WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 25 2023
$1.25
NEWSSTAND PRICE
NEWS4
New turf
Artificial turf field at Argyle Secondary finally ready to roll
LIFESTYLE13
Cave exploration
New film shines a light on Canada’s deepest, longest caves
SPORTS31
Pan Am Games
NEW
15 North Shore athletes represent Canada in Santiago, Chile Weekend Forecast Inside
local matters . since 1969
NORTHSHORENEWS
Need Dental Treatment? Call Today! 1892 Marine Drive West Vancouver 604.926.7621 belcantodental.com INTERACT WITH THE NEWS AT
nsnews.com
F2 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 25 2023
$1.25
NEWSSTAND PRICE
NEWS4
New turf
Artificial turf field at Argyle Secondary finally ready to roll
LIFESTYLE13
Cave exploration
New film shines a light on Canada’s deepest, longest caves
SPORTS31
Pan Am Games NEW
15 North Shore athletes represent Canada in Santiago, Chile
Weekend Forecast Inside
local matters . since 1969
SUPPORTIVE HOUSING
MLA questions level of support at ‘temporary’ Travelodge site
NORTHSHORENEWS
Need Dental Treatment? Call Today! 1892 Marine Drive West Vancouver 604.926.7621 belcantodental.com INTERACT WITH THE NEWS AT
nsnews.com
BOUNTIFUL HARVEST
JANE SEYD
jseyd@nsnews.com
West Vancouver Capilano MLA and BC United housing critic Karin Kirkpatrick is questioning whether the supports being supplied to residents of “temporary” supportive housing in the former Travelodge motel in North Vancouver are adequate, after she says neighbours have complained about open drug use and increased crime and vandalism in the area.
Neighbours have reported seeing bodies being removed from suites, she said, leading to “a presumption there have been some deaths there.” The BC Coroner Service is investigating several deaths associated with the site, including two from overdoses. On Monday, Oct. 16, Kirkpatrick raised the issue in the legislature, asking why the government is “choosing to warehouse the homeless without adequate supports.” “The Travelodge on Marine Drive in North Vancouver is a glaring example of this,” she said in the legislature. “I’ve heard countless concerns from neighbours and families horrified by the open and unsupervised drug use and rising vandalism.” Kirkpatrick went to ask why “such lawlessness and danger” were being allowed “to fester at the Travelodge.” But the Lu’ma Native Housing Society which runs the
OPEN HOUSE The Harvest Project’s development team member Rosalie Conway feels the glow of their new digital mural comprised of hundreds of photos. The mural is part of the Harvest Project’s 30th anniversary open house taking place Nov. 2, from 5 to 8 p.m. See page 37 for more details. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN
supportive housing at the Travelodge site says there are supports and programs in place. “Lu’ma takes the neighbour concerns really seriously,” said Mike Walker, a lawyer acting as a spokesperson for the housing society. There is on-site supervision, said Walker, but added,
spooktacular costumes for everyone!
“these are difficult issues. Sometimes it’s more difficult than we would like.” The housing project at the motel site has an unusual history. Part of the motel was quietly put into in use as a shelter during the COVID-19 pandemic in the spring of 2020. Continued on A33
879 MARINE DRIVE NORTH VANCOUVER 604-929-9202 partycity.ca
A2 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
NORTH SHORE MITSUBISHI FALL INTO SAVINGS EVENT
$
1000
DISCOUNT ON ALL MODELS
FREE CAR WASHES FOR LIFE WITH EVERY PURCHASE
FIRST OIL CHANGE FOR FREE WITH EVERY PURCHASE INTEREST RATES
STARTING AT 2.99% UP TO $7000 REBATES ON HYBRID VEHICLES
NEW VEHICLES | PRE-OWNED VEHICLES | SERVICE | PARTS & ACCESSORIES
NorthshoreMitsubishi.ca 1695 Marine Drive, North Vancouver 604-624-0640
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 |
100% BC owned and operated
Weekly Savings! Prices Effective • October 26 - November 1, 2023
SPeCial offer
6
$ 99
YOU SAVE
2
$ 00
Choices’ Own Fresh Soup Hass A Avocados ocados
650ml
From Mexico, Bag of 4
SPECIAl PRICe
3
$ 98 / BAG
Boneless Skinless Chicken Breasts
Raised without Antibiotics, Value Pack, 19.82/kg
6
$ 49
YOU SAVE
2
$ 00
Choices’ Own Half Artisan Fruit Pies 280g
8
$ 99 / LB
9
$ 99
Western Canadian
4
$ 99 / LB Pork Sirloin Chops & Roast Raised without Antibiotics, 11.00/kg
SPECIAl PRICe YOU SAVE
1
$ 00/lb
2
$ 98 / LB
Organic Yellow & Red Nugget Potatoes From Fraserland Organics, BC, 6.57/kg
CanPrev Vitamin and Supplements
Andalou Naturals Face & Body Care Products
Assorted Sizes
Assorted Sizes
20% OFF
30% OFF
Earth’s Choice Organic Coffee Whole Bean or Ground, 340g
FEATURED CHOICE Earth’s Choice Organic Canned Beans
2 2388
398ml
$ 29 $
YOU SAVE UP TO
55%
or Case of 12 x 398ml
Kitsilano 604-736-0009 | Cambie 604-875-0099 | Kerrisdale 604-263-4600 | Yaletown 604-633-2392 Scan To View Commercial Drive 604-678-9665 | Burnaby Crest 604-522-0936 | Abbotsford 604-744-3567 All Our Specials This Week Kelowna 250-862-4864 | North Vancouver 604-770-2868 | South Surrey 604-541-3902 | Parksville 250-947-8000 While quantities last. Not all items available at all stores.We reserve the right to correct printing errors. Product may not appear exactly as depicted. Buy One Get One Deals Not Available Online.
A3
A4 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
FOR NEWS AT ANY TIME, GO TO NSNEWS.COM GAME ON
Argyle’s long-awaited artificial turf field opens for play lines), and football (orange lines) and has uprights for football and rugby, soccer nets, and field hockey nets. There is also a smaller turf practice field just below the upper parking lot which Argyle classes and sports teams have been using since it opened last month. On Oct. 13 – the first day the regular field opened for use – some students set their alarms early to be the first ones on the turf, said Argyle principal Kim Jonat. “There was nothing better than walking up to the new field on opening day and seeing a small group of students playing a pickup game of soccer as the sun was rising,” she said. Since then, the field has seen constant use from PE classes, sports team practices and community groups who are able to book the field after school hours and on weekends.
JANE SEYD
jseyd@nsnews.com
Student athletes at North Van’s Ecole Argyle Secondary are finally enjoying the green, green (pseudo) grass of home.
After five long years without a school field to practice and hold games on, Argyle’s boys’ soccer squads and senior boys football team are taking to the new artificial turf field this week in front of a local crowd. Kickoff for the Argyle Pipers vs. West Van Highlands football game happens Friday afternoon at 3:45 p.m., while a senior boys soccer game was set to take place after press time on Tuesday. In the case of the soccer team, this week marks the first time a home game will be played at Argyle in 30 years, said soccer coach and Argyle teacher Darren Rath. That’s because the previous grass field at the old Argyle wasn’t in good enough condition to be used for games, said Rath, “so we’ve always played at community fields.” “It’s always nice to be able to play at your school,” he added. Bill Stanger, one of the football coaches at Argyle, said playing at home will give the teams a boost. “For years we’ve practiced somewhere else besides the school. They’ve played almost in anonymity,” he said. “No one could get there to watch us.” For the past several years,
Argyle senior boys soccer team member Aidan Best takes part in drills under the eye of head coach Darren Rath on the newly-opened Ecole Argyle Secondary artificial turf field. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN players have mostly used the field at Kirkstone Park, a kilometre away. “There’s no change facilities there,” he said, and the field is smaller, making it more difficult
for players to figure out what a game might feel like on a regular field. Practicing on the new turf last week for the first time was “fantastic,” he said.
New field will be used by soccer, rugby, field hockey and football teams The new field is lined for soccer (white lines), rugby (yellow lines), field hockey (blue
Argyle has been without a field for five years The opening of the artificial turf field at the high school has been long-awaited. Because the new Argyle school – which opened in January of 2021 – was built on the footprint of the old school field, athletes at Argyle were without an outside area to practice on during the years the new school was under Continued on A25
SERIOUS INJURIES
Police seek witnesses to pedestrian hit-and-run at busy intersection JANE SEYD
jseyd@nsnews.com
North Vancouver RCMP are looking for witnesses and dash-cam footage after a pedestrian was seriously injured in a hit-and-run collision with a vehicle near the intersection of Marine
Drive and Capilano Road Wednesday night.
Passersby found the pedestrian, a man from North Vancouver in his late 40s, laying on the roadway with serious injuries around 9:20 p.m., said Const. Mansoor Sahak, spokesman for the detachment. The man was
rushed to hospital. Police arrived on scene to find the suspect vehicle had fled, leaving vehicle debris behind. “The investigation is in its earliest stages and it’s very important that we continue our efforts to gather all available
evidence,” Sahak said. “We are looking for witnesses or drivers who were in the area of Marine Drive and Capilano Road at around 9:20 p.m. last night.” Police are asking anyone who was near the area or may have seen someone driving away from the scene of the accident
to please call North Vancouver RCMP at 604-985-1311 and quote file 23-22428. Police are also asking anyone with dash cam or surveillance video to come forward. “Your surveillance camera may have captured something. Please check,” said Sahak.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A5
LAKES, WHYTE LLP
is pleased to announce the addition of
Jessie Li
to our litigation team. Jessie fell in love with Vancouver after living in China and New Zealand. She completed her law degree at Dalhousie University Schulich School of Law with a business law concentration.
Sailors catch a breeze off John Lawson Park in West Vancouver’s Ambleside area. West Van council is considering zoning changes to the neighbourhood. NICK LABA / NSN
APARTMENT BUILDINGS
West Van mulls rental-only rezoning for Ambleside JANE SEYD
jseyd@nsnews.com
A zoning change that would ensure purpose-built rental apartment buildings in Ambleside can’t be redeveloped as strata condominiums will go to a public hearing in West Vancouver next month.
West Vancouver council voted Monday to give third reading to a zoning bylaw that would see 31 rental apartment buildings identified in West Van’s draft Ambleside local area plan earmarked as rental properties in perpetuity. Most of the rental apartment buildings in the municipality in Ambleside were planned in the late 1950s and were purpose built in the 1960s and 1970s. Some of these areas were zoned specifically as apartments, and some fall under land use contracts, all of which will expire next year. The zoning bylaw under consideration by council would restrict those properties to development of rental apartments in the future. Under current zoning, many of those older rental apartment buildings could currently be replaced with a strata building without any need for council approval, leaving many of the area’s tenants vulnerable to ‘renovictions,’ senior planner David Hawkins told council when they first examined the issue earlier this summer. “It’s very hard to achieve new rental housing,” Hawkins said Monday, adding a concurrent risk is “we lose our rental stock” that already exists to redevelopment. “The most affordable housing in West Vancouver already exists,” he said, adding there are 1,600 purpose-built rental units in those apartment buildings.
Since 2018, the province has given municipalities the power to designate zoning on certain properties as rental only, precisely to address this issue. If passed, the rental-only zoning would apply to about 30 of West Vancouver’s 80 apartment buildings. Coun. Nora Gambioli said the issue is “very, very important.” The buildings are currently rental “but they are not zoned rental,” she said. “They could put up luxury condos and sell them as strata. I don’t think very many people understand the significance of what we’re talking about here.” Gambioli said council has received one letter from the owner of an Ambleside apartment building who feared the aging building would never be redeveloped if strata ownership was prohibited. But she said she’d like to hear from the public, including “people who are living in these rental buildings,” as well as others who would like to be. A public hearing on the rezoning is scheduled for Nov. 20. On the larger issue of changes to the official community plan which would set the stage for the Ambleside area to accommodate a bigger range of housing types in future, council opted to defer further discussion and a vote on how to move forward for another week. The proposed changes to the official community plan would set general policy on the kinds of development the district would like to see in future in certain areas of Ambleside. Among those, the plan envisions more housing for seniors, rent-to-own apartments and row housing and townhouses to Continued on A25
Starting off as a solicitor, Jessie developed a foundation in business law, real estate, and wills and estates. She believes that solicitor and litigator knowledge go hand in hand. Jessie’s areas of focus include commercial litigation, civil litigation, and administrative tribunals. Jessie is known for her personable demeanour and her genuine care for her clients. Jessie speaks English and Mandarin. Contact Jessie to discuss your legal needs.
www.lakeswhyte.com 100 – 1312 Lonsdale Avenue North Vancouver
Lakes, Whyte LLP has been providing legal services to the residents and the businesses of the North Shore since 1986.
604.984.3646 jessieli@lakeswhyte.com
''ORLANDO' Full Cup Bra in Pearly Pink You’ve got the curves...We’ve got the lingerie to beautifully show off your curves! Enjoy the comfort, support and uplift only a high quality bra can deliver. Come in and experience the difference of how a professional fitting can make you look and feel!
A6 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
North Shore e-bike share program likely here to stay BRENT RICHTER
brichter@nsnews.com
YOU ’ R E I N V I T E D TO
O U R FA L L E V E N T S Join us at Amica West Vancouver, a senior lifestyles residence, for two exciting events this season!
Movement Around The World Travel the world from your seat when you enjoy dance performances of cultures across the globe. November 9: Contemporary Dance November 30: Indigenous Dancers December 7: Samba December 14: Bollywood 2:00 PM
Open House: Senior Living 101 Learn about all that senior living on Vancouver’s North Shore has to offer, plus meet our wonderful team. November 1, 15, 22 | 2:00 PM At all events, enjoy chef-prepared refreshments plus a guided tour of our premium suites and amenities.
PLEASE RSVP TO MAX OR C E L E S T E AT 6 0 4 - 9 2 1 - 9 1 8 1 .
E-bike sharing on the North Shore is most likely here to stay.
City of North Vancouver council voted Oct. 16 to extend the e-bike share program, currently contracted to Lime, for another year, with an eye to making the service permanent. Council members had mostly only praise for how the pilot has run since the first Lime bikes hit the streets in 2021. The vote followed a presentation by staff showing growing demand for the e-bike share program. Since its launch, roughly 35,000 unique users have completed 156,000 trips across North Vancouver and West Vancouver for a total of 319,000 kilometres ridden. According to staff, 60 per cent of the total trips were made by just 11 per cent of the users, indicating a loyal customer base. The median distance covered and time spent was two kilometres and 12 minutes. The fleet grew from 200 e-bikes at the beginning to more than 400 at the summertime peak. A survey of users found one in three said their e-bike trip would otherwise have been made in a personal vehicle. All told, the city estimates the e-bike share kept 25 tonnes of carbon from being emitted into the atmosphere. “That’s just huge in terms of reducing our GHGs for these shorter trips,” said Coun. Angela Girard. “It’s certainly meeting our climate target goals as well as our mobility strategy goals.” Since the program began, there have been no serious injuries reported to Lime or to the municipalities, staff noted, although a survey found less than half of riders wear helmets while on one of Lime’s bikes. The biggest impediments to more people using the service, the survey found, was the cost, which is 35 cents per minute, the
availability of parking for the bikes, and the lack of safe cycling infrastructure more broadly. Over the next year, staff will look into expanding the e-bike sharing borders, both on the North Shore and over the two main bridges into Vancouver, as well as increasing the size of the fleet and parking in high-demand areas. Although the program itself is likely to live on, Lime’s continued involvement is by no means guaranteed. Leadership in the transportation departments of all three municipalities have advised that the partnership should make the contract for the next term of the e-bike sharing project subject to bids on the open market among all potential e-bike providers. Other cities have two or more competing bike share services on their streets, noted Coun. Tony Valente, who said he’d also like to see e-bikes with child seats and e-cargo bikes added to the fleet. Council’s vote to extend the program for another year and direct staff to prepare for its being made permanent was unanimous. “Overall, I think, we want to make sure that people are moving safely and efficiently through or from the city, or across the North Shore, seamlessly. I think the data shows that that’s happening. For a long time, we haven’t been able to give people that service and so we haven’t been really able to understand why people weren’t choosing different modes,” said Mayor Linda Buchanan. “The data speaks for itself. That’s a lot of trips. That’s a lot of kilometres.” Buchanan said the number of people who choose to ride will only go up if local governments follow through on creating more safe cycling infrastructure. “Imagine what [ridership] would be if we actually did,” she said.
Reduce the appearance of wrinkles up to 68% Wrinkle and Frown Line Cream:
• For women & men of all ages and skin types • Reduces wrinkle depth up to 68%
• 5 creams in one: A wrinkle cream, day cream, night cream, moisturizer, & make-up base Manager’s Special:
659 C LY D E AV E N U E A M I C A . C A / W E S T VA N C O U V E R
Save $10. Now only
$39.99
Available in London Drugs stores or order online at londondrugs.com search for ‘Wrinkle and Frown Line Cream’
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A7
B.C. SUPREME COURT
Owner sues to have dog bite tickets tossed BRENT RICHTER
brichter@nsnews.com
A woman is taking the City of North Vancouver to court, seeking to have two bylaw tickets tossed out after her dog bit a stranger.
Andrea Reagan Wong laid out her version of the events in a petition filed in B.C. Supreme Court this week. On Feb. 26, 2021, Wong was walking her leashed dog Finna to their Victory Ship Way apartment when they encountered some residents moving out of the building and taking up most of the outdoor walkway, the petition states. “[One woman] strode into their path and walked directly into Finna, provoking him to nip at her leg to create distance between himself and the complainant,” she wrote. “The complainant suffered a minor wound to the leg and some bruising thereafter.” After the woman complained to the city, animal control officers issued Wong two tickets for failing to ensure that a dog does not bite a
A sign reminds North Vancouver park users about the rule to keep dogs leashed. MIKE WAKEFIELD / NSN FILES person, and failing to ensure a dog does not injure a person. Wong disputed the tickets, triggering an adjudication process. After a hearing in September, the adjudicator upheld the tickets but noted in her reasoning that Wong “took all reasonable precautions” leading up to the incident, the petition states. Wong highlighted the adjudicator’s comments that Finna was “reasonably under control up until the complainant was within close
proximity of the dog” and that “the owners had exercised reasonable cautions.” In her petition, Wong doesn’t dispute that Finna bit the woman, but she said she should have been entitled to the defence of due diligence – that is she should not be held liable for an incident she tried to prevent. “The brief reasons of the adjudicator show that they believe their role to be limited to making a factual finding of whether the offence occurred, rather than to perform a legal analysis of whether a defence was applicable. This is a legal error,” Wong’s petition states. The adjudicator was also wrong to uphold both tickets, given that they stemmed from the same single incident, Wong argued. The City of North Vancouver has not yet filed a response to the petition. In a statement Wednesday, city staff said they have not yet been served with the legal documents and could not offer comment.
SELL YOUR
GOLD
• Wills, Trusts & Estate Planning
Lynn Valley Law
• Powers of Attorney & Representation Agreements • Probate & Estate Administration • Residential Real Estate
www.lynnlaw.ca • 604-985-8000 3161 Mountain Highway, North Vancouver
“40 YEARS” Selling Homes Just Like Yours.
Call me today…
BRENT EILERS
REALTOR
604-644-0065
BRENT@BRENTEILERS.COM
Greater Vancouver Real Estate Board
Life Member
THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR EXPERIENCE! Masters, 200-1455 Bellevue Ave., West Vancouver
VOLUNTEERS WANTED APPLY BY 4:30 P.M. ON OCTOBER 31, 2023
The District of West Vancouver is currently looking for volunteers to fill vacancies on a variety of committees.
The District values the opportunity for dialogue and collaboration with members of our community. Volunteering gives you the opportunity to contribute to your community and helps enhance your personal and professional network. SCAN HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION AND EVENTS DATES
MAISON BIRKS PARK ROYAL SHOPPING CENTRE 1015 Park Royal S, West Vancouver, BC V7T 1A1
Just fill out an application form and submit it along with your resumé by the deadline above.
APPLICATION FORMS:
PHONE: 604-925-7004, or VISIT: westvancouver.ca/beinvolved
To discover our services or to book an appointment to sell and recycle your gold at your preferred location:
Please contact 1 (855) 873-7373 or visit us at maisonbirks.com
QUESTIONS? Legislative Services: 604-925-7004
A8 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
PUBLISHED BY NORTH SHORE NEWS A DIVISION OF LMP PUBLICATION LTD. PARTNERSHIP
114-400 BROOKSBANK AVE., NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. V7J 2C2
MATT BLAIR, PUBLISHER
Open field
S
omething remarkable happened this month. Argyle Secondary’s long-awaited artificial turf field finally opened for play. No one can say this was a rushed project -- some high school athletes who entered Grade 8 at Argyle without a field graduated without ever setting foot on it. But after five long years, the community can now celebrate what a great amenity it is. In this case, the field truly has been a community effort. Without the District of North Vancouver stepping in and bankrolling the field to the tune of more than $5 million, the project would never have happened. Expensive fields just aren’t in the province’s budget when it comes to building new schools. Which is too bad. Old-fashioned grass fields just can’t withstand the kind of heavy-duty use that
today’s athletic teams subject them to. Athletes on the North Shore are particularly squeezed when it comes to sports fields for teams to practice on. Even with Argyle now open and the turf field at William Griffin slated to re-open over the winter, there will still be a lack of fields for local teams. The result is that thousands of kids are forced to practice on ‘all-weather’ fields, a fancy way of saying gravel. If you’re trying to keep kids fit and interested in sport for life, sending them out to play on a patch of gravel sounds a little offside. Artificial turf fields don’t come cheap. But other fields are in the works in North Vancouver – primarily because the public turned out to say they were worth paying for. Let’s keep that team effort going.
Christine Sinclair’s legacy is a gift to young soccer players ANDY PREST
aprest@nsnews.com
It’s the year 2003 and my girlfriend and I have just moved into a little apartment in Edmonton.
We’re young and dumb and cute and poor. We’re both sports lovers, but for financial reasons we hesitate to get the full cable TV sports package, on account of the poorness. Then Team Canada gets on a roll at the FIFA Women’s World Cup, scoring wins over Japan and Argentina to advance to the playoff round for the first time in team history. They have plenty of firepower on the squad, but the most exciting of the bunch are a couple of youngsters in 16-year-old phenom Kara Lang and 20-year-old Christine Sinclair,
barely out of her teens herself but already established as a team leader and one of the best goal scorers in the world. A header from Sinclair stands up as the winning goal in Canada’s crucial win over Japan to book a spot in the quarterfinals. My then-girlfriend (now my wife) and I find ourselves so enthralled with the action that we end up seeking out local sports bars so that we can watch every minute of the playoff games – a win over China to make the semifinals followed by losses to Sweden and United States to finish in fourth place, still the best showing ever for Canada at FIFA men’s or women’s World Cup. By the time the bronze medal game rolls around my wife and I finally do the
math and realize that the money we are spending on beers and wings and nachos to keep a table at the pub for all these games would be enough to buy us the sports package for months, maybe even years. Hook us up! This was the power of that one soccer team – exciting enough to get money from an empty pocket. This was not something Canada had seen from a women’s team before except for maybe the women’s Olympic hockey team that took home gold in Salt Lake City the year before. Fast forward 10 years and we now have a kid of our own, a two-year-old who loves sports – shocking, I know – and adorably mispronounces athletes’
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.
names. He’s got a little soccer setup in the living room, and when he fires in goals he screams out “just like Sixteen Sinclair!” That’s pretty cool – a little boy screaming out the name of the best Canadian soccer player there is, who happens to be a women from just across the bridge in Burnaby. And by 2013 Sinclair is, no doubt, the best Canadian soccer player ever. She still is – young Alphonso Davies probably has a decade or two of work left to do to catch her. Fast forward eight more years, and the women’s national team, driven by Sinclair more than 20 years after she made her national debut, claims one of Continued page A9
ADMINISTRATION/RECEPTION 604-985-2131 ADVERTISING 604-998-3520, sales@nsnews.com REAL ESTATE ADVERTISING 604-998-3520, realestate@nsnews.com CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 604-630-3300, 604-444-3056, nmather@glaciermedia.ca DISTRIBUTION INQUIRIES 604-986-1337, distribution@nsnews.com
Matt Blair
Andy Prest
Marianne LaRochelle
Direct 604-998-3520 publisher@nsnews.com
Direct 604-998-3538 editor@nsnews.com
Direct 604-345-8705 mariannel@glaciermedia.ca
PUBLISHER
EDITOR
DIGITAL SALES MANAGER
Miguel Black
NEWSROOM 604-985-2131, editor@nsnews.com
Direct 604-986-1337 distribution@nsnews.com
PHOTOGRAPHY 604-998-3532, photo@nsnews.com
DISTRIBUTION MANAGER
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A9
MAILBOX
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.
AIRBNB CRACKDOWN IS NOTHING MORE THAN VOTE BUYING
DON’T LET DOGS SPOIL WEST VANCOUVER’S BELOVED SEAWALK
Dear Editor:
RE: It’s check-out time for short-term rentals, Oct. 18 editorial These actions by the NDP government are no more than vote buying, a thinly veiled attempt to shuffle the blame and responsibility for providing rental housing to British Colombians. Most Airbnb hosts are respectable, considerate citizens yet the province turns a blind eye to the many thousands of illegal, unauthorized suites that have been around for decades? Most of these suites do not meet basic building safety codes. Their owners often pay no income tax on rental income, nor do they pay additional property taxes for use of municipal services by their tenants. They do not have to provide one off-street parking space as is required for authorized suites. The lack of enforcement encourages more of the same. I am not a landlord or Airbnb host.
Jo-Lue Bloomer North Vancouver
Dear Editor:
RE: West Van councillors want to loosen leash on dog restrictions, Oct. 18 news story I have just read the above article which states that the West Vancouver Council – not the general public whom it will impact – is considering allowing leashed dogs on the Centennial Seawalk. Dog owners have become the new entitled group. It’s not enough that they have their own off-leash park, that they have their own dog run adjacent to the Seawalk, now their owners are demanding they be allowed on a pedestrian-friendly stretch. I walk this area daily and, although I am a dog lover, I am happy not to have to dodge them or their poop or their leashes as they run across the path to greet or even attack other dogs. Please leave this little bit of paradise to us non-dog owners. It’s only a few kilometres for heaven’s sake.
Lisa Cooper West Vancouver
Gold medal caps brilliant career Continued from A8 the biggest victories in Canadian sports history in winning an Olympic gold medal in Tokyo. Few sporting moments in the country’s history could be more satisfying than seeing Sinclair with a gold medal around her neck. It’s a win that will live forever in Canadian sports history. And then, last week, Sinclair announced that she was retiring from national team play at the end of 2023. She’ll leave, truly remarkably, as the leading goal scorer for any man or woman in international soccer history, having scored 190 goals in 327 international games. She’s the most Canadian of legends: modest and humble and full of quiet power. Not everything on her way to becoming the greatest international goal scorer of all time was easy though. In announcing her pending retirement, Sinclair wrote a letter to her 16-year-old self. It offers lovely and touching insights into the mind of normally very private superstar. It’s also kind of heartbreaking
in parts, rage-inducing in others. “Pretty soon you’ll discover things aren’t so rosy behind the scenes,” she writes to her teenaged self, describing the battles she waged off the field over two decades to try to bring equality to the sport in Canada. “While people will know you for your accomplishments on the pitch, they will remember you for how you transcended the painted white lines. Creating equity is what you will be most proud of.” It’s such an indictment of the system that the most prolific goal scorer in history is most proud of the battles she waged against her own federation off the field, not the victories garnered on it. But the legacy that will hopefully live the longest is all those youngsters, boys and girls, who saw her play and realized that someone from around here could go on to become one of the best in the world. Forget the cost of the TV sports package – that legacy is priceless. Andy Prest is the editor of the North Shore News. His lifestyle/humour column runs biweekly.
A10 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
TRAGIC THEFT
Woman pleads for return of her husband’s stolen ashes BRENT RICHTER
brichter@nsnews.com
A woman whose husband’s cremated remains were stolen from her parked vehicle is speaking out, hoping for the return of her family’s missing urn.
North Vancouver RCMP issued a plea to the public on Oct. 16 after a series of vehicle break-ins occurred sometime over the preceding weekend on the 500 block of 21st Street West. The victim, who the North Shore News is not naming to protect her privacy, said she saw right away that the thief had made off with some loose change, sunglasses, a blanket, some keepsakes and two pairs of reading glasses. It wasn’t until she opened her trunk later in the day that she realized the urn had been taken. “I was just really upset. What kind of person does this, to take something so personal? They have absolutely no use for it,” she said. Her husband died 14 years ago and she was preparing, along with her daughters, to find a meaningful way to spread his ashes together as a family when the theft happened. The woman said she is hoping the thief took the urn in error, not realizing what it was, and will either turn it in or leave it somewhere visible so it can be found and returned to police. The stolen urn has a date of 09-09-09, according to investigators. In the meantime, she wants the culprit to know the impact they’ve had on her whole family. “They think they’re just rummaging through a car and
taking random things, but they don’t realize the connections that people have to their things,” she said. “There’s nothing I can do about it but it is tough because even though it’s been 14 years, this is just another grief on top of it.” While they maintain hope the urn will be found and they can give their beloved family member a proper send-off, the woman said it’s also painful to think of her husband’s remains not being treated Obviously, this with the dignity they is something of a deserve. great sentimental “It’s not nice not knowvalue to the owner ing,” she said, holding back and we are hoping tears. “To think of it getting raked up off the side of the the perpetrator road with all the leaves and will do the right thrown in the dumpster or thing and return it. something, that’s not a nice CONST. MANSOOR SAHAK thought.” North Vancouver RCMP searched the area where the thefts occurred and are asking the public to keep an eye out. “Obviously, this is something of a great sentimental value to the owner and we are hoping the perpetrator will do the right thing and return it,” said Const. Mansoor Sahak, spokesperson for the North Vancouver RCMP. Anyone with information on the whereabouts of the urn is asked to call the North Vancouver RCMP at 604-9851311 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) to remain anonymous.
An urn, identical to this one, was stolen from a white Kia Forte in North Vancouver, sometime before the morning of Oct. 14. Investigators are appealing for its return. NORTH VANCOUVER RCMP
NOW SELLING OVER 5 0% SO LD
West Vancouver’s Most Exclusive New Address. DON’T MISS THE RARE OPPORTUNITY TO PURCHASE NEXT TO PARK ROYAL
LUXU RY RE SI D EN CE S ExecutiveonthePark.com CALL NOW: 604.926.2398
660 CLYDE AVE, WEST VANCOUVER
UP TO
0% 10% $100K ASSIGNMENT FEE*
DEPOSIT*
BUYER CREDIT*
Offer valid until Nov 30th. Under construction. Completion 2025. All renderings are representations only. The developer reserves the right to make changes to any information contained herein and make modifications to specifications, floor plans, features, sizes and measurements without further notice. This is not an offering for sale. Any such offering can only be made by way of a disclosure statement. E & O.E. * Contact your sales representative for details.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 |
YEARS OF
SAVINGS
CA NA DI AN GR AI
N FE D
F r e s h Po r k B a c k Rgib s
5
EVERY 4 WEEKS starting Feb 3 - Nov 9, we’ll be giving away amazing culinary prizes from cooking classes to helicopter picnic tours! ENTER by purchasing a Participating Product, and you’ll also get a chance to win an exclusive trip for two to Tuscany, Italy!
12 .10 /k
49 LB
scan here to learn more
PARTICIPATING PRODUCTS DAIRYLAND
DAIRYLAND
Chocolate or Strawberry Milk Beverage
Sour Cream 250 mL
1 L plus deposit &
recycle fee
California Fresh Pomegranates
299 each
Ocean Wise Fresh Steelhead Trout Fillets
399 /100 g
289
219
EA
EA
SAPUTO
Bocconcini
200 g
649 EA
Cathedral City Extra Mature Cheddar
200 g
749 each
Portofino Artisan Bread
assorted 585 g – 700 g
699 each
DEMPSTER’S ER’S
100% Whole Wheat Bread 675 g or white 570 g
329
Visit freshstmarket.com for more Participating Products
PRICES IN EFFECT FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27 - THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2
WEST VANCOUVER 1650 MARINE DR. • FRESHSTMARKET.COM
EA
A11
A12 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
CLAYTON LORENCE
LIONEL LORENCE
604.644.0500
604.644.3700
N
E OP
S
UN
2-4
It’s an Empire...
Ultimate Sunrises & Sunsets..
Altamont by the Sea….
Craftsman style, ½ duplex, 3,000 +/- sqft, 3 levels, 5 bedrm, licensed 2 bedrm suite, lovely SW ocean views, steps to Ambleside beach!
Caulfeild, custom built Hollingsworth showstopper, 2 levels, 3,400 sqft, 3 bedrms, gorgeous views!
Custom built by Bradner Homes, 10,000 sqft corner property, 3 levels, 4,000 sqft, outdoor pool, steps to the beach!
1207 Marine Dr, West Van NEW LISTING $2,590,000
4940 Meadfeild Rd, West Van
$4,695,000
West Bay Character…
Electrifying!
Private, park like 15,700 sqft property, 3 levels, 3,300 sqft, 5 bedrms, West Bay School Catchment, gorgeous ocean views!
Evelyn by Onni, 1,135 sqft, 2 bed + den, 2 bath, West facing, large covered balcony, modern contemporary design with loads of glass, pet & rental friendly!
3381 Mathers Ave, West Van
$3,980,000
#204-788 Arthur Erickson Pl,West Van NEW LISTING $1,559,000
281 29th St, West Van
$4,998,000
Don’t take too long or this Estate will escape you... With all its charm, it will also surprise you, enjoy the Autumn leaves & beautiful seascapes, 35,547 sqft property, 3 levels, 3,855 sqft.
4778 Marine Dr, West Van
Call for Price
Sold $2,000,000 available at 1%!
In the Heart of LoLo….
Spectacular Altamont Estate….
Highly sophisticated Yaletown waterfront by Concert Properties, upgraded by famous design firm, 2,000 +/- sqft, unobstructed False Creek, Granville Island & Boat Harbour Views! *Contact listing Agent for more information.
Dunbarton Manor, 1 bedrm, 718 sqft corner suite, in-suite laundry, fireplace, great location, close to the Quay, Shipyards & Seabus!
Private 80 x 240, 19,000 sqft property, 2 levels, 2,300 sqft, 4 bedrm, 500 sqft sun-drenched deck with ocean views, located in the West Bay School Catchment.
628 Kinghorne Mews, Van
#201-315 E 3rd St, North Van
$4,500,000
$615,000
3095 Mathers Ave, West Van
CALL FOR PRICE
RE/MAX LIONEL LORENCE #2001455 BELLEVUE AVENUE WEST VANCOUVER / VISIT WWW.LIONELLORENCE.COM COLOUR PHOTOS & FLOOR PLANS
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A13
ARTS | ENTERTAINMENT | FOOD | HOME |
| HEALTH | COMMUNITY
GOING UNDERGROUND
New doc shines light on Canada’s deepest, longest caves NICK LABA
nlaba@nsnews.com
In the middle of the evergreen rainforest on Northern Vancouver Island, a man wearing an orange helmet with a headlamp leans over a cave opening, all but camouflaged by the lush vegetation surrounding it.
Secured by a length of rope attached to a climbing harness around his waist, he lets a bricksized rock slip from his gloved hand into the darkness below. Silence. … A sonorous “Bang” echoes up from the unseen. “Ooo…. Twenty metres? Thirty metres?” guesses the man, before tossing a handful of rope into the abyss and beginning his descent. The man’s name is Peter Curtis, a caver with more than four decades of experience. He’s one in a group of adventurers that has been attempting to reach the termination points of the longest and deepest caves in Canada. The cavers’ experiences are chronicled in Subterranean, a new documentary that takes place inside two of the vastest caving sites in British Columbia. Subterranean premiered at Toronto’s Hot Docs Film Festival in April, and recently won the
“I want to be a supermom.”
Expedition leader Franck Tuot crawls along an underground passage on Vancouver Island. COURTESY OF SUBTERRANEAN FILM
Best Film About Adventure and Exploration Award at the Ladek Mountain Film Festival in Poland. The film will screen at Vancity Theatre Oct. 30-31, and Nov. 2 and 5. It has a broadcast premier on the Knowledge Network on Nov. 7 before being available to stream online. “This is a glimpse inside a world that most people will never get to see in person,” says
North Vancouver producer Jenny Rustemeyer, who’s also known for her award-winning work on the series Search & Rescue: North Shore, as well as This Mountain Life (Best Snow Sports Film: Banff Mountain Film Festival), and Just Eat It: A Food Waste Story (multiple awards including Canadian Documentary Feature Award: Edmonton International Film Festival).
“It’s true exploration where no person has gone before,” Rustemeyer said. “And we were able to capture it in such a beautiful way, to put it on a big screen where people can really enjoy the experience.” But you don’t have to be a caver to like the film, she explained. “It really is about the people who cave. It’s about the adventure. Even the logistics
– like, how do you do a trip like that?” Half of the 86-minute film follows Katie Graham, an expert caver and cave diver who leads a team of 13 on multiple expeditions between 2019 and 2021 down the Bisaro Anima cave near Fernie – the deepest recorded cave in Canada at 683 vertical metres from entrance to lowest point. The team carries down all the supplies needed for the trip, including batteries and camera gear – which crew sleeps with to keep dry – as well as diving equipment for Graham’s final descent where the cave is completely filled with water. Shuttling bags between multiple camps, while hiking, crawling, and abseiling down cliffs and steep pitches, the 6.4-kilometre journey takes around two days. Then Graham dives for a day, before trekking back to the outside world. The other half of Subterranean focuses on a team tackling the ARGO cave system in Northern Vancouver Island, which is currently recorded as Canada’s second longest at 18.6 kilometres (Castleguard Cave in Banff is more than 21.3 km long). That team is led by Franck Tuot, a man convinced that linking two Continued on A29
Shylo Can Help With The Chores! We know you want to be a super mom, but you were up half the night with the baby, and there are only so many hours in a day. You’re tired and you need help around the house. Caring for a young family is easier when someone has the meals, the laundry and housekeeping covered. The years when your kids are young are short. We can help you enjoy those precious years more by lending a hand. Who knows you might even get to take a well-deserved mental health break!
Call 604-985-6881 for a FREE In-Home Assessment.
Celebrating 42 years!
ACCREDITED BUSINESS
ShyloHomeHealthcare.ca
A14 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
POLYGON AWARD
Two artists commended for contributions to First Nations art MINA KERR-LAZENBY
MKerrLazenby@nsnews.com Local Journalism Initiative Reporter
Together, they have a combined experience of more than seven decades, some notable awards under their belt, and pieces that have been shown both across the world and in some of the most esteemed galleries on home soil.
Yet for Xwalacktun (Rick Harry) and Klatle-Bhi, an impressive repertoire doesn’t make an immodest artist: neither had been expecting to take home wins this year, not least for BC Achievement Foundation’s Polygon Award in First Nations Art. “This was a very, very pleasant surprise. It was almost a bit surreal,” said Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish) and Kwakwaka’wakw artist Klatle-bhi. “I don’t even know how to describe it, the feeling. It’s just nice to be standing alongside so many other great artists, and so many that have come before me.” North-Vancouver based
Squamish Nation artist Xwalacktun (Rick Harry) adds the Polygon Award to his ever-growing accolades. BRENT RICHTER / NSN Klatle-Bhi and West Vancouver residing Xwalacktun were selected alongside Musqueam artist Brent Sparrow and emerging Victoria artist Shawna Kiesman for their commitment and contribution to First Nations Art. Now in its 17th year, the award applauds artists who have accumulated a body of work that honours Indigenous artistic
traditions, and have demonstrated a commitment to their art practice, so much so they are recognized within their communities. Klatle-Bhi’s artistic resume includes a totem pole for the 2010 Olympic Games, large-scale commissions for corporate offices across Canada, and exhibits at the likes of the Museum of Arts and Design in New York City and
the Burke Memorial Museum of Natural History in Seattle. Xwalacktun’s highlights comprise a 2022 honourary doctorate from Emily Carr University, the 2016 First Nations Art Award and a number of varied carving projects in Scotland. For both, the desire to educate on Indigenous design and traditions is what drives much of their work, and, while all winning artists have their own unique styles, Xwalacktun said collectively they come together as one, working towards the same mission. “If we think about stories, a lot of stories overlap. We use different imagery and tell the story differently, but the messages are all the same,” he said. Klatle-Bhi, who hopes to bring “more light into the world” with his artworks, said much of his success can be credited to the mentors and fellow artists who encouraged him to embark on a career in carving. “One time I was inspired by many, many artists, some of those guys that really paved the path for
GET in EARLY
us to be here today,” he said. “Now it feels like I’m in that position where perhaps my body of work, over the last 33 years, has inspired people to maybe pick up a knife, or pick up a drum, or go to a potlatch. Just awaken somebody somehow,” he said. For that next generation of artists, both Xwalacktun and Klatle-Bhi have a word of advice. “Continue on doing the work the best you can, and think about the ones that aren’t here yet, that example you can set” said Xwalacktun. “Don’t give up. If you feel it, just keep going,” adds Klatle-Bhi. “If you feel that passion, that fire in your heart and spirit for the artwork, don’t give up. And learn from every piece. Always ask for more teachings, always keep on learning, that’s something that I still apply to myself today.” Mina Kerr-Lazenby is the North Shore News’ Indigenous and civic affairs reporter. This reporting beat is made possible by the Local Journalism Initiative.
Buy your tickets and be there!
CUSTOM FITTING TAKES TIME!
Visit us at thedestination.ca for more about custom boot fitting
November 14th, 2023 Hyatt Regency Vancouver, 655 Burrard St. Featuring two of Canada’s most distinguished journalists Lisa LaFlamme Veteran journalist/anchor Gloria Macarenko Host, “On the Coast” CBC Radio st technology From the newe ssics... cla to proven
ON’S MODELS
SAVE ON LAST SEAS
By Custom Fitted
Us.
Book your boot fitting appointment now at thedestination.ca 267 Pemberton Ave. North Vancouver 604-984-7191
For tickets and more information scan QR code S U P P O R T I N G PA R T N E R S
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 |
2023 ENCORE GX
4.99
%
FOR UP TO
FINANCING
48 MONTHS
2023
SILVERADO 1500 CUSTOM
0.99
%
FINANCING
FOR UP TO
60 MONTHS
+
#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.
A15
A16 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com COMBAT CASUALTY CARE
North Vancouver veteran trains medics in Ukraine JANE SEYD
jseyd@nsnews.com
When Jared Reynolds served a tour of Afghanistan with the Canadian military in 2009-2010, one of his roles in a platoon providing security to supply convoys was a back-up level medic for casualties in the field.
VANCOUVER‘S NORTH SHORE CRAFT BEER WEEK NOV. 2 - 14 MULTIPLE LOCATIONS We’re ‘hoppy’ to say it’s once again time for Vancouver’s North Shore Craft Beer Week, a celebration of the very best and most innovative local craft beer! November 2nd – 14th, 2023, North Shore Craft Beer Week is serving up thirteen days of showcase events at local craft breweries, with a chaser of live music and food. For more info: craftbeerweek.ca
As a soldier trained in Tactical Combat Casualty Care, Reynolds was ready to help the medics in a pinch. Fast forward years later, and as a District of North Vancouver firefighter Reynolds is using those skills as an instructor for that kind of trauma care here on the North Shore – though these days it’s more likely to involve an accident on a mountain bike trail than a rocket explosion. Recently, however, Reynolds got to take his training back closer to a war zone – this time helping others provide care in Ukraine’s deadly conflict.
NERD NITE NORTH VAN: SCIENCE & SÉANCE THURSDAY, OCT. 26, 6 - 9 P.M. MONOVA: MUSEUM OF NORTH VANCOUVER Join us for a Halloween-themed Nerd Nite. Tickets include admission to the Museum’s Permanent and Feature Galleries, along with some entertainingly nerdy presentations and a costume contest! The night includes 3 unique speakers, a short intermission, as well as a chance to win some trivia prizes. For more info: northvanarts.ca Events listed here are supported by the North Shore News. Check out more listings on North Shore’s online event calendar: nsnews.com/local-events
KIDS FIRST
Art-making + fun for families
Saturday + Sunday, Nov 4 + 5
The Polygon Gallery 101 Carrie Cates Court Territories of the Squamish, Tsleil-Waututh, and Musqueam Nations
Photo: Alison Boulier
@polygongallery thepolygon.ca
Training medics in Ukraine Last month, Reynolds was one of six Canadian firefighters and paramedics, who are also military veterans, who went to Ukraine to train emergency responders there in combat casualty care. “I was looking at what’s happening in Ukraine and feeling like this was kind of the closest thing to World War Two in my lifetime, with a global power invading an independent country,” he said. “I was looking for an opportunity to help.” Reynolds discovered that a Canadian charity, Firefighter Aid Ukraine, had already sent instructors to Ukraine to teach the kind of casualty care he specializes in. Soon after, he contacted the co-ordinator of the program in Edmonton and went through a process of being checked out by the group. Last month, he flew to Poland and
crossed the border to western Ukraine, where he taught three tactical combat casualty care courses to about 100 students over a 10-day period. With airports closed in Ukraine, Reynolds and other members of his team first had to fly into Poland and cross the border on foot, carrying their supplies through multiple checkpoints. Once set up in Ukraine, the people Reynolds helped train included firefighters, emergency services personnel, and others attached to groups tasked with removing landmines. While some of those people might end up treating battlefield injuries, others will likely help civilians who are either being deliberately targeted or drawn into the conflict. Skills Reynolds taught included “how to use things like tourniquets, pressure dressings, how to do things like doing needle decompression,” he said. In Canada, it’s not often a firefighter would be called upon to perform some of that first aid, said Reynolds, but “in Ukraine, they don’t have the luxury of ‘We’ll just take you to a hospital.’ Maybe the hospital just got bombed,” he said. Skills can help save lives Skills taught in the Tactical Combat Casualty Care course are focused on saving lives in situations where deaths are preventable – if the injured get cared for in time. Compared to the wartime situation he saw in Afghanistan, those in the Ukraine are at a disadvantage when it comes to evacuating wounded people, said Reynolds. In Afghanistan, Canadian forces could usually bring in a helicopter if someone was Continued on A17
Centennial Theatre North Vancouver Friday, Nov 3 7:30 pm
tickets.centennialtheatre.com
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A17
Quick access to medical treatment essential in a conflict zone Continued from A16 injured and evacuate them quickly to a field hospital. In Ukraine, however, “Russia has so much weaponry they can use in the air, that’s not an option,” he said. “So, most of their patients are having to be evacuated with vehicles.” With a lot of transportation having to take place at night in Ukraine, “They might not get there for 24 hours,” he said. “It’s a big difference if a patient is in your care for two hours versus 20 hours.” Some of the newly trained casualty medics have been pushed into roles they never imagined being in, added Reynolds. “You’ll have a doctor who was working as an ophthalmologist. And now all of a sudden [they’re] a trauma doctor,” he said. “Because there’s just no one else.” The recent medic training isn’t the first time Reynolds has pitched in to help in Ukraine. Earlier projects shipped field hospital, medical supplies Earlier in the conflict, Reynolds was instrumental in getting a surplus NATO-grade field hospital that
had been sitting in storage in North Vancouver shipped over to Ukraine. Shipping of the 200 beds and other life-saving supplies to the front lines, a project dubbed “Operation Hawkeye,” was led by the Defend Ukraine Foundation (Canada). A portion of the $14,000 cost to ship the field hospital was covered by two North Van fire charities: District of North Vancouver Fire Fighters Charitable Society and IAFF 1183 Charitable. A second project involved Reynolds taking about 500 pounds of outdated medical gear that he’d found stashed in a West Vancouver firehall as far as Poland. “I started to kind of look for all these old caches, because this stuff gets replaced and doesn’t get destroyed. It just sits there until someone does something with it,” he said. A third project involved sending winter clothing gathered from the North Shore over to areas of Ukraine where power grids had been knocked out. This latest project, however, was the first time Reynolds entered the country. As a former soldier, it’s a conflict that weighs heavily on him.
The conflict in Ukraine has fallen out of the news “because it’s been going on for so long,” he said. “But I feel like Ukraine is fighting the rest of the world’s fight. And I’m disappointed in Canada and I’m disappointed in a lot of the Western countries for not doing more. “Everyone’s [saying], ‘It’s not my country. So it’s not really my problem.… Where does this end if Russia goes through Ukraine? Do they keep going?” When he fought in Afghanistan, “I had an end date,” said Reynolds. “And I flew to another country to represent Canada and fight in a war. But these people are fighting in their back yards. Their home was invaded. So it just feels different. It’s obviously personal.” Reynolds said there’s a need for more medical training, and volunteers are ready to go to Ukraine. But more money is needed to buy the medical supplies that get donated and to pay to get the supplies and trainers to Ukraine. Anyone interested can find more information at firefighteraidukraine. com.
Family Owned
Jared Reynolds (wearing cap) was among six Canadian veterans and first responders who recently flew to Ukraine to provide specialized medic training. JARED REYNOLDS
A18 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
N O W S E L L I N G / V I S I T T O D AY
AT HOME IN NATURE SINGLE-LEVEL COTTAGES IN SQUAMISH PRICED FROM $ 988,000 Nestled between Whistler and Vancouver in beautiful Squamish, this striking collection of cottages is designed for those who love spending time in nature. Plus, enjoy the convenience of a bike storage room with space for storing all your adventure gear.
OPEN 12 - 5 PM DAILY (except Fridays)
2060 Dowad Drive, Squamish highline@polyhomes.com 604.757.5550 polyhomes.com
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A19
CENTENNIAL THEATRE
Ocean Film Festival celebrates anniversary with Canadian debut MINA KERR-LAZENBY
MKerrLazenby@nsnews.com Local Journalism Initiative Reporter
Whales and dolphins and octopi, oh my!
After a whole decade of showcasing in theatres around the globe, the Ocean Film Festival, a cinematic celebration of the big blue, is set to make its Canadian debut. On the evening of Nov. 9 the festival will unleash a string of aquatic short films at North Vancouver’s Centennial Theatre, presenting an international tour of stories that honour marine life, divers, surfers and oceanographers. There is a once-in-a-lifetime surfing trip to a winter ravaged eastern Russia, an inside look into the world of Italian free diving, an adventure into the Arctic to document the polar region’s sea ice loss. One film dives into the intricacies of whale sounds, while another has one particularly endearing octopus as its protagonist.
Local waters get their turn in the spotlight too, with the festival’s concluding film focusing on Vancouver freedive instructor and swimmer Roberta Cenedese. Viewers are taken along Cenedese’s journey as she trains for one of the most challenging feats in action sports, an icy mile in the three-degree waters of the Pacific Northwest. “It’s surprising that they’ve taken so long to consider Canada as one of the hosting countries, because it’s the perfect fit,” said Alvaro Calderon, the operations director for Ocean Film Festival Canada. “We have such a large ocean-loving culture here.” While organizers could have selected anywhere in the country to host the festival’s launch, it was the North Shore, with its ocean-hugging location, close proximity to the mountains and outdoorsy denizens that made for the most fitting location, said Calderon. “The North Shore community is really outdoorsy. We thrive
The Ocean Film Festival will make its Canadian debut Nov. 9 at North Vancouver’s Centennial Theatre. OCEAN FILM FESTIVAL in nature here,” he said. “It just made a lot of sense. It was a perfect match, a no-brainer. If we are going to put this in a place, it’s got to be here on the North Shore.” The festival, which was created in Australia in 2012 and has gone on to showcase annually to eager audiences in 14 countries, is a true celebration of North Shore living. Its sponsors include the Capilano University Alumni
Association and North Vancouver shipping company Neptune Terminals and, tying in with the festival’s aim to inspire viewers to explore and enjoy the oceans while protecting and respecting it, it has also partnered with Ocean Wise to organize local beach clean ups. “There are so many people that want to help and make a difference, so many that truly care about the environment,”
said Calderon. “This is more of a movement than just a festival, a place for like-minded people to get together and celebrate the oceans and do their bit to help keep them thriving. It’s a special community.” Ocean Film Festival will be donating ticket sales to the Pacific Salmon Foundation and Seymour Salmonid Society, and there will even be a special contribution from North Point Brewing Company, with the local craft brewery offering a special edition west coast pale ale and craft lager to celebrate the event. The limited edition beverage will be debuted in-house at a launch party Oct. 25, gearing audiences up for the main cinematic event Nov. 9. To view trailers and book tickets, visit oceanfilmfestivalcanada.ca. Mina Kerr-Lazenby is the North Shore News’ Indigenous and civic affairs reporter. This reporting beat is made possible by the Local Journalism Initiative.
Free accessory with purchase! Mobile Hearing Clinic
Better Hearing for Less!
Call us to book your appointment at
State of the art technology
Free hearing evaluations
604-360-4079
Professional aftercare included
earstoyou.ca
We're local. EVERYWHERE.
A20 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
SALE ENDS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2023
WEEK 3 WINTER TRUCK & SUV
SCAN TO SHOP OUR BIGGEST TIRE SALE
ON/OFF ROAD TRUCK
SAVE
SAVE WITH INSTANT
$140 whenREBATE you buy 4
SAVE 25%
BLIZZAK DM-V2
WINTER EDGE HD
RIDGETREK
ALL-TERRAIN T/A K02
ROAD RATED 98.0^
ROAD RATED 94.8^
ROAD RATED 95.8^
ROAD RATED 95.7^
SAVE 25%
$70
PLUS GET $70 ONLINE REBATE when you buy 4
WINTER PASSENGER & CUV
SAVE 25%
SAVE WITH INSTANT
$140 whenREBATE you buy 4
SAVE WITH INSTANT
$150 whenREBATE you buy 4
WINTER EDGE II
WINTERTREK
BLIZZAK WS90
X-ICE SNOW
ROAD RATED 97.3^
ROAD RATED 93.6^
ROAD RATED 97.5^
ROAD RATED 94.1^
ALL SEASON TRUCK & SUV
ALL SEASON PASSENGER & CUV
SAVE WITH INSTANT
SAVE 25%
SAVE 25%
$120 whenREBATE you buy 4
SEASONAL TIRE CHANGEOVER SERVICE
PLUS BONUS ALIGNMENT CHECK available upon request
SAVE
PLUS GET $50
REBATE 25% ONLINE when you buy 4
DEFENDER LTX M/S
GRABBER HTS60
EVERTREK GT
HYDRA EDGE TOUR
ROAD RATED 99.2^
ROAD RATED 99.7^
ROAD RATED 95.5^
ROAD RATED 97.1^
DUE FOR AN OIL CHANGE? Book an oil change while your new tires are being installed.
INCLUDES: • Tire changeover • Installing tires on rims • Balancing
Starting at
APPOINTMENTS ARE RECOMMENDED, BUT NOT NECESSARY Most vehicles, Canadian Tire service coupons/offers cannot be redeemed at Pit Stop or any Canadian Tire Petroleum locations. See in store for details.
SAVE 25%
$64.99
+taxes
*Pricing varies per vehicle; additional fees may apply.
1350 Main Street, North Vancouver 604-982-9102 • www.canadiantire.ca PROUDLY CANADIAN... LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED
FLUID SERVICE
Preventative maintenance will help your vehicle last longer.
BENEFITS OF FLUSHES: WE OFFER: ✓ Coolant Flush Maximize performance ✓ Power Steering Flush Condition internal components ✓ Brake Fluid Flush Prevent dirt and debris build-up ✓ Transmission Flush ... and more WE SERVICE ALL MAKES AND MODELS! Appointments are recommended, but not necessary
CANADA‘S GARAGE
Book your auto service online! Schedule appointments for seasonal tire changeovers, oil changes, and other services online with experts from Canada‘s Garage.
SCAN HERE TO BOOK
TEXT AUTO to 51922 to get offers and tips from us right to your phone! *See in-store for more details and restrictions.
on qualifying tires and auto
EQUAL PAYMENTS service purchases totalling $100 pre-tax or more. NO INTEREST • NO FEE† **†See store for details. Balancing, for 24 months** sales tax, and eco fees are extra.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 |
A21
A22 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
ADVERTISING FEATURE
Scary Mummies with devilish dipping sauce This spooky twist on pigs in a blanket is fun to eat and even easier to make. START TO FINISH: 30 MINUTES SERVINGS: 20 INGREDIENTS Mummies • 12-ounce (340-gram) package of crescent roll dough • 10 hot dogs Dipping sauce • 1/2 cup mayonnaise • 2 tablespoons maple syrup • 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard • Salt and pepper to taste • Red food colouring (optional)
Here are some activities for kids to help them have a spooktacularly fun Hallowe’en
5. Wrap the strips around each hot dog, leaving a portion unwrapped near the end to make the “face.” Place the dough covered hot dogs on the baking sheet. 6. Bake for 15 minutes or until the dough is golden brown. 7. While the hot dogs are baking, in a bowl combine all the dipping sauce ingredients. 8. Let the mummies cool for 5 to 10 minutes and then serve with the sauce. Enjoy!
DIRECTIONS 1. Preheat the oven to 350° F (175° C). 2. Cover a baking sheet with parchment paper. 3. Cut the hot dogs in half to make two shorter pieces (or you can keep them whole and make ten bigger mummies). Give your 4. Unroll crescent roll dough and mummies eyes by using cream cheese cut it into strips that are about and black peppercorns. one centimetre wide.
THIS ACTIVITY PAGE HAS BEEN GENEROUSLY SUPPORTED BY THE BUSINESS BELOW.
For more info, visit parkroyal.ca or scan the QR code
PARK ROYAL
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 |
A23
ADVERTISING FEATURE
Use your markers, pencils or crayons to get these monsters ready for Halloween.
THIS ACTIVITY PAGE HAS BEEN GENEROUSLY SUPPORTED BY THE BUSINESS BELOW.
TO ALL OUR STUDENTS! istock
A message from the North and West Vancouver Teachers’ Associations
A24 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
Pumpkin spice and everything nice.
Wishing our clients and community a great Halloween and a fantastic fall.
How can we help you?
northshorelaw.com 604.980.8571
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A25
Ambleside local area plan due for update Continued from A5 address the “missing middle.” Hawkins said by changing the OCP, council isn’t rezoning those properties or committing to redevelopment of any particular site. “It does send a signal that these types of housing are desired,” he said. Coun. Peter Lambur said he had some concerns about wording in parts of the plan, such as those which stipulate a range of building heights, like “six to eight storeys.” Gambioli said she had concerns that the public doesn’t understand the plan. “It’s very complicated,” she said. “My impression from what I hear is people don’t understand what this is.” Discussion on the rezoning of the apartment properties and changes to the official community plan in the Ambleside local area plan first came to council for discussion in September. Council decided to seek a legal opinion after former West Vancouver Chamber of Commerce Argyle’s new artificial turf field is now open and can be booked by community groups on evenings and weekends. DISTRICT OF NORTH VANCOUVER
DNV funds turf field
Continued from A4 construction. While many young athletes had hoped work on the new Argyle field would get underway as a high priority soon after the old school was demolished, further delays pushed construction further down the road. The budget for the new school did not include funds for an artificial turf field, so the District of North Vancouver stepped in to fund the field as a joint-use facility. The field was originally budgeted for $3.5 million in 2019, which ballooned to a final budget of $5.3 million this year, according to the District of North Vancouver. Actual costs of the field are yet to be finalized. Now that the field is ready, local sports groups can book it through the North Vancouver Recreation Commission after 5:30 p.m. on school days and all day on weekends. During the week, youth community sports organizations are given priority for the field and amenities until 8 p.m., once Argyle sports activities are done at 5:30 p.m. The field is also available for local adult sports organizations till 11 p.m.
president Maggie Pappas said Mayor Mark Sager and Coun. Christine Cassidy could be in a conflict of interest over property they own in the area. Sager has a commercial property at the corner of 15th Street and Marine, and Cassidy has a property on the 2000 block of Fulton Avenue. According to the Community Charter, locally elected officials with a financial interest in a matter that will be discussed or voted on at municipal council must declare those interests and not participate in discussion, vote or exercise influence on the matter. On Monday night, Sager said council has received the legal opinion which stated there is no conflict of interest in either member of council participating in discussion on the local area plan in general. When it comes to more detailed discussion of the commercial area in the plan, Sager said he will abstain from taking part because “I do own property on the corner.”
IN ES K IC C R LO 3 P 2 Honour your family’s legacy when you plan ahead. 20
Fall Savings Event 12% off Off 18%
up to select cemetery property*
+
0% interest for 60 72 months****
Act now to secure these savings. Call 604-328-6079.
Boal Chapel & MEMORIAL GARDENS 1505 Lillooet Rd. | North Vancouver, BC V7J 2J1
FirstMemorialNorthVancouver.com
*Limited-time discounts valid only for select cemetery property through October 29, 2023. Applies to new pre-need purchases only. Terms and conditions apply. See an associate for details. | **0% interest-free financing for 60 72 months valid only with 10% down payment. Offer expires October 29, 2023. Terms and conditions apply. See an associate for eligibility details. A division of Service Corporation International (Canada) ULC.
A26 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
Our Lions Gate Hospital Foundation
Board of Directors for 2023-2024 Executive Committee
Curt Bernardi Chair
Sandra Enticknap Past Chair
Bruce Chan Co-Vice Chair
President & CEO
Farah Sayani Co-Vice Chair
Greg Gutmanis Treasurer
Peter Buckley Secretary
Judy Savage CFRE
Directors at Large
Adil Ahamed
Thank you and welcome to our new Board of Directors who give their time and expertise to help improve health care in our community. Honorary Directors
Dr. Brighid Cassidy
Sally Dennis
Selina Ladak
Lee Ann Lambert
Darlene MacKinnon
Joan Proudfoot
Morna Sileika
Yang Wang
Darren Yada
John Zaplatynsky
Alex Messina
Heather Buckley Dr. Allan Burgmann Nancy Burke Mary Downie Don Foster Paul Hamilton Kenneth G. Hanna Mark Hannah Coryn Hemsley Alan Holton Joanne Houssian
Barbara Inglis Gabrielle Loren Bob McGill Maria Morellato Clark Quintin Ken Rekrutiak Lorraine Rinfret Yvonne Schmidt Michael R. Smith Ross Southam Grant Spitz
Mark Stevens Judy Strongman Jamie Switzer Carmen Thériault Bob Wilds Fred Yada
Please donate today 604.984.5785 lghfoundation.com
Every day at our hospital, hundreds of patients receive better care because donors come together to make a difference. With your help, everyone benefits from new medical equipment and technology, the most up-to-date therapeutic care, new facilities and staff who have access to the best medical tools. The state-of-the-art Paul Myers Tower, (pictured left) is currently under construction and will provide life-changing care on the North Shore from early 2025.
The development of the new medical and surgical centre would not be possible without the generosity of donors from across the North Shore. You have the power to give the gift of life, the gift of time and the gift of great care. You can support the work of Lions Gate Hospital Foundation by making a donation today.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A27
NORTH VANCOUVER COURT
No more jail for man who struck stranger with metal pipe BRENT RICHTER
brichter@nsnews.com
A man who struck a stranger on the head with a metal pipe in North Vancouver will not face any further jail time.
James Henry Reddemann, 44, was sentenced in North Vancouver Provincial Court Oct. 18 to time already served in jail, plus two years on probation. Just after midnight on Aug. 31, 2022, Reddemann approached two men sitting at a bus stop on the 700 block of Marine Drive and asked them for the time. Soon after, he came back with a metal pipe and struck one of the men, Terry Carmichael, on the head. Reddemann took Carmichael’s tool belt and the pizza he was eating and ran off. He was arrested a short time later. “Mr. Carmichael was taken to hospital. He said that he did not know Mr. Reddemann, that he remembered being struck with an object and landing on the floor and that was it,” Judge Lyndsay Smith noted in her decision. Reddemann was initially charged with armed robbery but later pleaded guilty to the lesser offence of assault with a weapon. When it came time for sentencing, the Crown was not able to track Carmichael down and he was not able to give a victim impact statement for the court, but Smith noted the aggravating circumstances of the attack. “The assault was unprovoked. It was a blow to the head. It caused significant harm to the victim in that an open wound was sustained on his head,” she said. Reddemann has a long criminal history dating back to 2007, including convictions for robbery, breaking and entering, uttering threats, assaults, and sexual assaults with a weapon. His last conviction was for breaching his probation conditions in October 2014. When Reddemann’s sentencing began in April, the Crown sought a jail sentence of nine to 12 months, plus a period of probation, but by that time he’d already spent 183 days in custody. Canadian courts generally credit every day in custody prior to a conviction as 1.5 days when it comes to sentencing, meaning the Crown was not seeking any further time in jail. A pre-sentence report indicated Reddemann had “little insight” into the offence, Smith said, although in court, he did indicate his remorse and accepted responsibility, she noted. Mitigating circumstances of the offence were that Reddemann pleaded guilty, that he’d gone a “relatively long time” since his last conviction and that he hadn’t had any run-ins with the law since he was released on bail in the spring. Reddemann is in the last stages of certification to become a health and safety officer, Smith noted. Smith agreed to the Crown’s submission that Reddemann face another two years of probation, which will include completing any anger management and addictions counselling programs directed by his probation officer. “You know your demons come from your addiction. If you can grab on with both hands and deal with that, it looks to me like you’ve got a good life ahead of you,” she said. “So, good luck.”
Help Brighten the Holidays! Sign up today to sponsor a North Shore family or individual this season. Find sponsor forms and client applications at familyservices.bc.ca, or scan the QR code. Need support for the holidays? We are here to help. Applications are available now. Founding Sponsor
NOTICE OF FIREWORK BAN Like many other jurisdictions, the Squamish Nation has prohibited the sale, purchase, and discharge of fireworks at all times on reserve land.
A28 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A29
Imagine your home, totally organized! Custom Closets, Garage Cabinets, Home Offices and more!
40% Off
Plus
Free Installation A caver rappels beside an underground waterfall. COURTESY OF
PLUS TAKE
Terms Conditions: 40% off off any order order ooff $1000 Terms and and Conditions: $ 1000 orormore moreoror30% 30%off off any any order order oo f $$700-$1000 700-$1000ono nany any complete custom closet, garage, or home complete custom closet, garage, or home officeoffice unit. unit. Take an additional 15% off on any complete Take an additional 15% off on complete system system order. order. Not Not valid valid with with any any other other offer. offer. Free Free installation with any complete unit order of installation with any complete unit order of$850 $850oror more. With incoming order, at time of purchase more. With incoming order, at time of purchase only. oOffer not valid in all regions. Expires 10/31/23./23.
Filming in caves presents extreme challenges
SPECIAL FINANCING SPECIAL FINANCING FOR 12 MONTHS! FOR 6 MONTHS!
With Withapproved approvedcredit. credit.Call Callororask askyour yourDesigner Designerforfordetails. details. Not Notavailable availableininallallareas. areas.
2023 © All Rights Reserved. Closets by Design, Inc.
Continued from A13 tunnel systems will create the longest-known cave in the country. The idea for the film was pitched to Rustemeyer by documentary filmmaker and director Francois-Xavier De Ruydts, who has been named among the country’s top explorers by the Canadian Geographic Society. “We just finished This Mountain Life, which was about people who love B.C. mountains and about the peaks of B.C. mountains,” Rustemeyer said. “This was an opportunity to go underground to the depths of B.C. mountains.” The producer emphasized the extreme technical challenges involved in capturing the footage. The two-camera film crews needed to have technical climbing skills, while navigating damp, dark, 4 C conditions sometimes for a week straight. “It’s so easy to forget when you’re watching this film, because you get so immersed in the story, that there was a camera person there too,” she said. “So I always keep that in the back of my head, that they went to great lengths to capture this footage. And I think they did a beautiful job.” After making the film, one thing that stood out to Rustemeyer is a caver’s optimism – the ability to always see a light at the end of the tunnel. “Whatever their goal is, whether it’s to make a connection or go deeper, they truly believe every trip that they are going to do it,” she said. “Ironically, success for caving is you reach a dead end.”
15% Off
Terms and Conditions: 40% off any order of $1000 or more or 30% off AN ofEXTRA any order $700-$1000 on any complete custom closet, garage, or
SUBTERRANEAN FILM
Call for a free in home design consultation and estimate
604-373-7615
NSN
www.closetsbydesign.com
Locally Owned and Operated Licensed and Insured
Comfort is more than a feeling – it’s a promise No matter how cold it is outside… you can count on a quality built, super efficient natural gas York Furnace and Heat Pump to keep you warm and toasty inside. Affordable, quiet, and reliable - you can count on York to provide consistent comfort throughout your home. OVER $12,000 IN REBATES AVAILABLE with approved systems
604-925-1341 www.progas.ca HEATING • GAS FITTING AIR CONDITIONING
A30 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
Vancouver’s North Shore presents
Craft Beer Week November 2-14, 2023 Win an amazing weekend getaway package that includes a one-night stay at the Seaside Hotel Vancouver! SCAN BELOW TO ENTER!
craftbeerweek.ca
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A31
GOING FOR GOLD
North Shore sends fifteen athletes to Pan Am Games ANDY PREST
aprest@nsnews.com
The North Shore is well represented at the Pan Am Games this year, with 15 athletes and two coaches with ties to North or West Vancouver taking part in the event running Oct. 20 to Nov. 5 in Santiago, Chile.
The North Shore core is bolstered by half a dozen field hockey players who will be going for gold with the men’s and women’s national teams. Climbers Sean McColl and Alannah Yip, who both represented Canada in 2021 in Tokyo where their sport made its Olympic debut, will be aiming to climb to the top again in Santiago. The list also includes a familiar name in Mike Darbyshire, who will be competing in stand up paddleboarding. Darbyshire is well known in North Van as the operations manager at Deep Cove Kayak. Wakeboarder Hunter Smith is the youngest North Shore athlete at age 21, while equestrian show jumper Tiffany Foster is the oldest at age 39. Here are all of the North Shore athletes and coaches who made the trip to Chile:
When it’s hard to talk about what’s on your mind. Lifelong family friends Alannah Yip and Sean McColl of North Van were the first two Canadians ever to compete in sport climbing in the Olympic Games. They’ll both be going for gold again at the 2023 Pan Am Games running Oct. 20Nov. 5 in Santiago, Chile. CHRISTOPHER MORRIS/TEAM CANADA Athletes • Hunter Smith, North Vancouver, wakeboarding • Gaelan Patterson, North Vancouver, water polo • Raben Dommann, North Vancouver, swimming • Mike Darbyshire, North Vancouver, stand up paddleboarding • Alannah Yip, North Vancouver, sport climbing • Sean McColl, North Vancouver, sport climbing • Ethan McTavish, North Vancouver, field hockey • Taylor Curran, North Vancouver, field hockey • Findlay Boothroyd, West Vancouver, field hockey
• Chloe Walton, North Vancouver, field hockey • Audrey Sawers, North Vancouver, field hockey • Karli Johansen, North Vancouver, field hockey • Elias Ergas, North Vancouver, rugby sevens • Tiffany Foster, North Vancouver, equestrian • James Dergousoff, North Vancouver, swimming
It’s okay to ask for help. Visit vch.ca/onyourmind
70% Less Than CABINET Replacing or REFINISHING Refacing! UP TO
CELEBRATING 30 YEARS REFINISHING CABINETS!
We specialize in Protecting Your Investment!
Coaches • Geoff Matthews, North Vancouver, assistant coach, men’s field hockey • Roberto Brogin, North Vancouver, coach and team leader, tennis
FREE DEMOS FREE ESTIMATES NO TOXIC CHEMICALS NO DUST! LOO GREAKS T!
GOT GREASE? GOT PEELING?
TRACEY BOOTH - FOUNDER
Before
After
KITCHEN CABINETS DONE IN 1 TO 2 DAYS!
Love your cabinets, but not how they’re worn? Gleam Guard offers a simple, cost-effective solution. We also refresh cabinets which costs less than refinishing.
Text cabinet pictures to 1-604-218-7470 or call.
www.gleamguardcabinetrefinishing.ca
A32 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
OUT WITH A BANG
West Vancouver bans private fireworks in municipality JANE SEYD
jseyd@nsnews.com
The big bang of Halloween fireworks has officially fizzled in West Vancouver.
On Monday, Oct. 16, West Vancouver council voted to ban the sale and private use of fireworks in the municipality, bringing it in line with most other Metro Vancouver communities. Up until now, members of the public in West Vancouver could apply for a permit to discharge fireworks from Oct. 24 to 28 and on Oct. 31 for a $5 fee. But increasingly, politicians and fire officials have decided allowing Roman candles and screechers to be set off is more trouble than it’s worth. According to the fire department, in the weeks leading up to and following Halloween, many public complaints are typically received, including ones for noise, concerns that gunshots have been fired, fireworks causing anxiety to household pets, environmental pollution and litter left on neighbouring properties. In 2022, there were 29 West Vancouver Police Department files involving fireworks and there have been six so far in 2023,
Here’s a selection of fireworks seized by the RCMP in previous years’ Halloween rambunctiousness. NORTH VANCOUVER RCMP according to a report by Assistant Fire Chief Jeremy Calder. The majority took place at schools, in parks or on roads, and five resulted in property damage. Ten of the complaints were from fireworks displays at private properties. In response to questions from Coun. Christine Cassidy Monday night, Calder described some of the problems that have been caused by fireworks. “We’ve had portapotties burn,” he said. “We’ve had fires set against the school with propane bottles and fireworks. We’ve had
people lighting fireworks off on the roof that have ignited the roof on fire.” In banning private fireworks, “I believe the message is that we’re not condoning something that’s dangerous, not only for the individual using fireworks but also for our community,” he said. One member of the public, Therese Reinsch, called in to council to point out the BC SPCA has long pointed out the harm done to both domestic pets and wild animals by fireworks. “The noise from exploding fireworks can be terrifying to pets,” she said. Animals can injure themselves in an attempt to get away from the noise, and reports of lost pets typically go up whenever there are fireworks, she said. Three people called in asking council not to ban fireworks – all of whom were involved in businesses selling fireworks. Dayle George, owner of Big Rig Fireworks on the Tsleil-Waututh Nation in North Vancouver, emphasized the “tradition of celebrating with fireworks.” Aleem Kanji, of the Canadian National Fireworks Association, told council people will continue to buy fireworks from underground sources or online.
He said many Asian and South Asian cultural festivals involve the “celebration of light over darkness,” and that fireworks have long been a part of that. Suggesting disco balls or pinatas as a substitute is “insulting” and “represents a very clear microaggression and an unconscious bias to the thousands of South Asians and Asians that observe Diwali and Lunar New Year in the city,” he said. He added candles and stoves cause more damage than fireworks, but “there’s no provision to ban candles or stoves in the city.” Coun. Nora Gambioli said many people have requested a ban on fireworks over the years, and since the proposed ban went public this year “we have not, to my knowledge, had a single piece of correspondence related to supporting fireworks.” Under the proposed bylaw, fines for breaking the rules will range from $300 to $500. Municipalities that still allow fireworks include Bowen Island and the villages of Lions Bay, Anmore and Belcarra. Fireworks are still allowed in both the District of North Vancouver and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh Nation), although both are said to be considering a ban.
Boost your savings with confidence For a limited time earn
6.1%
Deposits are 100% guaranteed† RRSP, RRIF, RESP, TFSA and FHSA eligible
on 1-year non-redeemable term deposits
*
Visit BlueShoreFinancial.com or call us today at 604.982.8000 *Rate subject to change. Eligible on new non-redeemable term deposits. Terms and conditions apply. †Deposits are 100% guaranteed by the Credit Union Deposit Insurance Corporation of British Columbia (CUDIC). ©BlueShore Financial Credit Union
Edgemont Village Branch #101 – 3053 Edgemont Blvd North Vancouver
Lonsdale Branch
1250 Lonsdale Avenue North Vancouver
Lynn Valley Branch
#149 – 1199 Lynn Valley Road North Vancouver
Park Royal Branch 815 Main Street West Vancouver
Parkgate Branch
3680 Mt Seymour Parkway North Vancouver
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A33
Second supportive housing project opens on Lower Capilano Road Continued from A1 That’s when the province began to rent hotel rooms in a few communities to help provide more space for people who would otherwise be living in crowded emergency shelters or not have anywhere to isolate when they became ill. Later the project changed from an offshoot of the shelter to a supportive housing model, where tenants recommended by agencies that work with people experiencing homelessness are provided long-term housing along with meals and other programs. The housing project began It’s going to be with 21 rooms, which was later hard work to expanded to 30 rooms, then make something eventually to all 61 rooms at like this work, the site. The operator of the no matter where site also changed, from the Lookout Housing and Health it is. Society, which also operates MIKE WALKER, LU’MA the emergency housing shelter NATIVE HOUSING SOCIETY on Second Street in North Vancouver, to the Lu’ma Native Housing Society, which operates six supportive housing sites across Metro Vancouver. Fifteen of the rooms at the site are reserved for Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation) members. BC Housing has been paying $1.5 million annually towards the operating costs of the supportive housing, on top of the lease. The initial term of the lease is up next month and is expected to be renewed. Neighbours question if enough support in place But in the interim, Kirkpatrick said she’s heard from more than 40 neighbours in condo towers and along Marine Drive concerned about open drug use and an increase in vandalism in nearby areas. “They are finding drug paraphernalia,” she said. The site wasn’t built for the purpose it’s being used for, she added, leading to a lack of security for residents and there are fears people who live at the site are being preyed on by drug dealers or others. “You don’t even know who the people in the parking lot are,” she said. “The building itself is dilapidated and there are shopping carts all over the street.” Kirkpatrick said before the lease for the site is extended, she’d like reassurance that enough supportive services are being provided. In a letter to Ravi Kahlon, Minister of Housing, in June, Kirkpatrick wrote the most common concern she hears about from neighbours is “the lack of clarity and accountability from your ministry about this project, and a lack of communication with neighbourhood residents.”
“At what point do you actually have a conversation with the community?” she asked. Kirkpatrick said she hasn’t got a reply. Meanwhile, she said issues like those being reported at the Travelodge could make others reluctant to see supportive housing in their neighbourhoods. “You are going to get more and more pushback,” she said. “It does cause a problem.”
Staff on site around the clock According to BC Housing, there are currently 55 tenants living at the Travelodge. Some of those people previously lived at a temporary hotel site in Vancouver operated by Lu’ma during the pandemic. Lu’ma staff are on site around the clock, said Walker, including five or six staff members during the day and at least two overnight. “There’s very good supervision of the site,” he said, including hourly ‘walkarounds’ and a procedure involving wellness checks on residents. All residents must agree to participate in programs, he said, but aren’t required to be drug and alcohol free. “It’s not a sobriety-based program,” he said. Walker said police and Squamish Nation peacekeepers are involved in any law enforcement issues but, in some cases, “neighbour concerns are not about the law,” he said. “If people don’t like what they see, that’s different.” Walker said Lu’ma is working diligently to make the project work with the neighbourhood. The Marine Drive site is no different than those operated by Lu’ma in other communities, he said.
“Have they achieved perfection? No. Will they achieve perfection? Likely not,” he said. “It’s going to be hard work to make something like this work, no matter where it is.” Walker said the hope is residents in the temporary site will be able to move to the Keith Road supportive housing project in North Vancouver once it’s built. Second supportive housing project opened Bowinn Ma, NDP MLA for the neighbouring North Vancouver Lonsdale riding, said there’s a significant need for housing on the North Shore, and the project has provided immediate housing while more permanent housing is being developed. In September, the Ministry of Housing announced plans to build a 65-unit, six-storey building on the northeast corner of Keith Road and Mountain Highway, which will also be operated by the Lu’ma Native Housing Society. Five of the units will be for people requiring complex care, supported by Vancouver Coastal Health. BC Housing also provides approximately $1.31 million to Hiy’am’ ta Sḵwxwú7mesh Housing Society for the operation of Estítkw Place, a 55-unit supportive housing at 239 Lower Capilano Road, about a block away from the Travelodge, which opened this fall on Squamish Nation land behind the International Plaza. The project also provides housing and supportive programs to those experiencing or at-risk-of homelessness, and those with mental health or substance use problems. According to BC Housing, there has been a delay in having tenants move into Estítkw Place, so there are currently just four tenants living in those units.
Want to make a difference in your community?
Join a City Committee!
Volunteering is a rewarding way for City residents to become involved and contribute to important issues in our community. The City is recruiting committee members for: » Advisory Planning Commission (3) » Board of Variance (2) » Heritage Advisory Commission (5) » Integrated Transportation Committee (4) » North Vancouver City Library Board (6) » Social Planning Advisory Committee (2)
Online application deadline is Friday, November 17, 2023 at noon. Applications are accepted throughout the year and retained on file for one year. Applicants must be City residents. Questions? Visit cnv.org/Committees or email committees@cnv.org 141 WEST 14TH STREET / NORTH VANCOUVER / BC / V7M 1H9 T 604 985 7761 / F 604 985 9417 / CNV.ORG
A34 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
HAUNTED HOUSES
We’ve got your spooky schedule covered with our Halloween map MINA KERR-LAZENBY
MKerrLazenby@nsnews.com Local Journalism Initiative Reporter
So, you’ve got a house decked out to the nines with terrifying Halloween decor and you’re ready to scare the bejesus out of anyone who dares visit … the only problem is, nobody knows about your blood-curdling creative venture.
Sound familiar? Well, not to fear, because we’re bringing back our annual haunted house map – a detailing of the most frightful homes here on the North Shore – and there’s plenty of room for newcomers. Returning for another year is the annual walk-through haunted house at 1336 West 15th St., between Pemberton and Phillip Avenues in North Vancouver’s Norgate neighbourhood. Scare-meister Christopher Smith, the brains behind the operation, promises this year’s iteration is even bigger and better than that of previous years. He remains tight-lipped on the finer details but assures that it’s going to make for one “very electrifying
experience,” with a longer walkthrough, extra jump scares and even more high-energy special effects. The house runs from Oct. 27-31 from 7 p.m. until 10 p.m., with a live band set to perform on Oct. 28. Admission is free, however minimum donations of $5 per person are encouraged – with all donations set to go towards the West Vancouver SPCA. “We raised $5,000 for the West Vancouver SPCA last year, and we’re going to try and double that this year,” he said. Homes everywhere from Horseshoe Bay to Deep Cove will be getting in on the spooky action, with annual family friendly events like the Great Grand Boulevard Walk and the Capilano Suspension Bridge’s Canyon Frights set to make their return. Hoping to add your own abode to the listings? Simply email the North Shore News team at editor@nsnews. com with your address and images of your scary fit-out and we’ll add it to the interactive map, found online by searching for “Haunted house map” at nsnews.com.
Avid haunted house decorator Christopher Smith, creator of this frightful sight last year, says he has returned with an even bigger Halloween setup for 2023. CHRISTOPHER SMITH
Find your new home with ease.
View featured real estate listings on the North Shore. Visit: nsnews.com/OpenHouse
BROUGHT TO YOU BY BROUGHT TO YOU BY
POWERED POWERED BYBY
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A35
URBAN DESIGN
Squamish Nation selects planning partners for 350-acre development
MINA KERR-LAZENBY
MKerrLazenby@nsnews.com Local Journalism Initiative Reporter
The Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation) is moving full steam ahead with its project to redevelop large swathes of reserve land, with two multidisciplinary design and urban planning teams now selected to take on development plans.
Earlier this year, the Nation announced it would be developing 350 acres of its reserve land with a focus on two North Shore locations: the Marine Drive area of Xwmélch’sten Capilano I.R. No. 5 near Capilano Road and the Ch’ich’élx̱wí7 ḵw Seymour Indian Reserve No. 2 near Ironworkers Memorial Second Narrows Crossing. Development is also penned for the Sunshine Coast at the Ch’ ḵw’elhp Indian Reserve No. 26, and at the Stá7mes Indian Reserve No. 24 in the District of Squamish. For the North Van locations the Nation has secured Perkins & Will Architects and Liveable City Planning, with subcontractors PWL Partnership Landscape Architects, Cory Douglas Modern Formline Design, Ginger Gosnell-Myers Consulting, and Bunt
& Associates Transportation Engineering. Development at the Sea to Sky and Sunshine Coast sites will be by HCMA Architecture & Design, with the aid of Nation members at the Sky Spirit Studio, and Urbanics Consultants Limited. “These teams were selected by Nation and Nch’ḵay̓ staff based on their understanding of Sḵwx̱wú7mesh worldviews, proposed collaborative design processes and understanding of market and industry opportunities,” said Mindy Wight, CEO of Nch’ḵay̓ Development Corporation, which is the economic development arm of the Squamish Nation. Earlier this year the Nation issued an expression of interest for development firms who would maximize both the potential financial value of the area and the benefit to the community, all while keeping with Squamish values, culture and worldview. The development itself will be a mix of residential and industrial, with a focus on bringing together the community through a number of amenities like elder centres, health care clinics, healing centres, community centres, schools and public parks.
DENTISTRY on BELLEVUE CALL US: 604 922 5711
FATHER’S DAY SALE MONTH SALE MONTH END END SALE
50
up to
CASH FOR GOLD
% OFF
GOLD AND DIAMOND JEWELLERY
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25 TH TO SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29 TH • 9ct, 10kt, 14kt, 18kt, 19kt WHITE & YELLOW GOLD JEWELLERY • 14kt GOLD MEN’S DIAMOND RINGS, CHAINS, BRACELETS, EARRINGS & PENDANTS • 14kt-19+kt GOLD LADIES LARGE DIAMOND RINGS, CHAINS, BRACELETS, EARRINGS & PENDANTS
First Nations Aboriginal Art
50% OFF
North Shore Pawn Shop
604-990-8214 140-B Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver www.northshorepawnshop.ca
BUY SELL LOAN - GOLD DIAMOND JEWELLERY
IN PARNTERSHIP WITH
40+ VENDORS | ALL INCLUSIVE TICKET
DentistryonBellevue.com | info@dentistryonbellevue.com
ARTISAN FOOD & BEVERAGE FESTIVAL
New Patients Welcome! Diagnostics
Veneers
Extractions
Carriers Control
Crowns
Partial and
Dental Cleaning
Bridges
Teeth Whitening
Root Canals
1507 Bellevue Ave West Vancouver, V7V 1A6
Full Dentures Emergencies @dentistryonbellevue
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4TH AT THE PIPE SHOP
A36 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
APPLY NOW
New: Applicants age 55+ welcome to apply.
Below market rental housing for independent seniors. One bedroom & studio suites in North and West Vancouver.
For more info call 604-926-0102 or see our website kiwanisnorthshorehousing.org
NORTH SHORE NEWS
2023
Quality Meats & Time For Comfort Foods! Made in-house meat pies and sausages (over 30 varieties) Fresh Roasts: Beef, Pork or Lamb, easily cut to order Imported UK Sweets and Treats
Grand Blvd W
Grand Blvd E
The British Butcher
✖
Queensbury Ave
Keith Rd
Minutes East of Lonsdale Ave Easy Parking Regular Hours Mon to Sat 10am-6pm Sunday 11am-5pm
703 Queensbury Avenue, North Vancouver 604-985-2444
Handsworth students and Stash Project organizers (front left to right) Parsa Douraghinejad, Kimiya Anjam and August Gadsby Portal team up with fellow students to raise money by selling donuts outside Whole Foods at Park Royal. The Stash Project fills backpacks with essentials for people experiencing homelessness. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN
STASH PROJECT
High school charity fills backpacks for people in need NICK LABA
nlaba@nsnews.com
Deodorant, soap, toothpaste – many of us take for granted the so-called necessities that help us lead dignified lives in society.
These are among the items found in backpacks filled by Stash Project, a nonprofit run by students at Ecole Handsworth Secondary in North Vancouver. Student volunteers were set to gather on Friday and Saturday (Oct. 20-21), at six locations across the North Shore and downtown Vancouver, selling Krispy Kreme doughnuts with all profits going toward helping people experiencing homelessness. But the planned fundraising cut short to a single day, as all 400 boxes of doughnuts sold out Friday. At $15 a box, nearly $7,000 was raised, according to student organizer August Gadsby Portal. Much of the cash will go directly to making the stuffed backpacks, which are handed directly to unhoused individuals, some locally but primarily in the Downtown Eastside. Portal, a Grade 12 student, says handing out the backpacks has allowed him to learn stories of people on the receiving end. “We talked a little bit and learned what they had to say, what they had to tell us about their situation, which I found very insightful,” he said. “It made us feel better because it gave us a bit of a connection. And they really appreciated it.” Portal got involved in the initiative last year, when Stash Project – a registered charity – was launched by Handsworth
seniors. This year, he’s taken more of a leadership role, alongside fellow students Parsa Douraghinejad and Kimiya Anjam. The idea behind stuffing the backpacks with essential items like hygiene products, Portal said, is to give marginalized individuals things they might not otherwise prioritize, but can boost self esteem. “They have other priorities, probably food and other stuff like that. So they’re not looking to purchase these things,” He said. By handing out essentials, “you can give them a bit more of a sense of dignity.” Many other people walking by don’t even acknowledge people experiencing homelessness, Portal said. “They kind of just pretend they’re not there,” he said. “So I feel like this gives them more of a connection to us as people and helps them not feel as invisible, like they’re appreciated as people and valued instead of just forgotten about.” A homelessness count report released earlier this month showed a sharp spike in homelessness across the Lower Mainland over the past three years. On the North Shore, the number of people experiencing homelessness rose nearly 40 per cent. This trend is “unacceptable,” Portal said, adding that there should be more support systems for mental health as well as additional financial supports. “It’s not something that we tackle in a day or even a year. So I think if we make those gradual steps towards solving this together, as a city and not just a couple of people … I think that’s probably a good way to start.”
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A37
CHARITY CELEBRATION
Harvest Project holds 30th anniversary open house
DUDLEY RD
ARLINGTO N CRES
BE LM ON TA VE
RIDGEWOOD DR
NE
DR
VD BL
DR
SCENTVIE CRE W
I DB O O
NT
T KE AR M
BROOKRID DR G E
W
O EM
POWERED BY
W NE
nsnews.com/bizwire
G ED
Scan QR code, or visit
RLEY CRES VE BE
k SITE
DR
E
HIG HL AN DB LV D
D AL ER EM
GLENORA AV
KENNED YA VE
W QUEENS RD
D DR
SU B
COLW OO
Introducing the Business Wire. Access top business news online anytime.
G TON CR E S AYR AVE
Mind Your Business
WE LLIN
The North Vancouver non-profit, which provides everything from grocery support to art therapy, is holding an open house at their Roosevelt Crescent office on Thursday, Nov. 2 from 5 to 8 p.m. The intent is to invite the wider community of neighbours, donors and supporters on the North Shore to see the organization’s successes up close. The Harvest Project was launched in 1993 by David Foster, a West Vancouver businessman who fell on hard times
DR
Thirty years after they opened their doors to folks in need, the Harvest Project is opening their doors to the entire community.
personally and professionally and wound up on the street. Today, the non-profit operates on a “client care” model, which looks at people in need of help holistically and aims to address areas of concern across their lives. To celebrate their 30 years of giving a hand up, the Harvest Project commissioned a digital mosaic, bearing the non-profit’s brand, but made up of hundreds of smaller images, personal anecdotes and press clippings. To see the growing mosaic or to contribute directly to it, visit harvestproject. org/30th-anniversary. The mosaic will have its public debut at the open house, along with live music, light refreshments and a few words from longtime volunteers and local dignitaries.
N LV SE D T
BRENT RICHTER
brichter@nsnews.com
FAIRMONT RD
A38 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
TIME TRAVELLER
A weekly glimpse into North Shore’s past from MONOVA: Museum of North Vancouver
GARDEN TO TABLE
The benefits of hops go beyond beer-making LAURA MARIE NEUBERT
Contributing writer
Sḵwxwú7mesh lacrosse team Photo: NVMA, 7119 Here is a photo of the Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish) lacrosse team, taken in October 1932. That year, the team took the local league title, and went on to challenge for a chance to compete for the Mann Cup, the senior lacrosse championship of Canada, ultimately falling short. The team was managed by Xwechtáal Andy Paull and led by star goalie Henry Baker, who competed as a member of the Canadian lacrosse team at the Los Angeles Olympics earlier that year. It was noted of their style that “their speed and stick-handling ability [stood] them in good stead against all opposition.” Visit monova.ca for more information about the history of the North Shore and to learn about MONOVA: Museum of North Vancouver, now open at 115 West Esplanade in The Shipyards. MONOVA: Archives of North Vancouver is located at 3203 Institute Road in Lynn Valley. Contact: archives@monova.ca
THE "TIME TRAVELLER" SPACE HAS BEEN GRACIOUSLY DONATED BY THE ADVERTISER BELOW. #LOCALMATTERS
SCHOOL AND GROUP BOOKINGS JOIN US!
monova.ca/education
Hops flowers, most often associated with beer making, have so much to offer than meets the eye. They are neither colourful nor showy, but they are elegant, strong, and uncommonly resilient. I love these ancient, medicinal and culinary blossoms. Perhaps it is my Bavarian roots that ground me in hop fandom.
Sleepy tea made from hops, holy basil, star anise and cinnamon. LAURA MARIE NEUBERT
A half dozen years ago or so, my son and I made small-batch beer from scratch. We didn’t know anything about brewing at the time, but we made stellar beer. Most definitely it was the hops that made it great. Pushing our luck still further, we made malt vinegar from the beer. Hands down, it was the best malt vinegar we’d tasted – sweet and savoury, punctuated by summer garden umami. A few summers ago, when we installed a food forest trellis along the perimeter of our home garden, we interplanted Centennial and Cascade hops alongside perennial native honeysuckle, grapes and figs, as well as assorted annual food crops like sunflowers and beans and such. We had been warned by assorted master gardeners, that hops would both “stink to high heaven” and attract rodents. I hadn’t heard anything about either eventuality from my Bavarian family, so I pressed on in good faith. As it turns out, my olfactory receptors are purpose-built for hops, because I very much love the subtle, near invisible gossamer blooms, and the overtly flowery, sappy, resin-like fragrance that I take on faith is off-putting to some. There has been no stink, and there have been no rodents. Typically, hops plants are string-trellis farmed as a monoculture crop, for beer, though permaculture suggests a polyculture neighborhood of simpatico species that benefit from and assist each other both above ground and below. Our polyculture food forest trellis is thriving, and we take great pleasure in harvesting the hops, to dry for beer and for tea, and for use in cooking. During this change of seasons, when our Circadian rhythms are challenged by darkness so sudden and so early, homegrown hops tea fortified with sweet bits of cinnamon and star anise, and a leaf or two
of holy basil, helps us fall asleep and stay asleep until dawn. For thousands of years, hops have been cultivated for brewing, for medicinal use, and for food. Great institutions, and minds far greater than mine have studied the medicinal and health-enhancing benefits of hops. Research suggests that hops promote calm, restfulness, uninterrupted sleep, detoxification, effective digestion and elimination, and skin health. Hops are rich in beneficial phytonutrients and powerful antioxidants, and also contain strong antimicrobial properties. Their taste and aroma is slightly skunky, like cannabis, which is interesting because the two plants are cousins within the Cannabaceae family. Beer and cannabis – crazy, right? Interestingly, in spite of hops’ relative obscurity outside of the brewing industry, a hops renaissance of sorts is emerging. “Sober” hops canned teas, hops tinctures, hops kombuchas and such are headlining the high-end consumer packaged goods space. How fabulous that a lowly, “stinky”, near invisible flower could command such attention and premium price point. I am content to grow my own hops health and wellness on a simple trellis in our yard, and then experiment in the kitchen. Hops are very easy to grow in a container, around the frame of a window or door, or under the eaves of a house. Local growers sell slips of varieties well suited to our climate, and nurseries stock hops vines in the spring. Check with your healthcare provider before ingesting herbal medicines. Laura Marie Neubert is a West Vancouverbased urban permaculture designer. Learn more about permaculture by visiting her website upfrontandbeautiful.com, or email hello@upfrontandbeautiful.com.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 | A39
LIFE SENTENCE
Parole denied for former cop who murdered his girlfriend JANE SEYD
jseyd@nsnews.com
A former police officer convicted of murdering his girlfriend in North Vancouver 30 years ago, then killing another partner on Vancouver Island three years later, has been denied parole.
The Parole Board of Canada denied a request for day parole by Brock Graham on Sept. 21, 2023. The decision came after Graham applied for day parole in March and a parole board hearing was held in August of this year. In denying Graham day parole, the board stated in its written decision that his risk “would be undue and would not be manageable in the community.” A psychological test in June of 2023 put Graham at a low to low-moderate risk to re-offend, but at a high risk for violence in the context of a relationship. Graham, a former Vancouver Police Department officer, is serving a life sentence for killing his 34-year-old girlfriend Lynn Duggan in her North Vancouver apartment in 1993 by hitting her in the head with a hammer multiple times. He later loaded her body into the trunk
of his car and drove out to the area now known as the Lower Seymour Conservation Reserve, where he covered her body with dirt and leaves before driving home to Surrey. Although Graham was always a suspect, he provided an alibi and the crime scene had been cleaned up, the decision noted. Three years later, Graham killed his common-law wife Patricia Ducharme, a mother of four children. He was convicted and sentenced to life in prison. Duggan’s murder remained unsolved until Duggan’s brother Brad visited Graham in jail and eventually got him to confess. That confession came 12 years after Duggan was killed and just months before he would have been eligible for parole on Ducharme’s murder. Graham was born in North Vancouver and worked with the VPD until 1990, later joining the transit police. In 2005 he was sentenced to life in prison for Duggan’s murder, with no eligibility for parole for 10 years. The Correctional Service of Canada recommended granting Graham day parole with conditions that he abstain from drugs and alcohol and report any relationships he is involved in.
A former cop who murdered his girlfriend in her North Vancouver apartment in 1993 has been denied parole. GETTY IMAGES The parole board noted Graham, now 63, has completed programs while in jail, but noted his attitude to women remains a concern and he had failed to address how he would handle high-risk situations, like a relationship breakdown. The decision noted Graham has had two relationships with women while incarcerated, but those “did not progress to private family visits.” Statements from Duggan’s family considered in the decision “are very compelling and convey the immense anguish and loss
Ready...Set...Vote! Ready...Set...Vote!
they have suffered,” the board wrote. Graham has been denied day parole twice before – once in February of 2021, which was confirmed on appeal in August of that year, and again in July of 2022. He has, however, been granted numerous escorted temporary absences from jail, as well as a recent 60-day un-escorted temporary absence during which he was living at a halfway house in Ontario while taking a violence prevention program offered by the Salvation Army. “It is noteworthy that you came into your federal sentence with significant dishonesty, having committed a previous murder that you did not take responsibility for and maintaining that stance for 12 years,” the board stated in its decision. “You committed very serious crimes, causing at separate times, the untimely deaths of two of your partners and you have impacted not only the deceased victims but a wide spectrum of people as well, including their families, loved ones and wider community. Committing such crimes against persons you claimed to love shows the presence of a deeper affinity for cruel behaviour and not surprisingly, you remain rated as a high risk for partner violence.”
A40 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
Your Community
MARKETPLACE classifieds.nsnews.com
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 In MeMorIaM
obItuarIes
BUTLER, Charles F. September 30, 1926 − September 30, 2023
In Memory of
Todd Welch
“Where there is deep grief, there is great love...” It is hard to believe it has been 3 years since you left us. Every day you are remembered, missed and so loved. Love mom and the Welch family.
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!
obItuarIes GALOZO, Gina Maria August 1, 1955 - October 11, 2023 We lost our beautiful daughter, sister, auntie and friend after a long hard 2 year battle with cancer. She left peacefully and went into the arms of the Creator wrapped in her Eagle blanket.
Chuck was born September 30, 1926, in Victoria, BC, and passed away on his 97th birthday September 30, 2023, predeceased by his wife Julie, who passed away in 2005. Dad will be missed by his children Greg, Dean (Joy), Mitch (Holly), Todd (Sonia); Papa to his grandkids Jacquelyn (Cody), James, Darci, Joel (Alexandra), Alex (Colin), Chris, Justin; and Papa Chuck to his great−grandkids Nova, Cade, Jacob, Henry, Benjamin. Chuck grew up in Dunbar/Point Grey, Vancouver, graduated from Kitsilano High and UBC. He raised a family in Lynn Valley, North Vancouver, where they were members at the North Shore Winter Club and retired in Nanoose Bay on Vancouver Island. His career was in insurance − ICBC, Leslie Wright & Rolfe, and Jardine Insurance. He was a lifelong golfer − started by taking a bus to Hastings Golf Course and then as a junior member at Marine Drive, McCleery, Point Grey and Fairwinds. He started shooting his age when he was in his 70s and played his last full game in his early 90s. He had a legacy of many friends and neighbours that always enjoyed his sarcastic wit and humor. Many thanks to the staff at Evergreen House for taking care of our Dad in the last year of this life. In lieu of flowers, please make donations to Parkinson Society British Columbia.
Gina was predeceased by her father Jim Galozo. She is lovingly remembered by her beautiful mother Eugenie Galozo; her sisters Audrey (Terry), Elaine (Tony); her brothers Thomas (Linda), James (Karen), Dennis, and Leo (Margot), and all her nieces and nephews, their partners and children. Funeral Mass at Holy Trinity Church, 27th and Lonsdale, Wednesday, October 25 at 11:00 am. In lieu of flowers Gina asked for donations to the North Shore Hospice or the Vancouver Cancer Clinic Orthopedic Cancer Division. Please visit korucremation.com to read Gina’s story.
obItuarIes
MOBERG, Vernon Allan April 6, 1940 - October 17, 2023 Vernon Allan Moberg passed away on October 17, 2023, in Kelowna. He was born to parents Nells and Winnifred Moberg on April 6, 1940, in North Vancouver. One of Vern’s first jobs was working at King’s Mill down at the bottom of Fell Avenue and he also delivered furnace oil on the North Shore. On July 8, 1960, Vern married Dorothy and they lived in North Vancouver where they raised their two boys, Dan and Greg. We all know how much Vern loved hockey. He coached at the North Shore Winter Club from 1972-1979 and formed a tight parent hockey group that lasted a life time. Vern was a scout for Billing’s Bighorns of the WHL from 1978-1982. He also coached the Billings Bighorns during the 1981-1982 season. In 1985, Vern and Dorothy purchased the Peachland Trailer Inn campground, which they operated for 18 years, meeting and creating many life-long friends. Vern also drove the school bus for Peachland School District and Wesbank First Nations Band. He loved to go see all his grandchildren’s activities. Vern is survived by his children Dan (Colleen) and Greg (Krista); grandchildren Quinn, Mason, Samantha, Chloe, and Cole; siblings Buster, Joan (Ron), Eileen, Ted (Pat) and Don (Catherine); brother-inlaw Jack; as well as many nieces and nephews. He was predeceased by his wife of 57 years Dorothy; mother Wynn and father Nells; brothers-in-law Ben, Bob, and Jerry; and sister-in-law Pat. We would like to extend a special thank you to Ted, Pat, and Trisha for all of their help. In memory of Vern, a donation can be made in his honour to the Kelowna General Hospital Foundation. No service by request. To share condolences with the family, please visit www.hansonsfuneral.ca Hansons Funeral Chapels 250-768-3702
May the Sunshine of Comfort Dispel the Clouds of Despair
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 |
A41
REMEMBRANCES Obituaries
Obituaries
WRIGHT, Joan (Harstone) July 13th, 1927 - September 10th, 2023 Joan Wright died peacefully on September 10th, 2023 at Hollyburn House in West Vancouver. We will miss Joan’s grace, kindness and love of life, wrapped up in her regal demeanour. Joan was born and grew up in Tuxedo, Manitoba. Throughout her life she spoke fondly of her early days in Tuxedo and the family’s North Star Island, in The Lake of the Woods, Ontario where the family spent their summers. The Harstones moved to Vancouver when Joan was a young teenager and Joan attended and graduated from Crofton House School. After graduation she discovered the pleasures of international travel which became a lifelong passion. Descending a staircase at a party in Vancouver Joan caught the eye of the dashing Peter Leckie Wright. No one who knew them would question the story that it was love at first sight. They were married in 1951, moved to West Vancouver and had three children - son David (Jeannette) and grandchildren Brett (Carly), Sean (Morgan) and great grandchildren Lila, Lui, Quin and Lennon, daughter Pamela with Queen Bee and Lollipop, and youngest son Philip. Joan lived her life with grace and zest. She swam and played bridge and tennis at the Hollyburn Country Club, supported the arts and loved gardening and flowers. She was a dedicated docent at the Vancouver Art Gallery and the Museum of Vancouver and also volunteered at organizations such as St. Christopher’s Church, Meals on Wheels and the Heart & Stroke Foundation. Joan entertained with elegance (and always a dinner bell), took a spirited part in family events and never missed the chance to send a thank you note. She and Peter loved to travel and until recently could be found embarking on yet another adventure. Joan was predeceased in 2022 by Peter, by then her husband of 70 years, her brother Campbell John Harstone and her cousins Doyne and David Harstone. She is survived by her children and grandchildren, niece Elizabeth “Buff” (Nigel), nephew Peter “Beau” (Gerry) and niece Tia (Gary). Joan’s family thank Dr. Paul Sugar, Victoriya and her staff of caregivers from Vital Life Nursing (especially Tatiana and Allison) who took such good care of Joan in recent years. We also thank the caring staff at Hollyburn House.
FISHER, Ruth Elizabeth (Née Nesbitt) May 28, 1924 - October 12, 2023 Ruth Elizabeth Fisher (Née Nesbitt) passed away peacefully at Lions Gate Hospital on October 12, 2023, at the age of 99, surrounded by family. Predeceased by father Harry Nesbitt; mother Dulcie Nesbitt (Née Robinson); husband Herb Fisher; sisters Dolly Cartwright (Née Nesbitt) and Bea Snelgrove (Née Nesbitt); and nephews Paul and Michael Cartwright. Survived by sister, Nora Haaland (Née Nesbitt); nephews Barry Cartwright (wife Rosa), Mark Cartwright (wife Linda), Rick Haaland, and John and Tom Snelgrove; nieces Arlene Haaland, Christina Marmaras (husband Dennis) Paula Serpa and Angelina Andre (husband Victor); niece-in-law Lynn Cartwright; grand-nieces and grand-nephews, Nina, Lynnsey, Stacy, Gary and Cameron Cartwright, and Gabriel and Nicholas Tavares and Zachary Andre; and great-grandnieces and great-grand-nephews Casey, Edith, Aaliyah, Amelia, Lillian, Aleah, Rylee, Noah, Jadon, Bodhi, Caiden, Liam and Livio. It’s the end of an era. Ruth Fisher (“Aunt Ruth” to just about everybody) lived virtually all of her life in the family home in Ambleside, a home that was built back in the days when you would have to swim or paddle to get from West Vancouver to Vancouver. She was one of the founders of St. Christopher’s Anglican Church in West Vancouver, a devoted member of the church throughout her life, and was the recipient of the prestigious Order of the Diocese of New Westminster Award. Aunt Ruth was renowned for her kindness and generosity. She loved children, loved teaching Sunday School, and greatly enjoyed gardening, crocheting, and time spent with family. She will be sorely missed by all. A service will be held at St. Christopher’s Anglican Church in West Vancouver at 11:00 AM on Saturday, October 28th, 2023. Anybody who knew her is welcome to join family and friends in celebrating her long and happy life. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to St. Christopher’s Anglican Church in West Vancouver, or to the Lions Gate Hospital Foundation.
GARDNER, William January 30, 1923 - October 17, 2023 Bill Gardner passed away at Hollyburn House, West Vancouver, B.C. at the age of 100. He was predeceased by his wife Christine Gardner on January 6, 2023, his daughter, Patricia Syme Gardner (John Adames), and sister Rennie Gardner Thomson. He is survived by daughter Sylvia Gardner (Glen Tugman), son Hamish Gardner (Susan) and daughter Christine Banham, and grandchildren, Christopher Tugman, James Tugman, Andrew Gardner, Kayla Gardner, Caroline Banham and Alex Banham. Bill will be remembered as a considerate, insightful, determined and charming man. He was a proud father and grandfather, formidable bridge player and a loyal friend. He lived independently to his last day with a sharp wit and clear focus, managing every aspect of his life, including writing his own obituary which we share here: Bill Gardner died on October 17, 2023. He enjoyed a long and happy life with his loving wife, Christine, and their children, Pat, who died in 1993, Sylvia, Hamish and Kirsty. Bill was born in Glasgow in 1923, spent his early childhood in India, was schooled in Scotland, graduating from Paisley Grammar School before serving five years in the R.N.V.R. Fleet Air Arm, Squadron 846. In 1951, he graduated in medicine from Glasgow University and the following year emigrated to Vancouver, as Resident in Paediatrics at St. Paul’s Hospital before setting up a medical family practice in Burnaby. In 1960 he entered into post-graduate studies and four years later opened a psychiatric practice in North Vancouver. He initiated the establishment of the Psychiatric Day Care Programme at Lions Gate Hospital. After 18 years in North Vancouver he moved to Vernon, B.C. where he was active in Geriatric Psychiatric services. In 1987 he returned to the Coast, to Community Psychiatry at Burnaby Psychiatry Services until he retired in 2000. Subsequently, he was actively engaged in doing nothing, with no sense of responsibility for the free offers of wisdom, opinion and advice he gave to anyone prepared to listen. A most fortunate and happy man. *************************************** The Gardner family wishes to acknowledge and thank the management, staff and nurses at Hollyburn House who provided Bill a warm, caring home and engaging community. Bill visited the West Vancouver Memorial Library weekly, always looking to explore new ideas and to understand our rapidly changing world. Please consider a donation in Bill’s memory to West Vancouver Memorial Library Foundation to support the Library’s mission to provide free access to knowledge in all its forms. www.westvanlibrary.ca/foundation/ways-to-give/ Funeral arrangements through McKenzie Funeral Services. Private family ceremony. To write a condolence to the family, please visit www.mckenziefuneralservices.com. A celebration to remember Bill will take place later this fall.
In lieu of flowers, donations in memory of Joan can be made to The Paul Sugar Palliative Support Foundation. The family will hold a service to remember Joan later this fall. We will miss Joan’s unfailing ability to do and say the right thing, her quiet kindness and her way of thinking the best of everyone.
Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes
As you share the stories and the memories of how they lived their lives and how very much they meant, may you find comfort...
A42 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
REMEMBRANCES Obituaries
Obituaries
Obituaries
OLIVER, Dorothy Eileen Eileen passed away at Inglewood Care Centre on October 15, 2023. Predeceased by husband William Robert (Bob) Oliver, parents Dorothy and Albert, brother Ted and his wife Marge, sister Joan Jessiman and her husband Doug, and son-in-law Peter Stampfli. Survived by daughter Jocelyn Stampfli and her daughters Krystle Dunn and Karina Stampfli, great grandsons Nathaniel Allan Dunn and Joshua Oliver Dunn, son Wesley Cameron Oliver (Angie) and their children Lindsay (Shaun) Machnik, Jenna Oliver (Lucas Wilson), Cody (Laura) Oliver, and great grandson Hayden, son Mark Cody Oliver (Trena) and their daughters Shannon and Kelsea. Eileen is also survived by Simon Davey MBE and Bill Edgar of London England, Gillian and Martyn Locke of Bristol Somerset, Diana Mitchell of Petersborough U.K., and nieces Deborah (Terry) Mikula and Pamela (Doug) Morris, great niece Rachel Teague, nephew Bruce (Chris) and great nephews Matthew and Tyler, and lastly great niece Lauren Hurdon. Eileen was proud of her British heritage. Living in Canada she held dual citizenship and was proud of both. Travelling to the United Kingdom to visit relatives and friends, she and Bob decided to cross the English Channel and travel the continent by coach, train and car, visiting several countries. At Eileen’s request, no service will be held. A private interment will take place at Capilano View Cemetery. If friends wish to honour her, in lieu of flowers, donations to The Terry Fox Foundation or Canada West Veterinary Specialists and Critical Care Hospital would be appreciated. Eileen’s family would like to express their heartfelt gratitude to the staff of Inglewood Care Centre for their loving care and support. Condolences and fond memories may be sent to www.firstmemorialnorthvancouvercom
TAYLOR, Thomas M. January 13, 1931 − October 5, 2023 Thomas Mackenzie Taylor of West Vancouver, British Columbia, passed away peacefully at home on October 5, 2023. He was in his 93rd year. Thomas was predeceased by his brother, Chris. He leaves behind his wife, Margaret; his son Paul, his wife Hu Yan, and their child Cecilia; and his other son Tom, his wife Sarah, and their children Mac and Charlie. Thomas spent his first several years in Kitsilano and the West End of Vancouver, before his family moved to West Vancouver, where he attended Pauline Johnson and West Vancouver Secondary Schools. He furthered his education at the University of British Columbia, where he met Margaret, and later gave years of service to the West Vancouver high schools.
In Loving Memory of Joan Fraser Rogers
November 11, 1942 - September 12, 2023 With heavy hearts and profound sadness, we announce the passing of beloved wife, sister, mother, and grandmother, Joan Fraser Rogers. ‘Joanie’ died on September 12, 2023, leaving behind a legacy of love and cherished memories that will forever be engraved in the hearts of those who knew her. Joanie was born on November 11, 1942, and her life was a testament to the values of compassion, kindness, and devotion. She touched the lives of many with her warm smile and unwavering love. She was the loving wife of Bill Rogers and a devoted mother to her family, Shannon (Warren), Russ (Melanee), and Glenn (Catherine) and sister to Peter (Nancy) and Paul (Susan). Her nurturing spirit and endless love guided her family through their lives, and her memory will continue to inspire them. Joan’s love extended to her grandchildren, Victoria, Cole, Callum, and Makena, who were the joys of her life. She cherished the time spent with them, and they, in turn, cherished her devotion and affection. Joanie loved Africa, and during her travels developed a special bond with Tinah, who she considered family. Joanie’s legacy will live on through the values she instilled in all of them. Joanie was more than just a devoted wife, mother, and grandmother; she was a friend to all who had the privilege of knowing her. Her kindness and generosity knew no bounds, and her home was always open to all. Her ability to make anyone feel welcomed and loved was her true gift to the world. Rest in peace, dear Joanie you will be dearly missed, but never forgotten. A memorial service to celebrate Joanie’s life will be held on November 16th at 2:00 PM at Gleneagles Clubhouse, West Vancouver.
Upon retiring, Tom dedicated time to the North Shore Retired Teachers Association and the West Vancouver Historical Society, serving as president and editor of the newsletter "Histrionics." He also authored the book, "Glimpses: West Vancouver through the eyes of the Paper and the Paperboy." Thomas’s love of music and nature, his wit and humorous use of language remained throughout his life.
Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes
SHARE YOUR CELEBRATIONS AND MEMORIES
TURNER, Patricia Joan March 2, 1930 - September 19, 2023 Patricia Joan Turner of Dollarton, Deep Cove in North Vancouver, passed away peacefully at the age of 93 on September 19th 2023. Mom, Nana, Pat leaves a quite a family legacy, She leaves Grant Turner, sons Lucas and Chase, Chris and Doug Fidler, children Miles and Olivia, Jane and Mike Murray, children Novelle, Leo and Emerson, Craig Turner, Graham Turner, children Austin and Stella, and great grand children Lenox, Penny and another little one on the way. Pat was born in Rushden, England to parents Margaret Spavins and John Warburton on March 2, 1930. She was the youngest of 8 siblings, 4 boys and 4 girls. She was just 9 years old when WW2 broke out, leading to many years of hardships. She married our father Kenneth Raymond Turner and together they immigrated to Canada in 1952, and went on to have 5 children. We settled in a little house at the end of Roslyn Blvd, where mom stayed at home and raised her family, then went to work at Lions Gate hospital for many years, retiring in 1992. After retirement Pat became very involved in the Parkgate Senior Center. It was near and dear to her heart from it’s earliest inception down in Deep Cove. She went on to volunteer for 25 years in many capacities and had a large group of friends which she played scrabble, mahjong and did crafts. Her days were full and she loved it! She was feisty, had a brilliant sense of humour and no filter, she left an indelible impression on her family and friends. Pat lived independently until the end, and she left this world peacefully. She wished our grief short and our memories to last a lifetime. A celebration of life will be held on November 10th at 11am at the Seymour United Church, 1200 Parkgate Avenue, North Vancouver. Our family wish to extend our gratitude to so many of her friends at Parkgate, and many of the people living at Banff Court, such a wonderful community, especially her neighbor Syd and neighbor Joy. If you wish to honour Pat, please consider donating in her name to Parkgate Services Society @ Parkgate Community Center, 3625 Banff Court, North Vancouver, BC.
Fond memories linger every day, Remembrance keeps them near.
604.630.3300 To place your announcement nsnews.call: adperfect.com 604.653.7851
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 |
REMEMBRANCES Obituaries
A43
COMMUNITY Funeral services
annOuncements YVR SHOE O SAMPLE SALE 3.00000X22 R0011940071 :: #745020 ANNOUNCEMENTS
North Shore’s Only Family Owned Funeral Provider RIDYARD, Helen Louise May 20, 1929 − October 16, 2023 We are sad to announce the passing of Louise Ridyard on October 16, 2023. She was predeceased by her husband, Keith, on April 26, 2015. She is survived by her loving children Sheila Ridyard, Susan Rose (Bruce), Lynn Aleman (Jon) and Scott Ridyard; grandchildren Mireille, Danielle, Kyla, Neil, Nicole, Michelle, Candice, Carly, Chelsea, Matthew and Austin; and six great−grandchildren. Mom loved living on the west coast after living in the prairies. Mom and Dad raised their family in North Vancouver. Mom loved curling, bridge, lawn bowling and outdoor cafes. She worked for many years at the Bank of Montreal in Park Royal until her retirement. The family would like to thank the exceptional caregivers at Inglewood Care Centre. She will be dearly missed by her family. No service upon request. In lieu of flowers, please make a donation in her name to the S.P.C.A. as mom loved animals.
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
604-922-1221 HollyburnFunerals.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...
Dignity Memorial is a division of Service Corporation International (Canada) ULC.
ExEcutor sErvicEs
Visa, Mastercard, Debit & Cash accepted. Facebook/YVR Shoe Sample Sale https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100070901604508
CHARITY SHOP saturday, November 4th 10 am - 2 pm. Lots of wonderful items and clothing! cash or credit card. Proceeds to charities. caulfeild cove Hall, st. Francis-in-the-Wood, 4773 south Piccadilly, W.v. 604-922-3531
lOst SINGLE EARRING lost in Edgmont village. oval, white and rose gold with Greek key design. snap hoop. Missed. Please call 604-780-6062
FOund Ladies Swatch Watch found on Spirit Trail east of St. Patricks Ave. 604−802−4891
card OF thanks ST. JUDE
Caring and Professional Executor, Trustee and Power of Attorney services based on the North Shore
Tel: el: 778.742.5005
Nicole L. Garton
heritagetrustcompany.ca
President, Heritage Trust Tel: 778-742-5005
Westcoast Wills & Estates
Probate made easy. Let our experienced lawyers help you.
Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes
604-230-1068 -2211 | westcoastwills.com *A law corporation
Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes
To advertise in the Classifieds call: 604-653-7851
oh Holy st. Jude Apostle Martyr, great in virtue and rich in miracles near Kinsman of Jesus christ. Faithful intercessor of all who invoke your special patronage in time of need. to you i have recourse from the depths of my heart and humbly beg to whom God has given such great power to come to my assistance. Help me in my present urgent position, in return i promise to make your name known and cause you to be invoked. say three our Father’s, three Hail Mary’s and three Gloria’s. st. Jude pray for us and all who invoke your aid.
LOOKING TO FREE UP SOME
604-653-7851
How to write a classified ad that works. Writing an effective classified ad is easy when you use these time-tested principles. • Use a keyword. Start y your ad with the item for sale, service offered or the job title. • Be descriptive. Give customers a reason to respond. Advertisers have found that the more information you provide, the better the response. • Limit abbreviations. Use only standard abbreviations to avoid confusion and misinterpretations. • Include price. Always include price of the item for sale. • How to respond. Always include a phone number (with area code) and/or street and email address.
Toplace place your your ad To adcall: call:
604-630-3300 604.653.7851
A44 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
MARKETPLACE Craft fairs/Bazaars
HOME SERVICES
LOOKING TO FREE UP SOME
free Canon Ink Cartridges Canon 210 Black & 211 Colour Ink Cartridges 604−988−3037
Saturday, October 28 11am – 4pm 550 Thompson Ave, Coquitlam First 100 people recieve a
MANY GIFTED PSYCHIC READERS
Maid it Bloom
Spring, regular, office, move out & same day housecleanings.
Call, 604-833-7217
wanteD
Oakdale Halloween Psychic Fair
Cleaning
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
604-653-7851
TODAY' S PUZZLE A NSWERS
2023 Holiday Craft Fair Shop and support local artists and small businesses!
November 18th 10:00am – 6:00pm November 19th 10:00am – 6:00pm Location:
Chief Joe Mathias Centre 100 Lower Capilano Road, North Vancouver, V7P 3P6 $5.00 Admission for adults (18–55) Students, elders & children are free! Admission is cash only
CALL FOR VENDORS!
Looking for local artisans and craftsmen to come sell, share and promote your business.
$30 / table per day, 2 tables max per vendor Elder vendors receive 50% off
Drywall
Tables are limited - first come, first served
To book your booth please email cjmcevents@squamish.net or call 604-980-6338
604-916-4141
lanDsCaping
flooring
Y.K. LANDSCAPING LTD. Young, 604-518-5623
Hardwood Floor Refinishing Experts • Repairs • Staining • Installation • Free Estimates
604-376-7224 centuryhardwood.com
Free est. 28Yrs Exp. RetainingWalls, Paving Stones, Fountains/Ponds, Fences Irrigation, more...
www.yklandscaping.ca SHAW LANDSCAPING LTD. Complete Landscaping
INSTALLATION,
DRYWALL PATCHING & REPAIRS. We Fix it -
Clean-up. Lawn Cuts.
REFINISHING, SANDING.
Shrubs & Tree Pruning.
Free Est. • Great Prices.
778-688-1012
778-227-6573
604-518-7508
A & A Millwood Quality Drywall Service. Repairs, renos, new construction. Prompt service.
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
gutters
Richard cell 604-671-0084 or 604-986-9880
eleCtriCal
• Gutters Cleaned • Power Washing • Christmas Lights • Window Cleaning • Awnings Cleaned
All Electrical, Low Cost,
Free Estimates & Quality Service
Licensed, Res/Com, Small job expert, Renos, Panel changes.
Gutter Cleaning, Power Washing, Window Cleaning, Roof Cleaning
(604)374-0062 Simply Electric
DNE Electric 604-999-2332 License No: 89267
Best Rates & Free Est. Res/Com/All Electrical Service/Panel Upgrade
.00
HOLIDAY CRAFT FAIR Mollie Nye House, 940 Lynn Valley Road November 4, from 1 - 3 pm. Baked goods, home decor, jewellry, knitting and much more! Cash only please.
• Furnaces • Boilers • Heat Pumps • Air Conditioning • Tankless Water Heaters • Hot Water Tanks • Fireplaces Kyle
778-919-7707
Small & Large Jobs OK!
Squamish Nation Presents:
INSTALL • SERVICE • REPAIR
www.kylesheating.ca
Professional Work
Shop the ENCHANTED MARKET filled with Jewelry, Crystals, Spooky Products, Gifts, Metaphysical items and more!
Craft fairs/Bazaars
604-765-3329
NORTH SHORE FENCE AND YARD - CARSON CONN 1.00000X1 R0021831011 :: #744891 FENCING
Specializing in residential concrete. Repair, removal and new installation. Patio specialists 604-988-9523 or 604-988-9495
Craft fairs/Bazaars
#89724
AGGRECON SPECIALTIES
N.C.B. CONCRETE LTD.
Christmas Corner
ALP ELECTRIC
ConCrete • Polished Concrete Floors • Pumping • Placing • Sealing • Acid Staining • Decorative Concrete • Forming • Demolition • Foundation Pouring
Heating
Low price, big/small jobs, satisfaction guar. Free est
fenCing
TAROT•MEDIUM•INDIGENOUS•AURA•ORACLE
classifieds.nsnews.com • classifieds.nsnews.com
eleCtriCal
YOUR ELECTRICIAN Lic#89402. Insured. Guar’d. Fast same day service. We love BIG & small jobs! 604-568-1899 goldenleafelectrical.com
To place your ad email nmather@glaciermedia.ca
604-644-9648
Call Simon for prompt & professional service 30 yrs exp.
604-230-0627
HanDyperson
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
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023 |
HOME SERVICES
A.A. BEST PRO
RICKY DEWAN PAINTING
Lawn maint, aeration & moss control, power raking, trims, pruning, topping, cleanups.
Free Estimates Call Sukh
604.726.9152 604.984.1988
SERAFINA
Serving the North shore for over 20+ years
604-299-5831 or 604-833-7529
All-Ways Painting
Garden Services • Fall Clean-Up & Maintenance • Pruning, weeding etc. • Design & advice • Professional & experienced
www.serafinagardens.ca 604-984-4433 contact Cari GREAT LOOKING Landscapes. Full service landscape & garden maint. Call Dave: 604-764-7220
Designer Interior Renos, Houses, Apts, Offices, Shops.
604-985-0402 604-352-8633
Masonry
RES & COM • INT & EXT Best Quality Workmanship 1 room from $178. WCB. Ins’d. 25 yrs exp.
604-727-2700
PLuMbinG
• 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
MovinG
10%
OFF
your total bill
• glass and mirror cut to size • wood and metal customized frames • storefront glass replace • windows and screens replacements • patio door screens and rollers • shower doors and railing glass • emergency board ups
atozglass1451@gmail.com | 604-770-0406
1451 Marine Drive, North Vancouver, BC V7P 1TS
•Patio •Stairs •Deck •Fences •Painting •Drywall & MORE
778-892-1530 a1kahlonconstruction.ca
$45/hr per person. 24/7
604-999-6020
PaintinG/ waLLPaPer D&M PAINTING .
Exterior/Interior Specialist Many Years Experience. Fully Insured. Top Quality • Quick Work. Free estimate.
604-724-3832
classifieds.nsnews.com
renos & HoMe iMProveMent
RAIN FOREST STONE MASONRY 18 Years serving the North Shore Walls, Fireplaces, Brick, Stairs & Patios New & Repairs
Michael
604-802-7850
Re-Roofing & Maintenance Repair SPECIALISTS
20 Year Labour Warranty Available Family owned & operated.
604-591-3500 604-502-8683
allseasonsroofing.ca
+ variety of all services. 20+ yrs exp. Exc ref’s avail. Reasonable rates. Free Estimates.
Greg • 604-404-5081
MASTER CARPENTER
• Finishing • Doors • Moulding • Decks • Renos • Repairs Emil: 778-773-1407 primerenovation.ca
roofinG
.
ABE MOVING • DELIVERY and Rubbish Removal
PUZZLE ANSWERS ON SEPARATE PAGE
ALL RENOVATIONS
604-729-6695 To place your ad email nmather@glaciermedia.ca
roofinG
•Kitchen •Baths •Additions
SPECIALIZING IN • Kitchens • Bathrooms • Basements
LEAKY CHIMNEY
We repair & fix your leaky chimneys & roof. 25 YEARS EXPERIENCE, BRITISH TRADESMEN 778−955−8072
COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL
..
.
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.
A TO Z GLASS AND MIRROR LTD.
Exterior Interior // Interiors Exterior Spring Specials Fall FallSpecials Specials BOOK NOW.
PROMOTION
GARDEN SERVICES LTD.
SUDOKU
renos & HoMe iMProveMent
A-1 Contracting & Roofing New Roofs & Re-Roofing ALL TYPES All Maintenance & Repairs GUTTER CLEANING Gutter Guard Installations • RENOVATION WORK • WCB. 25% Discount • Emergency Repairs •
Jag • 778-892-1530
a1kahlonconstruction.ca
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 MCNABB ROOFING
ALL Roofing & Repairs. Insured • WCB 40+ yrs exp • Free Est’s
Roy • 604-839-7881
New Roofs, Re-Roofing, Repairs & Gutter Cleaning. WCB.BBB. • GLRoofing.ca
604-240-5362
rubbisH reMovaL
ABE Rubbish Removal + Delivery & Moving Services Prompt. • 604-999-6020
tree services TREE SERVICES
To advertise call
604-653-7851
ACROSS
PaintinG/ waLLPaPer
Pruning, Hedge Trimming Tree & Stump Removal 75 ft Bucket Trucks
604-787-5915
.
www.treeworksonline.ca
$50 OFF
* on jobs over $1000
DOWN
Lawn & Garden
A45
1. Male children 5. Robert Wagner series “Hart to __” 9. Unfolded 11. Digestive disease 13. Wednesday 15. Malignant tumor 16. Conscientious investment strategy (abbr.) 17. Slowed
19. Letter of the Semitic abjads 21. Weights of cars without fuel 22. Former CIA 23. Asian country 25. Instead 26. Ancient Egyptian King 27. Privies 29. Shopping trips
31. Paradoxical anecdote 33. It’s on the table 34. Ancient Persia ruler 36. Small American rail 38. File extension 39. Days (Spanish) 41. Everyone has one 43. South American plant
44. About ilium 46. Vanished American hoopster Bison 48. A type of breakfast 52. Uncooked 53. Examined 54. Christian recluse 56. Strong posts 57. Some are for pasta 58. Skinny 59. School-based organizations
1. Ringlet 2. Type of complex 3. Midway between north and northwest 4. It becomes something bigger 5. German courtesy title 6. Genus of birds 7. Marked by public disorder 8. Least aggressive
9. Russian city 10. Insect repellent 11. Interruptions 12. Scoundrels 14. 1,000 calories 15. What one does overnight 18. Dwarf planet 20. Pipe 24. Black powdery substance 26. Set of four
28. Canned fishes 30. North Carolina college 32. Secured 34. A disgraceful event 35. Physical suffering 37. The home of the free 38. Some are boys 40. Satisfy 42. Makes very happy
43. South American plants 45. Modes of transportation 47. Female sheep 49. Type of torch 50. Piece of merchandise 51. Jump over 55. Wife of Amun
A46 | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
All adventures should fuel this good.
HYBRID
Two-motor Hybrid Powertrain
ECON Mode & Eco Assist™
Honda Sensing™ Real Time AWD™ Safety Technologies
18" Black Aluminum-alloy Wheels
Over 95.3% of Honda CR-Vs sold in Canada in the last 10 years are still on the road today.*
CR-V
INTRODUCING THE 2024
EX-L HYBRID
QUALIFIED HONDA OWNERS GET A $
750 LOYALTY BONUS
†
Reserve yours 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.*
PASSPORT THE DYNAMIC 2024
1,000
QUALIFIED HONDA OWNERS † GET A
LOYALTY BONUS
Reserve yours today.
NORTH SHORE NEWS
2023
2022
Take the Honda test drive. It costs nothing. It proves everything.
CELEBRATING
816 Automall Drive, North Vancouver 604-984-0331
www.pacifichonda.ca
ARRSS 44069YYEA IN B US IN E SS
†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: $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 2024 vs Total New Registrations of those vehicles. Offer ends October31, 2023 and is subject to change or cancellation without notice. †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 2024 vs Total New Registrations of those vehicles. Offer ends October 31, 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. Dealer order or 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