North Shore News April 5 2017

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Man arrested after breakins at vacant homes BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com

One man is facing charges after police recovered several hundred thousand dollars’ worth of goods stolen from vacant West Vancouver homes in recent months.

West Vancouver police had been investigating breakand-enters in the British Properties including one on Feb. 23 on the 1000 block of Eyremount Drive and another on March 26 on the 1000 block of King George Way. When they executed a search warrant for a storage locker in North Vancouver, they found a cache of furniture, art, appliances that hadn’t been installed yet, and luxury personal items. “There are large amounts of clothing, shoes, and personal accessories like high-value designer handbags,” said Const. Jeff Palmer, West Vancouver police

See Thieves page 7

SHIP SHAPE The Coppersmith Shop, a refurbished former shipyard building that houses Tap & Barrel restaurant, is reflected in the polished stainless steel cladding installed by workers on the Polygon Gallery, Presentation House Gallery’s new space at the foot of Lonsdale Avenue set to open next fall. Construction at nearby The Shipyards broke ground Tuesday. See our story page 4. PHOTO CINDY GOODMAN

SD44 to see enrolment rise in central NV

JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com

Long-range planners for the North Vancouver school district anticipate the number of kids enrolled at North Vancouver schools will grow by about 1,000 students over the next decade. If enrolment trends play out as expected, that will mean just around 16,700 students will attend North Vancouver public schools by 2027, compared to just more than 15,700 students today, pushing the current schools close to capacity.

New school in Lower Lonsdale still a priority, fewer students east of Seymour projected

But that growth likely won’t happen evenly throughout the district, authors of a 2017 long-range facilities plan warn. Families who move to North Vancouver are more likely to move into the central areas of community, making the need for a new elementary school in Lower Lonsdale more acute.

A SHINING EXAMPLE of

That project is at the top of the school district’s capital project priority list – after rebuilds of Argyle secondary, currently in the design phase, and Handsworth, which has been submitted to the ministry of education for approval. So far, the school district is still in the very early stages of site selection for a new Lower Lonsdale school – options from the old Cloverley school site, a city-owned parcel on Cloverley Street between Hendry and Kennard avenues below East Keith Road, to a more urban space in a new highrise have been suggested. “Everything’s on the table at this

See Catchment page 4

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nsnews.com north shore news WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

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| A3

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A4 | NEWS

nsnews.com north shore news

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

KEITH BALDREY: ELECTION CAMPAIGN IS GETTING PERSONAL PAGE 8

Catchment areas could be redrawn From page 1 point,” said Deneka Michaud, spokeswoman for the school district. “We would like to have it done in five years. I would say that’s optimistic.” The ministry of education would have to pay for both land and building costs of a new school. In 10 years’ time, it’s also likely Carson Graham secondary – rebuilt in 2012 at a cost of $38 million – will be again over-capacity and have to be expanded. That’s because when the ministry of education funds new schools, they do so based on current enrolment, said Michaud. The long-range facilities plan also points to a possible need in the future to change some elementary school catchment areas in the central and western areas, such as the boundary between Capilano and Norgate schools, which currently runs along Marine Drive, a major thoroughfare. Capilano, which runs an International Baccalaureate program at its Pemberton Heights location, currently operates at 89 per cent capacity, with all but a few of its students coming from within the catchment area. Norgate school, which operates as a community

school and includes the Squamish Nation’s Capilano reserve lands, currently operates at 45 per cent capacity (or 64 per cent capacity if classrooms being used for other programs are factored in). It will be the opposite scenario at the eastern side of the school district, however, where the student population is smaller. It’s likely the status quo won’t change in the next decade, but farther out, potential plans could include closing Blueridge elementary and combining the student population into one expanded new Seymour Heights school. Closing unused parts of Sherwood Park, Cove Cliff and Dorothy Lynas elementary could also be considered in the future, according to the long-range report. The plan also points to a possible closure of Seycove secondary (currently operating at 70 per cent capacity) in the longterm with a consolidation of the secondary school population at an expanded Windsor school (operating now at 82 percent capacity) in the eastern part of North Vancouver. Michaud said more study, review and public consultation would have to happen before any

Windsor secondary principal Adam Baumann, standing inside the seismically upgraded school’s new classroom space March 31, shows North Vancouver School District board chair Christie Sacré and North Vancouver-Seymour MLA Jane Thornthwaite a detachable wipe board, which integrates with flexible furnishing in the classroom. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD significant changes are considered for either the medium or long term. Many of the possible plans in the long-range report by Matrix Planning Associates are still theoretical at this point, she added. More immediately, it’s possible the school district will have to come up with more classrooms in September in response to a deal reached between teachers and the province as a result of the Supreme Court of Canada ruling on class size and composition. “We’re still working

through that in terms of what it’ll look like,” said Michaud. “It will vary by school. There will certainly be new classrooms that will be needed.” In some cases the need for classroom space may involve ousting other programs or “reclaiming” space like a second classroom, said Michaud. In cases of larger classrooms, “we could actually just put up walls,” said Michaud, turning two large classrooms into three smaller ones, for instance. “There’s also the possibility of portables,” she said.

Squamish man found guilty of CapU arson JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com

A DNA match on a Sprite bottle combined with video surveillance of an intruder setting fire to a cabinet in a Capilano University library has resulted in an arson conviction for a Squamish man.

Judge William Rodgers found Shane Nendick, 35,

guilty of the charge in North Vancouver provincial court March 31. Rodgers found Nendick guilty of breaking into the North Vancouver university campus library on Jan. 1, 2015, while it was closed for Christmas break, and deliberately setting a fire in a library office that resulted in about $200,000 of smoke and water

See Arson page 7

Owner of Marathassa charged for spill that hit WV beaches JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com

The federal government’s public prosecution service has filed environmental charges in connection with a 2015 oil spill in English Bay that resulted in oil washing up on the beaches of West Vancouver.

Ten charges under the Canada Shipping Act, federal Fisheries Act and Canadian Migratory Birds Act were filed in Vancouver provincial court last month against the MV Marathassa and Alassia

Newships Management Inc., the Greece-based ship’s owners. Charges include unauthorized discharge of a pollutant, failure to implement an oil pollution emergency plan and failure to report pollution. Charges stem from an incident on April 8, 2015, when about 2,700 litres of bunker fuel oil flowed from the MV Marathassa, a grain ship, into the waters of English Bay and Burrard Inlet. In the wake of the spill, marble-sized blobs of tar began washing up on North Shore beaches.

Sandy Cove, Dundarave, Ambleside and some shoreline near the Lions Gate Bridge were the local areas hardest hit by the oil spill, and resulted in beaches being closed and crab fishing in Burrard Inlet being temporarily banned. “We were affected by the spill rather directly,” said Jeff McDonald, spokesman for the District of West Vancouver. McDonald said the municipality is “pleased that the federal government is pursuing charges where they seem appropriate.” The municipality spent

about $60,000 dealing with the fallout from the spill – mostly in staff time to patrol shore areas and inform the public of beach closures. McDonald said West Vancouver was able to recover about $50,000 of that through the province’s disaster assistance fund. Despite initial gaps in the spill reporting by both the ship’s crew and federal authorities, McDonald said later oil cleanup efforts in West Vancouver were good and the district has not experienced any obvious long-term impacts. Miscommunication and

uncertainty about roles and responsibilities between the Coast Guard, Port Metro Vancouver and Western Canada Marine Response Corp. stymied the start of the cleanup effort in Burrard Inlet for nearly two hours after the spill started, according to a review of the spill conducted by former Coast Guard assistant commissioner John Butler. In addition, 13 hours went by between the time a West Vancouver resident first reported an oil slick on the water to the Canadian Coast Guard and the time District of

West Vancouver staff eventually learned the next morning of the fuel spill that hit local shores. On Tuesday morning, a Federal Court judge in Vancouver dismissed an application by the ship’s owners asking for a judicial review of the case on technical grounds that Environment Canada did not properly serve senior company officials with notice of the charges. The first court appearance on the environmental charges was scheduled for today in Vancouver provincial court.


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

NEWS | A5

north shore news nsnews.com

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A design rendering unveiled at Tuesday’s sod-turning shows the ice rink planned for The Shipyards, a City-owned parcel of land on the Lower Lonsdale waterfront. IMAGE SUPPLIED

City breaks ground on The Shipyards project

Water feature, ice rink, hotel planned for 2018 opening BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com

Work has officially begun on The Shipyards, the hub in the City of North Vancouver’s longheld plans to revitalize the waterfront in Lower Lonsdale.

Dignitaries gathered Tuesday for a groundbreaking at the 1.6-acre site that, by the end of 2018, will host a seasonal outdoor covered ice rink and water play area, community amenity space, and 60,000 square feet of commercial space, including a 70-room, four-star boutique hotel and two-storey restaurant. The ceremony was timed almost a year to the day Quay Property Management, the parent company of Lonsdale Quay, was named the city’s partner to develop the lands, where ships were once built. Taken together with the new North Vancouver

Museum planned for nearby Carrie Cates Court, the Polygon Gallery, which is now having its reflective metal cladding installed at the foot of Lonsdale, the “megabench,” the Pipe Shop’s reuse as an events venue, the Tap & Barrel in the Coppersmith Shop and the Spirit Trail, the vision for Lower Lonsdale is nearly complete, said Mayor Darrell Mussatto. “It’s really exciting. It’s the first step of the last phase of the redevelopment of the waterfront,” he said, noting it had been a passion project of his since he first ran for council in 1993. “I snuck into the shipyard with a photographer and had a picture taken of me and the shipyards, saying, ‘Very soon, this is going to be a vibrant place for people to access the water and to live and shop and recreate.’ I’m a little bit off on my timing. That was almost 25 years ago. But I’m very happy to see this coming together now.” Under the agreement, Quay Property Management will pay the $35-million cost to develop amenities and commercial space and lease them from the city. “We’re excited to be

that final piece that’s going to make the waterfront in North Vancouver definitely a destination in the Lower Mainland, we think – a destination internationally as well. We are sitting on a jewel of a piece of property and we’re proud to think that, with the city, we’re going to bring this to fruition and make it a real icon for the North Shore,” said Gary Mathiesen, president of Quay Property Management. The city will be responsible for building the 144 new parking spots as well as paying for the operations and the $5 million in costs to remediate the soil left contaminated from its time as a shipyard. Taylor Mathiesen, director of operations for QPM, said the quay and city are working closely and bringing outside experts to make sure the rink works for the local climate. “The last thing we want is to build this beautiful ice rink that’s slush,” he said. Operators for the hotel and restaurant will be announced later this month, Taylor added. “It’s really exciting. It’s going to be a major attraction for the area,” he said.

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nsnews.com north shore news

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NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING (WAIVED) WHO:

E-Comm 9-1-1

WHAT:

Development Variance Permit No. DVP2017-00001

WHERE: 151 East Keith Road WHEN:

Monday, April 10, 2017 at 6:30 pm Council Chamber, City Hall 141 West 14th Street, North Vancouver

Notice is hereby given that Council will consider: Av

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Tour registration: To ensure a seat on the tour, please reserve online at neptuneterminaltours2017.eventbrite.ca by April 20th. Seats fill up quickly!

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The proposed Development Variance Permit and background material will be available for viewing at City Hall between 8:30 am and 5:00 pm, Monday to Friday, except Statutory Holidays, from March 31, 2017, and online at cnv.org/PublicMeetings. Please direct any inquiries to Suzanne Smith, Planner, at ssmith@cnv.org or 604-990-4240.

For any questions, please call 604-983-7935.

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Location: Sunrise Park 1102 4th St E, North Vancouver site of community event and start of tours

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Saturday, April 22nd, 2017

existing mechanical penthouse for two microwave antennas, two GPS antennas, ancillary cabling and four equipment cabinets; and • up to 4.7 metres (15.42 feet) for three omni antennas.

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• up to 0.61 metres (2.0 feet) above the

2017 Neptune Terminal Tours & Community Day

Time:

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Development Variance Permit No. 2017-00001 to permit wireless communication equipment to project above the existing EK mechanical penthouse, as follows: eit h

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

NEWS | A7

north shore news nsnews.com

Thieves targeting luxury homes, police say From page 1

spokesman. “Anything that may have some kind of value at some point.” Police arrested Ali Reza Serri, 39, of no fixed address, on March 30. He appeared in court the next day to face one count of possession of stolen property but police will be asking Crown to lay more charges when he returns for his next appearance on April 19. “There’s a lot of property involved. That’s one of the reasons the investigations are all still very active. “Obviously one of the focuses for the investigators is to determine who else may have been involved and who else could be potentially be

held criminally accountable,” he said. There isn’t an exact total value for all the ill-gotten gains, but one victim alone reported $800,000 in losses, Palmer said. The rightful owners were able to come claim stolen property from West Vancouver police on Tuesday morning. Had police not discovered the storage locker, it’s likely the goods would have been fenced cheaply down the road through second-hand websites or flea markets, Palmer said. “Unfortunately, people who are looking for bargains may not be as inquisitive as to the source of the great bargain,” he said. Break-and-enters have

been on the rise in West Vancouver over the last two years, with 37 so far in 2017, compared to 15 year-to-date in 2015, and thieves are increasingly targeted luxury homes where the residents are rarely, if ever, home, Palmer said. “It definitely highlights the need of anyone who is thinking of being away for an extended period to harden their residential target,” he said, suggesting the installation of a security system and having someone check in on your home while you’re away. “Know your neighbours so your neighbours know you and so your neighbours know what would be, in any way, unusual on your property.”

Stolen furniture, art, appliances still in the box, and luxury personal items fill a North Vancouver storage locker raided by police. PHOTO SUPPLIED WEST VANCOUVER POLICE DEPARTMENT

Arson sentencing awaiting psych report From page 4

damage. Fire alarms went off in the library that day just before midnight. Firefighters who responded to the call discovered a fire in a wooden cabinet had activated overhead sprinklers. Police found furniture had been overturned and a safe containing $1,200 had also been smashed open. Video surveillance footage showed a man using a crowbar to pry open the safe before going into a small office containing the cabinet, carrying papers. An orange glow was seen on the wall shortly after. The suspect was caught on video drinking from a plastic Sprite bottle as he

left the room. A bottle matching that description was later found next to a door that had been smashed to gain entry to the library, with Nendick’s DNA on it. In finding Nendick guilty of arson, Rodgers wrote, “I find there is no other rational conclusion but that the fire was deliberately set.” Rodgers said the DNA match proves the person who broke open the safe and was seen on video setting the fire was Nendick. Chances of anyone else’s DNA being a random match are “one in 230 quadrillion,” according to a DNA expert who testified at the trial, said Rodgers. That proves guilt beyond

a reasonable doubt, wrote the judge. “It is a statistical impossibility to conclude otherwise.” DNA evidence in blood samples also proved Nendick was responsible for puncturing the tires of multiple vehicles overnight in a neighbourhood near to CapU on Dec. 4, 2014 and for breaking into Henry’s Grocery on Capilano Road on Aug. 12, 2015, the judge concluded. DNA contained in a pair of shorts from a backpack ditched by someone running away from a break-and-enter scene at an Esso Station at 2747 Mountain Hwy. on Jan. 10, 2015 also proved Nendick was guilty of that crime, Rodgers wrote. During the trial, Nendick’s

defence lawyer Michael Fox argued there were no witnesses who had seen Nendick puncturing tires, urging Rodgers not to speculate on why his client’s blood was found at the crime scene. But the judge ruled that wasn’t reasonable. While criminal law requires a high degree of proof, the duty of the trial judge is to consider a “rational conclusion,” Rodgers wrote. Rodgers found Nendick guilty of all 28 charges, including arson, multiple counts of mischief and three counts of break-and-enter. Rodgers ordered a psychiatric report be prepared prior to sentencing for Nendick. A date for that has not yet been set.

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Official Community Plan Review World Café What kind of future do you envision for your West Vancouver? The Official Community Plan Review is about shaping the future of West Vancouver: our housing choices, what our neighbourhoods look and feel like, how we support local jobs, shops, and services, and how we protect the environment. The District is consulting on your objectives for the revised plan and we want to hear from you.

• What are your priorities as we plan for the future of West Vancouver? • What do you think are the key challenges facing our community? • What opportunities are there to make West Vancouver even better? Come out to a World Café session. Talk with your neighbours and share your thoughts with us as we plan together for the future of our community.

CHOICE OF WORLD CAFÉ SESSIONS Saturday, April 8 | 2–4 p.m. Music Hall, West Vancouver Community Centre, 2121 Marine Drive Wednesday, April 12 | 6–8 p.m. Gleneagles Golf Course Clubhouse, 6190 Marine Drive There will be a range of public engagement options over the next year and we encourage you to be part of this important process. For more information about the Official Community Plan Review: visit westvancouver.ca/OCP or contact 604-921-3459


A8 | NEWS

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

PUBLISHED BY NORTH SHORE NEWS A DIVISION OF LMP PUBLICATION LTD. PARTNERSHIP, 116-980 WEST 1ST ST., NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. V7P 3N4. PETER KVARNSTROM, PUBLISHER. CANADIAN PUBLICATIONS MAIL SALES PRODUCT AGREEMENT NO. 40010186.

Full force gale

I

t’s spring – that time of year when confetti falls from above, is swept up by the wind and tossed back towards us. Sadly we aren’t talking about the annual cherry blossom festival. We’re referring to the flurry of announcements from the province, which began as a gentle breeze sometime in the fall, gathered force over winter and has now assumed the stature of a cyclone, with announcements about the many ways B.C. is benefiting its citizens blanketing the news cycle 24/7. If you missed it the first time, you’ll surely get it again soon. The province’s email blast system has been set to semi-automatic stun. There are so many competing announcements to be made, some are even being relegated to inopportune time slots like Saturday morning. Who knew there were so many amazing public programs that citizens had to

be made aware of with their own money at a time so agonizingly close to an election? If you didn’t, you do now. None of this is new, or unique to the BC Liberals. Many of the announcements aren’t new either – like the completed seismic upgrades for Windsor, announced this week with a photo opportunity, which was also announced as a government priority just prior to the 2013 election. Mercifully, after the election officially gets underway next week, we can all stop pretending that the government is governing and acknowledge that our MLAs are actually doing something they’ve been at for much of the past year – campaigning. Until then, expect the tsunami of needto-know up-to-the-minute good news to continue unabated.

Election campaign is getting personal

T

he election writ won’t even be issued until next week, but already the two major parties appear to have revealed – via TV advertising – the main thrust of their key campaign message to voters. The B.C. Liberals have clearly adopted the old political phrase that “it’s the economy, stupid” as the underpinning of its appeal to voters. Everything boils down to creating jobs for as many people as possible, and to keeping taxes low. The NDP, on the other hand, are starting off in an aggressive attack mode. Three short television ads debut this week, and all zero in on Premier Christy Clark in very personal terms (her party is only mentioned once, and even then is called “Christy Clark’s Liberals.”) The contrast to the NDP’s 2013 election campaign could not be clearer. Back

View from The Ledge Keith Baldrey then, the party barely mentioned their opponents and ran a campaign that lacked focus or emotion. But now it appears the New Democrats will relentlessly go after Clark on issues that frame her as a protector of the interests of the wealthy (all three ads feature a photograph headshot of her being showered with cash). I expect this tone will continue for at least the early

CONTACTUS

part of the 28-day campaign, and the week leading up to it. Don’t be surprised to see NDP leader John Horgan spending the first 10 days or so “prosecuting” Clark by name and over issues such as political fundraising, tax cuts for wealthy people, and various scandals and controversies. I’ll be surprised if the B.C. Liberals respond in kind with harsh attacks on Horgan, at least not directly. There are thirdparty advertisers who are already launching those attacks, including one ad that suggests the NDP leader wants to embrace the far-left and far-green “Leap Manifesto.” The B.C. Liberals will undoubtedly try to argue, after having made the case that the province’s economy is chugging along because of their stewardship, that an NDP government would

wreck economic growth and kill jobs. And just as the NDP ads focus on her, the B.C. Liberals’ theme will be very much wrapped around Clark’s personality. Clark is clearly a polarizing figure. She elicits a visceral, negative reaction from core NDP supporters, but at the same time galvanizes B.C. Liberal supporters or those who can’t bring themselves to ever vote for the NDP. Both sides are betting their view of her matches the view the majority of voters have of her. But attacks can only take the NDP so far. One of the problems that comes from being in Opposition so long is being associated with relentless negativity, which doesn’t woo voters. The NDP strategy in this campaign appears to mirror the one it used in the 1996

election, when it demonized B.C. Liberal leader Gordon Campbell. Their television ads featured a grey, glowering and menacing picture of him as a voiceof-doom narrator talked of all the dire things Campbell would do if he became premier. And back then the NDP ran a campaign based on a kind of class warfare approach, linking “Howe Street millionaires” and the banks to Campbell and his party. The party’s television ads running this week certainly try to tie Clark to the moneyed class. The NDP won that election due solely to a serious split on the right, as the B.C. Reform party took a lot of potential support from the B.C. Liberals to allow the NDP to squeak in, even though it got fewer votes (it may be useful for New Democrats to take

NORTH SHORE NEWS 116-980 WEST 1ST STREET NORTH VANCOUVER B.C. V7P 3N4

note that their share of the popular vote in 1996, after that relentlessly negative campaign, actually declined from the 1991 election). At some point the NDP will have to present a more positive message to voters, one that clearly outlines specifically what it will do help people and doesn’t just attack Clark. And while Clark can cause sparks to fly in either direction, Horgan is still an unknown figure to most people. He’ll have to put on his political salesman’s hat at some point, and depart from the attack mode. But until then, expect the next couple of weeks to be a rough and bruising time in B.C. politics. Things are about to get very loud, and very personal. Keith Baldrey is chief political reporter for Global BC. Keith. Baldrey@globalnews.ca

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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 © 2016 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. North Shore News is a member of the National Newsmedia Council, which is an independent organization established to deal with acceptable journalistic practices and ethical behaviour. If you have concerns about editorial content, please email editor@nsnews.com or call the newsroom at 604-985-2131. If you are not satisfied with the response and wish to file a formal complaint, visit the web site at mediacouncil.ca or call toll-free 1-844-877-1163 for additional information.

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

NEWS | A9

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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must include your name, full address and telephone number. Send your letters via e-mail to: editor@ nsnews.com. The North Shore News reserves the right to edit any and/or all letters based on length, clarity, legality and content. The News also reserves the right to publish any and/or all letters electronically.

Mayor Mike’s chamber chat falls short on solutions Dear Editor: Re: Mayor Calls for Reinvigoration of WV, March 12 news story. In what may have been an early and soft kickoff to the 2018 mayoral campaign, West Vancouver Mayor Mike Smith let loose with some calculated “free thinking” at his Mayor Mike Unplugged presentation to the West Vancouver Chamber of Commerce (March 8). Mayor Mike managed to savage pretty much everybody from the current council members to the provincial government without actually offering any solutions to the wrongs he identified. Let’s be clear, the mayor understands this municipality and has a clear vision for what ails it. He detailed two classes of problems and came close to identifying those holding back solutions – but pulled his punches in every case, never naming names or offering alternatives. And he is correct in identifying the big issues. First is a toxic mix of an aging demographic of residents in combination with rapidly rising property values. The result is the people needed to keep the district running and energetic for the future – the teachers, firefighters, police, municipal staff, shopkeepers, trades people and young families that keep any society safe and functional and vibrant – can no longer afford to live here; the rest of us, too old or disinterested to pick up the slack. That leads to a host of issues affecting everything from the viability of our schools, the selection of shopping, restaurants and nightlife, to growing traffic issues and our safety in the event of a major earthquake. The mayor’s solution is more development, particularly more affordable housing options, including rentals,

Q

which ultimately means more density. He clubbed the rest of the council members for holding the required development back (not necessarily true) as well as calling out a variety of unidentified NIMBY groups who rail against anything being built that changes the current landscape. However, it must be noted that the major developments the mayor has recently supported, such as the Grosvenor and Sewell’s Horseshoe Bay projects, are not what anyone could call “affordable,” quite the opposite. With the notable exception of the Hollyburn rental expansion, it is hard to identify anything council under this mayor has done that has worked to encourage development of higher density, low-rise, lower cost housing. Admittedly council cannot be held responsible for the types of projects developers bring forward, but surely they are responsible for creating the environment to encourage development of the kind we need. And as he pointedly illustrated, major developers laugh out loud at the concept of West Vancouver being open for business. The mayor’s second target of the evening was the provincial and metro governments, who for political reasons have been obstructive in many respects to initiatives that might help the district. In this category Mayor Smith includes things such as transit inequality, the decades-old lack of action on the low road connector to North Vancouver, and the lack of action on the sewage plant. (Also included in this category would be the mayor’s laundry list of unfair taxation, but these seemed mostly to be small thorns in the side, nothing that would change life in the district.) On the larger issues, the mayor was pretty clear he felt

we were ignored by the provincial Liberals because our votes are already secure for these ridings, meaning there was no pressure for the governing party to spend any money or political capital in this corner. You don’t have to buy votes when you already own them. True as that may be, Mayor Mike did not unplug himself enough to offer alternatives. Does he think we should vote NDP to send a message to Victoria that we too have needs? Does he think that would actually help? By the end of the evening, including softball questions from the floor, the mayor was completely successful in identifying some very real issues for West Vancouver and equally successful in sidestepping personal responsibility or hard recommendations for solutions. Local politics at its best. Tom Dodd West Vancouver

Good Samaritan covers seniors’ restaurant tab Dear Editor: We are four women who celebrate each others’ birthdays with a lunch, every year. This year was very special because we celebrated our most senior member’s 90+ birthday at a North Vancouver restaurant. Much to our surprise when we waited for our bill the server told us that a young woman had paid. This wonderful act of kindness only added to our thanks that there are still such nice people in our world. Whoever you are, please accept a huge thank-you for making a special day even more special. Now it’s up to us to pay it forward. Wanda Bogusz, on behalf of the Glenhaven Foursome

Delivering for North Vancouver Residents As we approach the official start of the 2017 Provincial election, I wanted to reflect on some of the key accomplishments over the last number of years, specifically to North Vancouver and the North Shore. Our community has benefited from having four BC Liberal Government MLAs in office, working hard every single day to deliver the programs, services, and the infrastructure North Shore residents deserve. We’ve also forged a strong working relationship with our local municipalities and our Members of Parliament, meeting regularly and coming up with solutions for important issues like transportation, public transit, housing, and major infrastructure projects. Here are some items I am most proud of: •

$198-million Lower Lynn Interchanges Highway Project.

$700-million Lions Gate Wastewater Treatment Plant.

$67.2-million HOpe Centre at Lions Gate Hospital, including a floor dedicated to children and youth.

$2.5-million for Foundry North Shore, one-stop shop youth mental wellness centre.

Over $150-million for new schools and seismic upgrades, including:

15% foreign-buyers tax, $855-million for affordable rental housing, and $703-million for the B.C. HOME Program – helping first-time buyers get into the market.

$150,000 to the Seymour Salmonid Society for the Seymour Rockslide Mitigation Project plus $22,000 annual grant.

$188,000 to North Shore Rescue to buy new long-line equipment, $10,000 for the construction of a helipad on Tim Jones Peak, $100,000 annual grant, and $15-million to BC Search and Rescue Association.

Extended D.A.V.E tax credit to post-production & continuing competitive film tax rate.

Creating a framework to allow ridesharing services like Uber and Lyft to operate in BC.

Shutting down puppy & kitty mills and providing $10-million to the BC SPCA to upgrade their facilities.

$500-million for seniors care across B.C. including $275 million for home and community care.

Lowering small business tax rate from 2.5% to 2%.

Cutting MSP premiums in half for B.C. households with an annual family net income of up to $120,000.

Argyle Secondary, Carson Graham Secondary, Windsor Secondary, Highlands Elementary, Canyon Heights Elementary, Carisbrooke Elementary, Ridgeway Elementary, Queen Mary Elementary, and Lynn Valley Elementary

Jane Thornthwaite

North Vancouver - Seymour

Do you welcome the legalization of marijuana? Yes, marijuana will contribute to the economy.

No, new rules will hurt nonindustrial growers.

HAVE YOUR SAY by taking part in our web poll at

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LAST WEEK WE ASKED YOU:

57%

Should we have more public Yes, most dogs are as well behaved as their space for off-leash dogs? owners. (results based on 193 votes)

43% No, most dogs are as poorly behaved as their owners.

Jane announces the expansion of the Lower Lynn Interchanges Highway Project, which now includes direct highway access for Lynn Valley residents, and a separated lane between Seymour and Lynn Valley.

Get in touch with Jane: JaneThornthwaite.com | Jane.Thornthwaite@bcliberals.com Campaign Office: 1248A Lynn Valley Road, North Vancouver

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This was paid for by the North Vancouver – Seymour BC Liberal Riding Association. Authorized by David Goldsmith, Financial Agent for the BC Liberal Party | 604-606-6000


A10 |

nsnews.com north shore news

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

NEWS | A11

north shore news nsnews.com

100th Anniversary Commemoration of

“THE BATTLE OF VIMY RIDGE”

North Vancouver community policing volunteer Ben Gwynne talks to an attendee of a fraud awareness event March 30 at the civic plaza on Lonsdale Avenue. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD

Don’t fall victim to income tax scam, RCMP warn Beware of fraudsters posing as CRA agents BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com

Nothing is for sure but death and taxes, and now apparently, tax scammers.

North Vancouver RCMP are again warning the public as tax time draws out fraudsters looking to make a dishonest buck. A frequent tactic used by con artists is to pose as a Canada Revenue Agency employee either claiming the victim owes a great deal of money or is due for a refund that can be claimed only if they hand over sensitive personal information.

The CRA does not make any cold calls to demand payment or offer money. “It is an entirely criminal operation and one that can easily be avoided by using some discernment and common sense,” read an RCMP press release issued on Tuesday. Less than 48 hours later, a North Vancouver man fell victim. Police say the resident received a call from a man with an Indian accent identifying himself as a CRA staff member. Intimidatingly, he warned the victim he owed $2,000 in back taxes. “He was instructed to immediately pay with iTunes cards or face seven years’ imprisonment,” said Cpl. Richard De Jong, North Vancouver RCMP spokesman. The victim complied and

purchased the cards and handed over the passwords over the phone. It wasn’t until they called back again that same day asking for more money that the victim realized it was a scam. But by then it was too late. The money had already been transferred and was unrecoverable. “CRA and iTunes have never (been) and will never (be in) a working relationship,” De Jong said. If you want to confirm that a CRA representative has contacted you, call the CRA at 1-800-959-8281 for individual concerns or 1-800-959-5525 for businessrelated calls. Anyone who suspects they have been targeted by an attempted fraud should report the incident to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre at 1-888-495-8501.

Transitioning Through Divorce A Free Workshop for Women

Parade & Service Sunday, April 9, 2017 West Vancouver Memorial Arch

1:45pm - Parade form up (Marine Drive at 18th Street) 2:00pm - March off

Commemoration Service 2:15pm The Royal Canadian Legion West Vancouver, Branch 60

Tuesday, May 2, 2017 6:30pm - 8:30pm

Edgemont Library, Potlach room 3045 Highland Blvd, North Vancouver

Call 604 925 9260 to register or email legaladmin@redmondlaw.ca

Abby Petterson

Divorce Coach/Child Specialist AJ Petterson & Assoc. Inc.

Tracy Theemes

Financial Advisor Sophia Financial Group Raymond James Ltd.

Karen Redmond Family Law Lawyer Mediator

With thanks to Veterans Affairs Canada, the District of West Vancouver, West Vancouver Fire & Rescue, West Vancouver Police, JP Fell Pipe Band, West Vancouver Youth Band and the West Vancouver Memorial Library, for their support of this event.


A12 | COMMUNITY

nsnews.com north shore news WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

BRIGHTLIGHTS! by Lisa King North Shore Sport Awards The North Shore Sport Awards, honouring outstanding achievement of our local athletes, coaches, volunteers and officials, were held March 28 at West Vancouver Community Centre. Don Rutherford acted as MC for the evening, as the North Shore sports community mingled and enjoyed appetizers and refreshments. The winners, recognized during the awards presentation, included Joe Iacobellis (Lifetime Contribution to Sport), Al Rose (Lifetime Coaching Achievement), Quinn Keast Foundation (Legacy), Gary Robbins (Outstanding Athletic Achievement), Nikola Girke (Spirit of Sport) and Capilano University’s men’s soccer team (Team of the Year), among many others.

Cynthia Livingstone and Dustin Livingstone

Eleven-year-old Markus Dailly joins Coach of the Year winner Paul Dailly with Dan Morello, Nic Morello and Devan Woolley of the Capilano Blues soccer team, winners of the Team of the Year award.

Darcie Montgomery with City of North Vancouver Mayor Darrell Mussatto and Mary-Ellen McSween

Bio reader Rob Berridge and MC Don Rutherford

Ingeborg Girke with Spirit of Sport award winner Nikola Girke and Gage Garner

Terry McColl with Male Athlete of the Year Sean McColl, Anna Lee and Sun Lee

Carmel Shaw with Youth Female Athlete of the Year Caitlyn Shaw, Melina Stokes and Jennifer Stokes

Please direct requests for event coverage to: cgoodman@nsnews.com. For more Bright Lights photos, go to: nsnews.com/community/bright-lights

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

| A13

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Your North Shore Guide to life and style HOME & GARDEN 14 l TASTE 23 l SPORTS 31

Mom’s the word

Writing project investigates mom before motherhood JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com

Who’s your mother?

It should be a simple question, but often the identity of the woman known as mom is a mystery shrouded in polite quiet. For 13 years, Marilyn Norry has been speaking against that quiet. “The silence around mother’s lives is in every single culture,” Norry says. “It’s all over the world and it seems like it’s been there throughout history.” My Mother’s Story is an effort to compile history by encouraging all sons and daughters – no matter what their relationship with their mother – to chronicle their mom’s life in 2,000 words. “Being your mother was just one thing that she did,” Norry explains. In 2004, Norry was in “the deep end of the mom pool,” when she noticed something startling. She was talking like her mother, “saying things I vowed I’d never repeat.” While pondering that generational echo, Norry found herself at a wedding, “standing around, waiting for the food,” when a friend uttered

a consequential phrase: “To know what I mean, you have to know my mother’s story.” It was what she’d been waiting for. In the book My Mother’s Story: The Originals, Norry describes her own mindset in that time of flux. “I talked to God often, asking to be of use somewhere … I thought this would be film work, but I was open to other possibilities.” Before her project had a name, Norry asked her Vancouver actor friends to take down their mother’s history. She quickly noted many mothers are reduced to a “one-word descriptor, often coined in adolescence: she was kind, a saint, nasty, a drunk, tragic, crazy, lost, beautiful.” But her friends emerged with a tale of a ballerina and knife-throwing, a chronicle of a “shocking flirt” who became the “belle of the barrage” in the Sindh desert. There were wonderful women who were terrible mothers, and wonderful mothers who were terrible women. But while some women were writing “there were so many more just talking about

writing,” Norry recounts. She invited a group of daughters to her living room. Those who had already written read aloud to those who “hadn’t yet found the courage.” That night led to scores of amateur historians eventually putting pen to paper. The key is simplicity, according to Norry. “Get the story of your mother’s life,” she says. “People can do this any time, all they need is the assignment and the deadline.” Mother’s Day, she adds, is a “really good deadline.” When it comes to the content of the stories, Norry is a proponent of the Joe Friday school of writing: “just the facts.” Write in chronological order and “as fast as you can,” she advises. Family stories can often unearth emotions and memories, but Norry reminds the writers that it’s not about them, it’s about their mother. “The writer is just a footnote,” she says. Taking down those family stories is essential for preserving the past, according to Norry. “I remember television shows better than I remembered my family history,” she

See Project page 28

604-925-1341

WICKED, WICKED WEST Montroyal elementary actors Avery Gallagher, Nicole Johnston and Mabel Rutter rehearse The Wizard of Oz. Dorothy leaves Kansas at 1:15 and 7 p.m. Thursday at the school gym. Admission by donation. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD

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A14 | HOME AND GARDEN

nsnews.com north shore news WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

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Eggs can be natural this Easter

Home Ideas Barb Lunter Easter just wouldn’t be the same without Easter eggs.

This year why not dye your eggs naturally? There are many ways to do this and the results are beautiful. Here is an easy way to dye your eggs using everyday items from your kitchen and garden. Boiling onion skins will produce a deep brown dye that is stunning when used on Easter eggs. Begin by hardboiling your eggs and letting them cool. Once the eggs have cooled down it’s a good idea to wash them with a little warm, soapy water to remove any oily residue that may impede the dye

adhering to the egg. At this point you will require an old pair of naturalcoloured nylon stockings. Cut the stockings into small tubes and set aside. Select a few flowers, herbs or leaves of your choice and wash them of any dirt or debris. Let them dry. Apply the flowers and herbs inverted onto the egg and carefully insert the egg into the small piece of nylon. Tie off the end. Fill a saucepan to the top with regular onion skins. Add tap water to the point where the skins are barely covered.

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Onion skins produce a natural brown dye for Easter eggs.

PHOTO SUPPLIED BARB LUNTER

Place the saucepan on the stove and bring to a boil. Once the water has boiled remove from the heat and let the water cool for 10 to 15 minutes. Carefully insert the eggs into the saucepan making sure to bury them within the skins. Place the saucepan into the refrigerator for four to 12 hours. Check on the eggs periodically to see how the dye is darkening and use your discretion as to how dark you would like the eggs to be. Once you are satisfied with the colour of the egg remove them from the skins with a slotted spoon and set aside. Carefully remove the nylon covering and the flowers by slowly peeling them off the egg. Pat the egg dry with a paper towel and let them completely dry. Rubber bands may also be used to make interesting patterns on a dyed egg. Choose a nice selection of different sized rubber bands and wrap each egg individually with the bands. Be sure to leave enough of the eggshell exposed in order to achieve a dyed pattern. To give your egg a nice glossy glow, rub them with a little vegetable oil. This method may also be done using purple cabbage. Simply add large pieces of purple cabbage to a saucepan filled with water and bring to a boil. Follow the same directions as using onion skins for similar results. Barb Lunter is a freelance writer with a passion for home decor, entertaining and floral design. She also runs Blu Dog Staging & Redesign. bludogstagingandredesign.com

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

HOME AND GARDEN | A15

north shore news nsnews.com

At the West Vancouver Community Foundation we embrace the concept of community and we identify how we can best foster its success. Then, together with our donors, we make community investments that support everything from care for those members who need it most, to recreation, the arts and the environment. Our many scholarships and awards for students are another form of community investment. We do all of this by managing more than $13 million in assets and a long list of endowment funds. FLOWER POWER Pastry chef Steven Tran works on some of the chocolate potted plants at Thomas Haas Chocolates in North Vancouver. The store is holding its annual charitable Easter egg raffle with a draw on April 14 at 2 p.m. There are 40 prizes on offer, including four giant chocolate Easter creations. Tickets: $3 each or four for $10. All proceeds from the draw will benefit the Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre and North Shore Crisis Services Society. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD

HOME AND GARDEN FRIENDS OF HUNTER PARK All ages are welcome to a community invasive plant pull and planting Saturday, April 8 from 10 a.m. to noon in Hunter Park, North Vancouver. Meet at the Chaucer Road entrance just inside the park. Wear suitable clothing and bring garden gloves. Other tools will be supplied. Bring your own water. Other refreshments will be supplied. Event runs rain or shine. mervynd@telus.ca EARTH MONTH EVENT A screening of Just Eat It – A Food Waste Story Monday, April 10, 6:308:30 p.m. at West Vancouver Memorial Library,

1950 Marine Dr. There will be a Q&A session with the producer of the film after the movie. westvanlibrary.ca UPPER LONSDALE GARDEN CLUB will host florist Sam Solis who will provide floral design demonstrations at the meeting Thursday, April 13, 7:30 p.m. at St. Martin’s Anglican Church, 195 East Windsor Rd., North Vancouver. New members and guests are welcome to attend. The club meets every second Thursday of the month. PLANT SALE The West Vancouver Garden Club is hosting a sale featuring plants from members’ gardens. Saturday, May 6, 9 a.m.-1 p.m at 2660 Queens Ave., West Vancouver.

IT’S A NEW ERA FOR THE WEST VANCOUVER COMMUNITY FOUNDATION. A new leader…

Strong business skills—check. Deep understanding of social responsibility—check. Years of experience in fundraising and philanthropy—check. Roots in West Vancouver’s community— check. Adine Mees brings all that to her new role as chief executive officer of the West Vancouver Community Foundation. “The West Vancouver Community Foundation is actively participating in the daily life of this incredible community. Great communities require sustained effort and support. I look forward to collaborating with you and together making this community even greater.”

…and a new growth target.

Going forward, the foundation intends to grow its assets to $30 million by 2025, allowing it to donate $1 million annually.

We are leading important community discussions…

The West Vancouver Community Foundation’s Vital Signs report in 2016 cast light on key issues in West Vancouver—housing security for seniors and others, marginalized new residents, readiness of young children to successfully begin school, mental health and addiction issues, and the absence of the 20- to 44-year-old cohort in West Vancouver—the ‘missing middle.’ We invite you to join our efforts to strengthen community vitality and resiliency.

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Find out about the West Vancouver Community Foundation’s vision, mission, how to donate and how to apply for grants and scholarships at westvanfoundation.com


A16 | WORK

nsnews.com north shore news WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

Little university goes to market: CapU snags AMA silver

Marketing students nearly pitch perfect in New Orleans JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com

After almost being derailed by an illegal travel ban, Capilano University students outpitched, out-sold and outdid all but one of their competitors in a North American marketing competition. CapU’s case competition team earned second place out of approximately 150 universities and colleges

at the American Marketing Association competition in New Orleans, La. “Beyond ecstatic,” said instructor Andrea Eby shortly after her plane landed at YVR. First prize went to Texas State University, which boasts a student population of 38,808 – making it approximately five times the size of CapU. “You just assume that they’re going to be better than you because they’re

well-known schools, but I guess all the hard work really shows at the end,” stated team leader Pauntehah Poursaba in a press release. Competing against storied institutions including Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Nevada, the CapU squad made their case for attracting consumers between the ages of 18 and 35 to eBay. The students “totally dialed it up,” according to Eby. The silver finish was all the more impressive given that it was only CapU’s

second year competing in the 39th annual marketing bonanza, according to Eby. The team’s entrance was initially jeopardized when U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order banning immigrants from seven nations, effectively barring Iraqi-Canadian citizen Hamzah Elhassani. Elhassani, described by CapU marketing instructor as “my rock star sales presenter,” was initially uncertain about making the trip. “We should be welcoming each other … rather than

discriminating,” he said prior to the trip. After the ban was struck down as unconstitutional, Elhassani ended up breezing through the border, according to Eby. Once in New Orleans he picked up 10th place in the AMA’s TEKSystems Outbound Sales Competition, which tests a student’s ability to secure a face-to-face meeting with a client in three phone calls. However, the biggest honour was bestowed on Eby, who was named faculty adviser of the year. “It’s the honour of my life,”

she said. The showing puts CapU’s marketing department “on the map,” according to Eby. The AMA function should help students climb the ladder to industry, according to Eby. CapU’s case competition team includes: Poursaba, Chris Critchley, Tom Kramer, Adam Wong, Robert Dromey, Phoebe Chung and Vermie Pacson. The Capilano University Marketing Association was formed in 2008. The group became a collegiate chapter of the AMA in 2014.

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

| A17

north shore news nsnews.com

Proud sponsors of the Whistler Cup

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

| A19

north shore news nsnews.com

PROUD SPONSOR OF THE 2016 WHISTLER CUP.

Proud sponsors of the Whistler Cup

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f all the 400 athletes that participate in the Whistler Cup, only a handful of the racers will reach the cherished podium. A few more will reach their personal best and have the race of their life. And even a greater number will gain expertise that will take them to future podium. But each and everyone of the young Whistler Cup racers will have an opportunity to meet, exchange and build a lasting relationship with a fellow racer from Canada, Norway, Australia, Korea or anyone

JIM DAVIE PHOTOGRAPHY

THE WHISTLER CUP – BUILDING LASTING FRIENDSHIPS of the other 18 participating foreign countries. These relationship will often last long after the Whistler Cup, will provide a unique view on a different culture and traditions and will build an understanding and respect for diverse cultures. The unique international friendships that will be formed is the real success of this race and everyone steps onto that Podium. Have a great Race. Richard Prokopanko Whistler Cup Chair 2016

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This year the parade will be lead by the Carnival Band, a communitybased brass band that seeks to use music and dance as tools to empower its members and audiences alike to work toward peaceful and positive social change. Under the direction of father and son duo Tim Sars and Ross Barrett, the band plays music ranging from samba, calypso, funk, and klezmer to New Orleans style jazz— animated music that injects crowds with an instant blast of energy.

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A20 |

nsnews.com north shore news

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

Proud sponsors of the Whistler Cup

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

| A21

north shore news nsnews.com SPONSORED CONTENT

HOME

PRO’S

WELCOME HOME

Do you need a new roof? Find out how to tell from Penfolds Roofing & Solar After gusty winds you noticed a few cracked cedar roof shingles in your yard. Or maybe you had some water leaks during the rainy season. These are some telltale signs that you need a new roof. But what if you’re unsure? How do you really know? Ask an expert. Shaun Mayhew of Penfolds Roofing and Solar has some tips about roofs for homeowners. “After every single winter you want to do a visual inspection of the roof,” Mayhew said. “You want to do that from the ground or road. Safety is a huge thing when it comes to roofs – especially with homeowners.” Mayhew doesn’t recommend that homeowners walk on their own roofs to do an inspection – it’s too dangerous. “I think a lot of homeowners make that mistake and think that it’s not a big deal to jump up on the roof when the reality is every single year homeowners get severely injured because they get too close to the roof edge. The last thing you want to do is put your safety at risk.” If you are unsure after a visual inspection, call a professional. Penfolds offers the service free of charge. “We send a Technical Advisor out and just give an honest opinion. Sometimes a homeowner knows the roof is on its last legs and needs to be replaced, sometimes they just want an honest opinion. We will tell them whether it’s time or whether they can push it for a couple more years if they have to.”

Here are a few common signs that your roof is aging and may require a replacement soon. CEDAR SHAKES • If you notice that the cedar is buckling or if the cedar is cracking, these are key indicators. Oftentimes cedar shakes will come off the roof and be in the yard after a windstorm. When that starts to occur, it’s a decent time to call in a professional to do an inspection. ASPHALT SHINGLES • When you are doing regular homeowner maintenance, you’ll start to see a lot more granules building up in your gutters; as the shingles get older this is a sign that the roof is nearing the end of its lifespan. CONCRETE TILE • Most often homeowners will know their concrete tiles are giving them issues when it starts leaking. Everyone thinks a concrete tile lasts 50 years but the reality is in our climate, we’ve seen replacements between 15-25 years. The product relies heavily on the underlay to keep water out of the attic. In California they may last 50 years, but not in our harsh climate. Mayhew says the general rule of thumb is that after your roof is beyond 15 years old it’s probably time to get a professional opinion. Penfolds also installs Solar Panels on roofs. Mayhew says “the North Shore is surprisingly good for Solar. Penfolds has installed well over 2500 panels in Metro

Vancouver on residential homes. You need to have a professional who understands roofing installing your panels. There can be huge warranty concerns if you don’t. We provide free Solar Assessments.” Penfolds has built a solid reputation in Greater Vancouver for its quality roofing & solar services. This year is their 80th Anniversary! “We’ve been on the North Shore pretty much our entire existence,” said Mayhew, who noted the company has an office at 710 Queensbury Ave. Penfolds has three North Shore-based Technical Advisors with over 40 years of experience between them. “They’ve seen pretty much everything when it comes to roofing. They have managed well over 3,000 projects over the years – they know their stuff.”

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A22 |

nsnews.com north shore news

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

SPONSORED CONTENT

HOME

OUTDOOR LIVING

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Bring the comfort of your home outdoors - all season long completed outdoor projects range in scope and can offer some inspiration (visit www.gclc.ca or houzz.com/pro/ greatcanadianlandscaping ). “You can have anything from your standard 10-foot by 10foot cedar pergola to dine underneath to a fully functioning outdoor kitchen with sink, bar and outdoor fridges and cabinets with lights and heaters and power outlets. There’s also retractable awnings too now that with the click of a remote, make your semi-covered living space fully covered if it’s raining or if it’s too sunny and you want shade. They are made out of the same material as many quality outdoor umbrellas, so they are mildew and fade resistant and can take the weather we have on the West Coast.”

You live on the Wet Coast. But that doesn’t mean you can’t create a dream outdoor living and entertaining space that your family and friends can enjoy year-round. North Shore-based Great Canadian Landscaping Company specializes in bringing the home outdoors with custom backyard kitchens and living areas that can include everything from fridges and fire tables to heaters and retractable awnings – and much more. “Expanding your living to the outdoor landscape allows you to maximize your space and extend your outdoor entertaining season,” said Chris O’Donohue, founder and president of the award-winning Great Canadian Landscaping Company. “I have clients who use their outdoor living spaces yearround. They have barbecues out in the middle of winter and sit outside together. The integration of different heating elements, electric or gas heaters, as well as the way the area is designed can make it a 12-month-a-year living space.” O’Donohue noted that his company installs high-quality heaters, BBQ’s and firepits from Johnstone’s & Crystalview and Custom Firepits from Solus Décor, Dreamcast Designs and Sticks n Stones.

The Great Canadian Landscaping Company offers a variety of services – from landscape design, lawn and garden maintenance to landscape construction and more – and in recent years they’ve added outdoor living and edible gardens to their list of specialized services.

FOR MANY CLIENTS, THE COST OF CREATING DREAM OUTDOOR SPACES MAKES GREATER FINANCIAL SENSE THAN MOVING TO A NEW HOME. “A lot of people look at the choice of moving or not moving and the expense of doing so and what would Expanding it take to make their house what they really want. Looking at their backyard and going ‘OK I’ve got your living to the a nice house, but maybe I don’t like my backyard outdoor landscape and I want to make it better to entertain or allows you to maximize enjoy.’ It’s a long-term investment for most people in their homes and once they have the your space and enjoyment factor of using their outdoor space extend your outdoor it’s a no-brainer.”

entertaining season.

“It’s become a niche for us. We’ve probably built at least three dozen outdoor kitchens in the last couple of years,” he said. THE INTEGRATION OF EDIBLE GARDENS INTO OUTDOOR LIVING SPACES IS ALSO VERY POPULAR. “Including an edible garden into the landscape close to these features so that if they want to have fresh herbs by the barbecue or close to the kitchen we build custom veggie boxes with organic soils and quality materials and we integrate it so it looks like part of the structure as well.” WHAT KIND OF CUSTOM OUTDOOR SPACE ARE YOU DREAMING OF? The Great Canadian Landscaping Company’s gallery of

For those who have a hard time envisioning their outdoor makeover, Great Canadian Landscaping’s designers provide clients with 2-D and 3-D renderings that put their outdoor dream into clear focus.

“What we offer that many don’t is a three dimensional rendering service so clients can see what it is going to look like when it’s built so they can actually understand what they are getting and paying for versus just an idea. That eliminates a lot of the worries some people have about not getting what they envision. The combination of the landscape renderings and the experience we have building makes us the right choice for outdoor living and your landscaping project.” WANT TO START PLANNING YOUR DREAM OUTDOOR SPACE? To book an on-site consultation with The Great Canadian Landscaping Company call 604-924-5296 or email info@gclc.ca. Or visit The Great Canadian Landscaping Company’s website at www.gclc.ca.

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

north shore news nsnews.com

Your North Shore Guide to exceptional cuisine

taste

| A23

Brunch menu more than just filler

Table 153 eatery impresses with esthetic Standing in the spacious and bright, decidedly minimalist room that is now called Table 153, I cannot for the life of me remember what occupied the space before.

Table 153, a welcome new brunch venue in Lower Lonsdale, so completely occupies this space, fits in it with such organic ease, that it might as well have always been here, like Jack Torrance Chris Dagenais at The Overlook Hotel in The Shining. I am impressed with this newest addition to the rapidly developing neighbourhood. For Table 153, brunch is not an afterthought, some bolted on appendage to their usual meal service designed to extract more revenue from the week. No, here it is the focus, expertly served with a host of little service nuances that suggest they have this brunch thing figured out. For instance, their Veggie Benny comes with your choice of toast served on the side rather than with the eggs and other ingredients served atop an English muffin. Why? Because the Veggie Benny includes roasted tomato, sautéed spinach, asparagus and hollandaise sauce and if you put that lineup of ingredients on top of bread of any kind, the latter will get soggy and won’t be as enjoyable. Another thing: while there are no menu items specifically targeted to kids, if you ask for a kid-sized meal the staff will work with you to develop something age appropriate, as they did for my two-year-old daughter, who was served a single, fluffy pancake with fruit and syrup, an ample meal for a little appetite and very reasonably priced at $5. I love brunch as a meal service but, to be honest, as I get older my patience for queues seems to be waning rapidly. I don’t wish to wait for 45 minutes or put my name on a list for the privilege of spending $50 on a late breakfast. Enter Table 153, a stylish and centrally located venue that serves brunch

The Dish

Chef and owner Michael Ro puts the finishing touches on a dish of Pulled Pork Eggs Benny, one of the stars of the brunch menu at Table 153 in Lower Lonsdale. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. six days a week (they’re closed Mondays). I’m all for beating the rush and heading out for a weekday brunch to break up the workday. With the thriving businesses, new office spaces and ubiquitous condos that populate the area, I suspect this will become a popular spot. It was my wife DJ that ordered the Veggie Benny on a recent

visit. The dish was good value for $14, a generously portioned plate with the aforementioned mix of vegetables and eggs as well as hashbrowned potatoes. Our friend C.W. joined us for the meal and ordered the 3 Decker Pancakes, a trio of large and

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A24 | TASTE

nsnews.com north shore news WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

Malbec offers degrees of oak

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Almost every wine region or wine producing country has its own signature wine or style, blend or variety.

The Germans remain Riesling champions of the world. Italy’s Veneto lays claim to the uniqueness of apassimento and Amarone. The Chileans still care about Carmenere (though less so, perhaps, these days). And the French have a lockdown on Champagne, no matter how many imitations pop up. It’s hard to argue with Argentina’s unqualified success with its own Malbec. The country has almost 40,000 hectares of the variety planted, about 86 per cent in Mendoza.

Malbec is everything people say they want in a red grape. When made well, it’s soft, supple, approachable, layered, quite complex and reflects its terroir well. In blends – in concert with others – it can truly shine. Malbec World Day rolls around this year on April 17. In anticipation, I’ve spent the last few days exploring more Malbec than I probably taste in a year to get a good snapshot of what’s out there. In Malbec, Argentina truly does has something for everyone. If you’re someone who shops on a budget you’ll know there are abundant choices and styles plus varying degrees of oak, from subtle to sledgehammer, often well under the $20 sweet spot. However, dig just a little deeper and you’ll be well rewarded. Malbec is no longer the homogenous entity it was once perceived to be. Argentina has been working hard on new plantings, especially at higher elevations. So much so that many producers now indicate on the label the height of the vineyards in metres. These are my top scoring and best value wines of the week.

! Bodega Argento Organic Reserva 2015 (Uco Valley, 1,090 metres): The purest expression of the variety, with aromas of black and blue fruit on the palate; cassis, blackberry, hints of spice, a little minerality, seamless tannins and measured French oak through a lengthy end (92 points, $25-$27 at private wine stores). Also worth noting, the “classic” Argento Malbec ($17-$18) also offers excellent value, 89 points). ! Finca Decero Remelinos Single Vineyard 2014 (Mendoza): Consistently one of the best Malbecs in the local market, this wine comes from a stunning site at 1,050 metres in the Andean foothills. Luscious black fruit and violet, underpinned by juicy acidity with great length and well integrated tannins from carefully managed oak, through a plush, lingering finish. (92 points, $24). ! Pascual Toso Limited Edition Malbec 2014: From a long established producer (since 1890) known for value wines, blackberry and coconut on the nose from mainly American oak, with a plush and plummy palate of black fruit and vanilla wrapped in approachable, well-integrated

tannins. Good value (91 points, BCLS $18). ! Kaiken Malbec Reserva 2014: From a warmer site at 950 metres. Forward cherry and spice notes with a fruitdriven palate of red and blue fruit, good mouthfeel and approachable tannins. Excellent value ($15-$18 private stores). ! Zuccardi Q Malbec 2013 (Uco Valley): From select old vine parcels, violets and black fruit up front followed by blackberry and mulberry on a juicy, well-balanced palate with firm tannins and a spicy close (91 points, $22 BCLS). ! Cuma Organic Malbec 2016: Not complex but well made and certified organic, with lifted red fruit and plummy aromas followed by a fresh, red berry palate of damson and vanilla, mediumbodied with a hint of spice in the finish (89 points, BCLS $13). Check with your local store for details of free tastings on Saturday, April 8, 16 and at other times. Tim Pawsey writes about wine for numerous publications and online as the Hired Belly at hiredbelly.com. Contact: info@ hiredbelly.com.

Steamed spinach nice addition to plate

From page 23

fluffy pancakes topped with fresh fruit, fresh fruit compote, whipped cream and a drizzle of maple syrup. The pancakes were proper diner style, fluffy rather than cakey, and were clearly cooked with butter, as evidenced by their deep golden colour and richness of flavour. On the recommendation of our server, I chose the Pulled Pork Benny for my main. House-prepared, slow-cooked pork butt was fork-shredded and piled high atop a toasted English muffin then topped with two soft poached eggs; you get to choose the temperature of your poached eggs at Table 153, but I remain hard pressed to fathom the darkness of the pathology that would make someone opt for well done eggs in a Benny. The hollandaise sauce on the benedicts was nicely realized, light and slightly tart. The dish also came with a nice little pile of steamed spinach, an unadvertised but welcome plate component. My older daughter, Blondie, the final member of our brunch party, went for the straightforward but generously portioned Farm House Breakfast, a hearty meal of two eggs prepared in the style of your choosing with a large English breakfast sausage split in two, three strips of crispy bacon, Texas style toast, hash browns and, just to torment our seven-year-old diner, the same mound of spinach that featured on my plate. The Farm House is also a good deal at $12.50. A final dish, superfluous to our needs but irresistible, was a dessert of Panna Cotta, a delicious example of the traditional thickened cream dessert, here exhibiting a luscious creamy texture and vanilla notes, complemented by fresh berries and a berry nage. Coffee is served as either drip or French press, the latter presented at the table still in the press with instructions to wait three minutes before depressing the plunger. Paper sachets of sugar and plastic creamers were incongruous with the

Table 153 features dramatically high ceilings and a large wooden communal table. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD otherwise well appointed esthetic of the venue. Table 153 has a lovely airiness to it, replete with hanging plants and dramatically high ceilings. The main floor is home to a large, heavy wooden communal table and a few deuces along the wall, while the second floor (accessed via 20 steep stairs that must surely provide an intense workout for service staff every single shift) has tall and spacious booth tables with around 30 or so seats. Our meal was $74 before gratuity. Table 153 is located at 228 Lonsdale Ave., 604-971-2153. facebook.com/Table153 Chris Dagenais served as a manager for several restaurants downtown and on the North Shore. A self-described wine fanatic, he earned his sommelier diploma in 2001. He can be reached via email at hungryontheshore@gmail.com. North Shore News dining reviews are conducted anonymously and all meals are paid for by the newspaper.

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nsnews.com north shore news WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

North Shore books lit fest

Anosh Irani, author of B.C. Book Prize nominee The Parcel, is scheduled to discuss the power of his redemption at the North Shore Writers Festival. PHOTO PAUL MCGRATH

YOUNG ARTIST OF THE WEEK

Attention literature lovers: the 18th annual North Shore Writers Festival takes place Friday and Saturday at the City of North Vancouver Library and city hall. The fest opens with a literary quiz presided over by author and amateur hockey goalie Grant Lawrence. The two day tribute to story arc and character development continues Saturday with tutorials on novel writing, presentations by writers Deborah Campbell and Zoe Whittall and a reception hosted by J.J. Lee, author of The Measure of a Man.

Spring Gardening for Easter The Easter Bunny and Children’s Crafts are at the Spring Garden in Lynn Valley Centre. Saturday & Sunday April 8 & 9 11 am to 3 pm Saturday April 15 11 am to 3 pm EASTER HOLIDAY MALL HOURS GOOD FRIDAY, APRIL 14 12 to 5PM

Anna Markus (17) St. Alcuin College ART TEACHER: Daylen Luchsinger FAVOURITE ART: Mandalas FAVOURITE ARTIST: Gathie Falk Her teacher writes: Anna is intrigued by mandala based artwork. Her exploration of both the technical and meditative aspects of this work have grown into the exquisite design seen here. Young Artists of the Week are selected from North Shore schools by Artists for Kids for displaying exceptional ability in their classroom artwork. For details, visit the website artists4kids.com. PHOTO CINDY GOODMAN

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BUSINESS BRIEFCASE EMERY VILLAGE Q&A SET FOR THURSDAY Anyone interested in hearing more about the 413-unit development proposed for Emery Place is invited to an information meeting Thursday. Mosaic is slated to go over the details of their proposal, which includes two 12-storey buildings, two five-storey buildings and 46 townhouses. No commercial space is proposed. The presentation is scheduled to be followed by a question and answer session. The Lynn Valley Community Association is facilitating the information meeting at St. Stephen’s Roman Catholic Parish at 1360 East 24th Street. The session begins at 6:30 p.m. and is scheduled to wrapup at about 8:30 p.m. Free babysitting is available. Guests are asked to register at info@lvca.ca -– Jeremy Shepherd GROUSE TOPS EMPLOYERS LIST The winners of the BC’s Top Employers competition have been announced and Grouse Mountain has made the cut. The mountain resort was selected in part due to its employee development programs, unique location overlooking Vancouver and employees’ unlimited access to outdoor recreation activities, according to a Grouse press release. The 12th annual competition results were put out by Mediacorp Canada Inc., the publication firm that also produces the annual Canada’s Top 100 Employers list. – Ben Bengtson UNIVERSITY STUDENT LAUGHS ALL THE WAY TO THE BANK Capilano University student Dini Stamatopulos has finished in the top five in a national sales competition. Stamatopulos initially pitched the Great Canadian Sales Competition a 30 second video where she extolled the benefits and virtues of laughing. She was eventually named as one of 22 finalists who got to go to Toronto last month for the competition’s final rounds. While there she delivered a 10 minute sales pitch to a large audience and judges. She finished in the top five and was awarded $1,000. This year’s competition was participated in by over 2,000 students from 80 campuses across the country. – Ben Bengtson WEST VAN LIBRARY NAMES NEW CHAIRMAN The West Vancouver

Memorial Library board of trustees has announced this year’s new members. Retired federal public servant David Carter will be taking over from Mary Jo Campbell as board chairman and former West

Vancouver Schools superintendent Geoff Jopson will now serve as vice chairman, according to a press release. Two new board trustees are joining this year as well, including Mahta Azarakhsh,

a legal assistant with a background as a lawyer and immigrant settlement worker, and Dr. Zulficar Rahim, a multilingual dermatologist, poet and writer. – Ben Bengtson

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nsnews.com north shore news WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

Project preserves past From page 13 notes. “If it’s not written down those oral traditions are just going to be gone.” The first North Vancouver writing workshop is slated for Tuesday at the North Vancouver City Library. Subsequent get-togethers are slated for April 18, 25 and May 2 at Presentation House Theatre. Workshops are also available online. The North Vancouver workshops focus on children of Japanese descent after a recent attempt to bring My Mother’s Story to a seniors

group in Japan failed after writers balked at telling potentially unpleasant stories of their mothers. “Hopefully more Japanese stories written here, of mothers born in Japan or Canada, will demonstrate the benefits to Japan of recording women’s history before it is lost,” Norry states. When complete, the project allows instant access to the past, Norry says, noting that it can also help communicate with future generations. “It’s something that you can discuss with your children.”

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Wine proposal dies on vine Overwaitea application meets sobering reality at CNV JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com

Don’t expect to save on wine at the Save-On-Foods on Brooksbank Avenue, following the City of North Vancouver’s recent decision to deny the grocer’s request to sell B.C. reds and whites.

Council rebuffed Overwaitea’s application March 27 over concerns local businesses like the Gull Liquor Store were: “struggling against an absolutely irrational approach on the part of the provincial government,” according to Coun. Pam Bookham. A release from the province cites “thousands of British Columbians” who favour more convenient access to B.C. wines. Bookham also disputed the provincial government’s assertion that separating liquor stores by one kilometre will inconvenience consumers. “I tend to think it’s probably about simply increasing availability of liquor to

increase the overall sale of liquor from which they gain a significant bit of revenue,” she said. Coun. Holly Back repudiated Bookham’s comments and ripped the one-kilometre rule. “I don’t believe in protecting one business and not another,” she said. “I don’t see any problem with having wine in the grocery store.” The grocery store’s plan was to sell 160 B.C. wines, similar to setups they’ve arranged at stores in Maple Ridge, White Rock, Kamloops, Prince George, and Parksville. “They’re tastefully done,” Back said. “To have wine in the grocery store; I don’t think it’s going to promote any more alcoholism than not having it in the grocery store.” Her opinion was disputed by Mark Lysyshyn, the North Shore and Sea-to-Sky medical health officer for Vancouver Coastal Health. Selling alcohol at lower prices leads to increased consumption, creating “public health risks that are not present when alcohol is sold in

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ever-changing rules have spent considerable time and money building up clientele.” The province needs to send a representative to council to explain their plan to reinvent licensing fees, according to Coun. Craig Keating. “There’s only a certain number of players who can be sustained in the industry and I don’t think this is a coherent approach to liquor policy,” he said. Coun. Rod Clark concurred, suggesting there were already enough liquor outlets in the city and no particular advantage in “giving Jimmy Pattison another line to add to his quiver.” Clark also sounded the alarm about another recreational drug. “What is going to happen when marijuana is under the control of the provincial government?” he asked. “Are we going to see it at the 7/11 because this is what the provincial government wants?” Despite protestations from a representative from Loblaws City Market, city council voted in favour of maintaining a one-kilometre radius between any outlet selling booze in September 2016.

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liquor stores.” Besides the “significant risk” of consumers buying alcohol instead of nutritious food, grocery stores are also able to promote alcohol to “vulnerable populations, including youth and people suffering from alcohol-related problems.” It can also be more difficult for grocery stores to keep booze out of the hands of underage buyers. “A study in Oregon found that underage-appearing youth were more likely to be able to purchase alcohol without an ID at grocery stores than at liquor stores,” Lysyshyn noted in a letter advising council to reject Overwaitea’s application. City staff noted Liberty Wine operated in the neighbourhood for 28 years before exiting in 2016. However, wine on the aisles at Save-on-Foods would hurt the Gull Liquor Store, according to manager Todd von Heintschel. Large companies with “unrivaled advertising power” are moving into territory already served by smaller businesses, he told council. “We as a small business operating under

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nsnews.com north shore news WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017 SPONSORED CONTENT

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Your North Shore Guide to the games people play Contact sports editor Andy Prest at 604-998-3538 or email aprest@nsnews.com

Heartbreak for Gary Robbins

One wrong turn after 60 hours of racing at Barkley Marathons ANDY PREST aprest@nsnews.com

North Vancouver’s Gary Robbins came agonizingly close to completing The Barkley Marathons Monday, a competition regarded by many as the toughest foot race in the world.

Robbins missed the cutoff for the 60-hour extreme endurance race by six seconds and arrived at the finish line from the wrong direction following a navigation error. John Kelly from Washington, D.C., became the 15th finisher in the race’s history, completing the course in 59 hours and 30 minutes. The diabolical ultra-marathon involves completing five loops of a course set through thick brush in Frozen Head State Park in eastern Tennessee, a distance that equals at least 100 miles. The full course contains an elevation gain that is approximately equivalent to climbing Mount Everest twice. Most racers are happy to finish one loop, while a handful each year complete three loops which, at 60-plus miles, is known as the “fun run.” Many years there are no racers who complete all five loops. Video posted on Canadian Running Magazine’s website Monday shows Robbins sprinting to touch the famous

Gary Robbins (right) shares a moment with eccentric race organizer Gary Cantrell following the completion of the 2017 Barkley Marathons Monday. Robbins came agonizingly close to finishing the 60-hour event, regarded by many as the toughest race in the world. PHOTO SUPPLIED MICHAEL DOYLE/CANADIAN RUNNING “yellow gate” that marks the end of the course and collapsing to the ground. Robbins had collected all of the book pages that are used to mark progress on the course but got disoriented in fog and snow near the end of the final loop. “I took the wrong side of the mountain in the fog,” Robbins can be heard explaining. “I went the wrong way.” Race director Gary Cantrell, a.k.a. Lazarus Lake, clarified that even if Robbins

had touched the gate before the 60-hour cut-off he would not have been an official finisher because he did not complete the full course. On Tuesday Robbins wrote a blog post on garyrobbinsrun.com that described his foggy finish. “After collecting my 13th and final book page, having not stopped moving for even a second on my fifth and final lap, the fog had once again set in,” he wrote. “As I went over the final bump on the

course I knew I would hit a trail, go left, and run down into camp with maybe five minutes to spare, but the math added up, I was going to make it.” But something went wrong on that final turn, and Robbins soon realized he was going in the wrong direction. Panic set in as he frantically fought through sleep deprivation to get back on course. “I ripped open my map and the gravity of things hit me,” he wrote. “I did not have

enough time left to correct my mistake by going up and over the mountain again. If I did this I would have finished in maybe 60:05 and I would not be an official Barkley Marathons finisher. Here’s the thing though, that’s exactly what I should have done, and the one regret I have after now sleeping is not doing just that.” He did not turn back, however, and instead he “bushwhacked down the mountain at breakneck

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See Six page 32

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A32 | SPORTS

nsnews.com north shore news

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

SATURDAY APRIL 8 | DOORS OPEN AT 10 AM | RYU PARK ROYAL SOUTH SNACKS | MUSIC | WORKOUTS | PRIZES Gary Robbins collapses in exhaustion with his wife Linda Barton-Robbins by his side following 2½ days of racing. PHOTO SUPPLIED MICHAEL DOYLE/CANADIAN RUNNING

Six seconds away in world’s toughest race From page 31

Where Voyeurs and Loiterers Feel At Home; the Photographs of Fred Herzog Join Grant Arnold, Audain Curator of British Columbia Art for the Vancouver Art Gallery, as he explores Fred Herzog’s photographs within the broader context of 20th century street photography. This event complements the Fred Herzog: Shadowlands exhibition currently on display.

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Trip to Hawaii turns golden For most vacationers, winning a marathon does not make it onto the to-do list during a trip to Hawaii. But that’s exactly what happened for one North Vancouver runner.

Date: Thursday, April 6, 2017 Time: Reception 6:30pm, Talk 7pm

Though he was agonizingly close to completing one of the most difficult tasks a human can attempt, Robbins was fully accepting of his fate. “The Barkley Marathons is not an orienteering style race,” he wrote. “You do not get to select the route that best favours you between books. You need to navigate between books, off trail, but in a very specific direction of travel. My finish, even if it were six seconds faster, would not have counted. I put Laz and the race in a precarious situation and in hindsight I’m glad I was six seconds over so that we didn’t have to discuss the validity of my finish.”

Robbins, a highly decorated ultra-marathoner, first attempted the race last year and finished 4½ laps before hallucinations and a navigation error made it impossible for him to complete the course in the allotted time. It was the best ever finish for a Canadian racer and third best for a rookie. Following last year’s race he vowed to go back again and again until he finished. At the conclusion of this year’s race Robbins was once again serenaded by a bugler playing “Taps,” a tradition carried out for all who fail to finish. “I did not finish The Barkley Marathons, and that is no one’s fault but my own,” he wrote. “That one fatal error with just over two miles to go haunts me.”

Barb Adams was on a family holiday in March when she decided to lace up her sneakers for the Big Island International Marathon. To her surprise she won the race, her time of 3:31:52 marking her as the top female finisher and eighth overall. “I’m used to running bigger city marathons, where I wouldn’t stand a chance of making the podium,” Adams told the North Shore News. “Nonetheless, it was a wonderful experience, and a highlight of my holiday for sure. The course was beautiful, and very well-organized with lots of super friendly and encouraging volunteers. It was pretty hilly, but for a born and raised North Van girl, the hills were no big deal.” – Andy Prest

Barb Adams crosses the line as the winner of the 2017 Big Island International Marathon. PHOTO SUPPLIED


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

| A33

north shore news nsnews.com

Your Community

MARKETPLACE Book your ad ONLINE:

Or call to place your ad at

classifieds.nsnews.com

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Email: classifieds@van.net

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REMEMBRANCES in memoriam

obituaries LILLEY, Alan

In loving memory of Joyce (Marilyn) Magnison

Alan passed away peacefully on March 13, 2017. He is lovingly survived by his daughters Susan Shennan (Lilley) and Allison Lilley, his grandchildren Laura, Jessica, Samantha, Mikayla and Connor, and his friends Shannon and Wally. May he rest in peace with his loving wife, June.

April 24,1939 – April 6, 2013

Brenda Britton April 22, 1941 − December 28, 2016 Please join us to remember Brenda Saturday April 8, 2017 at 2:00 PM Boal Chapel 1505 Lillooet ROAd North Vancouver, BC Since Brenda would want us to remember her with laughter, we look forward to sharing fun memories. We invite you to celebrate Brenda’s fabulous style by wearing your favourite animal print fashion accessory.

MAVRAKIS, Aimilia May 26, 1936 - March 29, 2017 If we could have one lifetime wish, one dream that would come true. With all our hearts, we would love for yesterday and you. Lovingly remembered by your family and friends. TTFN

Joan Marter

Celebration of Life to be held Sunday, April 9th at Molly Nye House, 940 Lynn Valley Road, North Vancouver, between 2 PM and 4 PM.

obituaries

it is with great sadness we announce the passing of our loving mother, wife and grandmother. She slipped away peacefully with her family by her side on March 29, 2017. Aimilia is predeceased by her parents Vasiliki and Demetrios and her sister Yioryia. She is survived by her husband Antonios, son Ioannis, daughter Anastasia (Brent), grandson Jordan and brother Manolis. Aimilia was born in Tsivaras, Chania, Crete on May 26, 1936. She came to Canada from Greece in 1962 to join Antonios. They were married and settled in North Vancouver where they enjoyed their new life together. Aimilia truly lived for her family, always putting them before herself. She was selfless in ensuring the needs of her husband and family were met before hers. She took pride and joy attending to her garden and cooking for her family. Her selflessness continued during her illness and right up to her last days. Aimilia’s courage, love and strength were truly remarkable and will never be forgotten. Aimilia is our inspiration and has left us with an admiration of her determination which will always be remembered. Our family expresses our heartfelt gratitude to all the nurses and doctors who took exceptional care of her. This includes Dr. Montemuro, Dr. Bains, and Dr. Paul Sugar, whose compassion and care is greatly appreciated by our family. Even though our hearts break with the loss of our beloved Aimilia, her memory will forever be eternal. Prayer services will be held on Wednesday, April 5th, at 8:00 PM at St. George’s Greek Orthodox Cathedral, 4500 Arbutus Street, Vancouver. A funeral service will also be held there on Thursday, A p r i l 6 t h a t 1 0 : 0 0 A M , w i t h R e v. F a t h e r Constantinos Economos officiating. Interment to f o l l o w a t C a p i l a n o V i e w C e m e t e r y, W e s t Vancouver.

Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes ADVERTISING POLICIES

All advertising published in this newspaper is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services offered are accurately described and willingly sold to buyers at the advertised prices. Advertisers are aware of these conditions. Advertising that does not conform to these standards or that is deceptive or misleading, is never knowingly accepted. If any reader encounters non-compliance with these standards we ask that you inform the Publisher of this newspaper and The Advertising Standards Council of B.C. OMISSION AND ERROR: The publishers do not guarantee the insertion of a particular advertisement on a specified date, or at all, although every effort will be made to meet the wishes of the advertisers. Further, the publishers do not accept liability for any loss of damage caused by an error or inaccuracy in the printing of an advertisement beyond the amount paid for the space actually occupied by the portion of the advertisement in which the error occurred. Any corrections of changes will be made in the next available issue. The North Shore News will be responsible for only one incorrect insertion with liability limited to that portion of the advertisement affected by the error. Request for adjustments or corrections on charges must be made within 30 days of the ad’s expiration. For best results please check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Refunds made only after 7 business days notice!

In lieu of flowers, donations to the B.C. Cancer Agency would be appreciated. Condolences and tributes may be sent to the family by visiting www.mountpleasantfuneral.com

BRYMER (Hare), Lois Marylin April 24, 1946 − March 27, 2017

Bill Brymer, along with daughters Molly and Jenny; son−in−laws Marc and John; and grandchildren Maggie, Ryan, Anna, and Will, announce the passing of Lois Brymer. Lois was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia to Nancy and Gerald Hare. She attended Dalhousie (BSC ’67) and Carlton (Journalism ’68) Universities. After travelling through Europe with her girlfriends, she married Bill on December 13, 1969. They drove west, sailboat and houseplants in tow, to Vancouver in 1973. Lois was an avid runner, skier, biker, and most of all, a swimmer who loved Kits Outdoor Pool (137 metres in length). Lois shared her love of fitness and fun with her wonderful group of friends, The Thunderlegs. In addition, Lois had a passion for music, performing and singing as a member of Pandora’s Vox Vocal Ensemble for the past 28 years. In 2005, Lois earned her MA in Children’s Literature from UBC. Above all else, Lois loved her family and was happiest spending time together at their family cabin on Bowyer Island, or during warm winter trips to Hawaii. All who knew her will miss her thoughtfulness, kindness, loving spirit and beautiful smile. Memorial Service April 11, 2017 at 1:30 PM at West Vancouver Baptist Church. The family encourages friends to visit the following website. loisbrymer.vistaprintdigital.com

(604)876-2161

GRIMWOOD, Joyce Rosa January 4, 1921 − March 9, 2017

Joyce Rosa Grimwood (nee Trythall) passed away in the Shorncliffe Care Home, Sechelt, BC at the age of 96. Joyce was predeceased by her beloved husband, Henry Russell Grimwood (Harry) January 20, 1979. The youngest of five children, Joyce was born in North Vancouver and spent much happy time on the Sunshine Coast at Pender Harbour and Buccaneer Bay. Joyce graduated as an RN from Vancouver General Hospital and worked hard to raise her family in North Vancouver. She is survived by her five children: Russell (Vicki), Mark (Susan), Ann (Dan), Terry, and Marie (Jerry), her nine grandchildren and eight great−grandchildren. Memorial donations may be made to the Animal Advocates Society, North Vancouver, BC.

May the Sunshine of Comfort Dispel the Clouds of despair

MCKINNEY (nee Mackay), Jessie Finlayson Scott August 27, 1921 − March 30, 2017 Born in Forestdale, BC to Jessie and Alex Mackay, young Jessie moved to Vancouver in the mid− 1940’s, where she met her future husband, Franklin Scott McKinney. They married in 1946 and moved to North Vancouver to raise their family. She was a long−time supporter of St. Andrews United Church, and was well known as "the candy lady" at Eaton’s candy department in Park Royal. Jessie loved her garden, long walks, and her grand kids. She passed peacefully on March 30 with family and friends at her side. Predeceased by her husband, Frank and brothers Robert and Donald. She will be missed by sons Barry (Heather) and Bruce (Karen), grandchildren Laura, Keri, Kim (Mike), Chad and Shea (Melissa), great granddaughter Lily, her long time friend Shirley Nugent, and many nieces and nephews. There will be no service at this time. A family Celebration of Life will be held at a later date.

UHL, Barbara August 10, 1952 - March 25, 2017 In loving memory: Barbara Uhl passed away peacefully Saturday, March 25, 2017 surrounded by her husband Lorne and family. A Celebration of Life will take place at the Crossroads Community Church at 11 AM, April 15, 2017 in Merritt, BC.

How will you remember them? photos • tributes • more legacy.com/obituaries/nsnews

LEGAL

LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICES U-Haul Storage Center North Vancouver claims Landlords Contractual Lien against the following persons goods in storage at 1410 Main Street, North Vancouver, B.C. Auction is subject to cancellation at anytime without notice. 129 Tyler Sheppard 330 N Nanaimo St., Vancouver, BC 327 Joseph LaForest 26-415 W Esplanade, North Vancouver, BC A sale will take place at the storage location on Thursday, April 20th, 2017. Viewing 9:00AM 11:00PM. Sealed bids will be opened at 11:30PM. Room contents are personal/household goods unless noted otherwise. Bids will be for entire contents of each locker unit.



WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

| A35

north shore news nsnews.com

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A36 |

nsnews.com north shore news

TIMEOUT!

Solutions can be found in next Wednesday's issue.

WORD SEARCH

Find the words hidden vertically, horizontally & diagonally throughout the puzzle.

ADVANCE ARAB BAY BEHAVIOR BETTING BIT BUCKLE CANTER CHALLENGE

FEED GAIT GAMBLE GRAZE HANDICAP HANDLER HOOF HORSE INJURY

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SUDOKU

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

CROSSWORD

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Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle! LAST WEDNESDAY'S SUDOKU SOLUTION:

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LAST WEDNESDAY'S WORD SEARCH SOLUTION:

COME FEEL AT HOME IN OUR UNIQUE MOTHER-DAUGHTER DENTAL PRACTICE.

49. Annoying one 50. Verse work 51. Basketball’s contents 53. Gangster’s gun


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2017

| A37

north shore news nsnews.com

Who’s to blame for the mess in B.C.’s schools?

not ng s ’ t I Hint: ardworki the h dians. custo

Clean and healthy schools are vital to a child’s education. But 16 years of underfunding by the provincial government have made it impossible for custodians to do their jobs properly.

Chronic underfunding has forced some districts to cut daytime custodian positions, leaving no janitors to clean up accidents, vomit or other messes. Increased and unrealistic workloads

cause injuries. Staff have been cut in most districts. Custodians are not willing to compromise the health of the students they support by lowering their standards.

We need a government that’s committed to proper funding of public education.

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