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Refugee sponsors pained by process Bureaucratic delays cause mounting concerns for family caught in Syrian crisis JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com
HishamWattar is worried. For the past month, the Syrian-born North Vancouver man has been trying to convince his youngest niece not to risk a deadly journey with human smugglers. So far, he’s talked her into staying in Egypt, where five members of Wattar’s family have been waiting to come to Canada since they fled Syria and were granted refugee status three years ago. But faced with repeated bureaucratic delays, the young woman is losing hope that she will ever get here. Lately, she’s been tempted to try a more dangerous journey to Europe — one now being taken by wave after wave of Syrian refugees, from a country where millions have been displaced. It’s a journey similar to the one attempted by the family of Alan Kurdi, the three-year-old boy whose lifeless body was captured in a photograph that shocked the world after the boat he was in capsized, drowning many on board. Kurdi’s aunt in Coquitlam had planned to help the boy and his family to come to Canada as refugees. Wattar understands the frustration that propels families to take desperate chances. He and North
*%_d_ G..)_@ -<'%.) .] 2<OC.O L_W[Y%' 2Y")8Y@ <O6 F.)%Y #<O8."d_) )_'W6_O% LW'Y<P !<%%<) %<QS <:."% :")_<"8)<%W8 6_Q<C' %Y_C5d_ _O8."O%_)_6 %)CWO[ %. '-.O'.) !<%%<)5' *C)W<O ]<PWQC <' )_]"[__'> DLE(E CINDY GOODMAN Vancouver’s Canyon Heights Church pastor Steve Moore have been trying for three years to bring his family to Canada as privately sponsored refugees. They have filled out reams of paperwork. In their case, the process was supposed to be quicker because Moore’s church denomination already has an agreement with Ottawa, allowing it to sponsor refugees. See Refugees page 3
Syria’s refugees capture candidates’ attention BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
Though Syria’s civil war has been raging for years and displaced millions of people, the refugee crisis wasn’t a political talking point for Canadian politicians until the now-iconic image of a drowned boy began to flash across our screens.
VOTE 2015 Since that time, the Liberals, Conservatives, Greens and NDP are all pledging to do more for Syria’s refugees.
Visiting West Vancouver on Thursday, Liberal leader Justin Trudeau said a Liberal government would bring over 25,000 Syrian refugees in the next few months, which Trudeau estimated would cost about $100 million. The plan would involve hiring more case workers to staff offices set up in Europe. “As Canadians our
hearts have gone out to the millions and millions of people who are struggling,” he said. “There’s a lot we should do and we should do now.” Trudeau characterized the Conservative government’s response to the humanitarian crisis as “looking for excuses and See Private page 3
A2 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
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Sunday, September 13, 2015 - North Shore News - A3
Refugees losing hope in face of long wait From page 1 But so far, “It’s no faster than any other way,” said Moore. These are people who’ve been “given hope, only to have it put on hold by some bureaucratic office,” he said. Wattar, who runs Best Falafel in Vancouver, emigrated to Canada himself in the 1980s under a business immigrant program.Three other family members joined him later under a family reunification program. Other family members who stayed in Syria lived normal lives until that country was torn apart by war.When student protests started on the streets of Damascus during the Arab Spring,Wattar’s 22-year-old nephew was among them. Authorities reacted swiftly, arresting the young man. The secret service raided the family home several times. “They came in with machine guns and searched the entire house.They smashed everything and threw it everywhere,” said Wattar. They knew it was time to get out. With Wattar’s help, his sister, two nieces and two of his niece’s children fled to Egypt. Because private citizens can’t sponsor refugees on their own,Wattar approached Moore in 2012, asking if the church in his neighbourhood would be
LW'Y<P !<%%<)@ '_<%_6 <% )W[Y%@ c.))W_' %Y<% )_-_<%_6 6_Q<C' WO YW' '-.O'.)'YW- <--QW8<%W.O Y<d_ Q_6 %. YW' OW_8_ 8.O'W6_)WO[ P.)_ 6<O[_)."' .-%W.O') DLE(E CINDY GOODMAN able to help.Wattar said it made no difference that he was a Muslim asking a Christian church for assistance. In October 2013, Wattar and Moore started the process of filling out paperwork.When they got clearance to file a formal application, in July 2014, they were quickly approved and told the forms were being sent to Cairo for further processing.That’s when the wait began. In March,Wattar contacted his MP Andrew Saxton and asked for help. Saxton promised he’d take up the case with Immigration Minister Chris Alexander. But little has apparently come of that. Last month, Moore and Wattar received a letter from
the federal government saying they should expect to wait another 42 months. That’s when his 27-year-old niece started to lose hope that the family would ever get to Canada. His niece began talking about paying smugglers to take a boat to Italy, he said. “That’s the one they call the death boat,” said Wattar. “It’s the longest (journey) and the most dangerous.” Moore said he understands the niece’s frustration as the family sits stateless, unable to work, go to school or go on with their lives. “We’ve already been at this 18 months,” he said. “She’s watching her life pass her by.” The problems faced by Wattar and Moore — willing sponsors who have been prevented from
(Y_ 6<"[Y%_) <O6 '.O .] LW'Y<P !<%%<)5' OW_8_ <)_ <P.O[ Nd_ ]<PWQC P_P:_)' cY. Y<d_ :__O [)<O%_6 )_]"[__ '%<%"' :C %Y_ &OW%_6 F<%W.O' <O6 <)_ c<W%WO[ ].) <--).d<Q %. 8.P_ %. 2<O<6<> DLE(E *&DDHK01 bringing refugees to Canada through bureaucratic delays — are ones the federal government has faced increasing criticism for since the photo of little Alan Kurdi went around the world. Seeing the picture of the boy drowned and face down in the sand was heartbreaking, said Wattar.
“How did we get to that? How did we let these things happen?” he asked. For Moore, it was the photo of the rescue worker carrying the lifeless child that struck him hard. “I’m the rescue worker,” he said. “And that boy could not be rescued. That’s what hit me. That’s kind of us. I don’t want to
be at that point.” Moore said it’s important to him to complete the sponsorship for Wattar’s family. “The journey they began is a journey that was promised to them,” he said. “I’ve had people call me and say they want to sponsor a refugee.” His advice: “Be ready for a big task.”
Private sponsorship program not ‘user friendly’ From page 1 dragging its heels.” West VancouverSunshine Coast-Sea to Sky Country Green Party challenger Ken Melamed said the current crisis has been exacerbated by the Harper government’s nearly 10 years in power. “The current situation is condemnable,” he said. “Harper has cut the public service to the bone. They simply can’t process the applications. We need to have special provisions that allow us to adapt and be more nimble in these times of crisis.” Melamed said Green members of parliament will also work to address the underlying issues causing the refugee crisis and that more bombs and jets are not the answer. “Our overseas
development aid has fallen to half of what the UN recommends, which is 0.7 per cent of GDP. We have to look at the root causes,” he said. “One of our fundamental principles is non-violent response.We think that economic measures are more successful in this case. If we look in the past, military intervention has never stopped militants and terrorists like ISIL. We need to take a different approach.” The NDP’s plan is to accept 10,000 refugees by the end of this year and increase the number of government-sponsored refugees to 9,000 per year for the next four years, according to Larry Koopman, NDP candidate in West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea to Sky Country. That would involve
appointing a refugee coordinator to speed up the process and fast-tracking private sponsorships. “I know it’s an ambitious plan but we do believe that we can do it. It’s going to take a lot of co-ordination and effort,” he said. “Turkey alone has taken nearly two million Syrian refugees. Germany is expected to take 800,000. It is time for us to move quickly and do the right thing. I think we have a moral obligation to take immediate action.” North Vancouver Conservative candidate Andrew Saxton said Canada is already punching above its weight when it comes to the refugees, and that the country is also contributing foreign aid and assisting in international military coalition against ISIS. “We originally had a
target of 11,300 Syrian refugees and the prime minister has now increased that to 21,300,” Saxton said. “Obama just announced that they’re going to resettle 10,000 refugees. That’s a country 10 times our size and they’re resettling less than we are.” Saxton said the refugee system is under a “huge amount of demand” right now, which has put strain on the system. More help is on the way, he added. “The prime minister did say we are going to be taking some extra, concrete steps to expedite the process. We do anticipate there will be an announcement to that affect sometime soon,” he said. “We have to make sure that refugees have been cleared from a security standpoint and we
don’t think it’s responsible to just send planes over and open the doors like Mr. Mulcair has said, and let anybody jump into the plane.” Janet Dench, executive director of the Canadian Council for Refugees, said the process for coming to Canada as a refugee has been subject to more barriers and technicalities in recent years, slowing the process for all. “In the last few years, the focus has been much more on closing the door and restricting who can get in and so there have been very few Syrians who can get in,” Dench said. “Now you kind of need to spend a year studying it in university before you can figure out what’s going on with the private sponsorship program. It’s certainly not user friendly.”
Dench took exception to the notion that Canada is somehow a leader in resettling refugees. “I’d say it’s extremely offensive for Canada to be trying to put itself out as being the most generous in the context where many countries, in particular countries around Syria, are hosting millions of refugees,” she said. “Only a tiny percentage of the world’s refugees come to Canada.” The council, along with a host of other nongovernment agencies, is recommending the government issue temporary residence permits to refugees who can stay with family in Canada, make private sponsorship easier and resettle 10,000 refugees by the end of the year. — with files from Jane Seyd
A4 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
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Sunday, September 13, 2015 - North Shore News - A5
Trudeau pledges marine protection Liberal leader promises to reinstate ocean science funding JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com
Liberal leader Justin Trudeau made a campaign stop on the North Shore Thursday to announce his party’s plans to beef up marine protected areas and restore funding to marine scientific research. Flanked by local Liberal candidates, and accompanied by a phalanx of national campaign staff and media, Trudeau stopped at the dock of West Vancouver’s John Lawson Park pledging to increase the amount of Canada’s marine and coastal protected areas by 10 per cent by 2020. Trudeau also promised to reinstate $40 million he said has been cut from the federal government’s ocean science and monitoring program. “The war on science ends,” he said. The Liberal leader
VOTE 2015 also said he supports a moratorium on oil-tanker traffic along B.C.’s northern coast, repeating his position opposing the Northern Gateway pipeline project. The Great Bear Rainforest is “not a place for a crude oil pipeline,” he said. But Trudeau ducked questions of whether he supports other projects that have been environmentally controversial, like the Kinder Morgan pipeline expansion project and the Woodfibre LNG project proposed for nearby Howe Sound. On those, Trudeau would only say that he supports ensuring full environmental assessments are conducted.
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“Citizens need to be assured issues are properly addressed,” he said. “Before projects get built, they have to acquire social licence.” He added one factor that should be considered is that fewer oil pipelines means an increase in oil shipments by rail. Both the Woodfibre proposal in Howe Sound and the Kinder Morgan proposal, which would see an increase in oil tanker traffic in Burrard Inlet, have been hot topics in North and West Vancouver. The same day, Lynne Quarmby, the Green Party candidate for BurnabyNorth Seymour, voiced
disappointment after the Supreme Court of Canada turned down a request by her and other environmental groups to act as intervenors before the National Energy Board hearings on the Kinder Morgan project. “As a scientist, I am very concerned about climate change,” said Quarmby in a press statement. Quarmby added the NEB review of the project has become “thoroughly discredited.” “The whole review process has become an approval process,” she stated. Trudeau took a few shots at both Conservatives and the NDP during his West Vancouver stop, criticizing the Conservatives’ environmental record in general and painting those in the party as having “openly questioned the existence of climate change.” Trudeau said NDP leader Thomas Mulcair “can’t do what it takes to protect the environment” because of his promise to not run a deficit.
In May, federal Fisheries Minister Gail Shea also stopped in West Vancouver for a pre-election announcement that Ottawa would spend up to $2.2 million on upgrades to its West Vancouver fisheries research facility. At that announcement attended by MP John Weston, Shea also pledged money to strengthen Ottawa’s $37 million five-year Marine Protected Areas program and a previouslyannounced $2 million for the Pacific Salmon Foundation towards studying factors affecting survival of juvenile salmon in the Strait of Georgia and surrounding marine environments.
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A6 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
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Tapped out T
hanks to recent rainstorms and a drop in our own water consumption, Metro Vancouver has taken us from Stage 3 watering restrictions down to Stage 2. But before we all go dashing for a sprinkler, it would be good if we took some time to reflect on the lessons these last few parched months have taught us. Metro Vancouver has pledged to review the entire water conservation plan and we look forward to seeing the results. Metro utilities committee chairman and City of North Vancouver Mayor Darrell Mussatto has said all options are on the table, including water meters. Municipalities that have them have been repeatedly shown to be more judicious with their water. We’d also like to get a better handle
MAILBOX
on industrial and business water usage. There’s some question about whether we moved to Stage 3 soon enough and we heard plenty of complaints arguing the restrictions on what was allowed and what wasn’t were totally arbitrary. It’s only prudent that Metro should review its policies after one of the worst local droughts on record comes to an end, but we should also be looking to our own habits. Our water system is AAA expensive infrastructure and so we want to be damsure that we’re putting it to its best use. That might not include dumping our drinking water, which is the envy of much of the world, onto our lawns. No doubt we’ve got some rainy months ahead of us. Let’s see if we can be better prepared for the next hot, dry summer.
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Horseshoe Bay losing its cottages Dear Editor: In 2012, when our landlord decided to let his daughter and her family move into the Dundarave house that my family and I had been renting for the five previous years, we decided to rent a nice 1948 cottage in Horseshoe Bay as our new home. Horseshoe Bay is a lovely place with a lucky name, and it was very quiet, seemingly untouched by the onslaught of apparently unregulated development infecting Metro Vancouver, including much of the North Shore. Fast forward three years and the luck is starting to run out for Horseshoe. During the past year, For Sale signs have popped up and vanished with increasing frequency in Upper and Lower Horseshoe. Quaint houses/cottages have rapidly been vanishing, replaced by the kind of modern monsters one can now find in every Lower Mainland neighborhood. But the worst result of all this development is the noise. I used to do my Ph.D-style work from home once in a while (UBC is a long haul), but now I no longer can, unless I permanently pin headphones to my ears and crank up the classical music volume. A rare ultra-modern metal frame house has been under construction next door for over a year now, with no seeming end in sight. (Drilling into metal frames makes a lovely sound,
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especially at 7:30 a.m.) And another house is coming very soon directly next to the metal-frame monster, and then surely there will be another. At least Horseshoe Bay residents no longer need to worry about bears coming to town. Soon my family and I will be on the run again, looking for a pleasant but affordable place to live that is at least marginally within reach of my workplace. Something tells me that the combination of pleasant plus affordable plus near work is going the way of the dodo bird for most Metro Vancouver residents, even for professionals
such as myself who would not be facing this situation in most other places (except in London, Hong Kong and such). The good folks “running” the North Shore neighbourhoods should sit down and ponder this highly troubling situation in earnest.They should look well beyond the dollar signs, and decide what they want to see at the foot of the Coastal Mountains on the still lovely northern shores of Burrard Inlet in five, 10 and 15 years. Walter Cicha West Vancouver
Gleneagles bulb-out to slow drivers, cyclists Dear Editor: Regarding Spirit Trail alterations to Marine Drive at Gleneagles elementary, I’m wondering why a section of the alteration was made so narrow. In a day and age when dedicated lanes or appropriately wide enough roads are built to accommodate vehicles and cyclists, they have made the lane so narrow. The fact that it is where children are dropped off and picked up for school makes it even more of a hazard for cyclists. This is on one of the most used
roadways by cyclists on the North Shore. John Fitzgerald West Vancouver Editor’s note:When asked, District ofWestVancouver spokeswoman Donna Powers said that the bulb-out is an important pedestrian safety measure and is intended to help slow traffic to 30 km/h in the school zone.While it may appear that Marine Drive has been narrowed, the road is roughly the same width as before, Powers said. Paving is yet to be finished.
“Alex played for 76 hours and 33 minutes.” Event promotor Pat Riccardi disputing a recent pinball record, saying the title was won by Alex Hunter in North Vancouver in 1984 (from a Sept. 11 news story). “Every time I think about it, I get quite violently ill. ” NorthVancouver resident Debbie Parhar on finding a “decaying grasshopper” in her fast-food spinach wrap (from a Sept. 9 news story). “Obviously people like winning, so we’re going to try to keep doing that. ” NorthVancouverWolf Pack general manager Elias Godoy saying the defending league champions are looking good ahead of the upcoming hockey season (from a Sept. 9 sports story).
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North Shore News, founded in 1969 as an independent suburban newspaper and qualified under Schedule 111, Paragraph 111 of the Excise Tax Act, is published each Wednesday, Friday and Sunday by North Shore News a division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership and distributed to every door on the North Shore. Canada Post Canadian Publications Mail Sales Product Agreement No. 40010186. Mailing rates available on request. Entire contents © 2013 North Shore News a division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership. All rights reserved. Average circulation for Wednesday, Friday and Sunday is 61,759. The North Shore News, a division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership respects your privacy. We collect, use and disclose your personal information in accordance with our Privacy Statement which is available at www.nsnews.com.
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Sunday, September 13, 2015 - North Shore News - A7
VIEWPOINT
Strategic voting concept convoluted The apparent closeness of the federal election may deal a major setback to those advocating that people vote “strategically” on Oct. 19 in order to defeat the Harper government. With polls (for what they are worth, which admittedly may not be much) suggesting there is a genuine three-way race between the major political parties, neither the NDP nor the federal Liberals can make the case that the other should get out of the way in order not to split the non-Conservative vote. And considering the polls are often contradictory, it’s hard to see how the NDP or the Liberals can use them as “evidence” that one of them should be the natural alternative to the Conservatives. A great example of why the argument to vote strategically may fall flat can be seen in the new riding of Vancouver Granville. If the riding had existed in the 2011
Keith Baldrey
View from the Ledge election, the Conservatives would have won with just 35.4 per cent of the vote, or about 2,300 votes ahead of the second-place Liberals and more than 5,100 votes ahead of the NDP. A left-leaning activist group called Leadnow is targeting the Vancouver Granville riding as one where people should vote strategically to defeat the Conservatives. But both the NDP and the Liberals are running credible candidates — either of whom would be worthy additions to the House of Commons — and it’s impossible for
anyone to make a credible argument that one of them should be shunned over the other. The Liberals can make the case that they have, on paper at least and using actual past voting results, the best chance to defeat the Conservatives. The NDP counters that recent polls (those unreliable things) show that party is more popular in this province than the Liberals. In other words, both parties could be right and both could be wrong. What’s a voter to think? There simply is no proven evidence that one party is better positioned to defeat the Conservatives. Another B.C. riding where the idea of strategic voting becomes a very confusing one is the riding of Victoria, currently held by the NDP. But the Green Party came oh-so-close to winning this riding in a byelection in 2012, losing by just 1,100 votes. In this campaign, it’s hard to say which candidate
— the NDP’s Murray Rankin or the Green’s Joanne Roberts — has the most residential campaign signs in sight (I disregard signs on public property such as boulevards; a sign on someone’s lawn is an indication of a committed voter), which suggests it is a competitive race between the two of them. So how is someone able to figure out how to vote “strategically” in this situation? There is a decent chance the Conservatives (who finished third here in 2011) could win with a very low vote count, but why should anyone expect (or demand) that voters for either the NDP or the Greens, given both parties’ apparent strength, abandon their party to embrace another in order to beat Harper’s candidate? This is another problem with strategic voting. It asks people to vote “against” something rather than “for” something. Other than political activists, I can’t see many people — particularly older voters, who may
warming, to global warming. Yes, that is right. Despite the fact that 2015 is touted as the warmest year on record, the trend over the last almost 20 years has not indicated global warming at all — in fact, another Ice Age is once again being postulated.
This yo-yo-type science is indicative that the most advanced computer modelling cannot predict climate over long periods of time, no matter what the Suzuki /Gore gods say. Jerome Henen North Vancouver
have been voting for a particular party for decades — putting aside one set of principles in favour of making sure a party they’ve never supported scores a victory on election day. Most voters are not closely attuned to the political scene, and pay little attention to election campaigns until near the end of them. Parties can get excited if 1,000 people show up at a campaign rally in a particular riding, but that conveniently ignores the fact that means 44,000 voters (in a 45,000 voter strong riding) stayed away. And unless something happens in this campaign that suggests that either the NDP or the Liberals are demonstrably and unquestioningly better positioned to beat the Conservatives, both parties’ supporters will likely stay away from strategic voting as well. Keith Baldrey is chief political reporter for Global BC. Keith. Baldrey@globalnews.ca
DARYL
PHARMACIST
September is Arthritis Month Awareness in Canada. An estimated 4.6 million Canadians over the age of 15 report having the disease and by 2036, that number will increase to 7.5 million. It is not a disease that affects only the elderly. About 56% of arthritis sufferers are under 65. A new arthritis diagnosis is made every sixty seconds in Canada. For more information go to arthritis.ca Take charge of your own health and your family’s health. Let our pharmacists be part of your healthcare team.
Pharmacy
1401 St. Georges Ave. NORTH VANCOUVER
604-985-1481 www.daviesrx.com SINCE 1973
Mailbox
Enough yo-yo science Dear Editor: Re: Gas Pump Stickers a Futile Exercise, Aug. 21 Mailbox. How right letter-writer Walter Cicha is regarding
this ridiculous idea.What I would add, though, is that there is also zero verifiable proof that CO² is a contributing cause to climate change or if there was global
Capilano University
Piano Sale
Capilano University is renewing its stock of pianos. Through an agreement with Kawai Music Canada and Loewen Piano House, the University is hosting a sale of pianos on campus. Loewen Piano House is a proud partner in the Kawai Piano Institutional Program at Capilano, now in its 21st year at the University. More than 100 pianos, several used at the University, will be available including: Grands, Uprights, and Digitals. Many are new, some are less than one year old, and others have been professionally refurbished. Brand names include: Kawai, Yamaha, Heintzman, Boesendorfer, Bluethner and Shigeru KAWAI. Specific brands will be allocated at 2 different locations including: North Vancouver and Richmond. To schedule an appointment call: 604-801-5393 www.loewenpianohouse.com Friday, September 18th • 10 am to 9 pm Saturday, September 19th • 10 am to 6 pm Sunday, September 20th • 10 am to 5 pm Capilano University Multipurpose Room - Sportsplex building 2055 Purcell Way North Vancouver, BC Visa, MasterCard, Interac, and Warranty and Delivery, arranged through Loewen Piano House.
YOUR VOTE is YOUR VOICE
Please vote Monday, October 19
A8 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
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Why Go Far?
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Work starts on causeway sidewalks Construction on a $4.37-million project to improve pedestrian and cyclist safety in the Stanley Park causeway will get underway Sunday and stretch into the fall and winter months. The scope of the project, announced in the spring, includes widening the sidewalks and installing bicycle fencing on both
sides of the causeway. During construction, pedestrian and cyclist detours will be in place via Hanson Trail and Pipeline Drive between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. on weekdays. Daytime vehicle traffic on the causeway will not be affected; however, there will be single-lane closures overnight on weekdays between 9:30 p.m. and
6 a.m. and on weekends between 10 p.m. and 9 a.m. Pedestrians and cyclists can follow Twitter updates for sidewalk open and closed status at: @DriveBC_LM or @ DriveBC. The detour map for pedestrians and cyclists and details about the project are available at gov. bc.ca/StanleyParkCauseway. — Maria Spitale-Leisk
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Sunday, September 13, 2015 - North Shore News - A9
Attention Parents!
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Please vote Monday, October 19
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A10 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
Court told Ivan Henry battles PTSD, anxiety Ivan Henry’s wrongful conviction prompted paranoid delusion disorder, psychiatrist testifies KEITH FRASER Contributing writer
Ivan Henry’s incarceration resulted in him suffering from a paranoid delusion disorder and, since his release from prison, Henry has had symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder and high levels of anxiety, a judge was told Tuesday. Henry, a North Vancouver resident who spent 27 years behind bars after being wrongfully convicted of a series of sex offences against Vancouver women, first started manifesting a psychotic illness when he was arrested for the sex crimes in 1982, said Dr. Adrian Grounds, a forensic psychiatrist. Grounds, who was described by Henry’s lawyer as a leading expert on wrongful convictions, said that from his arrest until his conviction in 1983, Henry was overwhelmed by the charges against him and developed “complex
paranoid ideas” while he was in Oakalla prison. “He thought the floor (of his cell) was vibrating and some machinery under the cell was causing this. He described thinking the cell was moving as if on rails. He said this happened throughout his time in Oakalla.” Grounds said it was the beginning of a psychotic illness and told B.C. Supreme Court Chief Justice Christopher Hinkson that the psychosis continued after he’d been convicted and sentenced. Under questioning from Henry’s lawyer John Laxton, Grounds said that while he was in prison, Henry experienced a “very considerable fear for his safety” and on one occasion was assaulted. “That chronic fear was one problem.The second was the separation from his two daughters, the many years of lack of contact between them.That was a source of stress.” A third problem
Kd<O L_O)C cW%Y YW' 6<"[Y%_) (<OC< EQWd<)_' <]%_) YW' <8+"W%%<Q WO 7;9;> /KH0 DLE(E IAN SMITH/PNG arose when his mother stopped visiting him in 2001. Grounds said Henry believed she’d been subjected to a strip search by prison authorities. Since his release from prison in 2010, Henry has had symptoms of post-
traumatic stress disorder, said the psychiatrist, who interviewed Henry for 14 hours in March and also interviewed a close friend of Henry and Henry’s one surviving daughter,Tanya Olivares, a North Vancouver resident.
Henry has had nightmares of his time in prison and “very high levels of anxiety,” believing that he might be “set up” by police and re-arrested, said Grounds. Despite his problems, Henry has shown “remarkable resilience” but will require ongoing therapy that may need to continue for a long period of time, he said. Grounds also described Henry’s early troubled life, noting that Henry had had a deprived and unstable upbringing, had experienced victimization as a child and had “very poor” relationships with others. Henry was first convicted of an offence at the age of 16 and until his arrest in connection with the sex offences, had spent half his life in prison. Prior to the 1982 arrest, there were some indications of stability and maturation, as he was employed in construction and was seeing his two daughters, said Grounds. How his life would have progressed had he not been arrested is “speculative,” but the work and family commitments would have served to protect him against further offending,
said Grounds. In 1983 Henry was convicted of 10 sex offences against eight women. He was designated a dangerous offender and jailed indefinitely. He maintained his innocence but his attempts to get an appeal went nowhere until 2006, when the criminal justice branch appointed a special prosecutor to look at whether a miscarriage of justice had occurred. The B.C. Court of Appeal released him on bail and in 2010 found that he’d been wrongfully convicted. Henry is in court now seeking compensation from the provincial, federal and Vancouver municipal governments, alleging police were negligent and the prosecutors failed to disclose material to him at trial. – The Province/ Pacific Newspaper Group
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A12 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
BRIGHT LIGHTS
Norgate Community Day
by Kevin Hill
F.)%Y *Y.)_ F_W[Y:.")Y..6 L."'_5' Lisa Hubbard <O6 Roberta Niccoli-Morrison
*%> J.YO 4P:"Q<O8_ (Y_)<-C 1.[ D).[)<P5' Darcy Chapman cW%Y *"SW <O6 Barb Desjardins cW%Y HWQC
F.)%Y *Y.)_ *<]_%C 2."O8WQ5' Claire Arnold cW%Y Westin Morgan@ Ryan McRae <O6 Logan Destine
Phoebe Ganz <O6 Claudine Gunn
Sandra Tweed@ Judy Thomson <O6 Dave Ware The annual Norgate Community Day was held Aug. 15 at Norgate community elementary. Local businesses and community organizations were in attendance handing out information, local eateries offered samples, musicians entertained, a dunk tank offered lots of hilarious fun, and children tackled a climbing wall and enjoyed a host of other family-friendly activities.
F.)%Y *Y.)_ (<:Q_ (_OOW' 2Q":5' Luba Sadovska cW%Y < C."O[ -Q<C_)
Doug Perks@ Stephen Harmer <O6 Shayne Dunlop
4d< G"'W8 <O6 4)% 2_O%)_5' Yumi Hsueh@ Heather Deris <O6 Victoria Chiu
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LIVE
Sunday, September 13, 2015 - North Shore News - A13
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to ACTIVE LIVING
Paddleboarders wanted ■ Board the Fjord: Stand Up Paddleboard Race, Sunday, Sept. 20. Check in: 8 a.m. at Deep Cove Kayak, NorthVancouver. Registration: $50/$60/$70. Kids and relay races are free. Board rental: $25. boardthefjord.com ERIN MCPHEE emcphee@nsnews.com
HEALTH NOTES page 14
It wasn’t long after Mike Darbyshire started teaching kayaking in Deep Cove that he took up the sport of stand up paddleboarding. Also a passionate surfer, he quickly realized the opportunity the activity afforded in terms of offering him a chance to enjoy a taste of surfing at home in Deep Cove, obviously lacking in wave action, and viewed it as a means of combining his two passions. “As I started doing it, I started to really like all the different aspects of it: the fact that you can race, you can go surfing in Tofino, you can go down the Capilano River or the Seymour River, you can do yoga, you can do distance paddling, you can do overnight trips.That’s what’s been cool about it for me. No matter what kind of person you are, what kind of goal you have, through the paddleboard you can get out there and do it,” the 28-year-old North Vancouver resident says. Today Darbyshire is a Starboardsponsored stand up paddleboarder and serves as operations manager for Deep Cove Kayak. He’s also the brainchild behind Board the Fjord, a Stand Up Paddleboard Race presented by Deep Cove Kayak in its fifth year, open to both elite and recreational racers. Last
year’s event saw more than 100 people participate and according to organizers, it’s the biggest stand up paddleboarding event in Greater Vancouver.This year’s edition is set for Sunday, Sept. 20 in Deep Cove. The event was founded in response to the growing popularity of stand up paddleboard racing. Deep Cove Kayak has a long history of involvement in kayak racing, for instance for the last 17 years has been presenting weekly Tuesday night races in Deep Cove, says Darbyshire.When paddleboarding started to come along they had a few people who were getting into racing and wanted to offer something similar for the burgeoning community. “We started seeing that there was room for an event in Deep Cove and we just wanted to make it happen,” he says. Darbyshire was further compelled to launch Board the Fjord out of an interest in exposing the paddleboard community to the natural wonders of the local area.The event’s 14kilometre course will take paddlers around seven different islands in Indian Arm, North America’s southernmost fjord. “I think it’s very unique in that way. I don’t know any other race that is quite as scenic and that has the beauty in the race course the way ours does,” he says. In addition to the 14-km course (the course record of which is around 90 minutes), those looking for something more recreational in nature can choose from shorter course options — seven and four km in length. A four-person coed sprint relay (surfboard class only with boards provided), will also be offered, along with a one-km kids race. “By having the elite guys in
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1__- 2.d_ I<C<S .-_)<%W.O' P<O<[_) GWS_ 1<):C'YW)_ WOdW%_' 8.PP"OW%C P_P:_)' %. )_[W'%_) ].) 3.<)6 %Y_ /U.)6@ <O <QQ?Q_d_Q' '%<O6 "- -<66Q_:.<)6 _d_O% *"O6<C@ *_-%> 7; WO F.)%Y #<O8."d_)> DLE(E PAUL MCGRATH there you obviously have that high level of competition that requires you to have a well-organized race and put a lot of thought and time into how the race runs. But then hopefully those elite athletes also inspire the
weekend warriors or the recreational racers just to come out and do their own thing,” says Darbyshire. For info on other Deep Cove Kayak stand up paddleboarding programs, visit deepcovekayak.com.
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A14 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
LIVE Health Notes HIKE FOR HUNTINGTON’S Join in for a hike at Rice Lake Loop Trail Sunday, Sept. 13, registration commences at 8:30 a.m. and the hike begins at 10 a.m., at the Lower Seymour Conservation Reserve, 4400 Lillooet Rd., North Vancouver. hike4huntingtons.ca COHO RUN AND COHO SWIM A 14kilometre run from Kitsilano Beach to Ambleside Beach Park Sunday, Sept. 13. 9 a.m. start for runners, 8 a.m. start for walkers. $65. Register at cohosociety.com/ coho-run. Choose from 1.5or three-km swim options starting and finishing at Ambleside Beach Sunday, Sept. 13. Register by 7:30 a.m. Swim starts at 9 a.m. Cost: $70. Register at cohosociety.com/coho-swim. GROUSE GRIND MOUNTAIN RUN Sunday, Sept. 13 at the Grouse Grind, Grouse Mountain, North Vancouver. Cost: $50/$55. Schedule: Day-of registration 7-8 a.m. and race starts 9 a.m. $5 from
each registration goes to B.C. Children’s Hospital grousemountain.com
For eight weeks. 604-417-2117 northshoregroups@gmail.com
ADDICTION, RECOVERY AND HEALING FOR INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES Join Annie McCullough, co-founder of Faces and Voices of Recovery Canada, Monday, Sept. 14, 7-8:30 p.m. at West Vancouver Memorial Library, 1950 Marine Dr. 604-925-7400 westvanlibrary.ca
GRAND OPENING PARTY Yoga Root will offer free classes during the day and a party from 7 to 11 p.m. in celebration of their opening Friday, Sept. 18 at 106-850 Harbourside Dr., North Vancouver. Schedule: theyogaroot. ca/classes-schedule/.
SINGLE MEN’S SUPPORT GROUP For those dealing with a divorce or break-up, widowed, custody issues or dating problems Monday, Sept. 14, 7-9 p.m. Led by an experienced facilitator in a private home. Not to be considered counselling. By donation. Includes materials and refreshments. Register at northshoregroups@gmail.com or 604-417-2117. WOMEN AND SELF ESTEEM Make positive changes, build selfconfidence, make healthier choices and set personal boundaries Wednesday, Sept. 16, 7-9 p.m. at a private home with an experienced facilitator. By donation including materials and refreshments.
THERAPEUTIC TOUCH PRACTITIONER DAY — ENERGY HEALING Join in for some relaxation and healing Saturday, Sept. 19, 9:45 a.m.-3 p.m. at Gloria Dei Lutheran Church, 1110 Gladwin Dr., North Vancouver. Cost: $20. All ages welcome. Appointments are required. lesquest377@gmail.com. TERRY FOX RUNS will take place Sunday, Sept. 20. The Inter River Park run will start at 10 a.m. (registration 9 a.m.). The run has 10-, five-, two- and one-kilometre routes. The West Vancouver run at Dundarave Park will also start at 10 a.m. (registration 9 a.m.). The run has 10- and five-km routes. terryfox.org Email listings@nsnews.com
Caring for North Shore smiles for over 20 years.
BIG WILD 2<O<6W<O D<)S' <O6 !WQ6_)O_'' *.8W_%C 3>2> 2Y<-%_)5' GW8Y_QQ_ *A _O8.")<[_' 8.PP"OW%C P_P:_)' %. )_[W'%_) ].) %Y_ G02 3W[ !WQ6 2Y<QQ_O[_@ < Nd_? .) 9;?SWQ.P_%)_ %)<WQ )"O=c<QS WO HCOO L_<6c<%_)' ,_[W.O<Q D<)S *<%")6<C@ *_-%> 9T> D).8__6' cWQQ '"--.)% 2D4!*@ cYW8Y W' Y.'%WO[ < 2_Q_:)<%W.O WO %Y_ D<)S <O6 :<):_8"_@ ].QQ.cWO[ %Y_ )"O=c<QS> ,_[W'%)<%W.O a$^;=$7;B@ .-_O' <% XR^\ <>P> *!#,!2&("+22%/#%)40# DLE(E CINDY GOODMAN
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FIT&HEALTHY Sunday, September 13, 2015 - North Shore News - A15 Advertisement
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exercises on the planet. Wrestling helps to develop the whole body and offers some of the most intense workout sessions for the serious athlete. “You don’t need to have the body of a Greek God to be able to learn these arts,” Yoo said. “Your mind will become sharper, more focused and disciplined, while your body becomes stronger, leaner and more flexible.” As you learn – and maintain – the skills that, one day, could save your life, Yoo says your mind and body will transform on their
In the belief that the quest for self-improvement and enjoyment should be a life-long pursuit, EOMA courses are tailored for beginners all the way to those who used to wrestle for their college team – without the stress that comes with competition. Judo for example, is called the gentle art and is an enjoyable and practical form of selfdefense. Taekwondo is perfect for developing focus, flexibility and coordination. Boxing drills are great for people of all ages and are considered some of the best aerobic
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A16 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
WORK
Delicious solution to a delayed meal
Sometimes you should ask for compensation when what you pay for doesn’t live up to expectations. But sometimes a patient and understanding manner can yield equally beneficial results. A friend and I went for breakfast at Café Medina in Vancouver where the lineup outside starts well before opening time. This sudden influx of diners pretty well fills the restaurant resulting in an onslaught of orders, or
Options for Volunteers The following is a selection of volunteer opportunities from community organizations, made available through Volunteer North Shore, a service of North Shore Community Resources Society. FAMILY DROP-IN VOLUNTEERS Family
Mike Grenby
Money Matters as our server put it: “It becomes a bit of a lottery Services of the North Shore seeks volunteers to read and play with newborns to age six.Volunteers will also help with set-up, clean-up, snack preparation and participate in circle time. TEACHING ASSISTANT Are you thinking of working in the field of outdoor education? Join a group of elementary school children as they explore forest, beach, garden and farm environments on Tuesdays
who gets served first.” We obviously didn’t do too well in that lottery because almost an hour later we were still waiting for our breakfast while folks at neighbouring tables had already come, eaten and gone. We were reassured, with an apologetic explanation, that our meal would be served soon and it arrived shortly thereafter. In due course, I asked for the bill. But when I turned over the piece of paper, I saw this
hand-written message: “Breakfast is on the house today. We apologize for the wait! Hope you have a wonderful day! Thank you for your patience!” My dining companion and I were truly surprised; we hadn’t suggested or expected anything like this. When I asked to see the menu so I could calculate what the tip would have been, the server suggested that really wasn’t necessary. However, I felt she shouldn’t lose out just because the meal had
and Thursdays. Fresh Air Learning is looking for teaching assistants for their elementary school program.You’ll work with two experienced educators connecting with children, leading activities and encouraging wonder in the natural world.
natural grandparents.This is not a babysitting job, but rather the chance to be a part of the life of the whole family.
GRANDPARENT Volunteer grandparents believe in the importance of extended families and want to share in the life of families who do not have
become complimentary; she had done her job well. And obviously our patient and understanding manner had also yielded a positive result. So the next time a purchase of goods and/or services falls short, find out why. Then decide which approach would be appropriate, for example an understanding manner, a suggestion/request for a discount or other compensation (whichever will cost the provider
less but still give you a benefit), or a combination of the two. Also, remember to put yourself in the other person’s shoes to give you an idea of how you would react if the positions were reversed.
Mike Grenby is a columnist and independent personal financial advisor; he’ll answer questions in this column as space allows but cannot reply personally. Email him at mike.grenby@ gmail.com.
VOLUNTEER CLEANER The duties of this position are general cleaning, vacuuming and disinfecting surfaces in kitchens, washrooms and meeting rooms. If you are interested in these or other volunteer opportunities, call 604-985-7138.
DISTRICT of
NORTH VANCOUVER
2015 Tax Sale The 2015 Annual Tax Sale will be held in the Council Chamber of the District of North Vancouver Municipal Hall at 355 West Queens Road at 10 am on Monday, September 28, 2015. The following properties will be included in the sale unless the delinquent taxes, plus interest, are paid before the tax sale commences:
FOLIO
STREET ADDRESS
PID
0119-3710-6 0178-7510-2 0198-3000-9 0275-7300-1 1518-9020-X 5034-4034-5
3714 DOLLARTON HWY 1092 CALVERHALL ST 517 VIENNA CRES 3118 FAIRMONT RD 3164 MT SEYMOUR PKWY 1201 PLATEAU DR
006-273-106 006-709-877 009-648-038 004-849-027 007-945-159 017-200-407
5043-7121-5
1010-2016 FULLERTON AVE
004-022-661
7251-0100-8
2629 PANORAMA DR
023-203-811
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
LOT 4 EXCEPT PLAN 21124 BLOCK K DISTRICT LOT 230 PLAN 8425 LOT 13 BLOCK 20 DISTRICT LOT 553 PLAN 2919 LOT 14 BLOCK 6 DISTRICT LOT 578 PLAN 9517 LOT 1 BLOCK 9 DISTRICT LOTS 598 AND 599 PLAN 8138 LOT 3 BLOCKS 5 AND 6 DISTRICT LOT 621 PLAN 15189 STRATA LOT 34 DISTRICT LOT 601 STRATA PLAN VR. 344, TOGETHER WITH AN INTEREST IN THE COMMON PROPERTY IN PROPORTION TO THE UNIT ENTITLEMENT OF THE STRATA LOT AS SHOWN ON FORM 1. STRATA LOT 121 DISTRICT LOT 764 STRATA PLAN VR. 437, TOGETHER WITH AN INTEREST IN THE COMMON PROPERTY IN PROPORTION TO THE UNIT ENTITLEMENT OF THE STRATA LOT AS SHOWN ON FORM 1. LOT E BLOCK 8 DISTRICT LOT 626 GROUP 1 NEW WESTMINSTER DISTRICT PLAN LMP25101
STANDING TALL 4 Y_).O '%<O6' .O < [)<%_ <% %Y_ 6"8S -.O6 WO 4P:Q_'W6_ D<)S> DLE(E KEVIN HILL
Notice to Prospective Purchasers
Successful bidders must pay by cash or bank draft. Purchasers of tax sale properties should be aware that they will NOT have the right to receive title or possession until after one year following the date of the tax sale. During this period, the registered owner of the property has the right to redeem the property from the tax sale thus cancelling the sale. T5’s will be issued for income tax purposes on interest paid to successful bidders. For further information, please contact the Tax Department at 604-990-2488. In the case of all properties, it is the buyer’s responsiblity to satisfy him/herself regarding the condition/ potential of the property.
North Shore
has moved to a new office
Come visit us at:
106 – 980 West 1st Street - North Vancouver (Behind Capilano Mall in the Capilano Business Park) Tel 604.988.3766
NVanDistrict
dnv.org
@NVanDistrict
The Employment Program of British Columbia is funded by the Government of Canada and the Province of British Columbia.
Sunday, September 13, 2015 - North Shore News - A17
TASTE
Okanagan fires didn’t damage fall wines
Tim Pawsey
Notable Potables It’s harvest time in the Okanagan. And my hunch is that more than a few people are breathing a whole lot easier than they were a few weeks ago.Yes, we’re about to celebrate what may turn out to be one of the best vintages to date in B.C.’s young history, but the drought just experienced could have had serious implications for the industry. When fires raged on either side of Oliver, all it would have taken was a slight shift in the wind to consume some of the longest-established vines in the south Okanagan. The good news is, with (hopefully) the worst of the fire season behind us the damage in the Okanagan Valley was light, with little if
any risk of smoke taint for 2015. Wine growing can be a tenuous affair on many levels. If you were lucky enough to take in the Main Event at Top Drop this week you might have (should have) tasted the wines from Chateau Musar. In spite of all odds (including 15 years of Lebanon’s civil war), the Bekaa Valley winery has managed to make every vintage except one (1976) since its founding in 1939. The late ownerwinemaker Serge Hochar, who put Chateau Musar on the world wine map, brought grapes by truck through the war zone to his Beirut winery. (I was lucky enough to meet him in 1998).You can find Chateau Musar’s flagship blend of old vines Cabernet Sauvignon, Carignan and Cinsault at BCLS and some private stores, while Kitsilano’s Supermarine pours Chateau Musar Rosé by the glass. A year ago this week, I was in Languedoc, tasting some excellent wines at Domaine Le Clos du Serres, on the wild and rocky newly declared AOC Terrasses de Larzac, not far from Montpellier.
(YW' '"PP_)5' cWQ6 N)_' <)."O6 3>2> 6W6O5% 6<P<[_ <OC cWO_)W_'@ '. ]<QQ )_Q_<'_' 'Y."Q6 :_ NO_> /KH0 DLE(E MIKE WAKEFIELD
When our group arrived there was a real buzz at the winery with a palpable sense of busyness and expectation in the air as the harvest was just getting underway. As we tasted through the wonderfully structured blends (including Clos du Serres Les Maros 2012, 92 points), the balmy weather started to change and the winds picked up. Suddenly, almost without warning, the storm hit with a vengeance. Rain lashed sideways. Plastic buckets awaiting the pickers by the vines were hurled across the yard.The storm turned out to be one of a series resulting in flooding throughout the region with a devastating impact on agriculture. After a turbulent year for many in the Okanagan and elsewhere,Thanksgiving may just be a whole lot more meaningful. There’s no better way to celebrate our own industry than to take in the Okanagan Fall Wine Festival, which kicks off in Kelowna, Oct. 1, with the B.C.Wine Awards Tasting. New this year is Cropped. Billed as “B.C.’s Largest Wine Tasting and Farmers Market,” this extravaganza brings together more than 80 wineries along with a wealth of produce and cheeses (including seminars with the Dairy Farmers of Canada), live bands and more. Belly’s Best Black Hills Syrah 2013 While the flagship Nota Bene blend (92 points, 2013) still gets all the glory, the all-too-often-overlooked Black Hills Syrah is another pace-setter and a good indication of what to expect from 2013 premium reds. Brimming with black and blue fruit, mulberry and smoky notes, the plush
and good length ($37, 93 points).
palate is layered and juicy with textbook pepper, wellintegrated tannins, carefully managed oak, suppleness
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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NORTH VANCOUVER NISSAN 819 AUTOMALL DRIVE, NORTH VANCOUVER TEL: (604) 985-9311
1.6 SL model shown ▲
Offers available from September 1 - 30, 2015. ◆ $12,698/$11,998 selling price which includes MSRP and fees for a new 2015 Sentra 1.8 S M6 (C4LG55 AA00)/2015 Versa Note 1.6 S M5 (B5RG55 AA00). $3,750/$3,400 NCI non-stackable cash discount, which includes $350/$200 dealer participation included in advertised amount. $750/$500 stackable Clearout Cash included in adveritised amount on 2015 Sentra 1.8 S M6 (C4LG55 AA00)/2015 Versa Note 1.6 S M5 (B5RG55 AA00). *Cash discount is $2,750/$3,750/$3,000/$3,900/$8,500 available on 2015 Rogue models, except S FWD (Y6RG15 AA00) which receives $1,000 when cash purchased, $3,250 discount is only available when financing with NCF through standard rates/ 2015 Pathfinder models, except Premium 4x4 (5XEG15 AA00) that gets $4,750 and S trims that get $1,000, $5,250 discount is only available when financing with NCF through standard rates/ 2015 Sentra models except 1.8 S FWD (C4LG55 AA00) which receives $4,500/2015 Versa Note 1.6 S M5 (B5RG55 AA00), all other trims receive $2,250/ 2015 Armada models, except Platinum trims (7CTG75 AA00, 7CTG75 CC00, 7CTG75 CR00) which receive $7,500. Cash discount consists of $1,750/$3,750/$2,250/$2,000 non-stackable cash with $0/$0/$350/$200 dealer participation on 2015 Rogue/2015 Pathfinder/2015 Sentra/2015 Versa Note and $1,000/$1,000/$750/$500 stackable Clearout Cash on select trims with $300/$300 dealer participation on 2015 Rogue/2015 Pathfinder. Dealers may set their own prices. An order or dealer trade may be required. ◆ Equivalent lease payments of $59 on the 2015 Rogue must be made on a monthly basis and cannot be made weekly. Weekly lease payments are for informational purposes only. ≠Representative monthly lease offer based on any new 2015 Rogue S FWD CVT (Y6RG15 AA00). 0.99%/0% lease APR for a 60/36 month term equals monthly payments of $255/$346 with $0 down payment, and $0 security deposit. First monthly payment, down payment and $0 security deposit are due at lease inception. Prices and payments include freight and fees. Lease based on a maximum of 20,000 km/year with excess charged at $0.10/km. Total lease obligation is $15,286/$12,445. $1,000 Clearout Cash included in advertised offer. Conditions apply. †Representative finance offer based on any new 2015 Rogue S FWD CVT (Y6RG15 AA00). Selling price is $25,208 financed at 0% APR equals monthly payments of $525 monthly for a 48 month term. $0 down payment required. Cost of borrowing is $0 for a total obligation of $25,208. This offer cannot be combined with any other offer. Conditions apply. ▲ Models shown $36,808/$48,708/$25,998/$21,148 Selling price for a new 2015 Rogue SL AWD Premium (Y6DG15 BK00)/ 2015 Pathfinder Platinum (5XEG15 AA00)/2015 Sentra 1.8 SL (C4TG15 AA00)/2015 Versa Note 1.6 SL CVT (B5TG15 AE00). See your dealer or visit Nissan.ca/Loyalty. *◆±≠▲Freight and PDE charges ($1,760, $1,760, $1,600, $1,600) air-conditioning levy ($100) where applicable, applicable fees (all which may vary by region), manufacturer’s rebate and dealer participation where applicable are included. License, registration, insurance and applicable taxes are extra. Lease offers are available on approved credit through Nissan Canada Finance for a limited time, may change without notice and cannot be combined with any other offers except stackable trading dollars. Vehicles and accessories are for illustration purposes only. ALG is the industry benchmark for residual values and depreciation data, www.alg.com. For more information see IIHS.org. †Forward Collision Warning is intended to warn you before a collision occurs; it cannot prevent a collision. Speed and other limitations apply. See Owner’s Manual for details. ∞Global Automakers of Canada (GAC) Entry Level Segmentation, June 2015. The Nissan Sentra received the lowest number of problems per 100 vehicles among compact cars in the proprietary J.D. Power 2015 Initial Quality StudySM. Study based on responses from 84,367 new-vehicle owners, measuring 244 models and measures opinions after 90 days of ownership. Proprietary study results are based on experiences and perceptions of owners surveyed in February-May 2015. Your experiences may vary. Visit jdpower.com. See your participating Nissan retailer for complete details. ©2015 Nissan Canada Inc. and Nissan Canada Financial Services Inc. a division of Nissan Canada Inc.
A18 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
Community Bulletin Board NSR OPEN HOUSE North Shore Rescue is celebrating 50 years of community service and is inviting the public to an open house Sunday, Sept. 13, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. at the North Vancouver City Works, 61 Bewicke Ave. The event includes visual presentations, a high-line display and more. The Lynn Valley Lions Club will be selling food and beverages. northshorerescue. com COHO FESTIVAL Environmental awareness event that includes a salmon barbecue, Coho Swim, Walk or Run, Squamish Nation Village, kids park, live music and more Sunday, Sept. 13, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. at Ambleside Park, at the foot of 13th Street, West Vancouver. All proceeds go towards the preservation and sustainability of North Shore waterways salmon. cohosociety.com GLENEAGLES SCOTTISH DANCE CLUB will be resuming classes the second full week of September. New dancers are welcome to attend a free Beginning Class Monday, Sept. 14, or the free Bring a Friend Night Wednesday, Sept. 16, both 7-9 p.m. at Hollyburn elementary, 1329 Duchess Ave., West Vancouver. For more information contact Norman Haug, 604-9847458. B.C. THANKSGIVING FOOD DRIVE Help fill food bank shelves for Thanksgiving Sept. 14-19. Anyone wishing to make a donation of non-perishable food items is asked to place them in one of the provided bags and leave it
on their doorstep before 9:30 a.m. on collection day Sept. 19. Those who do not receive a bag can drop off a non-perishable food item at the North Shore collection station, 941 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver. bctfooddrive.org E-READER AND TABLET CLINIC Appointment-based clinics designed to offer one-onone help with ebooks and e-readers, tablets, email, digital content and apps Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2-4 p.m. at West Vancouver Memorial Library, 1950 Marine Dr. Register at the Community Computing Centre. 604-925-7405 TOASTMASTERS OPEN HOUSE Join the District Dialoguers and develop speaking and leadership skills Tuesday, Sept. 15, noon-1:15 p.m. at District Hall, 355 West Queens, North Vancouver. 604-924-1545 CALL FOR MEMBERS Carousel Chorus, a nonauditioned community choir, welcomes men and women of all vocal types. No experience necessary, only a desire to learn and perform. Rehearsals are every Tuesday, 7:30-9:30 p.m. from September to May. Anyone interested in joining is invited to attend the first rehearsal Tuesday, Sept. 15, 7:30-9:30 p.m. at Queen Mary elementary, 230 West Keith Rd., North Vancouver. carouselchorus.com GET INSPIRED ABOUT SINGING North Shore Chorus is calling for new members, of all ages and backgrounds, to attend their rehearsal Wednesday, Sept. 16, 7:15-8:30 p.m. at Mount Seymour United Church, 1200 Parkgate See more page 19
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Sunday, September 13, 2015 - North Shore News - A19
BARNYARD BASH /<)P_) J"QW<@ /<)P_) F<6WO_ <O6 %Y_W) %c. ]_<%Y_)_6 ])W_O6' WOdW%_ %Y_ -":QW8 %. 8_Q_:)<%_ %Y_ ^;%Y :W)%Y6<C .] G<-Q_c..6 /<)P .O *<%")6<C@ *_-%> 9T ]).P 9; <>P> %. ^ ->P> <% ^;\ *_CP.") ,Wd_) DQ> (Y_)_ cWQQ :_ < :."O8C 8<'%Q_@ .Q6?]<'YW.O_6 [<P_'@ :"%%_) P<SWO[ <O6 P.)_> *-_8W<Q _d_O% <6PW''W.O )<%_' <--QCR $V>V\ <6"Q%'@ $\>X\ 8YWQ6)_O='_OW.)'> DLE(E MIKE WAKEFIELD From page 18 Ave., North Vancouver. 604-985-2559 info@nschorus.com AUTHOR TALKS Join local author Joanna van der Gracht de Rosado for a reading and discussion of her book Circles, about the life of her aunt during the Second World War, Wednesday, Sept. 16, 7-8 p.m. at Parkgate library, 3675 Banff Court, North Vancouver. nvdpl.ca BROWN BAG LUNCHTIME TALK — I JUST ATE WHAT? Learn what is really in popular processed foods and how to make changes to stay healthy Wednesday, Sept. 16, noon, at St. Stephen’s
! E R U CULT SEPTEMBER 25, 26, 27, 2015
Anglican Church, 885 22nd St., West Vancouver. Bring a brown bag lunch; coffee and tea will be provided. 604-926-4381
FREE EVENTS + HANDS-ON FUN… FOR THE ARTIST IN EVERYONE!
WEST VANCOUVER HISTORICAL SOCIETY will hold a meeting Wednesday, Sept. 16, 7 p.m. at West Vancouver Seniors’ Centre, 695 21st St. The event will include an illustrated talk by West Vancouver’s archivist Reto Tschan on the role of the archives in preserving West Vancouver’s heritage. Compiled by Debbie Caldwell Email information for your non-profit, by donation or nominal fee event to listings@nsnews.com.
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Experience Music! CapU Community Music School offers free Kodaly/Orff and Ukulele workshops on Sunday September 27th.
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Provincial Partners
A20 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
#northshorelove Thank you to everyone who shared their memorable photos. We had hundreds to go through and here are a few of our favourites:
Photo Contest
WINNER @BeingK ulvir
ex90 l i k c i n @
ONS! I T A L U T CONGRA
@m1i1k1e1
@meghansavage
@firefox2u
ilroy @jessmc
@shopgirlnorthvan
@eileen booth
land @erinire @vancouvercam
@shitmimisays
rk onic_ma m e g e h @
@millieannem
@Xzenog
@emkstew
Sunday, September 13, 2015 - North Shore News - A21
SENIORS
Architect builds on family legacy Work featured in currentWest Vancouver Museum exhibit
Peter Pratt’s solution for North Shore homeowners wanting to downsize was found in his own backyard. It began with the restoration of his family home, originally designed and built in West Vancouver by his father, architect Ned Pratt, in 1951. Ned Pratt was a prominent member of an informal mix of artists, artisans and architects — colleagues, friends and rivals — who manifested their vision of art and architecture into the post and beam style known as West Coast modern. In the early 1950s people were making their way to the North Shore, attracted by large lots at affordable prices. Post and beam design made the most of the area’s dramatic natural landscape. The simplicity and flexibility of post and beam construction made economic sense. Built for $10,000, the house Ned designed for his family was also intended to demonstrate an affordable construction option for these new families. Muriel May, sales agent for British Properties Ltd., considered a $10,000 price tag too cheap for the neighbourhood. As Peter recalls, she tried to put the kibosh on Ned’s plan to build, but he managed to win the day. Raised in the company of creative professionals who were defining the modernist style, Peter chose architecture as his profession. He continued his studies in Japan and in Greece and developed an international practice. Peter was working on a
project in Kuala Lumpur when he took on the challenge of restoring his family home, 60 years after it was built. It was a leap of faith. “I was away so much, working,” he recalls, “that I had to make decisions at a distance without being sure of the consequences of those decisions.” Like every creative project this one had its moments. “In the end, it worked out nicely because the design fundamentals — posts, beams and four-byeight infill panels — easily accommodates both expansion and contraction of the structure.” The house, which had expanded over time to approximately 3,000 square feet, was scaled back by more than half, to about 1,200 square feet, yet the integrity of the original design was preserved. As the restoration progressed, Peter designed and built a second house on the property. He set himself the task of designing a house that, while small in area, feels spacious. In the new house, with a footprint of 1,150 square feet, every aspect of the design has been thoughtfully considered and executed. “I thought of a cabin on a boat, where everything must have its place,” he says. In Peter’s home, the bedrooms, service and storage area is standard stick-built construction.The kitchen and living section, built on post and beam principles and modified by modern technology, resonates with the design of the original house.The living room, anchored at both
“We’re all stressed by Dad’s illness.”
Laura Anderson
Memory Lane
ends by a fireplace, opens to the natural landscape. The generous use of glass erases the division between inside and outside. “There are views wherever you are in the house.You feel you’re outside,” says Peter. Spacious, airy, comfortable and efficient, the new house links with the restored original by a covered walkway and courtyard. In 1951, Ned designed a post and beam prototype that would be livable and affordable for growing families. Sixty years later, with a smaller house seamlessly integrated with the original on the same property, Peter has created an option for people wanting to downsize. “Adding a smaller house to a property is an alternative for empty-nesters. A separate dwelling might be for family or guests, for a caretaker or for rental income. Depending on the house design, the primary house can be reduced in size.We must take our emotional attachment to familiar surroundings into consideration.The addition of a small house would allow people to continue living at home, enjoying their gardens and their neighbourhood,” he says. Peter’s family home is featured in the current
D_%_) D)<%% cWQQ %<QS <:."% %Y_ )_'%.)<%W.O .] YW' ]<PWQC Y.P_ <O6 8)_<%W.O .] YW' O_c Y.P_ *_-%> 9X <% !_'% #<O8."d_) G"'_"P@ -<)% .] W%' 8"))_O% _bYW:W%W.O> DLE(E CINDY GOODMAN exhibition, From the Inside Out: Integrating Art and Architecture on the West Coast, at West Vancouver Museum. During the exhibition, the
museum is hosting a series of presentations on the intersection of home, art, architecture and the natural world. Peter will talk about the restoration of his family
home and the creation of his new home on Thursday, Sept. 17 from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Laura Anderson works with and for seniors on the North Shore. 778-279-2275
Family Illness Affects Everyone. We’re Here To Help. SHYLO Brings The Care To Your Home. Cancer or chronic illness affects everyone in the family. Shylo Palliative & Respite Care can help with: 3 nursing support 3 pain mitigation management 3 a customized care plan 3 support for physical, emotional and spiritual needs
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A22 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
SENIORS Seniors Calendar DEMENTIA DIALOGUE ON COMMUNICATION Discuss and identify strategies for communicating more effectively with those living with dementia Monday, Sept. 14, 10 a.m.-noon. Address will be provided upon registration. For more information or to register, contact Kerri at 604-984-8348 or ksutherland@alzheimerbc. org. NORTH SHORE NEIGHBOURHOOD HOUSE BUS TRIP Join a trip to Steveston and enjoy a fish-and-chips lunch Tuesday, Sept. 15, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. at 225 East Second St., North Vancouver. Cost: $12. Lunch is not included in the price. 604-987-8138 NORTH SHORE NEIGHBOURHOOD HOUSE BUS TRIP Join a trip to Granville Island, browse the aisles and sample local and exotic flavours from farmers, bakers, butchers and
OPERATIC AFTERNOON G_P:_)' .] %Y_ F.)%Y *Y.)_ HW[Y% E-_)< *.8W_%C .]]_)_6 <O <]%_)O..O -_)].)P<O8_ <% 2_6<) *-)WO[' D4,2 )_%W)_P_O% )_'W6_O8_ )_8_O%QC@ _O%_)%<WOWO[ )_'W6_O%' <O6 P_P:_)' .] %Y_ -":QW8 <QWS_> (Y_ O.O?-).N% '.8W_%C Y<' :__O '%<[WO[ P"'W8<Q %Y_<%)_ .O %Y_ F.)%Y *Y.)_ 'WO8_ 9T^V> /.24.)(41 DLE(E* KEVIN HILL fishmongers Thursday, Sept. 17, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. at 225 East Second St., North Vancouver. Cost: $10. Lunch is not included in the price. 604-987-8138 FALL FEST OPEN HOUSE Fall refreshments and a performance by
Steve Elliott impersonating Elvis Sunday, Sept. 20, 1-4 p.m. at Chartwell Churchill House Retirement Residence, 150 West 29th St., North Vancouver. 778-382-0099 RAMBLERS Meet at the West Vancouver Seniors’
Activity Centre, 695 21st St. for an eight- to 10-kilometre hike every Monday at 9:30 a.m., rain or shine. Terrain is varied and proper footwear and clothing are required. Bring water and a bagged lunch. New participants must phone prior to the
first hike. 604-925-7280 westvancouver.ca/seniors SCRABBLE AND LUNCH North Shore Volunteers for Seniors hosts a soup-sandwichdessert lunch followed by games of Scrabble Wednesdays from noon to
3 p.m. at 275 21st St., West Vancouver. Newcomers welcome. $5. 604-922-1575 nsvs.ca Compiled by Debbie Caldwell Email information for your non-profit, by donation or nominal fee event to listings@nsnews.com.
Chartwell Fall Fest LET’S CELEBRATE THE FALL SEASON TOGETHER! Since moving to their Chartwell home, Rita and Jean-Louis have more time to socialize with friends and participate in their favourite activities. Now you too are invited to meet new people and experience all the season has to offer. CHARTWELL.COM
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday, September 20 1 PM - 4 PM 150 W. 29th Street, North Vancouver
Make us part of your story.
778-382-0099 Conditions may apply.
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Sunday, September 13, 2015 - North Shore News - A23
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A24 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
PETS
Maybe humans aren’t so bad after all They say that admitting you have a problem is the fist step to recovery, so here it goes. I have an aversion to the human race. I prefer the company of dogs and horses to people. I’d bend over backwards (and I have) to help an animal, any animal. But I think twice, even three times, when it comes to people. There, I’ve done it (whew). I never used to be this way, but after many years of being thrown under the bus as my reward for helping my fellow humans succeed in their endeavours, I’ve grown to distrust my brethren. Enter my dog Raider. Raider is the complete opposite from me when it comes to people. If the saying “A dog is a reflection of its owner” were true, it certainly would not apply to Raider and me, for he is the happiest flipping dog I have ever met. I mean really, there is not a human being to whom he does not offer a wag of his tail and a big smile. He has made the
Joan Klucha
Canine Connection most crotchety of people break into a big-toothed grin when he prances his cuteness in front of them. As a result, I must follow suit, for I certainly can’t be bitter at the human race with the cutest dog in the world prancing around at the end of his leash. And this has had a profound effect on many a person, even me. Just the other day, we went to a park along the Fraser River. All three of my dogs and I walked along the trail that paralleled the river and came across a group of senior citizens staring out over the water
and mountains. There was a palpable solemn silence from the group of eight or so people. Raider seemed to take this as a cue to pull out the ultimate in cuteness tactic and began to chase his tail directly in front of them. It took no less than two seconds for an elderly crackled voice to shout out, “I used to have a border collie!” That was all the incentive Raider needed to prance over to the woman in a wheelchair and give her his best “cutest dog ever” look and rest his head in her lap. The smile that spread across her face melted the ice around my heart. Soon the entire group had wheeled or pushed their walkers over to my dogs. They all had their favourites. Some loved Piper with his short dappled fur and velvety soft ears. Others told me stories of their German shepherds and how loyal they were. Others shared their love for border collies. Laughter rang out over
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the water as I showed off some of Raider’s tricks such as “bounce backwards on your hind legs” and “bang, you are dead.” When my dogs and I left the group, there was lively chatter among them about how they had shared their lives with dogs instead of the dead silence that we entered into. We continued our walk and decided to sit at a park bench. “Are they all yours?” I heard a voice come from my side. “Yep, they are.” I didn’t look up, but replied with a smile in my words as I rubbed my dogs’ heads affectionately. “You are lucky, they are beautiful.” The voice came from a mother and her daughter sitting on a bench a few yards away. “Thank you,” I said. “They are pretty special” Raider took that as an invitation to go say hello and soon the two people were swooning over him. He looked back at me over his shoulder as if to say,
“See Mom, they’re not all that bad.” I just shook my head and smiled as the ice around my heart melted a bit more. “That damn dog, making me see the good in people,” I mumbled to myself. A few moments later we continued our walk and I observed Raider smile and wag his tail at literally every single person we came across. To my surprise I began to do the same. I
wasn’t wagging my tail, but I was giving a genuine smile and “hello” and it felt good. It felt good to show kindness and joy to strangers, and with happy dogs at my side I got it back tenfold . . . and the healing begins. 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.
Keep kitties safe from highrise balcony falls The B.C. SPCA is warning cat owners who live in highrise buildings to safeguard their feline companions following the recent injury or death of several cats that fell from balconies. In August, the Vancouver shelter had five cats brought in that were seriously injured after
jumping or falling from highrise balconies. Two of them were so badly injured that they could not be saved. If cats are allowed out on highrise balconies, the SPCA advises owners to ensure the area is enclosed so the animals can’t fall through the bars or above the railing.
SPORT
Sunday, September 13, 2015 - North Shore News - A25
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to THE GAMES PEOPLE PLAY
2<-WQ<O. &OWd_)'W%C5' EQWdW< ,"C[).S %<S_' .O < -Q<C_) ]).P %Y_ 2.+"W%Q<P G_%).?/.)6 8Q":5' -)_PW_) c.P_O5' %_<P WO _bYW:W%W.O <8%W.O> ,"C[).S W' .O_ .] .OQC < Y<O6]"Q .] )_%")OWO[ -Q<C_)' .O < 2<-WQ<O. '+"<6 %Y<% <Q'. Y<' < O_c 8.<8Y> $!.!- /./%,.)(41 -4 .%% + 3"4-4 #+22%0') DLE(E* PAUL MCGRATH
THREE TO SEE THIS WEEK Football WestVan @ Carson Graham Saturday, Sept. 19 1:30 p.m. PacWest soccer Langara @ Capilano Saturday, Sept. 19 1 p.m. women 3:30 p.m. men PJHL Langley @ NVWolf Pack Saturday, Sept. 19 7 p.m. Harry Jerome Recreation Centre
All new for Capilano Blues Dramatic tie kicks off campaign for young team and rookie head coach ANDY PREST aprest@nsnews.com
It was only a tie, but it sure felt like a win for Capilano University women’s soccer rookie head coach Dennis Kindel and his new-look Blues. Capilano opened their season on the road against the Kwantlen Eagles Wednesday and — after trading goals in the first half, including a tally for Blues rookie forward Martina Bohomol Villa — found themselves down 2-1 in the dying seconds of the game. With less than a minute to play the Blues won a corner kick, giving them one final shot at a draw. “We threw everybody, even our goalie, into the
box. We could lose by 2-1 or 3-1, it didn’t matter,” said Kindel. Dayne McGregor swung in the cross and rookie defender Jessica Price rose up above the crowd to nod in the equalizer. For the players on the field it felt like a 2-2 win for Capilano. “The other team felt like they lost,” said Kindel. “They got to half and the ref blew the whistle. It was one of those ‘don’t give up, don’t die’ (games). It was a good way to start. It felt like a win even though it was a tie.” The feel-good draw provided a nice first impression of the PacWest league for Kindel, a former Capilano player who helped guide the Blues to a CCAA national title
in 2003, winning the top goalkeeper award at the tournament. Earlier this year Kindel was hired as the head coach of the Capilano women following the departure of Darren Rath. Kindel, a Burnaby native, has a long coaching resumé that includes a current position in the Sentinel secondary soccer academy. The Capilano job, however, is a special one for him. “For me it was like a dream job to come back and coach somewhere that I had the best three years of my life when I was younger,” Kindel said. “I’ve coached women’s soccer before in the premier league but this one is definitely slightly See Kindel page 26
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A26 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
SPORT
Kindel won national gold as Blues goalie From page 25
last in the league, and hasn’t made the PacWest playoffs since 2009. Turning around those numbers sounds like a daunting task but Kindel looks at it a different way. “I don’t feel that it’s that tough — the only thing I can do is go up,” he said, adding that he isn’t worried about the past, only the present and the future. There isn’t much of
different and better. All the girls want to be there — they’re there for school, they want to be part of a program, to be part of something while they are in university. Being around that atmosphere, it’s really fulfilling.” Kindel is coming into a team that didn’t record a win last season, finishing
a past to speak of on this team — only a handful of players are back from last season, with only three players boasting more than one year of experience at the post-secondary level. “My worry would just be revamping this program,” said Kindel. “We only had five players from last year stay on the team, so we had to go recruit another 15. We had
The 35th Annual TERRY FOX RUN for Cancer Research
to get a whole new team.” The three longestserving Blues are fifthyear Handsworth grad Demi Skierka, fourth-year defender McGregor, and third-year forward Olivia Ruygrok. The team’s rookie crop is bolstered by several recruits from a youth team in the Coquitlam MetroFord club that Kindel has been coaching for several years. “I’ve been coaching them since they were 13, and it just so happens that they graduated the same time I got this job,” he said. That list includes rookie headliner Taylor Einhorn, whom Kindel is counting on to make big contributions early in the season. “She covers a lot of ground and is a workhorse in the middle for this team,” said Kindel, who has already named Einhorn one of the team’s four rotating co-captains along with Skierka, McGregor and Ruygrok. The first job for Kindel and the returning players is getting the team’s army of rookies ready to play against players that are older, bigger and stronger than any they’ve ever faced. “The biggest thing I think is just gaining the confidence,” said Kindel.
“This team, when they’re training, is just 100 miles an hour. They’re gelling so well together, their possession and keeping the ball in training and practice is unbelievable. They’re still slightly shy with it on the field (in games), but I feel like as they get more mature — especially the young ones not getting pushed off the ball going up against players four years older than them — once they get used to that then I feel like it’s just going to all come together. It’s on the verge of getting there, I just don’t know when it’s going to explode…. I’m just hoping some of them burst out of their bubble a little bit. I see it happening, it’s just a matter of time.” Goal number 1 is to get the Blues — a perennial championship contender before their recent drought — back into the playoffs. Kindel said he is “very confident” that Capilano will make the top four in regular season play to book a spot in the provincial championship tournament. Beyond that, he said he’s hoping to make Capilano a destination program for talented Lower Mainland soccer players who have a lot of options when they come out of high school. “My biggest thing for the program is start
making an atmosphere where I don’t even have to recruit — players from all over the Lower Mainland are hearing about the program, that it’s a good program and players that are in it are enjoying it,” he said. “Obviously that comes with getting success on the field as well, but if I can create an atmosphere where people are talking about it, then it makes recruiting even easier. People will just email me saying ‘(I) want to be part of the program, when are tryouts?’” The Blues will be looking to add more points this weekend in a pair of contests, including a trip to Squamish to take on Quest on Saturday followed by the home opener against Vancouver Island University on Sunday. Kindel is hoping their dramatic tie in the season opener will set the stage for bigger things to come. “I feel like this weekend we can carry on that energy from that tying goal and hopefully that will give us the confidence to go get our first win.” ••• The Blues host the VIU Mariners in the home opener Sunday, Sept. 13 with the women kicking off at noon and the men to follow at 2:30 p.m.
SUNDAY
September 20, 2015 NO ENTRY FEE NO MINIMUM PLEDGE NO MINIMUM DONATION NORTH VANCOUVER
Inter River Park Registration: 9am|Run Start: 10am
For more information contact Norman Thomson at 604-926-4503 WEST VANCOUVER
Dundarave Park
Enter at Marine Dr & 25th St Registration: 9am|Run Start: 10am For more information email info@westvanrun.com
TERRYFOX.ORG | 1-888-836-9786
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Sunday, September 13, 2015 - North Shore News - A27
CARTER GM NORTHSHORE’S
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND
CANADA WIDE CLEARANCE ALL 2015 MODELS ARE PRICED TO MOVE
0
%
PURCHASE FINANCE
FOR
84
MONTHS
ON VIRTUALLY ALL CHEVROLET, BUICK & GMC MODELS.
D BRANW NE
SAVIN
2015 CHEVROLET MALIBU
$6,8GS OF 95
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CARTER NORTHSHORE CASH PRICE
19,995
$
2015 CHEVROLET CRUZE MSRP $21,925
OR STEP UP TO A 1LT FOR
2015 CHEVROLET TRAX MSRP $23,405
AUTO, AIR CONDITION, POWER WINDOWS, POWER LOCKS, REMOTE KEYLESS & MUCH MORE. STK#Q27870
CARTER NORTHSHORE CASH PRICE
$19,488
2015 BUICK ENCORE MSRP $29,645
CARTER NORTHSHORE CASH PRICE
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BI-WEEKLY
$2,250 DOWN + TAXES/FEES, 48 MONTHS LEASE
2015 BUICK VERANO MSRP $25,490
AUTO, AIR CONDITION, POWER WINDOWS, POWER LOCKS, BLUETOOTH, REMOTE KEYLESS & MUCH MORE. STK#TX60350
CARTER NORTHSHORE CASH PRICE
$20,990
2015 CHEVROLET SILVERADO DOUBLE CAB MSRP $33,005
POWER DRIVER SEAT, POWER WINDOWS, POWER LOCKS, AIR CONDITION, REAR BACK UP CAMERA, 18”ALUMINUM WHEELS, BLUETOOTH & MUCH MORE. STK#ER06480
168
$
AIR CONDITION, POWER WINDOWS, POWER LOCKS,TILT WHEEL, 17” ALUMINUM WHEELS & MUCH MORE. STK#VE43260
CARTER NORTHSHORE CASH PRICE
$24,998
2015 GMC SIERRA 4X4 DOUBLE CAB ELEVATION EDITION
MSRP $43,900
AIR CONDITION, POWER WINDOWS, POWER LOCKS,TILT WHEEL, LOCKING DIFFERENTIAL & MUCH MORE. STK#860450
CARTER NORTHSHORE CASH PRICE
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20” BLACKOUT ALUMINUM WHEELS, 5.3 LITRE V8,TRAILER TOW PKG, AIR CONDITION & MUCH MORE. STK#8609520
CARTER NORTHSHORE CASH PRICE
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All prices are net of all programs and are plus taxes, levies and doc fee of $598. Pictures not exactly as shown.
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A32 - North Shore News - Sunday, September 13, 2015
www.nestersmarket.com
Prices Valid Until: Saturday, Sept.19th, 2015
Extra Lean Ground Beef
4
Garlic Bread
2
Grades Of Beef
/lb
Beef Top Sirloin Steaks
Canadian, Big Pack 15.39/kg
6
$ .98 /lb
Beef Cross Rib Roast
98
5
$ .48
Pork Loin Chops
/lb
Fresh
Boneless, Centre Cut Big Pack - 8.77/kg
3
$ .98 /lb
Deli & Bakery
Dofino or Tre Stelle Cheese Slices
Selected Varieties 125 g - 175 g
4
Wk 38
Wild Halibut Steaks
Fresh
Grimm’s
2
$ .68
3
/100 g
Pace Calzones
Delicious Selected Varieties Grilled 285 g
3
$ .98
$ .78
/100 g
Selected Varieties 220 g
/ea
3
$ .58 /ea
3
Selected Varieties 7 inch - 600 g
11
Oven Roasted Rosemary Ham
2
/ea
ural Amy’s 100% Nat Pizzas
Fresh Zucchini B.C. Grown 1.94/kg
Home Grown Freshness
88
Grown in
Western Canada
¢
/lb
Selected Varieties 340 g - 397 g Frozen
7
Large Green Peppers
Nesters Own Cheesecakes
$
3for$10
2 lb Bag
.98 /ea
From The Deli
Mastro
Produce
California Grown
Pane Rustico Loaf In-Store Baked 600 g
$ .58
/100 g
B.C. Grown 2.82/kg
1
$ .98
Grown in
Home Grown Freshness
$ .28
Western Canada
/lb
Organically Grown
1
Organic Royal Gala Apples B.C. Grown 3.92/kg
NESTERS MARKET - DOLLARTON VILLAGE 415 Dollarton Highway N., Deep Cove, North Vancouver, B.C., Phone: 604-929-0241
/ea
Miss Vickie’s Potato Chips
Organic Rainbow Carrots
Italian Panini Buns In-Store Baked
2
/ea
3
$ .98
Grown in
Western Canada
$ .38 $ .48 6 for
$ .88
Fresh Seafood
Natural
/ea
/lb
Hot Capicolli
Canadian 12.08/kg
or Silk Coconut, Soy Milk Selected Varieties or Creamy Cashew 1.89 L
¢
$ .98 Meat
Home Grown Freshness
B.C. Grown
Fresh
8.77/kg
Silk Almond Beverages
/ea
Organic Green Kale
Bone-In Big Pack
3
/lb
$ .88
AA Or Better
Split Chicken Breasts
78
450 g
Cut From Canada
Grown in
Western Canada
¢
Italian Days
In-Store Made
$ .98 10.98/kg
Home Grown Freshness
B.C. Grown 1.72/kg
h Made Fres aily! In-Store D
Big Pack
Large Field Tomatoes
$ .78 /lb
/ea
100% Whole Grains
Dempster’s Bread Selected Varieties 600 g
7
$ 2 for