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HELP FUEL NEW MEDICAL BREAKTHROUGHS FOR KIDS AND FAMILIES IN BC BC Children’s Hospital is the only hospital of its kind in the province, tackling the most complex physical and mental health challenges facing children and youth today. Every step brings research teams closer to life-changing breakthroughs from the lab straight to kids’ bedsides in BC and the Yukon—and beyond. Widely recognized as leaders in specialized, innovative therapies and ground-breaking research, BC Children’s is ranked among the top five pediatric hospitals in the world. Whether it’s kidney failure, cancer, heart disease, or brain health, there are hundreds of health experts tirelessly delivering care and over 1,500 research community members working to solve the biggest questions remaining in child health.
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NORTHSHORENEWS
RODENT POPULATION
NICK LABA
For some living in the city, North Van feels like New York these days. It’s not for a reason you might think.
A population of rats has settled into Victoria Park, according to multiple reports and shrieks from people in the area. The rodents have been described as large (the size of “fat squirrels”), sometimes travelling in packs, coming out mostly at dusk, and living in concentrated numbers on the west side of the park. The City of North Vancouver is aware of the issue, and has put up temporary orange fencing in areas where traps have been set. The municipality has hired a contractor to handle rodent control in the park and has introduced other measures such as signage to deter people from feeding wild animals, a spokesperson said. On his daily after-work walk with his dog, nearby resident Ryan Scholz says he sees several rats every time he goes out. He’s also gotten in the habit of jingling his keys as he walks to avoid being spooked. “I’ve seen groups of four to five rush
out from underneath trees,” Scholz said. “It’s not dark outside, but they rush from underneath trees to go scavenge leftovers that people have left by the garbage cans or whatever. And the park is still pretty busy.” “On one or two occasions I was like, ‘Oh my God, these rats don’t care about humans at all,’” he said. Scholz lives in a building a block away from Victoria Park, and is also the co-founder of Shaketown Brewing Co. He’s lived in the area for around five years, and started noticing a surge in the number of rats around a month ago. Municipal spokesperson Jody Robertson said the city investigated the issue and moved forward with mitigation strategies “as soon as this was brought to our attention.” “Rats are a common part of North Shore wildlife and are best managed by reducing attractants such as potential shelter and food,” she said. “As with other human-wildlife conflicts, prevention is the preferred initial approach.” To address the rat problem in the Continued on page 19
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Rats are running rampant in North Vancouver’s Victoria Park nlaba@nsnews.com
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LEGO artist Paul Hetherington displays the surviving pieces of his scale model of the Moulin Rouge. Hetherington lost numerous award-winning models when his vehicle was stolen from a Spokane hotel in July but some art pieces have since been recovered by police and returned. See story on Page 22. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN
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FOR NEWS AT ANY TIME, GO TO NSNEWS.COM WILDLIFE CONSERVATION
Three North Shore eagles wearing tracker backpacks BRENT RICHTER
brichter@nsnews.com
Think of it as a bird’s-eye view of a bird’s-eye view.
There are now three North Shore eagles donning backpacks and trackers, allowing us to keep an eye on their movements in almost real time. The Hancock Wildlife Foundation, with some help from the North Shore Eagle Network and Orphaned Wildlife Rehabilitation Society, recently released Bee, an eaglet who fell from his Lighthouse Park area nest when he was about eight weeks old. Volunteers spotted him and arranged for OWL to come pick him up. They nursed the starving eaglet back to health, but the Hancock Wildlife Foundation also saw the opportunity to put him in a backpack-like harness with a solar panel and transmitter that automatically uploads GPS data whenever it is in range of a cell tower. Bee’s mother Annie, who is part of a lineage of eagles nesting around Lighthouse Park since the 1960s when there were only three nests remaining in the Lower Mainland, was the first North Shore eagle to have one. When Bee was released back in his home territory this month, about a dozen volunteers
Bee, a young bald eagle is seen wearing a harness that includes a solar panel and tracking device, courtesy of the Hancock Wildlife Foundation . NORTH SHORE EAGLE NETWORK and supporters from the Eagle Network gathered to watch, said Sally McDermott, North Shore Eagle Network co-ordinator. Bee had a rough landing in the branches at first and kept mostly still after. After about 30 minutes,
he called out and both his mother and father called back. But the conversation was brief and Annie soon after flew out over Howe Sound. A few hours later, her tracker indicated she was north of Powell River, having started
her annual northern migration, where all of the Lower Mainland’s eagles go to feed on the carcasses of spawning salmon. Later in the fall, she’ll return and the northern populations of eagles will sojourn south soon
after to Metro Vancouver to feed and scavenge here. Data from the trackers on eagles like Annie and Bee is now showing scientists, in greater detail than previously conceived possible, what the eagles are doing once they are out of eyeshot, McDermott said. In time, the Hancock Wildlife Foundation will share a real time map showing Bee’s movements, similar to one that already exists for Annie and about 30 other eagles with trackers. Biologists and advocates are now eager to see what they can learn with two closely related eagles both wearing trackers. In the past, eagle watchers have seen highly territorial, established eagle pairs tolerating juvenile outsiders on their turf (or even in their nests). Eagle expert David Hancock said they’ve speculated that the newcomers may be the offspring coming home for a visit, but the data now coming in from trackers on other juvenile birds shows that, so far, not one has returned to the area where they hatched. Hancock joked that the birds clearly hadn’t been listening to his lectures on the subject. “What we do know is so small compared to what we want to know,” Hancock said. “We’re Continued on page 17
TWO KILLED
Driver charged in 2022 fatal West Vancouver wedding crash BRENT RICHTER
brichter@nsnews.com
Almost a year after a woman drove her SUV into a backyard wedding in West Vancouver, killing two and injuring seven, the driver has been charged.
The incident happened just after 6 p.m. on Aug. 20, 2022 on the 400 block of Keith Road. The driver was exiting her driveway, which was shared with the neighbours
hosting the party, in her 2016 Range Rover when she accelerated into the party guests. Two women, both in their sixties, were pronounced dead at the scene. Seven people were taken two hospital, including one child. At the time, police said two of the victims had received “life-altering injuries.” After a lengthy investigation by the West Vancouver Police and the Integrated Collision Analysis and Reconstruction
Service, which included accessing the SUV’s “black box” data recorder and interviewing witnesses, investigators referred the matter to the Crown for charge approval. Hong Xu, a 64-year-old West Vancouver woman has now been charged with driving without due care and attention under the Motor Vehicle Act. She is due to make her first appearance in court in September.
Because the matter is now before the courts, West Vancouver police will not be releasing any further information, according to a release from investigators issued on Tuesday. “Our officers and victim services have been in contact with the victims and their families throughout this investigation to provide them with support and updates” said Const. Nicole Braithwaite.
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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023 | A5
EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
Provincial funds evacuation planning on the North Shore NICK LABA
nlaba@nsnews.com
As a record number of B.C. wildfires displace people from their homes, the province is providing new funding to help several communities prepare for emergency evacuation events.
Through the Community Emergency Preparedness Fund, the North Shore is receiving $90,000 to strengthen operational readiness for evacuations, across the three local municipalities. The grant will help agencies make better decisions in future evacuations, and go toward a large-scale exercise planned for next year, says Emily Dicken of North Shore Emergency Management. The organization has what’s called a common operating picture, a web-based platform that helps NSEM make and track operational decisions. “This grant funding will allow us to take the data that we already have and digitize it, to really help us model real-life events as they’re unfolding on the ground, and help us move through evacuation procedures and processes,” Dicken said. The funding will also help strengthen relationships between West Vancouver and North Vancouver city and district by putting on “a fairly large scale exercise – working with first responder agencies, the various municipal departments that support evacuation – and help us simulate an event that will help us respond when the real thing happens,” she said, adding that the exercise is tentatively planned for late spring 2024. In a disaster scenario, NSEM would be working closely with technical experts – local fire chiefs and BC Wildfire Service in the event of a wildfire, or geotechnical experts during a landslide event – relying on that hazard-specific expertise to inform the emergency operations centre if an evacuation order needs to be issued, Dicken explained. On the North Shore, that would mean notifications going out through the Altertable app, which Dicken said everyone who lives in the region should download. It could also mean door-todoor communication. Or, in a very serious event, so-called broadcast intrusive messaging – like the amber alerts issued in July after two children were allegedly abducted. And in disaster events, it’s also important to communicate who shouldn’t be evacuating, potentially clogging up critical evacuation routes.
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A water bomber attacks a fire burning in the trees near West Vancouver’s Whyte Lake, June 26, 2023. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN To understand how to safely move people from Point A to Point B, “we recognize that traffic is a huge consideration on the North Shore,” Dicken said. “One of the things that we will be messaging out if an evacuation is required is that for those who do not need to be on the road, who are not within the evacuation area, it is very important that they stay in place.” “It’s recognizing that quite often in these events, we’re not going to be looking at moving everybody off the North Shore,” she said. “Generally speaking, for the hazards that we face on the North Shore, they’re localized events that we’re going to be moving people from one impacted area of the North Shore to another.” Be prepared to evacuate In the meantime – when there are no active evacuation orders – Dicken stressed that people should prepare their homes and families now for when such an order might come down in the future. On the North Shore, that means downloading the Alertable app, and being prepared to leave home very quickly. “So, making sure that they have an evacuation and reunification plan with their families, on how they can remain connected. But also to have a grab-and-go kit so … they have some of their critical personal documentation, any medication, and anything that they want to have at the ready,” Dicken said. The Alertable app, as well as the North Shore evacuation guide, can be found on nsem.ca.
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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023 | A7
LYNN CANYON RESCUE
Woman ‘lucky’ after hit by falling rock
NICK LABA
nlaba@nsnews.com
A woman narrowly avoided a fatal injury following an incident in Lynn Canyon, says an official from District of North Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services.
Crews responded after a call came in around 5:35 p.m. Aug. 15 about a male stuck on a cliff band in the area below Pipeline Bridge. But during the man’s efforts to climb along the cliffs, he unknowingly caused rocks to fall into a pool below, where his girlfriend and another bystander were at the time, according to Deputy Fire Chief Mike Danks. As a result, the bystander’s elbow was cut open and a rock slashed an eight-inch gash in the woman’s back. Both patients were able to move downstream, where fire crews then treated them on scene. The bystander was driven to a clinic, while the woman was escorted to a waiting ambulance. Meanwhile, fire crews used ropes to pull the man stuck on the cliff to safety. Because the initial call just involved the man, first responders were faced with a much more complicated
Conditions in areas like Lynn Canyon are variable and unpredictable. ‘Cliff jumping is never safe,’ says DNVFRS Deputy Fire Chief Mike Danks. NSN FILES situation when they arrived, Danks said. “The consequences could have been very severe,” he said, referring in particular to the injured woman. “When you think about the size of the rock that hit her that would have caused that [gash] and the internal organs in that area, and her head was unprotected...“This woman was very lucky she walked away from this.”
The man didn’t want to be in the water, so he was trying to navigate the cliff to keep watch of his girlfriend, Danks said, adding that alcohol could have been a factor affecting the man’s judgment. “You need to be very cognizant of your surroundings,” Danks said. “If you are navigating a cliff above the river in a well-known swimming spot, you need to be very aware of potentially dropping anything down on people. That’s a major hazard.” “If one of those rocks that hit the female hit her in the head, crews are saying that she would not have survived,” he added. With an injured cliff jumper being rescued in Lynn Canyon the day before, Danks stressed that conditions in these areas are variable and unpredictable. “Cliff jumping is never safe. There’s a lot of debris, undercurrent and rocks that are not visible,” he said. “You could do a jump one day, and the next day, that jump may not be safe. “When you do these jumps, you’re not only putting yourself at risk, but also the first responders.”
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Prepare for the worst
T
he devastating fires that swept through West Kelowna and the Shuswap this week are a reminder of how quickly life can change in a disaster. More than 50 homes have been destroyed. Residents fled with only brief time to escape the flames roaring down the hillside. Those have been heartbreaking scenes. And the hills in West Kelowna are in many ways not so different from those on the North Shore. The threat of an interface fire here is also very real. That’s where advanced planning is so important. Fortunately, on the North Shore we have some excellent resources in North Shore Emergency Management, which this month got a boost to its community
emergency preparedness fund. It will help make sure those who need to evacuate can be brought to safety, especially given the region’s challenging geography and transportation corridors. Individually, we also have a responsibility to have our grab-and-go kit stashed and ready. Copies of critical documents, medications, some precious family photos, a back-up hard drive of important files, a blanket and water, even some spare pet food, can all get packed up in advance. Have a plan for checking in with family members. Download the Alertable app to get advance warning when danger suddenly flares up. Know your neighbours. Anything we can do to help ourselves in a disaster helps keep emergency responders out of unnecessary danger and frees up resources for those who need it most.
A lush, late-summer garden sticks out like a green thumb KIRK LAPOINTE
klapointe@biv.com
Given the recurrent tragedies and the human and economic toll from forest fires in our dry summers, squawking about local life with a brown lawn is pretty petty. So is the defiance by West Vancouver homeowners. As is the sad reality that the district has to patrol and police it. Not a good look for the community. I will admit that, after nearly two decades without a lawn to tend, I looked forward when I moved here to the appeal of a yard that I presumed came with living where in winter and spring it pours and pours and pours. Except, I’ve found that for the growing season it doesn’t and doesn’t and doesn’t.
We went 102 consecutive days last year without rain. This summer hasn’t been much wetter. My new mower has been amortized to $50 a cut. It takes a summer sabbatical. Planting grass seed after March provides the same optimism, and likely outcome, of lottery tickets. I had to accept the verdict. So be it. Yet when I drive around, I am struck by the sight of lush, verdant landscapes. Clearly other homeowners are doing something I’m not, and I suspect – no, I know – it has something to do with breaching the restrictions on water consumption. When only hours away we can witness life-and-death weather episodes in which the presence of water means more than getting green grass, when communities are
pulling together to save their homes and belongings and lives, our water greed and entitlement is embarrassing. It is, of course, odd that in a province with about one-tenth of the country’s freshwater, with some of the world’s most desirable water, and on the North Shore with rainfall and the mountain melts, that we could be encountering what has become a chronic supply management challenge. Even stranger is how many people haven’t adapted to the years-long reality of weather events that have reshaped the characteristics of our seasons. It is a sad state that the district had to write 956 addresses to chide them on their water consumption in July. The effect was a large-scale, caught-with-your-hand-in-thecookie-jar moment. After all, you can’t really
CONTACT US 114-400 BROOKSBANK AVE. NORTH VANCOUVER B.C. V7J 2C2 nsnews.com 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 by North Shore News a division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership. Canada Post Canadian Publications Mail Sales Product Agreement No. 40010186. Mailing rates available on request. Entire contents © 2023 North Shore News a division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership. All rights reserved. Average circulation for the Wednesday edition is 58,911. 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.
hide your feasting or claim some miraculous agricultural wonder of water-free greening. There are individual meters that tell all. Those meters let the district know that many properties quadrupled their water use once the temperature rose. The meters also have a power of some exoneration. To wit: District spokesperson Carrie Gadsby jubilantly reports that 79 per cent of the early offenders decreased their consumption by a substantial amount within two weeks of the shame-mail. “This is good news!” she wrote. It may also be that some of them went away on holidays and will be back soaking their yards in due course, but let’s score this one a win. Still, the game isn’t over. Stage 2 of the restrictions are upon us, Continued on page 9
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MAILBOX GROUSE GRIND CLOSURE IS A PUBLIC DISSERVICE Dear Editor:
RE: Grouse Grind Closing in Early September for Major Improvements, Aug. 9 story Metro Vancouver has over-imposed its stewardship of this park and its trails to the point where the public is not being served. Wherever this bureaucracy starts controlling parks, inconveniences, closures and busywork seem to follow. Now, the Grind will close as of Sept. 5 for the mother of all make-work programs, a completely unnecessary trailhead facelift. Granted, helicopter operations, tree felling, excavation, assessment and abatement work will naturally result in some closures. But these extraordinary projects should be co-ordinated and carried out expeditiously so as to minimize public inconvenience, not extend it ad nauseam as is increasingly the case. The Grouse Grind is not the Great Wall of China. At some point, routine maintenance simply must suffice and this rugged mountain trail’s default status needs to be “open,” not “closed.” The trail’s condition is already vastly improved over what existed 30 years ago, and there were none of these interminable closures in those days. My understanding is that a couple of
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023 | A9 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must include your name, full address and telephone number. Send your letters via our website: nsnews.com/ opinion/send-us-a-letter. 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.
enthusiastic hikers worked on the trail in the 1980s entirely of their own volition! And apparently even back then the GVRD frowned on this activity. Tragically, there have been serious injuries and deaths of Grind hikers over the years. A hiker was swept away by an avalanche in 1999. But no amount of bureaucratic interference can prevent sedentary, middle-aged people from challenging the trail unadvisedly and suffering fatal cardiac arrests, and they surely constitute the majority of deaths. How about staffing the Grind with some trail hosts and a few more rangers rather than just closing it because Metro doesn’t want to deal with the popularity of the trail? Participants always enter the trail completely at their own risk anyway, a giant disclaimer sign and an online waiver notice tell us so.
Stefan Forrestal North Vancouver
It’s additionally irksome for those who purchased an annual pass, anticipating usage of the Grouse Grind trail until the annual winter closure (usually sometime from November onwards). Does GVRD have any plans to subsidise a prorated refund process? Or is Grouse Mountain willing to credit those hikers with three months on their next pass?
Pauline Critchley North Vancouver
Being a water hog isn’t a classy look Continued from page 8 and they’re more stringent – and more likely to engender enforcement beyond the tsk-tsk letters. Indeed, it appears there are jobs this summer to root out the sprinkler set. Gadsby reported the other day that, so far, no fines have been issued. You can expect a patrol through your neighbourhood by the Metro Vancouver Drinking Water Conservation Plan Summer Support Program staff, a long name even as an acronym, and some reports into the bylaw folks. If you relish snitching on a neighbour, this is your chance. That $500 contravention of the bylaw is an awfully effective incentive to behave. I’m not a big government-intervention guy on things like this, nor am I big on discrediting, but the education-first
approach of the district is giving all of us far too much credit for being oblivious. We’re adults, we know inherently that it’s not classy to strain the supply beyond cooking, cleaning and drinking. When that lawn is going brown – or golden, as the district euphemistically seems to prefer – we ought to just focus on getting up at 5 a.m. to tend the flowers, shrubs and trees and be done by 9. The folks in the Okanagan, Shuswap and Yellowknife, if they can find a moment to breathe and reflect on our cat-andmouse game to preserve the iconic lawn, must think we’re out of our skulls. Kirk LaPointe is publisher and executive editor of Business in Vancouver as well as vice-president, editorial, Glacier Media Group, the North Shore News’ parent company. He is also a West Vancouverite.
SPONSORED CONTENT
Jonathan Wilkinson NORTH VANCOUVER’S MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT
August 23, 2023
Canada’s modern nation-building opportunity Nation-building projects begin with a vision. Without it, obstacles can seem like impassable mountains – much like the Rockies did to Canada’s railway builders in the 19th century. It was the vision of a prosperous future enabled by the railway that powered them forward against seemingly impossible odds. Today, Canadians are facing a nationbuilding opportunity for the 21st century that is unprecedented in scale and importance. Once again, a compelling vision is essential to mobilize and inspire the “all-of-Canada” effort necessary to achieve this project’s ambitious – perhaps even audacious – goals. Earlier this month, against the backdrop of the worst wildfire season in BC’s history, I released “Powering Canada Forward,” the government of Canada’s vision document for the modernization of Canada’s electricity sector. This massive and complex undertaking will form the backbone of our strategy to achieve Canada’s climate goals and to safeguard a prosperous future for this country. Ensuring access to affordable, reliable, clean electricity is a critical step in driving down the greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate change, while seizing the massive economic opportunities that will be enabled through the shift to a global low-carbon future. The future we desire An inspiring vision captures the imagination by focusing on the future we desire: a clean, net-zero electricity system by 2035, and the doubling or tripling of supply by 2050, that retains Canada’s strategic clean electricity competitiveness and meets increased demand as we plug our cars, homes and industries into the grid. The metaphor of the obstacles the Rockies posed to the railway in the 19th century is helpful. The mountains we will need to overcome are slow approval processes, labour shortages, supply
chain upheavals, jurisdictional politics, competition for critical minerals and geopolitical uncertainty – to name a few. Realizing the vision will require exceptional policy coherence, investment mobilization, technological flair, and the commitment of all levels of civil society. The required public funding is mind-boggling and is needed while government simultaneously addresses a housing supply and affordability crisis as well as rising health care costs. The challenges are enormous and not for the faint of heart. Head start The good news is that Canada already has a head start. In this country, we are fortunate to possess an electricity grid that is already more than 80% non-emitting. Canada as a country has the advantage of being several steps ahead of many – including our American friends - in this respect. It is important to recognize that every province, every territory, every Indigenous community has unique circumstances, challenges, and requirements. There will need to be different pathways to achieving the clean grid of the future. And it is critical that we work collaboratively and boldly to ensure that electricity in every region of this country is reliable, affordable, non-emitting and abundant. Clean energy is at the heart of achieving our environmental and our economic ambitions. The critical importance and the increasingly broad scope of the energy conversation is a key reason why the Prime Minister recently changed the name of my ministerial title to “Minister of Energy and Natural Resources”. The vision document I released earlier this month represents an invitation to Canadians to engage in this conversation and to help us all shape our path forward. This is not a matter for government alone. We all have a stake in the outcome of our latest and most important nation-building exercise.
Contact us: Constituency Office 604-775-6333 Email: Jonathan.Wilkinson@parl.gc.ca Website: JonathanWilkinson.libparl.ca
A10 | WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023
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B.C. SUPREME COURT
Lions Gate doctor negligent for baby’s brain damage, court rules JEREMY HAINSWORTH
jhainsworth@glaciermedia.ca
A B.C. Supreme Court judge has found a North Vancouver doctor and hospital liable for negligence in the birth of a baby that left the child with significant injuries.
Justice Francesca Marzari said Abigail Leigh Gilmore was ultimately born by caesarean section after mother Meaghann Sitter went into labour June 13, 2014. “Abigail was delivered with bruising along her left arm, shoulder and head, and she was admitted to the special care nursery shortly after her delivery,” Marzari said. “Approximately a day later, seizure activity was suspected and Abigail was transferred to BC Women’s and Children’s Hospital, where imaging established that she had three fractures on the left side of her skull, and extensive brain damage.” Marzari said Abigail is now eight years old and continues to suffer from the effects of the damage to her brain. Sitter is Abigail’s litigation guardian, meaning she is bringing the lawsuit on behalf of her child. The defendants are Lions Gate Hospital, the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority, three nurses who attended
Lions Gate Hospital. MIKE WAKEFIELD / NSN FILES Sitter during the labour and Dr. Karis Love, the obstetrician primarily responsible for Sitter’s labour and Abigail’s delivery. Liability was the sole issue before Marzari in the trial. “I apportion 85 percent of the liability to Dr. Love and 15 percent to the hospital defendants,” Marzari said. The judge said the infant’s injuries resulted from a number of negligent acts. “However, Dr. Love was the responsible physician, and bears the greatest responsibility for the failures of communication and monitoring during the management of Ms. Sitter’s labour, and all of the
responsibility for the breaches of care during the surgery,” Marzari said. Sitter was not quite full term when she went into labour and was admitted to the hospital. During the birth, Marzari said the baby’s position was not optimal to passing through her mother’s pelvis, so the doctor attempted to alter the position of infant’s head. The doctor offered Sitter the options of continuing to push for another 30 minutes while being administered oxytocin, or proceed to a caesarean section. Sitter chose a caesarean section. “In Dr. Love’s words, Abigail’s head was ‘tightly wedged’ and ‘severely impacted’ in Ms. Sitter’s pelvis, and Dr. Love was unable to get her hand around Abigail’s head to elevate her head and deliver her, at least initially,” the judge said. How Abigail’s head was moved to deliver her became the key issue in the case. Marzari found the immediate cause of Abigail’s skull fractures and the extensive brain damage she suffered was the force of Love’s hand during the caesarean section. The doctor admitted that her hand was the cause of one of the fractures above
Abigail’s ear, and likely a second one towards the back of her left parietal bone, the judge said. Love denied responsibility for a third fracture at the top of Abigail’s left parietal bone and submitted that this fracture was more likely caused by a nurse’s hand while pushing from below. But Marzari rejected that argument. “I find that it is far more probable that all three fractures, and the brain injuries associated with them, were caused by the same hand and the same movement: Dr. Love sliding her hand between Abigail’s head and Ms. Sitter’s pubic bone in order to dis-impact and lift the fetal head at the time of the caesarean section,” she said. Further, Marzari said, the continuation of pushing likely further risked impacts with the pelvis. She cited a lack of communication between members of the medical team as well as a lack of informed consent about the caesarean option. “I therefore find that breaches of the defendant medical practitioners’ standards of care during the management of Ms. Sitter’s labour were also causative of Abigail’s injuries,” Marzari said. Monetary damages have yet to be determined.
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A12 | WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023
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KIDS FIRST
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Vernon firefighter Chris Ovington (left) reunites with his former District of North Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services colleagues Wes Machon and Chris Summers as battling fires in the Interior becomes a team effort. DNVFRS
The Polygon Gallery 101 Carrie Cates Court Territories of the Squamish, Tsleil-Waututh, and Musqueam Nations
Photo: Anita Bonnarens
@polygongallery thepolygon.ca
North Shore firefighters help protect West Kelowna JANE SEYD
jseyd@nsnews.com
Firefighting crews from all three North Shore fire departments are stationed in fire-ravaged Interior communities this week, helping to protect homes against wildfires still burning there.
Crews from the District of North Vancouver, West Vancouver and City of
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North Vancouver all arrived in Kelowna over the weekend, joining firefighters from across the province in helping to protect communities still threatened by wildfire. A crew of four North Vancouver City Fire Department members and a fire engine arrived in West Kelowna on Continued on page 24
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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023 | A13
ARTS | ENTERTAINMENT | FOOD | HOME |
| HEALTH | COMMUNITY
SILK & LACE
Lingerie designer Christine Morton celebrates 50 years MINA KERR-LAZENBY
MKerrLazenby@nsnews.com Local Journalism Initiative Reporter
“Here, you have the big slice,” Christine Morton insists, reaching over a queenly collection of teacups and saucers to cut into some sort of decadent apricot pastry.
The backyard of Morton’s wisteria-drenched West Vancouver home is a scene that wouldn’t look out of place on the front of a luxury spa pamphlet: flowers in varying states of bloom and colour erupting from seemingly everywhere, a white-clothed table topped with golden baked goods, and Morton herself, gracious as ever, pouring tea and slicing treats with the warmth and precision of a seasoned host. To be at Morton’s home, to be in Morton’s vicinity at all, is comforting. To put it simply, the woman knows how to make someone feel good. Not that it should come as much of a surprise, as Morton has been making the fairer sex feel like goddesses for years. Decades, even. Five decades, to be precise. We’ve come together to discuss a milestone: for 50 years Morton’s silk lingerie and loungewear pieces have been sought after by women across North America and beyond, and some of the planet’s most well-known women at that. Oprah has worn her garments. So has Lauren Bacall, Chrissy Teigen, Gwyneth Paltrow and Elizabeth Taylor. In that time her eponymous label has grown from a basement business in West Vancouver to being stocked in more than 100 high-end boutiques in Canada, the
Christine Morton, at her West Vancouver home, celebrates her lingere business turning 50 this year. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN United States, Australia, and the U.K. Timeless pieces that ooze luxury have become her trademark, silk and lace have become synonymous with her name. The brand had been borne from a love of fine materials – a devotion sparked as a child when the designer stumbled across a treasure trove of lace doilies in her grandmother’s dresser – and a simple idea that making garments would be “something fun to do.” Such success was never anticipated, not least in a city where functionality and down-pared style dominate.
“The fashion industry was only just beginning in Vancouver at that time,” she says. “I started making teddies, and nobody had ever heard of teddies before. At that time, 50 years ago, a camisole wasn’t even a name. You never saw any advertisements in the magazines for anything other than a bra and panty, and even then they were…” the Scottish-born, Vancouver-raised designer trails off, evidently struggling to find a polite term for the drab and function-forward underwear of the ’70s. Shifting the public’s perception of
lingerie from function to fashion was a bold undertaking, but audacity would go on to be the reason behind much of her brand’s success. It was certainly the reason behind her stateside triumph. “The first sales trip I made to New York I had been by myself. I phoned up the stores when I got there, I made the appointments on the spot, and I managed to get them. It was amazing.” Bergdorf Goodman, Bloomingdales, Saks and Henri Bendel “went crazy” for her collection, comprising just five or so little camisoles with Morton’s trademark rosebuds, detailing she had learned to make in her very first job as a gift wrapper. Several placed orders immediately. Soon the windows were stocked and the magazines came calling, Women’s Wear Daily first, Glamour, Town & Country, Marie Claire, Elle, GQ and InStyle later. Hollywood’s elite, feverish as ever to snatch up the latest trends touted by the glossies, were hot on her heels. The likes of Cher, Linda Evans and Joan Collins joined Bacall and Taylor in becoming high-profile, long-time fans. “Walking down Fifth Avenue and seeing a whole window of all your whimsical wraps, and all your pieces, that’s just a treat,” the designer says. “There have been moments like that where you go, ‘Oh, I’m doing something right here.’” She credits her high-calibre celebrity clientele as being further confirmation of knowing she’s “doing something right,” and some of her most defining career milestones have been dressing A-Listers. Continued on page 18
A14 | WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023
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WEST VANCOUVER CRIME
Shootout suspect charged with attempted murder BRENT RICHTER
brichter@nsnews.com
A host of criminal charges have now been sworn against a suspect accused of getting into a shootout with West Vancouver police.
West Vancouver police issued a release on June 26 stating that one man was in hospital after an attempt to arrest him for suspected impaired driving escalated
into violence on the westbound Highway 1 off-ramp at 15th Street. “During the interaction with the male, there was an exchange of gunfire and the male was struck by a police vehicle. The male was transported to hospital for treatment,” the release stated. Because the man was seriously harmed in the incident, the province’s Independent Investigations Office was automatically tasked to
carry out its own probe to review the actions of police. At the time, the IIO stated the man was in serious condition. The Crown has since sworn nine charges against Siavash Ahmadi, a 37-year-old Vancouver resident, including two counts of attempted murder using a firearm, according to documents filed in North Vancouver Provincial Court. Other charges include impaired
driving, discharging a prohibited or restricted firearm, possession of three restricted handguns without a licence, one count of breaking and entering at an apartment in East Vancouver, and one count of pointing a firearm. In that case, the victim has the same surname as Ahmadi, court documents show. Ahmadi faced a bail hearing on Aug. 17 and he remains in custody. He is due back in court on Aug. 24.
West Vancouver investigate after the shootout, June 26, 2023. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN FILES
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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023 | A15
PERSIAN CULTURE
EDGEMONT VILLAGE
Dancers have trained and performed with Vancouver Pars National Ballet since its formation in 1989 in North Vancouver. VPNB
North Van ballet academy keeps Iranian dance traditions alive HAMID JAFARI
Contributing writer
On the last day of August 1990, an advertisement in Persian was published in the North Shore News.
It said: “Vancouver Pars National Ballet Classes accepting students.” This ad started an amazing journey that still goes on today. Now, more than three decades later, Vancouver Pars National Ballet continues this path, teaching ballet and Iranian folk dances in North Vancouver. In 1966, Abdollah Nazemi founded Pars National Ballet in Iran, with a primary focus on classic ballet, while also exploring Iranian folk dances and music. Azita Sahebjam, ballet dancer and the director of VPNB, was a student of Nazemi and began her journey in Pars National Ballet at the age of nine. Nazemi believed that they could use the ballet techniques and tell their stories, through the music, costumes, and tales from Persian literature, drawing inspiration from sources such as Ferdowsi’s epic poem The Shahnameh, the stories of Sheikh Sadi found in Hikayat-eSaadi, and the poems of Hafez. Sahebjam recalls practicing with pointe shoes and flat shoes, following various techniques taught by instructors from different countries. After about seven years she started teaching dance to youth and children when she was 16. After the Islamic Revolution in Iran in 1979, however, the academy faced challenges. Dancing in public became illegal for women and girls, and the academy was eventually forced to close. “One day, I remember we were in the class when the Revolutionary Guard arrived with machine guns and closed the academy,” said Sahebjam. “It was a terrifying experience, and they took Abdollah Nazemi with them.”
She remembers they were extremely worried, fearing something had happened to him. He was forced to promise not to practice of teach dance, and he later left for the U.S. Sahebjam decided to migrate to Vancouver in the late 1980s, but when she arrived, she felt like something was missing. “It was my identity that I had lost. So, I thought about Iranian folk dances, and I got back to my roots,” she said. She established Vancouver Pars National Ballet in 1989 in North Vancouver, following in her master’s footsteps to preserve Iranian culture through dance. “I still have a connection with Abdollah Nazemi, I always respect and admire him. Before starting, I asked him for permission to use the name Pars National Ballet for my own ballet group, and he trusted me.” Abdollah Nazemi is 86 years old now, residing in Isfahan, Iran. He has written four books on the subject of dance, according to Sahebjam, but they remain unpublished due to dancing restrictions in Iran. Now VPNB has a history here teaching Iranian dance to at least two generations. “Many people who were once my students have now become moms, and their kids are coming to my class,” she said. Since the Woman, Life, Freedom movement started in Iran, dancing has become a powerful form of protest in the country despite its illegality. Five Iranian girls were arrested last March and were forced to publicly apologize after posting a video on social media in whch they danced to a Selena Gomez song without wearing hijabs. “They dance because dance represents feelings,” Sahebjam said. “I have great hope for and praise the future of this movement.” Hamid Jafari is a Vancouver-based freelance journalist. His work for the North Shore News is supported by New Canadian Media.
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A16 | WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023
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PERSIAN EATS
North Van shop specializes in classic Tehran sandwiches HAMID JAFARI
Contributing writer
Nostalgia is “a feeling of pleasure and also slight sadness when you think about things that happened in the past,” as defined by the Cambridge dictionary.
Around eight months ago, a family opened a restaurant in the heart of Central Lonsdale. They claimed they brought the taste of traditional Persian-style sandwiches. Among Iranians, these sandwiches are known as “Dah-e Shasti,” a nostalgic food for the generation that was born in the 1980s. Zara Nikkhah, the restaurant’s owner, was born and raised in Iran and arrived in Vancouver four years ago as a student. She studied public policy and administration with a focus on social justice leadership at Adler University. Before managing the family restaurant, Zahar worked as an English as a second language instructor in a non-profit organization that served immigrant and
Zara Nikkhah is the owner of Hidra, a North Vancouver sandwich shop specializing in old-style Persian classics. HAMID JAFARI / NSN refugee women and children. She remembers recent years after their journey started in Vancouver, “my son, started working as a helper and dishwasher in a Persian restaurant located in North Vancouver. After three years, he became a chef at an Iranian restaurant. Also, my husband started working as a manager at a different restaurant and now we are working together here.”
She finished her studies in April 2022, and then they chose to start their own restaurant. The name of the restaurant is inspired by her son’s name, Hidra. “The spark for the restaurant’s concept came from our son, he suggested we introduce traditional Persian-style sandwiches to Vancouver,” she said. The menu offers a variety of foods, ranging from old-style Persian sandwiches like Sosis
Bandari (spicy sausages and onion), Kuku Sabzi (Persian herb frittata), Kuku Sibzamini (Persian potato patties) and Kotlet (Persian meat patties), to modern options like homemade burgers. “Our menu isn’t just about food. It’s a journey into the past,” says Nikkhah. After the Second World War, traditional Persian-style sandwiches emerged in Iran. A few shops in Tehran started selling sandwiches, smoked fish, and sausages with bulky bread, pickled cucumbers, a bit of butter on the bread, and fresh parsley. By 1956, the sandwich trend spread beyond Tehran to other cities in Iran. Nikkhah explained about maintaining unique ingredients or preparation techniques that contribute to the authenticity of their sandwiches. “It was quite challenging to find spices that closely resemble the taste we remember from Iran,” she said. “Additionally, the flavors of all the ingredients here are quite
different from what we were used to in Iran, especially with the bulky bread.” They tried out different bakeries to see which worked best before they started the restaurant. “Finally, we found the right ingredients for the bulky. We also found a factory in Toronto that makes sausages just like the ones in Iran,” she said. Nikkhah believes that such activities have an impact on bringing Persians closer to their community. The restaurant is more than just a business to them. “The interesting thing is people from diverse backgrounds find our food [similar to] what they’ve tasted before,” she said. Many Iranians live on the North Shore, more than 15,000 of them. “We offer not only food, but we’ve also managed to create a homely atmosphere.” Hamid Jafari is a Vancouverbased freelance journalist. His work for the North Shore News is supported by New Canadian Media.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023 | A17
Eagles face persistent threats
Bald eagle population rebounding The species has come back from near extinction in the 1960s to a flourishing 600 known mated pairs in the Lower Mainland, but an outbreak of avian influenza caused “hundreds and hundreds” of B.C. eagles to die in 2021, Hancock said. Following the outbreak and some extreme weather events in 2021, only five eaglets from the North Shore’s 22 nests successfully fledged in 2022, which was a bleak sign, McDermott said. This year, however, 17 known chicks have lived to make their first northern migration. “So, 17 out of 22 is not that great, but a
heck of a lot better than when we had the five out of 22 last year,” McDermott said. “We’re just hoping that this year is such an improvement over last year that we’re going in the right direction.” Eagles face persistent threats from habitat loss, pesticides, microplastics, loss of prey and food to scavenge, and, of course, climate change, Hancock said. For now, though, he’s encouraged by 2023’s successful fledges. “The fact that they bounced back as they did this year is kind of awesome. Nests in most of the areas in the Lower Mainland have produced more than one chick per nest. That’s more than they would produce in the wilderness,” he said. “They’re going to work at building back the population. That’s encouraging. That says that the basic habitat that we have here is pretty good. We just have to keep looking after it.” If you find a dead chick or eagle, don’t touch it with your bare hands. Instead, report it to the province, which is monitoring for signs of avian flu, at 1-866-431-BIRD (2473). The North Shore Eagle Network, meanwhile, is always looking for volunteers who can help keep an eye on the local eagle population.
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Continued from page 4 learning so much every day from these things.” The one other eagle on the North Shore with a tracker is Harbour Sun, a female from the territory immediately north of Annie’s, around the appropriately named Eagle Harbour. McDermott said it has been fascinating to look over the maps of where Annie and Harbour Sun have travelled both to hunt and rest, while keeping their beaks out of each other’s business. “Neither of them has gone into each other’s territory. There is absolute respect for each other’s territory,” she said.
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A18 | WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
Oprah and Elizabeth Taylor have worn North Shore designer’s PJs Continued from page 13 “I received a call from an unknown buyer who just said, ‘I hope you’ve got some lavender in stock.’ I asked why, and she replied, ‘Well, Oprah’s wearing your pyjamas on the front cover of her magazine.’” Morton’s face widens in surprise, even now, as she retells the story. There was one gown so beloved by Elizabeth Taylor that she would ask for it to be shipped to her apartment in New York in every colour. (“She’s just very little, so we had to cut it about five inches off the bottom.”) It’s now dubbed the “Liz gown,” naturally. Acquiring such a steadfast fandom in the fashion world often means creating something so entirely unique and utterly timeless that the wearer will keep returning
again and again no matter the season or in-vogue style. Following trends, says Morton, has never been a matter of great importance. Instead, the designer says she would rather create something that can be worn endlessly by women, before being passed down to their children, as time-honoured heirlooms. “She has a really strong, beautiful esthetic, and that has never shifted far away from where it started,” explains Morton’s assistant designer Evan Clayton, when asked about the reason behind Christine’s unremitting success. “That is part of the core of designing for Christine. The person that is wearing the clothes isn’t this nebulous concept. It’s an actual person.”
Leasehold Disposition of City Lands 144 St. Georges Avenue, 207-221 East 2nd Avenue and 225 East 2nd Avenue (partial) 144 St. Georges Ave 207-221 E 2nd Ave 225 E 2nd Ave (partial) E2
es A
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La ne St .G eo rg
PROPOSED LOT A
Co m Ga mu rd ni en ty
Pursuant to Sections 24(1), 26(3) and 94 of the Community Charter, notice is hereby given that the City of North Vancouver’s Council has authorized the City to enter into a ground lease with Catalyst Community Developments Society (“Catalyst”) in respect of a new land parcel, proposed as “Lot A”, shown outlined in bold in Figure 1, which is to be subdivided from lands owned by the City, having a civic address of 207221 and 225 East 2nd Street, legally described as PID: 012-590-924, Lot L Block 154 District Lot 274 Plan 22039, and PID: 012-590-975, Lot M Block 154 District Lot 274 Plan 22039.
nd
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E1
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Tennis Courts
La ne
t
Figure 1 Pursuant to the ground lease, Catalyst will construct a building on Lot A and once complete, the ground lease will be converted under Section 203 of the Strata Property Act into two leasehold strata titles; one strata portion of the building will be leased to Catalyst and used for residential rental dwelling, and the second strata portion will be leased to Health and Home Care Society of British Columbia (“CareBC”) for use as a respite care facility. The term of the ground lease will commence on September 15, 2023, and will end on the date that is 60 years after the date that the City issues the first (partial or whole) building permit for Lot A. The strata leases of strata portions of the constructed building to Catalyst and CareBC will each be for terms of 60 years. Rent will be $1.00 for the total term of the ground lease and subsequent strata leases, which is less than market value, and this is a form of assistance to Catalyst and to CareBC, which are non-profit organizations.
Questions? Robert Skene, Deputy Director, Strategic Initiatives rskene@cnv.org / 604-983-7306 141 WEST 14TH STREET / NORTH VANCOUVER / BC / V7M 1H9 T 604 985 7761 / F 604 985 9417 / CNV.ORG
Clayton, who has been working under Morton’s guidance for five years, says there is a “real, interpersonal connection” between the designer and her clients, women have grown up in tandem with the brand. Perhaps the biggest indication of the timelessness and quality of the designs is that Morton is most often found donning them herself. At home in her garden she sits draped in a vibrant silk kimono. A few weeks later when we meet for a tour of her store and studio, located on Powell Street in Vancouver, she floats from room to room in a similar silk creation, this time in a vivid green hue. Even at her wedding in 1983, to the now late David Farris, she walked down the aisle in one of her own pieces. Her first foray into bridal wear, Morton had designed her own gown and the Edwardian-inspired dresses for her flower girl and three bridesmaids. It is also an example of the many ways in which Morton’s personal and professional lives overlapped. When you are a brand’s own producer, designer, marketing manager and events planner for so many years – “when you have your own business, and you’re an entrepreneur, you have to wear all the hats” – it is easy for lines to become blurred, she says. Those blurred lines are evident further still in Morton’s studio, where the ever-loyal staff have become very much like a family of her own. In 1983, Morton sponsored several seamstresses from Laos enabling them to live and work in Vancouver, many of whom brought their growing families with them. “As I’ve progressed through the years it has really become about this cottage industry for me,” she explains. “That was really key, and really important, because it meant the girls were able to work from home and have their babies and have a family, but also have a job,” she says, describing how the privilege of running her own business meant she had been able to do the same – not sacrificing a career for a family or vice-versa – and that, above all the glamorous magazine nods and celebrity adoration, had been the most momentous of career highlights. Morton, a grandmother herself now, said her smallscale team is intrinsic to the design process, but that doesn’t mean she’s ready to pass on the baton just yet. “There are so many things happening right now, I’d like to see us grow, myself,” she says, touching on how the brand recently made its first foray into menswear, and, just this year, it released its Black Label Collection – a limited quantity of up-and-coming designs that would be released just once, each month. Celebration-wise, a 50th birthday bash is due to be held at West Vancouver lingerie store Romantique on the afternoon of Sept. 16 (“We are hoping people might wear their favourite Christine pieces,” says Morton with a smile), while a Limited Edition 50th Anniversary Collection draws inspiration from the label’s most iconic pieces from the past five decades. Long-time lovers of Christine can expect glistening pink peignoir sets and a voluminous nightshirt that has been a firm favourite since it was originally introduced in the 1980s. “If it ain’t broke don’t fix it” is the brand’s guiding philosophy after all. Why change now? Mina Kerr-Lazenby is the North Shore News’ Indigenous and civic affairs reporter. This reporting beat is made possible by the Local Journalism Initiative.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023 | A19
Snap traps deployed for rats Continued from page 1 park, the city has removed open garbage bins and vegetation that could provide possible shelter, Robertson said. City staff have also been communicating with park visitors to not feed the wildlife, as that can create food sources for rodents. “We have found both bread and water set out by well-meaning people concerned about birds,” Robertson said. “We have connected directly with them and they have been very understanding and accommodating about not doing this anymore.” To curb the number of rats directly, a city-hired contractor has put out snap traps in secure boxes and is checking them every two days, Robertson said. “We do not use bait traps because they can harm other wildlife such as owls, eagles, hawks, raccoons, and even cats and dogs who could consume the bait or the poisoned rodents,” she added. Rodent populations ramped up during the pandemic, experts say In recent years, so-called second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides have been banned across all North Shore municipalities. Use of these rodenticides has been widely restricted at the provincial level, with some exceptions for “essential services” like
food producers and hospitals. These bans have contributed to a growth in rodent populations, said Julie Scott, co-owner of Pestcheck Pest Control. While there are select allowable use cases, her business doesn’t use second-generation rodenticides at all, she added. Rats also benefited from pandemic-related closures of restaurants, Scott said, which are a large part of urban pest control. Restaurants are also a source of food for rats, many of which went looking elsewhere during that time. “During COVID they all went to the suburbs,” she said. “Since last year, we’ve been getting a lot more rodent calls.” While the city didn’t provide an estimate for just how many rats now call Victoria Park home, Scholz guesses the number is at least a hundred, if not hundreds. But there’s been some noticeable impact since the municipality has stepped in, he said. “I’m glad that the city’s doing something about it.” Given the potential for rats to carry disease, Scholz said he’s moderately worried about them scurrying about in the neighbourhood. “If I had a first floor unit, like a garden entrance, I would definitely [take] a lot more precautions,” he said.
A20 | WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
TSLEIL-WAUTUTH LAND
Dollarton Highway to receive safety upgrades via Vision Zero MINA KERR-LAZENBY
MKerrLazenby@nsnews.com Local Journalism Initiative Reporter
The Tsleil-Waututh Nation is receiving a chunk of funding to help improve the safety of its streets for road users and pedestrians.
The B.C. Vision Zero in Road Safety Grant program, launched in 2021 by Vancouver Coastal Health to reduce the amount of injuries and fatalities caused by road collisions, will hand over $20,000 so the Nation can install a new speed reader board on Dollarton Highway. “This could save lives on the highway,” said Tsleil-Waututh Nation Chief Jen Thomas. “The safety in this area is a problem that we’ve had as far back as the 1960s. I’ve had a relative hit
and killed in front of my mom and dad’s driveway, and then the next driveway down another person was hit and killed in the 1990s. We’ve lost members to speeders.” Thomas said the dangers of the area are commonly discussed among residents, especially those who live on the bustling highway itself. A busy thoroughfare for foot passengers, there are often students who cross the road to travel from school to the waterfront for classes, she said, and with it being canoe season currently, there are paddlers crossing the road frequently. “This has always been a big issue for the community.” Thomas said the introduction of a reader board should
be the first of many road safety improvements made to the area, and that the Nation is currently looking at creating their own community SpeedWatch program, which will see trained members displaying temporary speedboards in various locations throughout the community. “Having the SpeedWatch program will make a difference, and hopefully we can go for a little bit more afterwards. But this is a really good start,” she said. Vancouver Coastal Health’s medical health officer Dr. Michael Schwandt said a “major part” of the program is paying attention to the concerns of the local communities, and in this case, the proposal had come directly from the Nation. “We’re really glad to be able
Mind Your Business
to support this as a health authority,” said Schwandt, adding how the project has both indirect and direct benefits to improving safety. “The proposal for a speed reader board and a community speedwatch program is well supported by evidence that this sort of project can decrease speed and can decrease risk of injuries. There’s also the indirect effect that people are made more aware in general, and will carry that duty of care with them when they leave the area,” he said. Schwandt said the project is part of a wider movement dedicated to making the streets safer for pedestrians, and to making a change to some alarming statistics.
“In British Columbia, over 200 people a year die on average due to road crashes, which is a large number, and we believe that close to all of these can be prevented,” he said. HUB Cycling and Musqueam Indian Band are among some of the other Vision Zero recipients for this year, with HUB Cycling set to receive $20,000 in funding to provide safe cycling sessions to the band’s youth, aged between eight-18 years. The project will also facilitate a bike maintenance workshop and distribution of bikes, helmets and other accessories. Mina Kerr-Lazenby is the North Shore News’ Indigenous and civic affairs reporter. This reporting beat is made possible by the Local Journalism Initiative.
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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023 | SPONSORED CONTENT
Unlock the secrets to aging well at upcoming Expo in West Vancouver Join researchers, wellness experts, exhibitors, and hundreds of other seniors on Friday, September 8 at the West Vancouver Seniors’ Activity Centre to learn about the cognitive, physical, social, financial, and nutritional aspects of aging successfully in B.C. As we move through our lives, the types of questions on our minds certainly change with us. From a child wondering why the sky was blue, or a teenager questioning why they needed a curfew, to an adult racking their brain about how to get that promotion, the progressions and ever-growing maturity is clear. And yet, despite having done decades and decades of answer-seeking by the time you’re an older adult, there are somehow even more questions to be asked. Questions like, how can I take care of my brain as I age? What kind of foods should I be eating to keep my body strong? How do I use the right pronouns for my grandchild? Thankfully, the North Shore Seniors’ Health Expo has the answers to your questions and so many more on Friday, September 8 at the West Vancouver Seniors’ Activity Centre. Returning from a three-year hiatus due to the pandemic, the annual event, presented by Hero Home Care, will be hosting innovative speakers, leading researchers, and over 40 exhibitors all centered on cognitive, physical, social, financial, and nutritional well-being. “We’re so thrilled to be able to bring this program back to the community, especially because we’ve always had such a great turn-out both attendance and the senior-focused businesses in our community,” says Jessica Walker, event manager.
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“The North Shore has made it very clear that supporting our seniors is a priority, and really, it’s our duty to make sure our seniors can live with a high quality of life. But in order to do that, they need to have the proper information and resources to know what’s available to them as they age.” Throughout the day, there will be 12 different sessions exploring the various areas of wellness in addition to a keynote presentation on “Aging Successfully in B.C.” from the province’s Senior Advocate Isobel McKenzie who will be speaking about the current issues facing seniors and the resources to overcome these barriers to healthy aging. The exhibitor hall will be open all day
to drop into from 9 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. in the West Vancouver Community Centre gymnasium. Whether it’s learning about detecting Parkinson’s disease early, preventing falls by improving your balance, or managing hip and knee arthritis, the diverse topics among the sessions are sure to pique anybody’s interest. There will also be free hearing and memory tests available at the expo. “Our hope is that seniors will leave the expo feeling like they’re not alone, feeling like they’re a part of a community, and that if they had questions, that we helped answer them and provided them access
to resources that perhaps they didn’t know about,” says Walker. To learn more, please visit westvancouver.ca/seniors. The North Shore Seniors’ Health Expo is an annual event dedicated to providing useful wellness information, resources, and opportunities to seniors, family members, and caregivers. This year’s expo is on Friday, September 8 from 9 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. at the West Vancouver Seniors’ Activity Centre.
A21
A22 | WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com ART HEIST
LEGO artist recovers two stolen pieces BRENT RICHTER
brichter@nsnews.com
North Vancouver’s premier LEGO artist is picking up the pieces.
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Paul Hetherington and his partner Melissa Rekve were left devastated last month when the vehicle Hetherington was driving home from Brickworld Chicago LEGO convention was stolen, along with a dozen of their unique LEGO creations that had been shown around North America. They reported the theft to police in Spokane, Wash. where the vehicle was stolen but were told not to get their hopes up about ever seeing the car or its contents again. A week later, the vehicle turned up but it had been ripped apart and left full of garbage and drug paraphernalia. “But none of our stuff.” By then, word about the theft of the models had spread far and wide through B.C. and Washington State news outlets, and even farther in the LEGO community. Two weeks later, Hetherington and Rekve were contacted by two strangers on Facebook who claimed to have two of the LEGO models. They were
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willing to give them back and did not ask for any reward. Rekve arranged for Spokane police to go pick up the boxes. Inside were Hetherington’s LEGO Moulin Rouge and less than half of his Buck Rogers-inspired Dragon Base. The ordeal has left Hetherington with understandably mixed emotions. “It was maybe 10ish per cent of the LEGO that was stolen, so it wasn’t the full recovery but we’ll take what we can get,” he said. “It was a relief and slightly frustrating just because you
know there’s more. It was unexpected, so it was pretty good feeling.” Hetherington said he still holds out hope some of the others may be found intact. “These models are all kind of like my little babies right? I’m connected to them,” he said. Most recently, Hetherington has had public showings of his scale models of famous West Coast Modern homes via the West Vancouver Memorial Library and the Harmony Arts Festival. With those shows now wrapped, Hetherington has been selling LEGO replicas of famous West Van buildings designed by the likes of Arthur Erickson, B.C. Binning, Fred Hollingsworth, Paul Merrick and Geoffrey Massey. While he’s been giving the current owners of those buildings first right of refusal for the LEGO replicas, there are still some that haven’t been spoken for. He’s also working on a scale model of Disneyland’s It’s a Small World ride, which he will be debuting at Seattle’s BrickCon in September. “That song gets stuck in your head, definitely,” he said.
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A24 | WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
TIME TRAVELLER
A weekly glimpse into North Shore’s past from MONOVA: Museum of North Vancouver
The sistersShipyards swimmingBaseball in the 1920s TheNye Wallace Team
Photo: NVMA 4689
Born in 1913, Florence Mary “Mollie” Nye lived in Lynn Valley for almost the entirety of her life. She In 1914, a group of men working at the Wallace Shipyards formed a baseball team, simply worked as a teacher for more than four decades and was heavily involved in sponsoring Red Cross named “The Wallace Shipyards,” and joined the North Shore Baseball League. The team Youth Clubs. disbanded after this first season, but reformed following the First World War. The North Vancouver School Board named a teaching award for outstanding community service In her 1919,honour. led by Upon star players JackinWyard, Ernie Jolliffehome and ace in her death 1997, her long-time waspitcher turnedArt intoGourlay, a small the community “Northfor Shore centre LynnNine” Valley.went on to win the Vancouver Commercial League and the Senior Championship The latter was wonand in aher series Sunfoot at of St The photo abovePennants. shows Mollie (on the right) sisteragainst Joyce the on aVancouver beach at the Athletic Avenue, Park, which saw the Wallaces handily defeat the Sun 13-2 and 8-2. Patricks ca. 1920s. Visit monova.ca for more information about the history of the North Shore and to learn about MONOVA: Museum of North Vancouver now open Thursday to Sunday in The Shipyards. Currently, MONOVA: Archives of North Vancouver at 3203 Institute Rd. in Lynn Valley is open by appointment only. Contact: archives@monova.ca
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Eby warns against Interior travel Continued from page 12 Saturday evening and have been working up in the hills above the city as part of a structural protection unit, said Deputy Fire Chief Andrew Payne. Payne said firefighters have been staying at UBC’s Okanagan campus but are required to be self-sufficient if need be, with tents, sleeping bags and food supplies. Five West Vancouver Fire and Rescue members also arrived in West Kelowna on Friday along with a trailer carrying special sprinkler equipment capable of protecting a few homes. At some points, just two fire crews oversaw protection of up to 50 large homes, said Deputy Chief Gord Howard. That crew and another senior fire officer from West Vancouver have been working both in West Kelowna and further north in Lake Country, he said. District of North Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services has also sent a crew and equipment to Kelowna, who have also been working in West Kelowna and Lake Country areas. Most local crews will work on Interior fires for between eight and 14 days. Some of those crews will then be replaced by other local firefighters.
On Monday, Premier David Eby, Forests Minister Bruce Ralston and Bowinn Ma, Minister of Emergency Management, thanked firefighters from across B.C. for stepping up to help with the unprecedented fire situation. Ralston said Monday there are now more than 652 structural firefighters deployed in coordination with the BC Wildfire Service, which is “a record number for joint wildland and structural firefighting response in this province.” “We are immensely grateful to all our partners who continue to show up when we need them most,” he said. According to the BC Wildfire Service, progress has been made on the fire in West Kelowna, although heavy smoke has impacted the ability of helicopters to fly and provide water bucketing in the area. Wildfires are also burning in the Fraser Canyon, between Lytton and Boston Bar, and an area including Gun, Downton and Carpenter lakes near Gold Bridge, as well as in the Shuswap region, and in the south Okanagan near Oliver and Keremeos. Provincial officials also repeated their message about a tourist travel ban to the Interior areas impacted by wildfires, urging visitors not to go there.
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monova.ca
ShyloHomeHealthcare.ca ACCREDITED BUSINESS
you, and a loved one who cannot manage safely on their own. Let us help! We can be there with supportive care 24/7, medication assistance, meals, even rides to doctor’s appointments. This is the caring solution for your loved one and your family. Call 604-985-6881 for a FREE In-Home Assessment.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023 | A25
FOUR GOLD MEDALS
North Shore players score big at field hockey nationals ANDY PREST
aprest@nsnews.com
North Shore athletes were all over the pitch as teams representing British Columbia cleaned house at the 2023 U16 and U18 field hockey national championships held the last two weeks in Brampton, Ont.
B.C. teams took gold in all four tournaments, winning men’s and women’s U16 and U18 titles. On the women’s side B.C. was so strong they were able to send two teams at both age levels, with all four of the women’s squads reaching the podium. At the U18 women’s tournament, team B.C. Blue grabbed gold with a 3-2 win over Ontario in the final held July 30 at Cassie Campbell Field in Brampton. That team included North Van’s Ella Rideout, Lindsey Hills, Robyn Goh, Scarlett Kotar, Stella Goddard-Despot, and Sydney Le, along with Nadine Brenninkmeyer from West Van. Goddard-Despot was the tournament’s leading scorer with nine goals. B.C. White also hit the podium at the U18 women’s tournament, topping P.E.I. 5-0 in the bronze medal match. That team
CROSSWORD
Solutions can be found in the Wednesday September 6th issue.
included North Van’s Kaitlyn Pennefather, Kate Martin, Olivia Okano and Tessa Wang. At the U16 women’s level, team B.C. Blue and B.C. White met in the final, with Blue claiming gold in a 2-1 Aug. 13. The Blue team included West Van’s Allison Lavis, Maeve Lustig and Sutton van Dyk, as well as North Van’s Camryn Jensen, Emily Arnet, Julie McCusker, Lydia Harrington, Madelyn Potts, Maisie Fulton Stephenson and Meghan Lovell Team White included Allyson Van Dijk, Chloe Zambon, Elliotte Yuen, Flora Price, Kayla Parker and Siera Edstrand from North Vancouver and Elle Ferros, Emilie Chisholm, Tristen Stanimir and Valerie Chan from West Vancouver. On the men’s side B.C. claimed gold in the U18 division with a 3-1 win over Ontario July 13. North Van’s Chase Martin and West Van’s James Loxton both suited up for the national champs. In the men’s U16 division, B.C. claimed the title with a 3-1 win over Quebec on a team that included North Vancouver’s Lachlan Scobbie.
CLUES ACROSS
I know this market... I’ve been selling homes on the North Shore for over 35 years. Let me help you get started.
Al Sutton
604-720-4889 | alsutton.org
Life Member
35 Years
1. 1 or 11, in blackjack 4. Matching 8. Small hotels 12. Unfinished 13. Lyric works 14. Cool! 15. Betrayals 17. Be overly fond 18. Toss 19. Snake poison 20. Grate 23. Mic holder 26. Rotation center 27. Not inside 31. Feeling rotten 32. Spotted horse 34. Chesapeake ____ 35. Salad ingredient 37. ____ fun at 38. Toes the line 40. Minus 41. Relaxes
44. Noah’s number 46. Folk hero 47. Most costly 52. Additional 53. Broadcasts 54. Mock 55. Reared 56. Canvas covering 57. Dripped
CLUES DOWN 1. Paul’s partner 2. Bumper ____ 3. Flock mother 4. Just fair: hyph. 5. Kind of brick 6. Fellows 7. Highway curve 8. Truly 9. Type of sign 10. Defense gp. 11. Trunk 16. Swiss mountains 19. Overrule 20. Metal bar 21. Wheel shaft
41. Body part 22. Fine sand 24. Cash 42. Skunk’s defense 25. Trim 43. Fables 28. Bassoon’s kin 45. Actress Mae ____ 29. Mighty trees 47. Posed for 30. Dark breads 48. Deadlock 32. Saloons 49. Pitcher handle 33. Skating surface 50. Sauna locale 36. Resounded 51. Bo’s number 37. Pour like ketchup Crossword puzzle answers use American spelling 39. Rigid Wednesday August 9th Solutions:
Daily crossword available at: nsnews.com/crossword
A26 | WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
2023 SILVERADO 1500 CUSTOM
0.99
%
FOR UP TO
FINANCING
60 MONTHS
4.99% 48 FOR UP TO
FINANCING
MONTHS
2023 TERRAIN
2023 ACADIA
#D10743
CARS AVAILABLE AT TIME OF PRINTING. NOT EXACTLY AS ILLUSTRATED. ALL PRICES ARE PLUS TAXES, LEVIES AND $598 DOCUMENTATION FEE SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. FINANCING ON APPROVED CREDIT.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023 |
Your Community
MARKETPLACE classifieds.nsnews.com
A27
Call or email to place your ad, Monday through Friday 8:30am to 4:30pm
604-653-7851 • 604-362-0586 nmather@glaciermedia.ca • dtjames@glaciermedia.ca Book your ad online anytime at
nsnews.adperfect.com
REMEMBRANCES
SHARE YOUR CELEBRATIONS AND MEMORIES
In MeMorIaM
obItuarIes
In Loving Memory of
Susan Lynn Mott 6 April 1962 - 23 August 2015
In our hearts and thoughts, always. Dearly missed . Kristen, Marisa, Mom and Susan
ERIK BEZUR January 8, 1981 - August 28, 2005 Sadly, missed along life’s way, quietly remembered every day. No longer in our lives to share but in our hearts, you’re always there…
obItuarIes
GALLAGHER, Clarence David Clarence David Gallagher 91 passed away in hospital July 22nd, 2023. He was predeceased by his father Joseph Gallagher and mother Martha Gallagher, sisters Cathleen Gallagher and Agnes McColm, brothers Desmond and Anthony Gallagher, brother in law Harold McColm and niece Margaret Lesperance (nee Gallagher). He is survived by niece Sharon (Ron) Harris, nephews Edward McColm, David (Sandy) McColm and Anthony (Donna) Gallagher, as well as several grand nieces and nephews. Clarence was born in Vancouver and was a longtime resident of North Vancouver. He was a very talented carpenter and cabinet maker, his lifelong profession. He was the family historian both in Canada and Ireland. Clarence was very interested in his Irish heritage, spent much of his free time reading about Ireland, its history and connecting with relatives living there, a bond that grew ever stronger after his visits. He was a well read man, a font of knowledge with an amazing memory and story telling skills. A devoted Catholic, Clarence was generous with his time to his Parish, using his many skills to help with numerous projects. Clarence was well known in his neighbourhood, often helping others in his younger years. The Family are very grateful for the generous, compassionate help and support he received from them as he declined in his last years. His passing was a great sadness and he will be missed by all who knew him.
JAKOBSEN, John April 27, 1942 − August 7, 2023 John was born in Denmark and moved with his parents to Vancouver in 1954. He met the love of his life and best friend, Treva May, while attending King George High in the West End. They married in 1966 and recently celebrated their 57th wedding anniversary together. John loved playing sports and excelled at skiing, tennis, racquetball, badminton and waterskiing. He especially enjoyed spending time with friends and family at Green Lake, Crystal Mountain, Savary Island and his happy place, Lindell Beach. Over the years, John and Treva travelled to many places, including Hawaii, Italy, Denmark, the Caribbean and their favourite destination, Santorini. John worked as an auto mechanic at Happy Honda for a memorable 30 years and was our Mr. Fix It! He loved a project and was happy to help friends with theirs. John was fun−loving, charismatic, caring, tenacious and very cheeky. He took great pleasure in teasing his grandkids. Sadly, John lost his battle with cancer on August 7th with his family by his side. John deeply loved his wife, Treva; daughters Karle (Jon) and Romy (Brian); grandchildren Kealy, Jacob, Grady, Griffin; and pup Kula. Sincere thanks for the kindness and compassion of the many volunteers, nurses and doctors that supported John and the family throughout this journey. In lieu of flowers, if you wish to make a donation, please consider donating to The Oncology Clinic at Lions Gate Hospital or The North Shore Hospice through LGH Foundation in memory of John Jakobsen.
Thinking of you and loving you Sister Karin, Parents, and Friends.
His life will be celebrated in a private gathering.
604.630.3300 To place your announcement nsnews.call: adperfect.com 604.653.7851
May the Sunshine of Comfort Dispel the Clouds of Despair
Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes
Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes
A28 | WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
REMEMBRANCES Obituaries
Obituaries
Funeral services
SLINGERLAND, Caroline Ann SALVO, Patrick Vincent (Snyder) Patrick Vincent Salvo Snyder, 59 years, passed away July 23rd in his home in North Vancouver, BC. Son, brother, father, friend, devoted listener, big hearted soul. He loved lively conversation, fishing, being in nature, honesty, helping people, and always had time for someone in need. Missed by his son, Joshua, his siblings, Carol, Joe, Anthony and Noelle, his father, Vincent and bonus mother, Joan, and many friends. He was predeceased by his mother, Roberta. A celebration of life will be held at West Vancouver United Church on Friday, September 1st at 12:30 PM, 2062 Esquimalt Ave, West Vancouver, B.C. In Patrick’s name, donations may be made to Health Connections North Vancouver - Lions Gate Hospital Foundation. To write a condolence to the family, please visit www.mckenziefuneralservices.com
As you share the stories and the memories of how they lived their lives and how very much they meant, may you find comfort...
On the afternoon of August 8th during a thirtyminute window between visitors, Caroline Ann Slingerland slipped out of our world. Ann was 87 years old and called Sunrise of Lynn Valley her home. Born on June 11, 1936 to Victor and Agness Hayman in Vancouver. Ann grew up in East Vancouver, attended Vancouver Tech High School and was an active member of Job’s Daughters International. It was during her time in Job’s that she met DeMolay member and soon to be her husband and life partner Barry Slingerland. Ann was 18 when she married, and it would be a year later she gave birth to the first of four boys. She was a cook, chauffeur, referee, and enjoyed volunteering at a local thrift shop. For the most part she was a full-time mom, however she worked as a secretary at Larson Elementary and was a payroll clerk at Lions Gate Hospital for a short time. Ann was predeceased by her husband Francis Barry Slingerland in 2014 and more recently her older brother Douglas Fraser Hayman in January of 2023. She is survived by her four sons; Glen (Karen), Wayne (Nadine), Jeff (Ann) and Blair (Lorraine). She is also survived by 10 grandchildren and 7 great grandchildren. The great grandchildren brought an incredible amount of joy to her day anytime they visited her.
North Shore’s Only Family Owned Funeral Provider
George & Mildred McKenzie
604-926-5121 • mckenziefuneralservices.com 200-100 Park Royal South, West Vancouver
taking care of each other
is what community is all about.
Hollyburn Funeral Home 1807 Marine Drive, West Vancouver Thank you for continuing to place your trust in us now and always. Proudly serving the north Shore for over 80 years
Fond memories linger every day, Remembrance keeps them near.
604-922-1221 HollyburnFunerals.com Dignity Memorial is a division of Service Corporation International (Canada) ULC.
ExEcutor sErvicEs
A special thank-you to the caregiving staff at Sunrise of Lynn Valley for their kindness and compassion over the years. A memorial service will be planned for a later date.
Caring and Professional Executor, Trustee and Power of Attorney services based on the North Shore
Because I Love You So Time will not dim the face I love, The voice I heard each day, The many things you did for me, In your own special way. All my life I’ll miss you, As the years come and go, But in my heart I’ll keep you, Because I love you so. -Anonymous
Brian Dougherty
heritagetrustcompany.ca
Westcoast Wills & Estates
Probate made easy. Let our experienced lawyers help you.
604-230-1068 | westcoastwills.com 604-210-2211 *A law corporation
Chairman, Heritage Trust Tel: 778-742-5005
As you share the stories and the memories of how they lived their lives and how very much they meant, may you find comfort...
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023 |
COMMUNITY Coming EvEnts
MEMORIAL DONATIONS
GARAGE SALES
BUSINESS SERVICES
HOME SERVICES
DOWNSIZING
FinanCiaL sErviCEs
CLEaning
30 years of Treasures
Saturday Sale Aug 26 • 9 to 2pm 3150 Princess Street North Vancouver
Maid it Bloom
Spring, regular, office, move out and same day cleanings.
Antiques & Collectibles, Books Old & Recent, Children’s Items & Costumes, Paintings + + MUCH MUCH MORE!
Made in Vancouver Fashion PopUp Shop Join us on September 2nd and 3rd at 2008 Manitoba St, Vancouver, for the Made in Vancouver Fashion Popup. Shop designs by local independent fashion designers, and support Canada’s talented and hard− working apparel industry. Featuring work by: Goreea Tammi Anne Barker Maria Correa ONEPEACECO facebook.com/events/ 784067990385483? ref=newsfeed
Lost Lost − Audi Key − Black 604−788−4978 Lost Brown and Tan Male Burmese Cat Lost July 22. Indoor cat who accidently got out. Please call us if you have spotted him. Reward offered. 604−657−0759
Lost Gold Ring − Men’s gold wedding band lost on 14 July. Possibly lost at Whytecliff Beach or Panorama Park Deep Cove. 604−505−0759
Lost Sunglasses− Lost in the early summer, RayBan sunglasses on a cord. 604−788−4978 REWARD for LOST PHONE! I lost my Samsung phone at Lynn Valley Centre in June. Reward if found!!
Vonzipper Sunglasses Rectangle blue glo lens. Bright blue rim along the lens. Black legs/blue logo inside. Lost on trail, Upper Delbrook, Sunday, July 23rd. Sentimental value. Reward if found. Call Deborah @ 604−671−9458
Please support palliative care Please support palliative care services for patients and their families services for patients and their families facing serious illness and end of life facing serious illness and end of life challenges in our community. challenges in our community. To donate: To donate: donate: 231 East 15th Street To c/oNorth Lions Gate Foundation Vancouver, V7L 2L7 231 EastHospital 15thBC Street 231 East 15th Sreet 604.984.5785 North Vancouver, BC V7L 2L7 North Vancouver, BC V7L 2L7 northshorehospicepalliative.com 604.984.5785 604.984.5785 northshorehospicepalliative.com To access services or volunteer: northshorehospicepalliative.com 604.363.0961 To services or volunteer: volunteer: To access access services or everydaycounts@vch.ca 604.363.0961 604.363.0961 everydaycounts@vch.ca everydaycounts@vch.ca A partnership of Lions Gate Hospital Foundation and North Shore Hospice Society In collaboration with
LEGAL LEgaL/PubLiC notiCEs WAREHOUSEMAN LIEN By virtue of the Warehouseman’s Lien Act and on behalf of Coho Marina, we will dispose of goods belonging to Wayne Hassel and Tasha Seib namely: 42’ white/blue previous name under Contesa to recover $7291.61 plus accruing storage & any/all other expenses related. These goods will be made available for sale after September 7th, 2023. Goods are currently being stored in Madeira Park, BC. Contact 604-434-2448 for further information.
Grow Your Business
FOUND
MOVING SALE Saturday & Sunday August 26 & 27 9am - 10pm 5383 Nancy Greene Way North Vancouver 604-376-9932 EVERYTHING MUST GO Leaving Country! WEST VAN THIS IS THE ONE Saturday & Sunday Aug 26 & 27 • 9am - 3pm
CLEANING SERVICE Reas rates, specializing in homes. Guar work. Refs. Call 604-715-4706
ConCrEtE STELLAR FINANCIAL SERVICES HELPING PEOPLE PLAN FOR THEIR FUTURE UNDERSTANDING HOW MONEY WORKS HOW MONEY CAN WORK FOR YOU PLS. CONTACT LITO VOCAL @ 778−628−5549
4953 Water Lane
DESIGNER women’s & men’s clothing, general household, vintage, collectibles, furniture, rocking chairs . . . TOO much to list!
Empty your Garage Fill your Wallet Make it a Success! 604-630-3300 604-653-7851 MARKETPLACE FrEE Free Fabric Pieces Assorted, left over from sewing projects, suitable for crafts or creations. Two full carry bags. Take all. 604−319−7349
WantEd CASH for your CLUTTER I will pay CASH for your UNWANTED ITEMS! I specialize in RECORDS, English Bone China & Figurines, Collectibles, Tools, Antiques, ETC
Rob • 604-307-6715
Call 604-444-3000 Call 604-653-7851 to advertise
604-833-7217
Old Books Wanted. Also: Photos Postcards, Letters, Paintings. No text books or encyclopedias. I pay cash. 604-737-0530
RENTAL aPartmEnts/ Condos For rEnt PARK TERRACE
1766 Duchess Avenue West Vancouver 1 BR, balcony, 2nd floor, SE facing, quiet building, no pets, No smoking. Available Oct 1, 2023 for $2200. By appointment: 604-926-3493 or 604-926-1010
Get MORE
LIVING ROOM Find it in the Rentals Section.
To place your ad: Call 604-653-7851 classifieds. 604-630-3300 to place your ad burnabynow.com
To place your ad call
AGGRECON SPECIALTIES
• Polished Concrete Floors • Pumping • Placing • Sealing • Acid Staining • Decorative Concrete • Forming • Demolition • Foundation Pouring Professional Work
778-919-7707
N.C.B. CONCRETE LTD. Specializing in residential concrete. Repair, removal and new installation. Patio specialists 604-988-9523 or 604-988-9495
A29
ELECtriCaL
A CLASS ELECTRICIAN
Licensed. LEL029900 Small Jobs, Free Est. All work is guaranteed 2 years. 7 days/ week 9 am - midnight.
Dave, 778-230-0619 All Electrical, Low Cost,
Licensed, Res/Com, Small job expert, Renos, Panel changes.
(604)374-0062 Simply Electric
DNE Electric 604-999-2332 License No: 89267
Best Rates & Free Est. Res/Com/All Electrical Service/Panel Upgrade
dryWaLL
Boarding & Taping, Good Rates! Reliable, Free Est. Reno’s & Small Jobs Welcome! Call Gurprit 604-710-7769 A & A Millwood Quality Drywall Service. Repairs, renos, new construction. Prompt service.
Richard cell 604-671-0084 or 604-986-9880
YOUR ELECTRICIAN Lic#89402. Insured. Guar’d. Fast same day service. We love BIG & small jobs! 604-568-1899 goldenleafelectrical.com
ELECTRICAL Contractor
20 yrs of Experience. Friendly & Reliable. Specialty is renovations old/new wiring, trouble shooting. Lic. #50084 604-600-2061
ALP ELECTRIC #89724
Low price, big/small jobs, satisfaction guar. Free est
604-765-3329 classifieds. nsnews.com
Home Services cont. on next page
TODAY'S PUZZLE ANSWERS
A30 | WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
HOME SERVICES landscaping
NORTH SHORE FENCE and YARD
Y.K. LANDSCAPING LTD.
Quality work by professionals Repairs and construction
604-230-3559
Young, 604-518-5623
Free est. 28Yrs Exp. RetainingWalls, Paving Stones, Fountains/Ponds, Fences Irrigation, more...
www.yklandscaping.ca SHAW LANDSCAPING LTD.
Flooring
Complete Landscaping Clean-up. Lawn Cuts. Shrubs & Tree Pruning.
778-688-1012
lawn & garden
A.A. BEST PRO
D&M PAINTING
Free Estimates
Exterior/Interior Specialist Many Years Experience. Fully Insured. Top Quality • Quick Work. Free estimate.
Lawn aeration & Lawnmaint, maint., Moss, moss control, powerTrims, raking, Power Raking, trims, pruning, topping, cleanups. Pruning, Topping, Clean-Ups Call Sukh
604.726.9152 604.984.1988
SERAFINA
Garden Services • Summer Clean-Up & Maintenance • Pruning, weeding etc. • Design & advice • Professional & experienced
Ny Ton Gardening & Landscaping
• Repairs • Staining • Installation • Free Estimates
Garden Clean-up Trimming: Hedge & Shrubs Tree Pruning. Ny Ton • 604-782-5288
604-376-7224 centuryhardwood.com
GREAT LOOKING Landscapes. Full service landscape & garden maint. Call Dave: 604-764-7220
INSTALLATION, REFINISHING, SANDING. Free Est. • Great Prices. Satisfaction guaranteed.
604-518-7508
Masonry
gutters Gutter Cleaning, Power Washing, Window Cleaning, Roof Cleaning
Call Simon for prompt & professional service 30 yrs exp.
604-230-0627
classifieds.nsnews.com
Find the professionals you need to complete your renovations in the Home Services section
Capilano Home Improvement Small and big ig jobs jo
Kitchen and Bathroom remodeling Plumbing, Tiling, Paving Drywall, Carpentry, Deck, Fence Door and Window ood, Laminate Hardwood,
Insured & WCB
604.219.0666 Handyman on the North Shore Fully Insured & WCB 604−551−4267 www.nv−handyman.ca
604-724-3832
FAIRWAY PAINTING Fully Insured 20 yrs. exp. • Free Est.
INTERIOR & EXTERIOR SPECIALS 10% OFF
Call 604-
7291234
RICKY DEWAN PAINTING Exterior / Interiors Spring Specials Summer Specials BOOK NOW. Serving the North shore for over 20+ years
604-299-5831 or 604-833-7529 Mark’s Painting Services Interior-Exterior-Repairs Professional - Reliable Lifelong North Shore Resident
RES & COM • INT & EXT Best Quality Workmanship 1 room from $178. WCB. Ins’d. 25 yrs exp.
.
1,3,5,7,10 Ton Trucks Licensed & Insured Local - Long Distance Free Est. Senior Disc.
604-727-2700
pluMbing
604-900-6010 MrHandyman.ca
OFF
your total bill
atozglass1451@gmail.com | 604-770-0406 • 236-777-8994 1451 Marine Drive, North Vancouver, BC V7P 1TS
RAIN FOREST STONE MASONRY 18 Years serving the North Shore Walls, Fireplaces, Brick, Stairs & Patios New & Repairs
www.affordablemoversbc.com
ABE MOVING & Delivery &
Rubbish Removal $45/hr per person.24/7 • 604-999-6020
Any project,
BIG
or small...
Find all the help you need in the Home Services section
• Hot Water Tanks • Plumbing • Heating • Furnaces • Boilers • Drainage • Res. & Comm. • 24/7 Service
604-437-7272
DELBROOK PLUMBING & DRAINAGE • Licensed & Insured • No Job Too Small • Hot Water Tanks • Specializing in Waterline
To advertise call
604-653-7851
MASTER CARPENTER
• Finishing • Doors • Moulding • Decks • Renos • Repairs Emil: 778-773-1407 primerenovation.ca
tree services TREE SERVICES
Pruning, Hedge Trimming Tree & Stump Removal 75 ft Bucket Trucks
604-787-5915
.
www.treeworksonline.ca
604-802-7850
On Site
Kitchen and Bathroom "Working with owners and award winning designers since 1991"
604-644-9648
A-1 Contracting. Bsmt, bath, kitchen cabinets, tile & laminate flrs, painting, decks.. and more. Call Dhillon, 604-782-1936
OnSiteRenovations.com
Mike Getzlaf 604 351 9316
* on jobs over $1000
ALL WEST TREE SERVICE
Topping, trimming, hedges pruning, cleanups and take away. Free est. 604-726-9152
HOME SERVICES
Michael
LOOK to Home Services in the classifieds
604-537-4140
D & C STUCCO 30 yrs exp. Exc serv. All types of Finishes, Repairs. Ins’d 604-788-1385
$50 OFF
Need a Painter?
604-729-6695 BONDED & INSURED EXPERIENCED EMPLOYEES PROFESSIONAL, SAFE AND RELIABLE
10%
• Glass and mirror cut to size • Wood and metal customized frames • Storefront glass replace • Windows and screens replacements • Patio door screens and rollers • Canopy/skylight • Shower doors and railing glass • Emergency board ups
Expert Home Finishing
Affordable Moving From $45/hr
stucco
.
Mark 604-250-1234
Moving
Handyperson
renos & HoMe iMproveMent
GARDEN SERVICES LTD.
www.serafinagardens.ca 604-984-4433 contact Cari
Hardwood Floor Refinishing Experts
painting/ wallpaper
PROMOTION
Fencing
Find the professionals you need to create the perfect renovation. to advertise advertise call to call 604-653-7851 604-630-3300
ALL RENOVATIONS: •Kitchen •Baths •Additions •Patio •Stairs •Deck •Fences •Painting •Drywall & MORE
778-892-1530
a1kahlonconstruction.ca
rooFing MCNABB ROOFING
A-1 Contracting & Roofing New & Re-Roofing • All Types All Maintenance & Repairs GUTTER CLEANING Gutter Guard Installations • RENOVATION WORK • WCB. 25% Discount • Emergency Repairs •
ALL Roofing & Repairs. Insured • WCB 40+ yrs exp • Free Est’s
Roy • 604-839-7881
Jag • 778-892-1530
a1kahlonconstruction.ca
Re-Roofing & Repairs Specialists
20 Year Labour Warranty Available
Bros. Roofing Ltd. Over 40 Years in Business SPECIALIZING IN CEDAR, FIBERGLASS LAMINATES AND TORCH ON.
Liability Insurance, WCB, BBB, Free Estimates
604-946-4333
To place your ad email nmather@glaciermedia.ca
604-591-3500
New Roofs, Re-Roofing, Repairs & Gutter Cleaning. WCB.BBB. • GLRoofing.ca
604-240-5362 classifieds.nsnews.com
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!
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023 |
A31
SUDOKU Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken 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.
DOWN
ACROSS
PUZZLE ANSWERS ON SEPARATE PAGE
1. Russian painter 6. Very fast jet 9. Phillipine municipality 13. Intestinal 14. Small freshwater fish 15. Algerian coastal city 16. Vomit 17. Famed astronomer 18. Ghanaian currency 19. Improved the condition of 21. Int’l association of interpreters 22. Infections
23. Dish made with lentils 24. Thou 25. Former CIA 28. Unit used to compare power levels 29. Members of Pueblo people 31. Myanmar monetary units 33. Polished 36. Signed a contract 38. Nothing 39. Once-ubiquitous department store
41. Neural structures 44. Thick piece of something 45. Slang for trucks with trailers 46. Longing 48. Senior officer 49. Levels of frequency 51. Bird’s beak 52. Move rapidly downwards 54. Koran chapters 56. Streteches out 60. Top of the human body
61. A Chinese temple and Indian town are two 62. Fertility god 63. Sea eagle 64. Dry 65. Zodiac sign 66. “Horizon Call of the Mountain” character 67. Have the ability to 68. Take somewhere
1. “Iron Man” actress Leslie 2. Wings 3. Adjust the spacing 4. They’re usually locked 5. Atomic #43 6. Wise individuals 7. Horse mackerel 8. Pearl Jam’s debut album 9. Confines 10. Colorless crystalline compound 11. Unsatisfactorily
12. Plant of the parsley family 14. Determines time 17. Causes the birth of 20. Small ornament on a watch chain 21. Richly decorated cloth tapestry 23. Vito Corleone was one 25. Igbo musical instrument 26. Put in harmony 27. Japanese alcoholic drinks
29. Tinseltown 30. Closes tightly 32. Songs sung to one’s lover 34. One thousandth of an inch 35. Small drink of whiskey 37. Political divisions in ancient Greece 40. Helps little firms 42. Baby’s eating accessory 43. Very long periods of time
47. Small block of wood 49. Town in Surrey, England 50. Enquiry 52. Murdered 53. Bura-__: Chadic language 55. Crater on Mars 56. Mammal genus 57. Sock 58. Make 59. Stony waste matter 61. Partner to cheese 65. Pound
A32 | WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
All adventures should fuel this good. 19 HYBRID
Two-motor Hybrid Powertrain
Real Time AWD™
Honda Sensing™ Safety Technologies
Bose® Premium Sound System
19" Black Aluminum-alloy Wheels
CANADIAN BUILT. CANADIAN DRIVEN.
Over 95.3% of Honda CR-Vs sold in Canada in the last 10 years are still on the road today.*
All adventures start with confidence.
Honda Sensing™ Safety Technologies
ECON Mode & Eco Assist™
i-VTM4™ AWD System
Apple CarPlay® & Android Auto™
Remote Engine Starter
Over 94.5% of Honda vehicles sold in Canada in the last 10 years are still on the road today.*
NORTH SHORE NEWS
2023
2022
#Limited time finance offer is from Honda Canada Finance Inc. (HCFI), on approved credit. Finance example: $35,000 at 5.47% for a 24-month period, for a total of 24 monthly payments of $1,543. Total finance obligation is $37,029. Finance payments include freight and PDI of $2,000 and applicable fees, but do not include lien registration fee (up to $85 in certain regions) and lien registering agent fee (up to $6), which are due at time of delivery. No down-payment required. Taxes, insurance, license, and registration fees (all of which may vary by region) are extra. †Enhanced Loyalty Honda Bonus is available to eligible customers who: (i) are the current owner/lessee of a Honda or Acura vehicle and reside in BC, AB, SK, MB or ON; and (ii) have a current Honda Financial Services (HFS)/Acura Financial Services (AFS) lease or finance account, or a previous HFS/AFS account that expired within the past year (365 days). This offer is not transferable to any otherperson. Proof of eligibility is required and must be submitted to HFS to qualify for this loyalty offer. Loyalty Honda Bonus will be applied only to a Honda brand vehicle leased or financed throughHFS, on approved credit, as follows: $750 bonus on CR-V models. Loyalty Honda Bonus: (i) will apply only to current payments advertised by HFS in Canada; (ii) cannot be combined with other existing loyalty offers, unless otherwise indicated. *Based on IHS Markit Vehicles in Operation as of June 30, 2022 for Model Years 2013 to 2022 vs Total New Registrations of those vehicles. Offerends September 30, 2023 and is subject to change or cancellation without notice. Dealer may sell/lease for less. †Enhanced Loyalty Honda Bonus is available to eligible customers who: (i) are the current owner/lessee of a Honda or Acura vehicle and reside in BC, AB, SK, MB or ON; and (ii) have a current Honda Financial Services (HFS)/Acura Financial Services (AFS) lease or finance account, or a previous HFS/AFS account that expired within the past year (365 days). This offer is not transferable to any other person. Proof of eligibility is required and must be submitted to HFS to qualify for this loyalty offer. Loyalty Honda Bonus will be applied only to a Honda brand vehicle leased or financed through HFS, on approved credit, as follows: $1,000 bonus on Passport models. Loyalty Honda Bonus: (i)will apply only to current payments advertised by HFS in Canada; (ii) cannot be combined with other existing loyalty offers, unless otherwise indicated. *Based on IHS Markit Vehicles in Operation as of June 30, 2022 for Model Years 2013 to 2023 vs Total New Registrations of those vehicles. Offer ends September 30, 2023 and is subject to change or cancellation without notice. Dealer may sell/lease for less. Offer available only at participating Honda dealers in Western Canada. Limited quantities of 2023 models available - dealer trade may be necessary. Models may not be equipped as shown and are for illustration purposes only. Visit Honda.ca or your Honda dealer for details.