Vancouver from the North Shore and billed later.This
alleviates a huge amount of worry for parents concerned about youth getting home safely from the downtown night clubs at 3 a.m. Stop to consider for a moment that many cab drivers are new Canadians, with high levels of education and skill, who cannot find suitable jobs in our country. And the allegation that taxi drivers use cellphones
when driving is false.They work very long hours, have families too and may need to make calls to them — but never when driving. All the cars I have been in recently are new and so is their new pin pad payment system. Regarding the comment: “Just because they are trapped in an expensive regulated business model doesn’t mean the customers
should suffer.” In a truly green world, shouldn’t governments be providing incentives to assist such a highly-regulated and expensive business model, a business that helps people live without cars? Thank you North Shore Taxi for getting me around for all these years in the rainy season. Elise Roberts North Vancouver
It’s time to rid ourselves of our defeatist addiction to oil Dear Editor: Re: Keith Baldrey’s View from the Ledge column Lost in All the Oil Rhetoric is Realism, Dec. 5. Keith Baldrey is correct; the oil industry will not be out of our lives in our
lifetime, mainly due to the fact that our dependence on oil is accelerating the approach of that ultimate day. Most of us are aware of oil’s supremacy in our daily lives but, increasingly, people are
CONTACTUS
trying to wean themselves from it. This column exhorts the retrograde, defeatist rationale that one continually hears. It is exasperating to be subjected to this point of view considering all that
we know about climate change and threats to our health. (The opinion column) provides an excuse to avoid the effort needed for positive change. Mr. Baldrey has made an impressive list of oil’s
worldly trespasses. Perhaps this can be a checklist with which to cross off our dependencies and to begin to rid ourselves of petroaddiction. Robert Partridge North Vancouver
YOU SAID IT
“A big boulder fell down and created it.” MetroVancouver superintendent of environmental management Mike Mayers discusses the formation of a new lake where Seymour River used to be (from a Dec. 12 news story). “There is no plan B.” District of NorthVancouver Mayor RichardWalton implores MetroVancouver voters to support a referendum that would use a sales tax increase to improve transit (from a Dec. 12 news story). “The harsh winds of economic reality that has blown through the private sector should blow throughTransLink.” WestVancouver Mayor Michael Smith explains his opposition to the upcoming transit referendum (from a Dec. 12 news story).
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Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A7
VIEWPOINT
Fighting fire with fire: the big reveal
Anyone who follows the North Shore News closely will no doubt have noticed a gaping hole in our coverage recently. I’m going to pull back the curtain a little bit and reveal how things work around here and why we missed one of the hottest stories of the year. We have a dedicated team of reporters who work tirelessly to dig up little details, make connections in the community and manage massive information networks.They’re waiting, spider-like, to feel a little ripple in the web that will lead them to a juicy morsel that they can pounce upon, digest and then spin out for the world to see. And also sometimes someone from another newspaper will write something interesting with a vague North Shore connection and we’ll basically just copy it.We make a huge deal of the local angle, take a cool photo and voila — community news. Sometimes a North Shore-related story pops up that is so hot, so explosive that it gets passed around the newsroom and generates instant buzz.This was one of those occasions.The exposé appeared last week in none other than the venerable Globe and Mail, the national newspaper of record. It contained exclusive information on a series of top-secret video recordings of — I hope you’re sitting down for this — someone tending to a small fireplace. Most of you no doubt have seen the fire log
Andy Prest
Laugh All YouWant television channels that pop up around Christmastime. They’re wildly and bafflingly popular.Well, they’re at least wildly and bafflingly something that exists. I’m not sure about the popular part. This particular story was about the Shaw fire log, credited with being the first widely broadcast burning pile of wood in Canada (Shaw first filmed it in 1986, copying a popular log that had been a hit in NewYork since the 1960s). And to be fair, the Globe and Mail’s story was really quite good. There were ins and outs, twists and turns, secret locations and a mystery man calling all the shots. Best of all, for us at least, there was a North Shore angle.The fireplace in question just happened to be found inside a cabin at an undisclosed location deep in the backwoods of North Vancouver. No one knows where it is, or even if it exists, except for a few folks at Shaw. And, perhaps, a few District of North Vancouver staff members.
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Also the Kokanee Ranger, all of his bikini-clad sidekicks and his Sasquatch nemesis. Oh, and the entire cast and crew of Stargate. Other than that though, the cabin is a veritable X-Files mystery (also, it was probably used on the X-Files). Anyway, it was a cool, fun, interesting Christmas story with strong North Shore ties — a no-brainer copy job.The story was assigned to intrepid reporter Jeremy Shepherd (quick aside: I’d love to meet the world’s first unintrepid reporter). Jeremy quickly went to work trying to track down a Shaw employee or two who could basically tell us the same things they told the Globe.That’s when things got weird. I’ll turn it over to Jeremy to describe how he spent the better part of a busy deadline day: “My phone calls went unreturned, emails led nowhere and one hopeful tweet yielded nothing, like pretty much every other tweet. I made more phone calls and started writing emails in all-caps so the powers that be would know I meant business. Eventually, a very nice representative from Shaw called me up to say they weren’t doing any more interviews on the fire log. Apparently, they See The top-secret page 10
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THE LATEST NEWS AND INFORMATION FROM THE CITY OF NORTH VANCOUVER
Planning an Outdoor Community Event in 2015?
So Many Events — So Little Time...
APPLICATION DEADLINE JANUARY 31, 2015
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Is your group planning an outdoor community event in 2015? Applications for festivals, charity fundraisers, neighbourhood celebrations and large group picnics taking place in City parks are being accepted until January 31st. Please visit North Vancouver Recreation & Culture Commission or contact the Community Events Office at 604-983-6575 or events@nvrc.ca for more information. Details at online at: northvanrec.com/facilities/park-and-plaza-bookings
Meet Your City Council THE 2014-2018 TERM IS UNDERWAY Council is back in session and the 2014-2018 term has begun. Here are your new Council members (left to right): Councillor Linda Buchanan, Councillor Holly Back, Councillor Rod Clark, Mayor Darrell Mussatto, Councillor Craig Keating, Councillor Pam Bookham, and Councillor Don Bell.
'Tis the Season and so many events, activities and parties to attend. Check out our online listings to find out what's happening throughout the City over the Holiday Season. From ballets, recitals, light displays, visits with Santa, story times and crafting events — if it's happening — we've got it listed. And it's easy to post your events there too. Details at cnv.org/CelebratetheSeason
A Night to Remember CITY'S CHRISTMAS FESTIVAL FILLS THE SQUARE A big turnout at the City's Christmas Festival last Saturday in Shipbuilders' Square. Thank you to all the folks, of all ages who joined us. Thanks to Twilight Markets for producing the event and North Shore Green Markets for the wonderful lights. Check out the photos online. The festive fun continues with the Christmas Market in Shipbuilders' Square every weekend until Christmas. Details at cnv.org/CelebratetheSeason
Don't Forget Fido! DOG LICENCE TAGS EXPIRE DECEMBER 31ST With all the rushing around in the pre-holiday run up, don't forget Fido. Okay, he's not easy to forget, but renewing his license is. City dog licences expire on December 31st. We've made it easier for you to renew your license. Come in to City Hall or pay online. Details at cnv.org/DogLicence
Council meetings take place Mondays at 6:00pm. Join us in Council Chambers, or watch online or on your mobile device, live or whenever you wish. Details at cnv.org/Your-Government 141 WEST 14TH STREET / NORTH VANCOUVER / BC / V7M 1H9 / T 604 985 7761 / F 604 985 9417 / INFO@CNV.ORG / CNV.ORG /
@CityOfNorthVan
Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A9
Skilled workforce will swell to 1,000 From page 3 Shipyard General Workers Federation — which represents many of the trades at the shipyard — are concerned about that. Work is simply concentrated in other areas of shipbuilding, farther along in the process, said Clewes. “Stuff that’s left requires higher skill,” said MacPherson. “There’s still a lot of manual labour.” There are about 200 people working in trades at the shipyards today, but that is expected to dramatically increase to about 1,000 people within the next three years. The company, which currently has 17 apprentices working in Vancouver Shipyards, expects to hire more apprentices by next year and re-train those who are already qualified with transferable skills from other industries. Not surprisingly, there has been a lot of interest. “It’s a well-paid job and it looks like it’ll be a well-paid job,” said MacPherson, citing an average rate of pay of about
H[Z$Q 3 `-(R[( 7V[7R& ; 7-Na[A[( UN&U5[ )[;&,;N4& N[` O-5[(NU?[5 ,;N[P &V-,< +UXV$Q 3 `-(R[( X(UN5& ; `[P5 UN&U5[ $V[ &"9=;&&[O9PA &V-,< BKD'D) MIKE WAKEFIELD
$38 an hour, plus benefits. Unlike many existing jobs that fit that description, a job at the shipyards lets local workers stay home and see their families, says MacPherson, “as opposed to going to Fort McMurray.” Jacob Burnikell, a 35year-old welding foreman who’s been working on and off in shipyards for the past seven years, understands that. “This is huge for
North Vancouver,” he said. “The opportunity to have that many jobs accessible potentially for a long period of time is huge for any community.” Of the 35 people who report to him now “probably eight or 10 of those could be in Alberta or up north, but they’re here,” he said. “I’ve got some good young people coming back now. They’re ready to work
at the shipyard.” It’s a definite improvement over downturns in the past where he’s had to lay people off. “You build a team then you lose that team,” he said. “Hopefully (now) the crew I have will see the start of the vessel and the end of the vessel.” In the block assembly shop, telescoping pins — or pin jigs — support pieces of shaped steel while they
are manually welded into larger pieces. At the end of the shop are two large chunks of what will eventually be the new cable ferry — one piece upside down. At this stage, pieces are often built upside down and turned over, said Clewes. “It’s easier for a welder to weld down than to weld above him.” Under the new system, workers who arrive at a
dedicated workstation will start the day with a work order detailing their tasks. “All the material will be there, all the tools will be there,” said Clewes. Welding torches hang from cranes inside the shop, fed by 500 lb spools of welding wire. “Guys don’t have to carry stuff into the work area,” said Clewes. “They just drop it See Modular page 10
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A10 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
Modular construction key From page 9
from the crane.” From here, bigger assembled pieces might go into a new paint shop — where state-of-theart ventilation and dust recovery systems have been installed. Or they may head into one of several “pre-outfit” bays, where the mechanical parts of the ship including engines, pipes, cables and electrical systems will be installed before the large modular blocks are put together — a radical departure from shipbuilding of the past. The systems going into the large ships will
come from around the world. Seaspan already has partnership agreements with the Canadian subsidiaries of a number of multinational companies —ImTech Marine Canada, Thales Canada, Computer Sciences Corporation and Alion Canada — specializing in marine technology and defence contracts. Two new self-propelled modular transport systems — up to 32 rolling axles that can lift 1,000 tonnes and are operated by remote-control chest backs — will then take the massive blocks of the ship to the pre-erection area of
the yard to be put together under huge multi-storey shelters. When the blocks are 150 or 200 tonnes, the gantry crane will lift them on to the berth. “That’s when they form a ship, when they put them together,” said Clewes. “Those blocks will be put together like large Lego blocks.” When the ship is built, it will move on to a load-out pier, be put on a floating dry dock, taken to deep water and floated off. The last five per cent of the build, including final testing, will be completed at Seaspan’s Victoria
Shipyards — near to the Canadian navy base at Esquimalt. The joint support ships won’t be the first ships built at the modernized yard, but they are certainly the biggest ships that are part of the contract and ones that have attracted the most attention. Both the parliamentary budget officer and the auditor general have questioned whether $2.6 billion set aside by Ottawa will be enough to build two ships, noting the government hasn’t adjusted that figure in a number of years, despite delays in deciding to build the ships. The political ante in getting the ships built was also recently upped when Ottawa announced it will decommission two of its existing support ships earlier than expected over concerns about their structural integrity. When finished, the 173-metre ships will be the biggest vessels ever built in western Canada. But depending on when contracts get signed with Ottawa, Seaspan isn’t expected to start building those ships until late 2016 or early 2017. To start off, Seaspan will ramp up its production with three fisheries science vessels. The contract for the first of those — a 55-metre research vessel — and production on it is expected to start in earnest in the spring. Six months after the first ship is begun, the second vessel will be started and See Support page 19
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The top-secret skinny on burning wood piles From page 7 were afraid of running the whole fire log thing into the ground.Well, that makes one of us.” Intrepid and funny, that Jeremy Shepherd. We all, however, were dumbfounded that the folks at Shaw were uninterested in making someone available for a five-minute chat about firewood.That short chat would very likely have become a front-page article in the finest community newspaper west of the Mississippi (and north of Burrard Inlet, south of that windmill thing on Grouse Mountain and east of Horseshoe Bay). Our stolen scoop may have been stolen right back from us, but we weren’t about to lie down and die. We’re a newspaper — we’ll never die! Or at least not for the next six months! We decided that instead of chasing the ghosts of fire logs past, we’d kindle
our own fiery future.We made our own fire log video, recorded by our own mystery stoker whose identity is photographer Mike Wakefield. I mean, secret. As Jeremy pointed out to me, we decided to literally fight fire with fire. Consider it our Christmas gift to you. You’re welcome, everyone. If you want to know how we shot it, by all means give us a call.We’ll gladly tell you all about it in our next print edition. Heck, a few days later we might even put it up on that new internet thing. That’s how we roll over here in the newspaper biz. Happy holidays everyone. You can find the North Shore News fire log video attached to the online version of this column at nsnews.com. Special thanks to Jeremy Shepherd for his contributions to this column, and to MikeWakefield for crafting one of the best damn burning piles of wood you’ll ever see. aprest@nsnews.com
Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A11
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Holiday Time is Barbecue Time on Canada’s West Coast With the Christmas holidays now upon us, we’ve made food the focus for this month’s Curb Appeal Corner. Barbecuing is more traditionally associated with summer months but here in the lower mainland, it only takes a few small tweaks to make your outdoor space into a hub for entertaining all year round. “Place freestanding heaters around your patio to enlarge your entertaining area for those Christmas and New Year’s parties,” suggests Jamie Johnstone of Johnstone’s Barbecues and Parts. “Add a pergola near the barbecue itself and install both lighting and electric infrared heaters. Infrared’s
Chris O’Donohue The Great Canadian Landscaping Company very efficient because it heats objects—like people—rather than heating the air.” Johnstone’s has been the North Shore’s barbecue expert for 30 years.
Originally founded by Gary Johnstone in 1975 as a home appliance service company, the focus of the business shifted exclusively to barbecues and barbecue parts by the mid-80s. In 2015, Johnstone’s will celebrate 40 years on the North Shore, and it’s a family affair. Gary, his wife, his two sons and his daughter-inlaw all work in the business today. Here are the Johnstones’ top gift ideas for the 2014 holiday season: ■ Backyard fires are a big trend. We have complete fire table packages, portable units and custom burner kits available in all price ranges.
Patio heaters can turn your outdoor space into a cozy year-round oasis.
Johnstone’s is the North Shore’s source for everything you can think of related to barbecues. With the wide variety of Barbecues, Patio heaters, Gas fire tables & pits along with replacement parts for everything they sell – it’s no wonder this Family run business is approaching their 40th Anniversary. And now they even offer reward points! Johnstone’s Barbecues and Parts johnstones.com 165 Pemberton Ave 604-985-0234
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Creative Bricks ‘n Blocks supplies the largest selection of Landscaping Supplies for both the retail public and contractor markets, with a reputation for providing the right product at the right price with complete advice from start to finish. They do not install, they work with the finest contractors large and small to provide the right contactor for their customers. You’ll hear their customers say….”the most helpful, knowledgeable staff we have found anywhere.” Creative Bricks and Blocks bricksnblocks.com 1371 Mc Keen Ave 604-984-3008
Remote barbecue thermometers are a great gift for the griller who has everything. They allow you to monitor meat temperatures without having to lift the lid of your grill. ■ A light that attaches to your barbecue makes it easier to grill all year round. ■ Charcoal is making a comeback. It’s not uncommon these days for people to have both gas and charcoal grills on their deck—and the heat from charcoal grills keeps you nice and warm while cooking! For the front of your house, think Curb Appeal with freestanding tube or spiral torches at the entrance of your home to create an impressive and inviting look. Wall-mounted torches can also be used to frame doorways and seating areas to add ambience and warmth to your home’s facade. Happy Holidays from all of us at The Great Canadian Landscaping Company, Team Clarke and all of our partner companies. In January, the experts at Team Clarke Real Estate will weigh in on how to prepare your home for the spring selling season. Do you have a question about how to maximize your home’s curb appeal? Email your questions or comments to me at curbappeal@gclc.ca ■
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CHRISTMAS TURKEY ON THE BARBECUE Instead of cooking your turkey in the oven, try the grill! It frees up space for all your sides to bake in the oven and if you use a rotisserie kit on your grill, you’ll find the turkey self-bastes and stays extra juicy. Also – don’t forget about your side burner. If your cooktop is full, you have another burner to use! Here is a great brine recipe to lock in even more moisture before grilling the bird: • 1 gallon water • 1 cup salt (1 1/2 cups Kosher or coarse salt) • 1/2 cup sugar • 6 fresh tarragon • leaves or 1/4 cup • dried tarragon • 1 teaspoon black pepper The water you use should not be chlorinated. If you don’t have easy access to good spring water, boil it first, let the water cool, then add all other ingredients and mix thoroughly. Place turkey in large non-metallic dish and cover completely with brine. Let sit in refrigerator for 1 hour per pound. Remove turkey from brine, rinse thoroughly and pat dry.
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A12 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
BRIGHT LIGHTS
by Paul McGrath
An Evening with Joseph Boyden
![&$ #;N7-"a[( PU9(;(A &$;ZZ O[O9[(& Lauren Henderson> Lorna Rush> Kim Enjo> Pat Cumming ;N5 Louise Biggar
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Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A13
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to ACTIVE LIVING
Society extends a helping hand Organization serves local mothers facing challenges ERIN MCPHEE emcphee@nsnews.com
Nina Hemmes recently enjoyed a family vacation to Hawaii. While sun-soaked getaways are common for many local residents, hers was special as it marked a much-desired return to normalcy, good health, and light at the end of a very dark year. Hemmes experienced a number of health issues after she got pregnant with her second son, Lukas, now 11 months. From week nine, she was in and out of the hospital and racing from one medical appointment to another. In a lot of pain, she was on bed rest and faced isolation, all the while trying to care for her eldest son, Sam, now three years old. “It was very, very challenging for everybody,” says Hemmes, 30, a former North Vancouver resident who recently moved to White Rock. “It was the worst time of my life,” she adds. While her extended family is not in the Lower Mainland (she’s from Sweden originally), her husband, Colin, did what he could, though was hampered by a full-time work schedule. Local family and friends likewise offered assistance when possible. A further worry was that Hemmes had experienced post-partum depression following the birth of her first son. Concerned for her well-being and realizing she needed more help, Hemmes’ medical team referred her to the North Vancouverbased Spectrum Mothers Support Society as part of her care. From that moment on, everything changed. The non-profit society provides a host of free services to North Shore mothers caring for children under age five who find themselves in challenging situations. Spectrum was founded by North Vancouver’s Sally Livingstone, who serves as executive director. Examples of challenges faced by society clients can include health issues, as in Hemmes’ case, or be related to mental health, abusive relationships,
),[7$("O G-$V[(& )",,-($ )-7U[$A 5-"P; ;N5 9-;(5 O[O9[( I[&&U7; )P-;N ^P[Z$@> ;N5 Z-"N5[( ;N5 [_[7"$Ua[ 5U([7$-( );PPA HUaUNX&$-N[ ^(UXV$@ O[[$ `U$V Z-(O[( 7PU[N$ FUN; K[OO[& ;N5 V[( 88=O-N$V=-P5 &-N H"R;&< 'V[ &-7U[$A -ZZ[(& ; V-&$ -Z Z([[> &",,-($Ua[ &[(aU7[& $- P-7;P O-O&< BKD'D MIKE WAKEFIELD addiction or financial.The society also serves teenage and single mothers, students, as well as new immigrants and mothers of children with disabilities. “Our goal is to get there early in that situation so that we can support them before crisis hits,” says Livingstone. Services include caregivers who go into the mothers’ homes, offering respite, as well as mentorship, phone support, driving services, and doulas, on hand both before and after the baby is born. Support is tailored to the needs of each
North Shore Schizophrenia Society offers Family-to-Family Education
particular mother and could mean holding a crying baby while she has a shower, lending a compassionate ear, or transporting her and her child to a drop-in support group, a medical appointment or the grocery store. Livingstone was inspired to launch the Spectrum Mothers Support Society following her experiences as a nurse, going back 40 years to when she was working in London, England, at Westminster Children’s Hospital. During that See Fundraising page 15
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A14 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
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Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A15
LIVE
Fundraising and hamper campaigns underway
From page 13
time, she witnessed a young mother who had had twins — a healthy baby and a second born with spina bifida.The healthy child was taken home whereas the sick baby was left behind, passing away a few weeks later in hospital. Her goal ever since has been to provide children in need with a loving and caring environment. Therefore in Livingstone’s personal life she serves as a foster mother, offering a safe-baby home for drug and alcohol-exposed and medically fragile babies. She currently has three foster babies in her care in addition to an adopted daughter Devon, 8, who she started caring for at birth, adopting her at age three. “It’s a challenge, but there’s a saying when you’re passionate about something, you just make it work and I think that’s just always been my life, you just make it work. I could not do it without the incredible caregivers that I have in my own life and with Spectrum,” says Livingstone. Her personal experiences
further encouraged her to launch the society in 2006. “As a foster mom and knowing what it’s like for moms to be separated from their children, whatever the reason, and just wondering if you were able to put support in early enough if we could just keep families in tact,” says Livingstone, of her motivation. Spectrum currently has 19 caregivers working with 40 families. A family’s time spent with the society ranges from three months to three years, dependent on need. Mothers are referred by professionals, including local doctors, nurses, social workers, police officers and community agencies. Community members are welcome to get involved with the society. Interested caregivers must undergo an application process and criminal record check, and be CPR-certified, in addition to having relevant training and experience. Many prove to be mothers themselves, some of whom previously faced challenges in their own lives, and are interested in giving back. What’s been a pleasant surprise to Livingstone are
the friendships that develop between the mothers and caregivers who stay connected long after their official Spectrum-related relationship is over. “That to me is sort of building the community because now these moms who may well have felt very isolated before now have a friend and that to me is huge,” she says. In the lead-up to her son’s birth, Hemmes was assigned primary doula Jessica Sloan, a North Vancouver resident. “She was just there and that felt really good,” says Hemmes, explaining how helpful it was to have such a knowledgeable resource at her disposal around the clock. Both Sloan and Hemmes’ backup doula were there for Lukas’ birth, which happened early at 36 weeks. While Lukas stayed in the hospital for seven days, he is now a healthy, happy boy. Hemmes too is doing well and fully recovered, despite experiencing some shortterm post-partum depression and requiring a surgical procedure three months after giving birth. She’s grateful for the support of a society
GREAT CHRISTMAS GIFT Entertaining & Thought Provoking DARK SEED is an exciting high concept thriller that tackles one of the big issues of our time – GMO’s. “…tight and fast-paced action. This thriller’s premise of corporations controlling the food supply and sacrificing human health for the sake of profits is so plausible that it is horrifying. Readers will find themselves rapidly turning the pages to see what happens next in this disturbing “OMG this could really happen “novel.” Chanticleer Book Reviews
caregiver during that period. “If we can give a mom of any age a positive birth experience, as positive as we can, and put them into a feeling of having control over the situation where often they don’t feel like they have any control whatsoever, the outcome after the baby is born is usually a lot better,” says Sloan. She also serves as a society board member and works as a nurse. She’s been part of Spectrum since its launch, attracted to its mission. “We should be taking care of each other as much as we can and giving the support to those that aren’t as fortunate to have it,” she says. Society representatives continually hear from mothers regarding its “lifechanging” and “life-saving” impacts. “That to me sums it up, that we are able to get in there, help the moms in crisis, and stay long enough to help them to make those changes in their life that they need to continue to be the moms that they want to be. That’s what it’s all about,” says Livingstone. Her goal is to one day open a six-bedroom house, giving her additional space
to care for her own foster children, as well as offer space and respite to society mothers and their children. The house could also prove useful for mothers who, due to their circumstances — like mental illness — require around the clock support in caring for their babies. Spectrum is currently in the midst of a holiday hamper drive. Interested donors are encouraged to contact Livingstone and will be matched with one of their mothers, asked to fulfill the woman’s specific holiday wish. Examples of desired items include towels, spa gift cards, and pots and pans.The deadline for donations is Monday, Dec. 22.To participate, phone
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Livingstone at 604-5625530. In addition, the society has launched a crowdfunding campaign on Fundrazr in support of its ongoing operations.To donate, visit fnd.us/c/4tNQ7. “Our family is back now on track,” says Hemmes. “It was really amazing what Spectrum could do. . . . It was really nice to find out that there are selfless people in this world that actually help others, that look after you. It’s sort of like mothers helping mothers. I owe them the world really.They’re a wonderful, wonderful organization.” For more information on the Spectrum Mothers Support Society, visit spectrummothers.ca.
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Cortisol, our stress hormone, causes increased fat accumulation around our midsection when in the presence of too much insulin. This is often described to us as that spare tire or belly fat. Insulin is both a fat storing and muscle building hormone. If you have too much insulin and are eating a reduced calorie diet, the weight you lose will more likely be muscle than fat. Estrogen is not always bad! It works to balance the insulin and cortisol. Progesterone can affect cortisol, and vice versa. So when both estrogen and progesterone fall in menopause, the female body has a harder time staying lean – especially if there is added stress! When looking at diet, a calorie is not a calorie. When we are young and active we are less resistant to insulin and we need more starchy vegetables to balance our hormones. As we age we become more carbohydrate sensitive and need to adjust our protein, fat and carbohydrate intake accordingly. Let’s not forget about stress – our body does not know the difference between stress from a busy schedule, family stress, stress from exercise, or stress from a poor diet. It’s cumulative. If we are stressed out, and then go and increase our exercise in an attempt to lose weight, we may be increasing that cortisol imbalance and blocking our ability to lose weight. If you are menopausal and having difficulty losing weight, a hormonal assessment may be in order. Our naturopathic physician Dr. Sara Kinnon is available for comprehensive hormone assessment and treatment.
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Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A17
SENIORS
Early childhood educator recalls her roots When Susan Fraser was a little girl in South Africa, she lived for a time with her grandmother. “I became her pupil in a class of one as the two of us walked for miles on the African veld, sketching the scenery and the animals,” she says. At home, the two spent hours recreating in miniature all they had observed. They built clay models of hippos, antelope and leopards, and placed them outside the Bantu villages and European-style farms they constructed on a landscape made of papier mâché. “I was a funny little girl, my mother told me, interested in things other people weren’t. I’m the last one who spoke to the grandparents. I’m the last one who remembers,” she says. Sue’s family goes back six generations in South Africa. On the maternal side, they were medical missionaries of the Methodist persuasion. She was delivered into the world by her grandfather, Dr. Ernest Daniel. His father, known as John Daniel the Missionary, guided David Livingstone from the Orange Free State to the Zambezi River. Sue’s father, James Thompson, was a founder of the 1820 Settlers Museum in Grahamstown. All its contents vanished when independence came to South Africa. By the time apartheid divided South Africa, Sue was in England where she met and married Hugh Fraser, whose own family history in Africa goes back seven generations. The couple returned to their homeland in 1955 to take up farming. Sue and Hugh’s farm in East Africa was “miles from anywhere” and soon the time came for their children, Sally and Ian, to meet other
“I need help while I recover.”
Laura Anderson
Memory Lane
children and begin their education. Sue found a school in the little town of Nakuru, 15 miles away. It functioned according to the progressive principles of the British Infant School, which encouraged learning through play and exploration. “The distance was too far to go back and forth again, so I stayed with the children and helped out. That’s how I found my life’s work,” she says. In the 1960s, East Africa’s progress toward independence could turn violent. Two ambushes on the daily drive to the children’s school convinced Sue and Hugh to find a new home, somewhere in the British Commonwealth. A letter from a friend describing Christmas celebrated with champagne on a Gulf Island beach made the decision easy. By 1964, the Frasers
were settled in West Vancouver. The children, eventually numbering four, attended West Bay elementary. Hugh went into business and Sue embarked upon her life’s work. She enrolled at the University of British Columbia in the emerging field of early childhood education and founded West Bay Play School, which operated for 23 years along those British Infant School principles first encountered in an East African school. Sue was one of the first Canadian delegates to visit the preschools of Reggio Emilia in Italy. The freedom of expression and creativity that arose from the interaction of children and adults transported Sue back to her own childhood, walking with her grandmother under the hot African sun. “I realized the importance of listening closely to children’s conversations and collaborating with them in realizing their ideas,” she says. The Reggio Emilia approach to children’s education was the crucial piece in Sue’s pedagogical puzzle and inspired her influential book, Authentic Childhood: Experiencing Reggio Emilia in the Classroom. Sue received the Child
Care Award of Excellence for Lifetime Achievement from the B.C. Ministry of Children and Family Development in 2013. In October of this year, she became the first Canadian to receive a lifetime achievement award from the North American Reggio Emilia Association. Sue Fraser has lived in West Vancouver for 50 years. It seems long, 50 years, though the span of time is within living memory. Time to raise a family with husband Hugh. Time to build a distinguished career in early childhood education. Time to be welcomed into, and contribute to, a close-knit community and time to witness its See Fraser page 18
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A18 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
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SENIORS Seniors Calendar TABLE TENNIS Mondays and Wednesdays, 10 a.m. to noon and Fridays, 1-3 p.m. at Silver Harbour Centre, 144 East 22nd St., North Vancouver. Fee: $18 per season. Equipment provided. 604-980-2474 silverharbourcentre.com TABLE TENNIS: Wednesdays, 2:45-5 p.m.; Thursdays, 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Saturdays, 12:302:30 p.m.; and Sundays, 11:15 to 1 p.m. at the West Vancouver Seniors’ Activity Centre, 695 21st St. Dropin fee: $2. 604-925-7280 westvancouver.ca/seniors TAI CHI Beginner and
From page 17 transformation over 50 years. Sue is a greatgrandmother now, reading stories with her great-grandchildren. The
Harsh winters can often mean hibernation. Another option is rejuvenation! At our all-inclusive retirement communities you’ll enjoy lively social activities, freshly prepared hot meals and feel safe and secure knowing there is always someone close by to lend a hand. Spend the Winter with us.
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TAI CHI Healing exercises that promote calmness, strength, flexibility and confidence Tuesdays, 9-10 a.m. at Silver Harbour Centre, 144 East 22nd St., North Vancouver. Fee: $26 for eight classes. 604-9802474 silverharbourcentre.com TAI CHI YANG STYLE This class will introduce the basic principles and movement of tai chi Wednesdays, 10:30-11:45 a.m. at John Braithwaite
Community Centre, 145 West First St., North Vancouver. Drop-in fee: $8/$6.50. 604-982-8326 WALKING CLUB Walk local trails and pathways, then meet for coffee Mondays, 1011:30 a.m. at Mollie Nye House, 940 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver. Participants should be able to walk comfortably for a minimum of one hour. Drop-in fee: non-members $4/members $2. 604-9875820 mollienyehouse.com WALKING GROUP Thursdays, 1:30-3 p.m. at North Shore Volunteers for Seniors, 275 21st St., West Vancouver. 604-922-1575 info@nsvs.ca nsvs.ca Compiled by Debbie Caldwell Email info for your nominal fee event to listings@nsnews.com.
Fraser awarded for approach
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time has come to record, for future generations, her own story and that of the Daniels and the Thompsons over six generations in the vast continent of Africa. “I’m the last one who
spoke to the grandparents. I’m the last one who remembers.” Laura Anderson works with and for seniors on the North Shore. 778-279-2275 lander1@shaw.ca
Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A19
Support ships will be largest built in B.C. From page 10
eight months after that, work on a third will begin. A 78-metre oceanographic vessel will follow. In fact, two of the large modular blocks currently being built at the shipyard alongside the new cable ferry will eventually form part of the hull of the first fisheries vessel. Building the two blocks — which will each measure 12 by 12 by 10 metres — allows the company to test its equipment and procedures before production pressure mounts. Not that anyone’s complaining. To date, Ottawa has signed an “umbrella agreement” with Seaspan, indicating its intention to go ahead with the first
its large new ferries in European shipyards. At the end of this twoyear upgrade however, Matergio has no hesitation saying, “We are Canada’s most technologically advanced shipyard.”
In the short term, “Our order book is full,” he said. But in the long term, he sees the federal contract as the beginning, not the end, of the future for the shipyard industry. Burnikell is looking
forward to working on the big ships. “There’s something extremely special about building a vessel and launching a vessel,” he said. “Knowing that vessel is going to be around for a long time.
At the end of the job you know it’s going to have some adventures behind it and it’s going to be because of you.” He likes talking about the heydays of the shipyards with some of
the old-timers. They tell him about the best days, he said, “‘When we were building ships. When everyone was going.’” “All of them say, ‘It’s coming. It’s coming again.’”
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seven vessels. A further 10 ships worth about another $3 billion have also been announced. In rough terms, that’s about 15 years of work, say shipyard bosses. And they are confident there will be more to follow. That’s good news for people like Burnikell, who got his start in shipyards years ago when a friend told him about an outfit looking for someone to wash the bottom of the boats. “I rolled out the pressure washer and a foreman came over and said, ‘You don’t want to wash boats. I need some help fitting this plate.’” He hasn’t looked back since. “Everybody’s who’s in the shipbuilding industry, they have a big sense of pride of workmanship,” he said. The modernization project represents a spectacular turnaround for an industry that struggled to stay afloat in the decades since large federal contracts dried up at the end of the 1980s and B.C. Ferries — once a mainstay of the business — opted to build
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A20 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
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❄Cookie recip e❄ ❄ Tree tips❄ ❄ Event listing s❄
Y O U R
G U I D E
T O
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H O L I D A Y
S E A S O N
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Party conversation tips ROSALIND DUANE, rduane@nsnews.com
W
ith the holiday season in full swing, it’s a good time to brush up on any and all party tips before you’re pressed into mandatory mingling at various office and/or family get-togethers. Although inquiring about a raise or a recent divorce may seem like a good idea, we polled the North Shore News staff for a few conversation starters that might be more appropriate. Here are their suggestions: ❖ Are you doing anything special for Christmas this year? ❖ You look drunk. ❖ Are you going anywhere special for Christmas? ❖ How about those Canucks? ❖ What traditions do you still keep that you had when you were a kid? ❖ What is the farthest you have ever travelled for turkey? ❖ What’s your favourite Christmas tradition? D[[ S83[ 8R 6-Y[ hQ
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Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A21
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Heather Smythe is a North Shore resident and trained chef with a specialty in pastry. She worked as a film caterer for 15 years, and now owns a pop-up store on Gallant Avenue in Deep Cove for December called Provisions12, a Preserves and Essentials company, with classes running until Christmas.
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CHRYSALIS BANGLES
…are adorned with charms and stones which can be worn alone or stacked. More than just decorative bangles, each charm carries a special meaning and sentiment.
Collection 2014
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A22 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
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Lynn Valley Road & Mountain Hwy • www.shoplynnvalley.com
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SCOOTERS:
WE HAVE THEM
We also stock Lucky, District, Dominator & Custom Decks!
“Locally Proven” Chaos Was $299 now $209 New Storm $169
2014 Holiday Shopping Hours and Performances Sunday
14 Jonathan Wiltse Pianist 2:30–4:30pm HOURS
noon-5pm
21
Monday
15
Amicus Music Duo 3:30–5:30pm
LATE NIGHT SHOPPING BEGINS
10am-9pm
22
Tuesday
Wednesday
16
17
Jonathan Wiltse Pianist 3–5pm
Amicus Music Duo 3:30–5:30pm
HOURS
10am-9pm
23
HOURS
10am-9pm
24
Jonathan Wiltse Pianist 1–3pm
Amicus Music Duo 3:30–5:30pm
Jonathan Wiltse Pianist 3–5pm
Jonathan Wiltse Pianist 11am–1pm
HOURS
HOURS
HOURS
CHRISTMAS EVE
11am-6pm
28 HOURS
noon-5pm
10am-9pm
29 HOURS
10am-6pm
10am-9pm
30 HOURS
10am-6pm
10am-5pm
Thursday
18 Thunderbirds Barbershop 7:15–8:45pm HOURS
10am-9pm
25 MERRY CHRISTMAS!
CLOSED
Friday
Saturday
19
20
Jonathan Wiltse Pianist 3–5pm
Amicus Music Duo 3:30–5:30pm
HOURS
10am-9pm
26 BOXING DAY HOURS
noon-5pm
HOURS
10am-6pm
27
HOURS
10am-6pm
31 Jan 1 Jan 2 Jan 3 NEW YEAR’S EVE HOURS
10am-5pm
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
CLOSED
HOURS
10am-9pm
AN EVERYDAY REMINDER OF YOUR LOVE These absolutely beautiful “every occasion” earrings will remind her of your love every time she wears them. 14kt yellow/white gold diamond earrings, .46ct T.W. with omega clip backs ($1,335). While at Trio, ask about having your old jewellery refashioned into something brand new. Quality, price and integrity since 1980.
HOURS
10am-6pm
winners • shoppers drug mart • save-on-Foods • black bear pub • plus over 40 stores
#26-1501 Lonsdale (above Bank of Montreal) 604-986-9591
Mon to Fri 9:30-5:30, Sat 9:30-5 Dec. 24th: 9:30-noon
Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A23
WINTER GIFT G A L L E R Y A unique selection of gifts by local artists in the Seymour Art Gallery and Gallery Shop
OPEN UNTIL DECEMBER 24, 2014 Seymour Art Gallery
4360 Gallant Ave North Vancouver, BC V7G 1L2
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Party tips continued 538S 6-Y[ h"
❖ In your opinion what is the best wine to
pair with turkey? ❖ Did you make the dip? It’s delicious! ❖ How about that snow, rain, wind, sun, warm weather, wet weather, cold weather (anything about the weather)? ❖ That looks good, what are you drinking (or eating)? ❖ Are you doing much shopping this holiday season? ❖ Will you be travelling for the holidays? ❖ How much does a polar bear weigh? Just enough to break the ice.
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Gift Ideas & Stocking Stuffers for her!
info@seymourartgallery.com www.seymourartgallery.com 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 7 days a week 604.924.1378
All I Want For Christmas... • Fresh cut Christmas trees • Holiday wreaths, garlands, and swags • Festive winter planters and greens • And many more great gifts and ideas
Open through December 24th Nor th Vancouver ad 1343 Lynn Valley Ro
604-985-1784
rden.ca www.mapleleafga
Smoke & Mirrors Eyeshadow Kit by Jane Iredale $52.50
Keepsake Collection Train Case by Glo Minerals $90
Wrinkle Relaxers Dermal Fillers Dr Jonas LaForge MD Address Free Radical Degeneration Natural Hormone Replacement Uncover Biochemical imblances Vitamin Therapy
Keepsake Collection Time Capsule by Glo Minerals $62.95 Limited offer while stocks last. VIP discount not applicable
Jazz Standard Limited Edition by Deborah Lippmann $19
Sexy Back Limited Edition by Deborah Lippmann $24
A24 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
Tips for choosing a Christmas tree ROSALIND DUANE rduane@nsnews.com
S
trolling through rows of fragrant Christmas trees looking for the perfect one to take home is a popular holiday tradition for both adults and kids. Sometimes a special fir finds its way into your heart, and other times you need a little help choosing. David Perrigard, the manager at Maple Leaf Garden Centre in North Vancouver, says many people know what type of tree they want when they head to the store. And this year, three- to six-foot trees are very popular. “We find a lot of people are going with smaller trees,” notes Perrigard, adding it may be due to shifting demographics or smaller house sizes. Plus, smaller trees tend to be cheaper as trees are generally priced by size. The height often correlates to the age of the tree as well, he explains. “An eight-foot tree will be several years older than a five-foot tree.” Christmas tree stock usually arrives in late November, and the first two weekends of December are the peak times to pick one up. There are four main types of trees to consider: Douglas, noble, Fraser, or grand fir. Perrigard says the most popular type of tree tends to be the Douglas fir, but they are not necessarily the nicest. They grow fast so their branches aren’t as stiff, which means they don’t hold ornaments as well, he says. They also drop a lot of needles, but they have the best fragrance. “The Douglas fir, you walk into a room you can smell them,” he says. The noble and Fraser firs have stiffer needles that don’t have as much oil in them, so they don’t smell as much. But Perrigard calls these the “premium” trees. “The nice thing is they’ve got much tougher branches
so you can hang heavier ornaments on them and lights and things like that much better. And usually there’s a little bit more space in between them too, so they show off ornaments a little better.” The Fraser firs have a silver underside to the needles, which a lot of people like, he adds. And nobles are usually sturdy with a perfect pyramid shape and a strong green hue. A grand fir sits somewhere in the middle of the Douglas and the Fraser with some attributes of both, he explains. They too have silver undersides, but grands have a softer, more elegant look and longer needles. “They look quite nice,” says Perrigard adding, “All four trees are quite different.” He suggests when choosing a tree to consider the height of the room it will be in and leave at least 18 inches from the ceiling. Most trees for sale at various spots right now are local and fresh, but watch for lots of bare needles on the inside of the tree, which could be an indication that it’s older. “If there’s still a lot of needles inside the tree then it’s probably fresher, stronger,” explains Perrigard adding, “You shouldn’t be seeing brown at this point. They should all be green.” Once the tree is home, it’s important to water it every day, says Perrigard. And it should be given a fresh cut, which can be as little as half an inch at the bottom. “The fresh cut allows the tree to start drinking water again and that will prolong its life through Christmas,” he explains. The tree should be placed in water within an hour of getting a fresh cut, even if it’s placed in a bucket of water and left in the backyard. “It’s a lot like a floral rose when you cut it it’s going to want to start drinking water,” says Perrigard.
There are four main types of trees to consider: Douglas, noble, Fraser, or grand fir.
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Bring Hope and Joy to a Family this Holiday Season You can help... 8 Donate On-Line or Mail a cheque to
FAMILY SERVICES OF THE NORTH SHORE #101–255 West 1st Street, North Vancouver, BC V7M 3G8
8 Bring a New Unwrapped Gift to the
Christmas Bureau or leave your donation with
Park Royal Guest Services, or Capilano Mall near Santa’s House
8 Our greatest need is for:
Seniors or Persons with Disabilities Suggestions: blankets, towels, toiletries, sweatshirts, t-shirts, gloves, boxes of cookies, chocolates, gift cards for movie passes, restaurants, department, drug and book stores Children Suggestions: board games, puzzles, arts & craft supplies, Frozen toys, Monster High, sports items, back packs Teens Suggestions: sports gear, jerseys, electronic games, ear buds, winter hats, gloves, scarves, hoodies, sneakers, pyjamas, toiletries, make-up, hair accessories
Thank you for your generous support! Visit www.familyservices.bc.ca for more information or call 604-984-9627 FOUNDING SPONSOR
EMPTY STOCKING FUND In partnership with United Way of the Lower Mainland.
Counselling • Support • Education
Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A25
WORK Options for Volunteers The following is a selection of volunteer opportunities from various community organizations, made available through Volunteer North Shore, a service of North Shore Community Resources Society. VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES Immigrant Services Society of B.C. has a vast range of opportunities that can accommodate volunteers who have a broad variety of skills and interests. Short-term opportunities include agency receptionist; administrative assistant; field trip leader; community outreach/special events; ESL teacher/assistant/tutor; translator/interpreter; settlement services assistant; volunteer program assistant. Long-term opportunities (three-six months) include settlement mentors; learning in action mentors and mentees. REHABILITATION VOLUNTEER A rehabilitation volunteer
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Student ventures face the grizzlies CHRISTINE LYON clyon@nsnews.com
Five student startups from Capilano University and BCIT have been selected to compete for $5,000 in cash and prizes after impressing “the grizzlies” at a recent Dragons’ Den-style event in North Vancouver. The annual Grizzly Den competition, which took place Nov. 28 at Zen Maker Lab in Lower Lonsdale, is an elevator pitch contest designed for student entrepreneurs, social enterprises and early-stage startups. Fifteen teams were
allotted 100 seconds each to convince a panel of three judges to invest in their business. The top five winners will be invited to compete at the North Shore Tech Innovators Night on March 27 at Pinnacle Hotel at the Pier for at least $5,000 and in-kind prizes. They are, in order of rank, Flood Hats (Jessica Liebenberg from Capilano University), Smart Tea (Manjot Dhillon and team from BCIT), UBrew (Adrien Nichol from Capilano University), People’s Tutoring Platform (Penny Li from BCIT) and HomEship (Danielle
Walkow and Jennifer Larsen from BCIT). The first place Grizzly Den winner, Flood Hats, will receive $500 cash from event sponsor Auro.io and the top five will get a free six-month membership to Zen Maker Lab where they can develop their ideas and products. All presenters will get a $150 cloud hosting credit from Auro.io. The winner of the first Grizzly Den contest, Procurify.com, went on to secure more than $1 million in funding from investors, including Mark Cuban from TV’s Shark Tank.
is needed to assist with a walking and exercise program by encouraging residents to participate in rehab activities, escorting residents to and from activation area and assisting with set up and storage of the equipment. DRIVER CLASS 4 Volunteer driver is needed to drive the Hub bus (15 seat capacity) for programs, assist Hub staff with getting seniors on and off the bus, carry and lift walkers and groceries, and socialize with the seniors. VISITORS Lynn Valley Care Centre is looking for volunteers to visit with residents and help with various programs such as conversation, musical entertainment, games, reading, mealtime assistance etc.This position would be suitable for a high school student, 16 years of age or older. CAMPAIGN LEADER April is Daffodil Month. The Street Team Program consists of teams of volunteers promoting pins and cut daffodils in preassigned locations, including malls and street corners. It
is primarily a fundraising campaign, but also raises awareness about programs. GAMES HELPER/ PLAYER Volunteer is needed to play different games with residents either one-to-one, or in small groups; escort residents to and from the activity and encourage participation and independence.This is an activity which the volunteer can choose to do independently with individual residents but under the direction of staff. HEART MONTH CANVASSER February is Heart Month. Join a team of dedicated volunteers to raise funds to help prevent heart disease and stroke. Attend heart rally information session; visit neighbours, friends and family and ask for funds to support research; raise awareness by handing out Heart Month brochures; thank neighbours for supporting the Heart and Stroke Foundation; return canvasser kit. If you are interested in these or other possible volunteer opportunities, call 604-9857138.The society is a partner agency of the UnitedWay.
Help us ‘extend a hand up’ to families in need • Serving families and individuals across the North Shore • Providing counsel + coaching, food + clothing that saves lives • Offering one-to-one care. Restoring people to healthier, productive lives • Grassroots support from households, business, churches, community groups
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A26 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
TASTE
List has picks for holiday pairings
Tim Pawsey
Notable Potables In case you missed it, the holidays are here. With them comes the chance to celebrate in style, but there’s no need to break the bank. Here are some suggestions to help you make the right choices when it comes to planning your festivities. There really is no substitute for answering the door with a glass of something sparkling. And if you’re not going to drink Champagne at this time of year, well, when? Champagne Hubert Paulet Brut 1er Cru NV The current trend is very much towards small producers such as this fourth-generation family in Rheims. This bubble brims with personality. It has citrus and honey
notes up front before lemon and floral notes underpinned with keen minerality (limited, private wine stores, around $60, 90 points). Easier to find, a delicious drop (and Best of Show at last year’s Vancouver Magazine Wine Awards): Le Mesnil Blanc De Blancs Grand Cru Brut, which sports citrus and nutty notes with biscuit hints and a long finish (BCLS $54.99, 91 points). From the big names, I’m headed back to Piper Heidsieck NV, a perennial fave that just happens to be on sale right now. Look for a fine stream of bubbles with some toasty and nutty notes on top, followed by elegant mouth-filling apple and citrus notes with just a touch of mineral and a lengthy finish. It’s a great festive treat. Think foie gras or lobster canapés (BCLS $59.99, 91 points). When it comes to sparkling wines there’s no end of great choice, from Cava to B.C. bubble and more. Another winner that also delivers excellent organic value is organic Pares Balta Cava Brut. It is well textured, quite fullbodied, with toasty notes
on top followed by fresh apple and pear over citrus hints ($19.99, 90 points). Riesling, Chardonnay Musqué and Pinot Blanc make up the blend in this traditional method sparkler that sees 16 months aging on its lees (fermentation). The result is a robust but crisp bubbly bursting with citrus and apple aromas. More citrus and brioche flavours abound before a lingering, slightly off-dry finish. Just like Champagne, what better time of year could there be than this to drink Riesling? It’s lower in alcohol, among the most food-friendly of wines, is often a crowd pleaser and is generally downright delicious. Riesling is also coming very much more into the mainstream these days. Here are some suggestions to help the festivities along. Kung-Fu Girl Riesling 2013 A lip-smacking, fruitdriven Riesling from Washington State, this one sports up-front floral and stone fruit with a juicy palate of peach and zesty orange notes. It has a fun package too. Think sushi (duh!), as well as lightly spiced Asian flavours or
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'V[([ ;([ ,P[N$A -Z ([5> `VU$[ ;N5 9"99PA -,$U-N& $- 7V--&[ Z(-O `V[N U$ 7-O[& $- ,U7RUNX `UN[ $- ,;U( `U$V V-PU5;A Z[;&$&< BKD'D CANSTOCK even mince tarts (BCLS $19.99, 90 points). Quails’ Gate Chenin Blanc 2013 One of B.C.’s most underrated whites, here’s a great alternative to Chardonnay that (with 10 per cent Sauvignon Blanc) adds up to a pretty tasty drop. Packed with zesty lemon-lime citrus notes, it sports a generous palate without being clumsy before a crisp and clean end. Chill it down (not too much, though) and get shucking those oysters ($18.99, 91 points). The (interesting) party red: Jean Maurice Raffault Chinon Rouge 2013
(Loire). The last thing you really want to do is drink a heavy, oaky red for half the night, so try this one instead. This Cabernet Franc suggests bright red berries up front, followed by a savoury mid-palate with mocha and peppery notes wrapped in lively acidity. It’s a perfect match for cold cuts or even cranberry sauce (BCLS $21.99, 90 points). For something a little bit different try Wychwood’s Hobgoblin Ale (U.K.). This light to mediumbodied red or ruby ale is reminiscent of English bitter, with a nice hoppy component and some
gentle roasted notes (BCLS $3.50, 500 millilitres). Here’s a few more party planning tips: ■ Make a list and rough out a budget before you go to the store and stick to it. ■ Choose wines lighter in alcohol and that are foodfriendly. ■ Have on hand tasty, non-alcoholic options for designated drivers and other non-drinkers. Above all, always be a responsible host. Tim Pawsey writes about wine for numerous publications and online as the Hired Belly at hiredbelly.com. Contact: info@hiredbelly.com.
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Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A27
PETS
A rare exception to the annual rule
Joan Klucha
Canine Connection a local rescue or shelter or contact a reputable breeder. That has been my advice for years. But after the email I received a few days ago I am beginning to have a change of heart. You see, not everyone’s Christmas is busy and hectic. There are some people who spend Christmas alone and not only have the time to bring a puppy or adult dog into their lives, but also a big lonely heart filled with great desire to do so. Richard (not his real name) lost his wife to cancer around Christmas two years ago. They had no children, but they had a dog that had passed on just before his wife got ill. They chose not to bring another dog into their lives due to the circumstances. A couple of years have passed and Richard has found himself wanting a companion in his life. In Richard’s email he writes, “I’m not ready to share my life with another person yet, and I may never be, but a dog. . . .” He told me about his former dog and how it was like a child to him and his wife. He also shared how alone he felt at this
time of year and adding to his loneliness was the reluctance of rescues to adopt dogs out. Yes, it’s true that he could have considered adopting at any other time of the year, but often it’s Christmas, the season we all honour as a time for family, that opens that door of loneliness that many people have closed tight throughout the year. “I want to adopt a dog at this time of year as a way to change how I feel.
I’m never going to forget about my wife and I don’t want to,” he says. “I just know a dog will help me.” I do respect the closed-door policy that rescues and most shelters have when it comes to adoptions at this time of the year, but sometimes there can be an exception to that rule. Maybe by opening the door just a crack to let someone like Richard tell you his story, you can create a little bit of Christmas magic to heal
a broken heart and assist someone who wants to move forward in his life and knows that a dog will help him take those steps. Isn’t that what the true meaning of Christmas is all about? Giving the gift love? Taking care of a dog takes your mind off of your troubles and that heavy heart for a little while and during that time you smile, feel the warmth of unconditional loving companionship and don’t
feel so alone. I directed Richard to a shelter out of town that I knew would listen to him and possibly help bring some Christmas joy into his life because we all deserve to be loved, especially by a dog. Joan Klucha has been working with dogs for more than 15 years in obedience, tracking and behavioural rehabilitation. Contact her through her website k9kinship.com.
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Every year around this time I dedicate a column to the reasons why a puppy should not be under the tree on Christmas morning. It is not my intention to discourage people from adopting a puppy, but rather to encourage people to consider the timing of the event in relation to how busy this stretch of holiday season tends to be. For most people, Christmas is anything but a relaxing, peaceful time of year. It is filled with shopping, right up until the eve of Christmas. There is a mixture of work parties, festive events with friends, and entertaining family from out of town. And let’s not forget kids being out of school and the extra commitment that adds to the holiday schedule. Then it’s New Year’s and bam! . . . back at work. This endless activity makes it challenging to bring a new puppy or an adult dog into an unfamiliar home. That new dog, especially a recycled mature dog that may come with baggage, needs stability and calmness to bond with its new people and to feel safe. A puppy needs consistency — and lots of it — to get issues like house training and good manners off on the right foot. If a puppy or adult dog is on that Christmas list, I typically suggest purchasing dog toys, a collar and leash, a food dish or dog bed and place that under the tree instead of a live canine. Add a card that says that after Christmas the family will go and adopt a puppy from
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A28 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
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Gala proceeds to empower youths
Community members are invited to attend the upcoming SDCWinter Gala 2014, intended to raise funds for programs working to empower children with disabilities. The SDC Blue Ribbon Foundation International was launched by former high school students from the Lower Mainland to support youths with disabilities, according to a press release.The non-profit organization is based upon youth empowerment and mobilization, with a focus on mentoring and financial aid. The youth-led organization has helped more than 100
children with disabilities locally and globally through fundraisers, disability awareness projects and tailored alternative therapy programs. Gala proceeds will help fund the organization’s current programs for children with disabilities as well as to start new programs in other communities.The gala will be held Dec. 21 from 5:30 to 10:30 p.m. at Vancouver’s Fairmont Waterfront Hotel. Festivities will include entertainment, keynote speakers, and a presentation by motivational speaker, Spencer West. Tickets ($200) and info: can. sdcblueribbonfoundation.org.
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Sunday, December 14, 2014 - North Shore News - A29
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to THE GAMES PEOPLE PLAY
A true Hall of Fame life Many obstacles faced and beaten by Denny Veitch
STEFANIA SECCIA sseccia@nsnews.com
All his life, the late Denny Veitch managed to thrive despite facing seemingly impossible odds from a very young age. On Thursday it was announced that Veitch, who passed away from Alzheimer’s disease in 2011 at the age of 80, will be inducted into the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame in the builder’s category for his lifetime’s worth of contributions to soccer, rugby and football at both the professional and amateur levels. The longtime North Vancouver resident was general manager of the BC Lions from 1967 to 1970 and then went on to become co-founder of the Vancouver Whitecaps Football Club and the team’s first general manager, holding that post from 1973 to 1977. He’s also credited with coming up with the team’s name, the word Whitecaps springing to his mind one day as he drove over the Lions Gate Bridge and saw foaming waves below and snow-capped mountains above. On top of the sporting accolades and achievements that have him headed to the Hall of Fame, he was, above all, a family man, according to his daughter Deanne Lenarduzzi. “He raised us family first,” she said. “My mom died very, very young. She was only 45 and so he had to continue raising a family after that.” Following the death of his wife, Veitch raised Deanne, her brother Danny and sister Karen on his own. “He was the ultimate parent,” says Lenarduzzi, who met her husband, a fellow named Bobby, through her father’s soccer connections. Deanne describes her father as a lifelong athlete as well as a survivor with a difficult past.
H-NX$UO[ F-($V )V-([ ([&U5[N$ 0[NNA #[U$7V X[$& ([;5A Z-( ;N UN$[(N;$U-N;P ("X9A $-"( UN $V[ P;$[ 8SY:&< 'V[ UN&,U(;$U-N;P ;$VP[$[ `[N$ -N $- 9[7-O[ 7-=Z-"N5[( -Z $V[ #;N7-"a[( !VU$[7;,&< DN 'V"(&5;A U$ `;& ;NN-"N7[5 $V;$ #[U$7V> `V- 5U[5 UN 6:88> `UPP 9[ ; O[O9[( -Z $V[ 2<1< ),-($& K;PP -Z .;O[ 7P;&& -Z 6:8Y< BKD'D )%BBHJ/0 She was six years old when she finally realized her father had only one arm. “He was a very young child when he lost his arm,” she said. “To be normal, to be able to be like everybody else way back in those days, was what drove him.” As a young boy Veitch lived near the train tracks in Kitsilano with four siblings, and they’d often hop on the boxcars to get around. One day, when he was six years
old, his brothers and friends challenged him to hop on the train with them. “Him being such a little athlete right out of the gates, any challenge — he was up for it,” she noted. However, at the time Veitch’s mother was very sick and at the last second he thought he heard her calling for him — so he jumped off the train.When he fell, the moving train ran over his arm, severing it
from his body. “He just decided that’s what was handed to him and it was tough times anyway as a kid,” she said. “He just lived life and played it out as hard as he could. He was the ultimate competitor, he thrived on competition.” His mother died a few years later and at age 12 he wound up living in a boarding house.Veitch started working at a bakery before school to pay for the
boarding house. “His outlet was sports,” Lenarduzzi noted. “My father was involved with sports his whole life. . . . There was no handicap with him.” Lacking a limb didn’t stop Veitch from making a name for himself on the football field — as a receiver, no less — as well as on the rugby pitch where he earned See Haar page 30
A30 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
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a reputation as a fierce tackler and represented Canada internationally. It also didn’t hinder his ability to encourage his own children to take part in an active lifestyle, according to Lenarduzzi. “He taught us how to ski, water ski, swim. He taught me how to use a stick shift.” Veitch’s family-first policy was what had him pull back from the Whitecaps just two years before their first major victory because he wanted to take care of his wife when she was diagnosed with terminal cancer in 1977. “He pulled back actually because he had three kids and he was trying to figure out how he was going to carry on,” Lenarduzzi added. Veitch spent his life dedicated to professional and amateur sports organizations, including Rugby Canada and the Rick Hansen Foundation. But one day during a tennis match with old buddies he took a fall and fell ill. It led to several strokes causing memory loss, which led to a misdiagnosis, his daughter recalls. It wasn’t until his memory loss worsened that the doctors caught on. For the last six years of his life, Lenarduzzi said it was hard watching her father struggle with Alzheimer’s
because he was always used to overcoming obstacles in his life. “It was a hard way for him to finish his years because he never let anything take him down before,” she said. “But he did fight it for sure. He was an impressive guy. He was bigger than life. “That’s how I choose to remember him as that big personality that I grew up with and taught me how to make sure you don’t take no for an answer.” ••• There will be a distinct North Shore flavour to the 2015 B.C. Sports Hall of Fame induction ceremony as Veitch will be joined on the slate by two other honourees with strong local ties. North Vancouver native Paul Kariya will be inducted in recognition of his stellar hockey career in the NHL and with Team Canada. Kariya, who retired from the NHL in 2010 after 15 seasons, will go down as one of the greatest B.C.-born players in league history. He scored 989 points in 989 regular season games, including 402 goals, was named a first-team league all-star three times and a second-team all-star twice. He was also twice named the winner of the Lady Byng Trophy for gentlemanly conduct and sportsmanship. Kariya played for Canada in two Olympic Games,
winning silver in 1994 and gold in 2002.The smooth skating forward is already in the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame as a member of that 2002 Olympic team that included other provincial links such as Eric Brewer, Scott Niedermayer, Joe Sakic, SteveYzerman and recently deceased West Vancouver resident Pat Quinn who was the team’s head coach. The other North Shore link headed to the Hall is longtime North Shore Twins head coach John Haar. The Vancouver native has earned countless honours as a baseball coach, having launched the careers of several B.C.-born major leaguers. He served as Canada’s manager at the 1986 World Cup held in Cuba and helped the team qualify for the 1988 Olympic Games. Haar was named Baseball Canada’s coach of the year in 1991, the International Baseball Federation’s top coach in 1992, and was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in 2007. He coached the Twins to three straight B.C. Premier Baseball League titles from 2007 to 2009.The 71-yearold is still the head coach of the premier Twins, having guided them to a secondplace finish in the BCPBL this summer. — with files from Andy Prest
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A36 - North Shore News - Sunday, December 14, 2014
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