WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 22 2023
$1.25
NEWSSTAND PRICE
NEWS4
Minister mom
BOWINN MA AND BABY AZALEA
MLA Bowinn Ma welcomes newborn daughter Azalea
LIFESTYLE13
Magic ingredient
Health profession opening their minds to psychedelics
SPORTS22
Golden Royals NEW
Handsworth wins field hockey title with last-second heroics
local matters . since 1969
Weekend Forecast Inside
INTERACT WITH THE NEWS AT
NORTHSHORENEWS
nsnews.com
DEADLINE: MIDNIGHT, TONIGHT, NOVEMBER 23 | WORTH OVER $36,000 2023
MILLIONAIRE
GET YOUR TICKETS NOW!
SUPPORTING
FALL BONUS DEADLINE TONIGHT
LOTTERY
WIN & CHOOSE
$30,000 IN TRAVEL PLUS $5,000 CASH OR A 2023 MAZDA CX-5
10
OR $30,000 CASH!
MULTI-MILLIONAIRE LIFESTYLES
INCLUDING $2.7 MILLION TAX-FREE CASH
PURCHASE YOUR TICKETS TODAY
PURCHASE IN PERSON AT
millionairelottery.com 604-602-5848
TOLL FREE
1-888-445-5825
Winner will choose one prize option; other prize options will not be awarded. 19+ TO PLAY
|
KNOW YOUR LIMIT, PLAY WITHIN IT
|
2023 MILLIONAIRE LOTTERY TICKETS
2 for $100 | 5 for $175 | 10 for $300 | 25 for $600 50/50 PLUS® 2 for $15 | 6 for $30 | 16 for $60 | 32 for $90 DAILY CASH PLUS™ 2 for $25 | 6 for $50 | 12 for $75
BC Gaming Event Licences #144980, #144977, #144979
PROBLEM GAMBLING HELP LINE 1-888-795-6111
|
WWW.BCRESPONSIBLEGAMBLING.CA
F2 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
2023
MILLIONAIRE
SUPPORTING
LOTTERY
WORTH OVER $3.1 MILLION
SOUTH SURREY
10
north shore news nsnews.com
INCLUDING $2.7 MILLION TAX-FREE CASH
F3
FALL BONUS Worth Over $36,000
DEADLINE: MIDNIGHT, TOMORROW, NOVEMBER 23
MORE TO WIN
WORTH OVER $2.9 MILLION
VANCOUVER
WORTH OVER $2.9 MILLION
BURNABY
#3906 – 6511 Sussex Avenue (Available February 2024)
Presentation Centre Open: Saturday-Sunday, 12-5pm
Not open for viewing
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 |
MULTI-MILLIONAIRE LIFESTYLES
#220-7789 Yukon Street (Available Spring 2025)
1873 129 Street, Ocean Park
north shore news nsnews.com
Presentation Centre Open: Sat-Thurs, 12-5pm (5549 Kingsway)
WORTH OVER $2.9 MILLION
COURTENAY
WORTH OVER $2.9 MILLION
LANGLEY
3317 Manchester Drive
(Available June 2024) Not open for viewing.
20525 76B Avenue
JACKPOT ALREADY OVER
$1,200,000 WINNER TOOK HALF!
Not open for viewing
105 DAYS OF WINNING!
WORTH OVER $2.9 MILLION
WEST KELOWNA
Villa #2 – 1 Old Ferry Road (Available July 2025)
RICHMOND
Display Open: M-F, 10am-6pm & Sat, 11am-4pm (#101 – 1665 Ellis St. Kelowna)
BUY TODAY
WORTH OVER $2.9 MILLION
WORTH OVER $2.9 MILLION
LAKE COUNTRY
Townhome #2 – 3328 Carscallen Road
#10 – 9201 Okanagan Centre Road West (Available June 2024)
Presentation Centre Open: Saturday-Thursday, 12-5pm
Display Home is Open: Tuesday-Sunday, 1:30-4pm (Starting Nov 7)
millionairelottery.com 604-602-5848
TOLL FREE
1-888-445-5825
WORTH OVER $2.9 MILLION
SOOKE
Surfside Yacht Suite 33A, 1000 SookePoint Place
(Available March 2025) Show Cottage is Open Daily: 11am-4pm
WIN MILLIONS IN CASH!
$325,000 IN TOTAL CASH TO BE WON!
$2.7 MILLION CASH It’s the most popular Grand Prize of all!
2023 MILLIONAIRE LOTTERY TICKETS
PURCHASE IN-PERSON
2 for $100 | 5 for $175 | 10 for $300 | 25 for $600 50/50 PLUS® 2 for $15 | 6 for $30 | 16 for $60 | 32 for $90 DAILY CASH PLUS™ 2 for $25 | 6 for $50 | 12 for $75
Thanks a million. Together, we transform healthcare
BC Gaming Event Licences #144980, #144977, #144979
Winner will choose one prize option; other prize options will not be awarded. 19+ TO PLAY
|
KNOW YOUR LIMIT, PLAY WITHIN IT
|
PROBLEM GAMBLING HELP LINE 1-888-795-6111
|
WWW.BCRESPONSIBLEGAMBLING.CA
F4 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
Together, we transform health care. Thanks a million. Support life-saving care at British Columbia’s largest hospital and help our doctors, nurses, staff, health care workers, and all the patients who visit VGH every day. Your Millionaire Lottery tickets support specialized adult health care and research at Vancouver General Hospital, UBC Hospital and GF Strong Rehab Centre. VGH is one of only two accredited adult Level 1 Trauma Centres in BC. VGH, together with UBC Hospital and GF Strong, are the province’s main referral centres for specialist care. Every year, Vancouver Coastal Health serves more than 650,000 residents, as well as visitors and patients from across British Columbia, performs more than 32,000 surgeries and sees over 115,000 emergency room visits.
The simple truth is, if you are seriously ill or injured, our hospitals are your best chance. There are few illnesses or injuries our medical teams cannot treat, no matter how complex or rare.
This is BC’s hospital, and the Millionaire Lottery is truly BC’s hospital lottery.
WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 22 2023
$1.25
NEWSSTAND PRICE
NEWS4
Minister mom
MLA Bowinn Ma welcomes newborn daughter Azalea
BOWINN MA AND BABY AZALEA
LIFESTYLE13
Magic ingredient
Health profession opening their minds to psychedelics
SPORTS22
Golden Royals NEW
Handsworth wins field hockey title with last-second heroics
local matters . since 1969
Weekend Forecast Inside
TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE
North Shore bus rapid transit at front of the line, TransLink says BRENT RICHTER
brichter@nsnews.com
A North Shore-to-Burnaby bus rapid transit route will be among the first up and running when TransLink starts rolling out improvements in Metro Vancouver’s transit system – but likely not until 2027 at the earliest.
TransLink announced Thursday that the Park Royalto-Metrotown route, with connections to the SkyTrain’s Evergreen and Millennium lines, would be at the front of the line, along with King George Boulevard and Langley Township-to-Maple Ridge routes. TransLink CEO Kevin Quinn said bus rapid transit will be a “game changer” for Metro Vancouver – faster and more convenient and reliable than the existing RapidBus lines. “Bus rapid transit is the best possible bus service – rapid
transit with traffic-separated bus lanes, high frequencies and rail-like stations for boarding,” he said. “BRT is the backbone of so many world class transit systems around the world. We want to be next on that list.” Speaking for the North Shore’s three councils, City of North Vancouver Mayor Linda Buchanan welcomed the North Shore route being made a priority. “Everyone knows that congestion has reached a tipping point. People are spending too much time commuting and not enough time living,” she said. “Our only way out of this crisis is to deliver a new option that allows people to move efficiently.” The actual route alignment, stops and station designs still are not developed. TransLink will do public engagement on those in the spring and summer of 2024, Quinn said. Continued on A39
NORTHSHORENEWS
INTERACT WITH THE NEWS AT
nsnews.com
NASTY SPILL
GOING SIDEWAYS Crews work to clean up the scene surrounding a flipped vacuum truck on Mountain Highway on Friday, Nov. 17. The crash and ensuing cleanup closed the northbound lane of Mountain Highway for several hours, while the driver of the truck sustained non-life-threatening injuries. See page 7 for more details. NICK LABA / NSN
BLACK FRIDAY STARTS WITH RED THURSDAY - NOV 23
A2 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
NORTH SHORE MITSUBISHI
Gear up for Winter Event! 2024
Mitsubishi RVR
STARTING AT ONLY $99 PER WEEK
WINTER TIRE BLOWOUT SALE
FREE CAR WASHES FOR LIFE WITH EVERY PURCHASE INTEREST RATES
STARTING AT 2.99% NEW VEHICLES | PRE-OWNED VEHICLES | SERVICE | PARTS & ACCESSORIES
NorthshoreMitsubishi.ca 1695 Marine Drive, North Vancouver 604-624-0640
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 |
black friday 100% BC owned and operated
Savings!
Prices Effective • November 23 - 29, 2023
SPECIAL PRICE
5
$ 99 Choices Country Pot Pies
SPECIAL PRICE
Chicken, Beef or Turkey
Organic Bunched Carrots
Boneless Skinless Chicken Breast
Orange & Rainbow, From USA
2
Value Pack, 13.21/kg
5
$ 98 $200
$ 99 / LB 34%
YOU SAVE
WesTern CAnAdiAn
6
$ 99 / LB Boneless Pork Loin Chops
Raised without Antibiotics, 15.41/kg
YOU SAVE
40%
Natural Factors Vitamins & Supplements Assorted Sizes & Varieties
20% OFF
5
$ 98 Organic Gala & Fuji Apples
From Blossom River Organics, BC, 1.36kg Bag
YOU SAVE
1
$ 00
Earthbound Farm Organic Frozen Fruit 300g
8
2 FOR $ 00
$
YOU SAVE Choices Artisan Fruit Pies 8 inch
now available Choices Signature Christmas Stollen
FEATURED CHOICE Amy's Organic Canned Soup 398ml
YOU SAVE
6
$ 58FOR 2
1099
3 $ FOR
11
49
star of the season
Kindly donated by Calabar Printers, Choices’ Holiday Stars may be purchased between November 15th and December 24th for a donation of $2.00.
November 15 - December 24
For more details on each neighbourhood house,please visit our website: choices.market
YOU SAVE
6
$ 48FOR 3
Choices’ Star of the Season Program enriches the lives of families all across Metro Vancouver, the Fraser Valley, Vancouver Island and the Okanagan.
Kitsilano 604-736-0009 | Cambie 604-875-0099 | Kerrisdale 604-263-4600 6 | 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, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
FOR NEWS AT ANY TIME, GO TO NSNEWS.COM MINISTER MOM
North Van MLA Bowinn Ma welcomes newborn daughter JANE SEYD
jseyd@nsnews.com
If her entrance into the world is any indication, baby Azalea may have inherited a dose of her cabinet minister mother’s approach to getting things done.
Azalea, the newborn daughter of North Vancouver-Lonsdale MLA and Minister of Emergency Management and Climate Readiness Bowinn Ma, made her entrance as a new constituent punctually at 9 a.m. on her due date Wednesday morning at Lions Gate Hospital. Ma and her husband arrived at the hospital just seven hours earlier and “we weren’t a moment too soon or too late,” she said. “Things escalated pretty quickly for me. Thank goodness for epidurals.” Ma added she has nothing but praise for the staff at Lions Gate Hospital. Mother and baby are now back home recovering and getting to know each other while Ma takes a six-week break from her duties as a cabinet minister and MLA. Ma acknowledged that having a baby while in elected office has presented some unique circumstances – in addition to those that most working mothers face. While most couples would likely tell family and close friends first about their pregnancy news, in Ma’s case, B.C. Premier David Eby was the first to know, because as a minister “we needed to be transparent about what the next several months would be for me,” said Ma. “There’s a lot that can happen with a pregnancy that can’t be planned for.” Ma said she did make up a plan for how she would handle both the summer wildfire season and debate on legislation while
North Vancouver-Lonsdale MLA and cabinet minister Bowinn Ma holds her daughter Azalea, born Nov. 15 at Lions Gate Hospital. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN also being mindful of her own pregnancy milestones. Political colleagues were amused, she said, warning her that babies tend to follow their own calendars. For the most part, her pregnancy was straightforward, said Ma – until the last six weeks when walking became difficult. During committee stage debates in Victoria, it would take her an entire 15-minute break to walk to the washroom and back, she said. After that, she was able to continue
participating in debates online – something that only became possible after the COVID19 pandemic. Ma said along with a very supportive husband, she’s been fortunate to have support from colleagues of all political stripes in recognizing “the democratic value of having elected representatives from all walks of life and different family circumstances.” Ma said there was only one instance when a community leader suggested she should resign her cabinet post early, ahead
of the summer’s wildfire season. “They said everyone would be more comfortable if I gave up my post early on.” Ma said she rejected that. She added she’s also faced criticism from people on social media over her plan to go back to work in the new year. Timing a pregnancy is difficult for working women at the best of times, said Ma, 38. The nature of a four-year term means “there’s no real way for an MLA to tap in someone else to represent your community” during an extended absence, she said. “You have a few options, and they all come with their share of criticisms. It’s a challenging thing to balance.” Ma is the third sitting B.C. cabinet minister to give birth while in office, and the 14th to do so in Canada, according to research done by the legislature library staff. Other women who’ve had children while holding elected office in B.C. in the past include Linda Reid, Jenny Kwan, Judy Tyabji, Christy Clark and Michelle Mungall. “I’m able to benefit from a lot of the changes” their experiences brought about, said Ma – like being able to bring her baby into the chamber in a pinch. “The attitudes in the legislature about having children have drastically changed,” she said. Having said that, “There’s still a lot of room for improvement.” Ma said she recognizes how fortunate she is to have the kind of support she does in her work. She added it’s important for the legislature to accommodate politicians of all family circumstances to better reflect all British Columbians. Ma said she hopes that will continue to extend to all sorts of life circumstances and backgrounds.
STORING ‘STUFF’
West Van tweaks fire bylaw over condo parkade storage areas JANE SEYD
jseyd@nsnews.com
Residents of West Vancouver condo towers who want to store their Christmas decorations, kayaks and snow tires in underground parking garages will have to answer to the province if local fire officials determine those items aren’t allowed.
West Vancouver council voted Nov. 6
to strip many of the specific references about what can and can’t be stored in underground parking garages and the kinds of storage unit allowed there from the local fire bylaw. That won’t change what’s allowed, said Acting Fire Chief Gordon Howard. But it’ll make it clear whose regulations are responsible and which government residents can appeal to if they don’t like
what they are told. The issue came to light in recent years after residents in some West Vancouver strata buildings – including Ambleside’s Grosvenor building – objected to being told they weren’t allowed to store household possessions in enclosed storage units in the building’s parking garage. A number of those building residents felt West Vancouver’s fire bylaw had
created additional restrictions that went beyond provincial regulations, according to a recent staff report on the issue. Immediately after the election in November 2022, the new council asked staff to change the wording of the fire bylaw to allow storage of household goods in parking storage areas. Since that time several senior staffers, including the Continued on A31
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A5
Federal Public Services and Procurement Minister Jean-Yves Duclos (left) meets with Canadian Coast Guard members and Seaspan workers at the North Van shipyard on Nov. 15. BRENT RICHTER / NSN
SEASPAN SHIPBUILDING
Canadian Coast Guard science vessel coming together BRENT RICHTER
brichter@nsnews.com
Things are coming together at Seaspan’s Vancouver Shipyards – about 3,200 tonnes of steel, specifically.
Federal Public Services and Procurement Minister Jean-Yves Duclos marked a major milestone in the construction of the Canadian Coast Guard’s new offshore oceanographic science vessel on Nov. 15 – the consolidation of its massive steel blocks into one solid ship. “All of the major parts of the new vessel have been assembled and built and they are being brought together to form the ship’s complete structure,” he said. “It’s a notable accomplishment in the construction of this important and essential new vessel. The OOSV is on track to be delivered to the Coast Guard in 2025 to support the next 20-plus years of cutting-edge scientific research that will help protect Canada’s fisheries, oceans and coastal areas.” When it is completed and put into service in Atlantic Canada, the ship will hold 34 crew members and 26 scientists to work in its numerous floating labs. Like other Coast Guard ships, it will also be pressed into service for search and rescue missions and environmental response as needed. It replaces the 60-year-old CCGS Hudson, which was decommissioned in 2022. Earlier this year, the budget for the oceanographic science vessel was updated from $995 million to $1.28 billion. Duclos said that was partly because the ship is the “first and only” of its class, and the estimates had to be adjusted as the designers and builders came to better understand what would be asked of the vessel. And Duclos said the project faced the
same disruptions, supply chain challenges and cost pressures that every infrastructure project has gone through during and after the pandemic. The science vessel is one of several that Seaspan will be expected to produce under the National Shipbuilding Strategy, following CCGS Sir John Franklin, CCGS Capt. Jacques Cartier and CCGS John Cabot, all of which are already on the water. Two Royal Canadian Navy joint support ships are under construction currently, and when launched, will be the longest ships ever built in Canada. John McCarthy, CEO of Seaspan Shipyards, praised the company’s workers for their progress on oceanographic science vessel and other ships under construction. With each ship, lessons are being learned and Seaspan is making improvements, McCarthy said. “With each block, with each ship, we’re getting better, more efficient, and faster,” he said. “We’re seeing a nearly 40 per cent reduction in labour hours from ship one to ship two on the first 25 per cent of the blocks. Truly remarkable.” Designs are currently underway for a polar icebreaker, which will come in at 6,000 tonnes heavier than the joint support ships. Beyond that, the government has 16 multipurpose vessels on order. “So we’ve got work here at Seaspan Shipyards into the late 2030s,” McCarthy said. With 4,000 employees at three shipyards in B.C., the company is projected to contribute $27 billion to the country’s gross domestic product over the next 12 years, McCarthy said.
IF I NEED MORE CARE, WILL YOU ASK ME TO LEAVE?
Whether you’re asking about the care, the food, or how you spend every day, we know you’ve got questions about moving to senior living. You should. It’s a big decision. Come in and ask us anything. Book a tour today. Call Erica and Maryam at 604-929-6361
3 2 2 5 H I G H L A N D B LV D A M I C A . C A / E D G E M O N T V I L L AG E
A6 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com AMBLESIDE APARTMENTS
Housing advocates urge West Van to adopt rental-only zone JANE SEYD
jseyd@nsnews.com
Housing advocates and renters who live in some of Ambleside’s most affordable older apartment towers urged members of West Vancouver council this week to adopt a rental-only zone that would restrict 30 of those apartments from being redeveloped as strata buildings.
Council heard from the public Monday on a proposed zoning bylaw that would see 30 rental apartment buildings identified in West Van’s draft Ambleside local area plan earmarked as rental properties in perpetuity. 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. The rental buildings are home to about 1,600 households – or about one in ten of the households in West Vancouver, Hawkins said. “The value of strata is obviously significantly higher than that of rental housing,” said Hawkins. “There is a risk and we have seen it … that rental buildings are torn down and they are replaced with strata.” Don Peters, chair of the Community Housing Action Committee, urged council to make the change to protect rental housing, calling lack of affordable rental housing a “slow rolling rental disaster” across the North Shore. Many of those living in the rental towers are seniors, said Peters, adding if the housing is lost to strata development, it will be very difficult to get back. Housing consultant Pat Frewer told council protecting rental housing as a default makes sense if West Van wants to keep people like teachers employed locally. “We can’t become a retirement resort,” he said. Andy Krawczyk said rezoning to rental only doesn’t mean owners can’t apply to build something else on the site. But it makes a statement to current tenants that their housing is safe for the foreseeable future, he said. “My first 10 years of teaching, I lived in that apartment area and was very thankful for it,” he said. Not everyone was in favour of the rental-only zoning. Michael Armstrong, whose company owns a 12-storey tower on the waterfront on Argyle Avenue, said the 50-year-old
West Vancouver has a large proportion of single-detached homes, but there are also a number of older apartment buildings in the Ambleside area. NICK LABA / NSN building “is starting to cost a great deal of money to maintain.” The company has started to look at redevelopment, he said, but the project won’t be economically viable unless strata can be included. Martin Bruckner, an architect who is doing a feasibility study on redevelopment of the 49-unit building, said much higher density than is currently allowed would be needed to make any project work. Couns. Linda Watt and Christine Cassidy also voiced concerns that rental-only projects wouldn’t make economic sense. Others urged council to consider the needs of the wider community. Dana Mulhern, a member of the Positive Voices advocacy group, said West Vancouver is “an absolute paradise” but “it is dying from old age, greed and fear of change.... Too often only profit counts,” she said. Marianne Pengelly, who lives in one of the apartment buildings, said, “It’s very hard to think that maybe your housing is not secure when you are old.” The apartments provide homes for “seniors like me who’ve downsized in the community, but may not be able to own a place,” she said. Housing advocate and Positive Voices member Jatinder Sidhu said many of the residents in the old apartment buildings are people in their 80s and 90s. “It is an extraordinarily inhumane thing to do, to say, ‘You know what, we don’t care about the security of your tenure. We don’t care whether you live in this community,’” he said. Since 2018, the province has given municipalities the power to designate zoning on certain properties as rental only. The bylaw is set to come back before council for a vote Nov. 27.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A7
• Wills, Trusts & Estate Planning
Lynn Valley Law
nsnews.com/ m/local-events
• Powers of Attorney & Representation Agreements • Probate & Estate Administration • Residential Real Estate
www.lynnlaw.ca • 604-985-8000 3161 Mountain Highway, North Vancouver
White powder poured on the roadway absorbs liquids spilled in a vacuum truck crash on Mountain Highway Friday. NICK LABA / NSN
CLEANUP ON LANE 1
Driver of flipped vacuum truck ticketed for unsafe driving NICK LABA
nlaba@nsnews.com
The driver of a flipped vacuum truck has been issued a ticket for driving without due care and attention, police say.
On Friday, a flipped vacuum truck on the Mountain Highway overpass in North Vancouver caused significant rush hour traffic delays for vehicles approaching the Second Narrows Bridge. At 12:18 p.m., a McCrae’s Environmental Services truck was travelling southbound on Mountain Highway and flipped onto its side while coming to the bend near the southbound Highway 1 off-ramp, said Const. Mansoor Sahak of North Vancouver RCMP. The truck landed on its side across the northbound lanes, totalling the industrial truck while two other vehicles sustained minor damage, Sahak said. The truck driver sustained non-life-threatening injuries, Sahak added.
Following the crash, northbound traffic on Mountain Highway was closed until late Friday evening. The roadway re-opened by 7 p.m. that night, according to Drive BC. After the crash was initially reported, first responders rushed to the scene. The site was littered with broken glass, loose hose and other debris, as a brown liquid leaked from a tube on the truck onto the roadway below. Fire crews worked to clean the site, spreading absorbent powder on the road. Nearby resident Karen Cannon said she felt the impact from her home. “[I heard] a lot of twisting metal,” she said. “It went on for a bit and then a huge bang.” When Cannon came down to see what happened, she said drivers were getting out of their cars, and fire extinguishers were being used. Shortly after the crash, a white sedan could be seen stopped just a feet away from the flipped truck.
EMPREINTE “LILLY ROSE” Delicate, feminine & a sophisticated boudoir style. This stunning Lingerie is a perfect illustration of French Elegance! Experience the difference a professional Bra Fitting can make in how you look & feel. Our caring & compassionate Bra Fitters are dedicated to finding your perfect fit. Inclusive sizing from A to H cup.
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
A8 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 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
Expect delays
M
ore than a year and a half ago, the TransLink Mayors’ Council debuted plans for nine new bus rapid transit lines around Metro Vancouver. Many on the North Shore greeted the BRT concept as a disappointment because it did not include SkyTrain. But, TransLink and the mayors argued, BRT would be much cheaper to build and much faster to get online. We learned at a Nov. 16 press conference that the North Shore BRT line from Park Royal to Metrotown would be among the first three to be built. But we still don’t know what routes the buses will follow, where the stops will be, or what infrastructure changes will be required to keep the “rapid” in bus rapid transit. And the whole expansion concept is
still subject to funding commitments from all three levels of government. Until there is money in the bank to get the system built, discussions over which routes are at the front of the line are akin to arguing over how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. We are sure that much work is being done behind the scenes on badly needed transportation solutions. But the next time TransLink and the mayors feel a need to hold a press conference updating us on the status of transit expansion, we want to see more tangibles. Bus rapid transit promises a faster, more efficient way to get around. The process so far isn’t inspiring confidence in a traffic weary public. Here’s hoping the rapid plan starts to picks up some speed soon.
Here’s one ‘game-changer’ that lives up to the name ANDY PREST
aprest@nsnews.com
“Game changer” is one of those cliches that gets thrown around so often these days that it has been rendered almost meaningless.
So many ideas and things get elevated to “game changer” status that should, in reality, have game-mostly-stay-the-same-er status. Plus when you get a certain age, you aren’t really looking for game-changing experiences anyway. We like our game the way it is. We hate change. Game changers can be a tough sell, is what I’m saying. But friends, I’ve found a real one. My game has been changed, and it’ll never be
the same. What changed it? Two-and-a-half words: Return-It Express. Let me explain. You know the bottle depot, right? Loud, sticky, dark, a little scary maybe? It wasn’t always like that. Bottle returns used to be an organic thing – in the 1800s bottles were handmade so they were valuable. If you got a bottle of soda from the store or beer from the local pub, you’d bring it back to get filled again. No one was wasting a perfectly good glass bottle, unless perhaps some sidewinder in the saloon was cheating at poker and you needed to smash something over his head. That’s all fine – the pianist wouldn’t even stop playing for that. As the 1900s arrived and mass
production started to kick in, the bottle return system stayed mostly intact, particularly through the lean years of the Great Depression and Second World War, when conserving scarce materials was an important and respected part of life. Then the prosperity boom hit, and we entered a world of leisure and, above all, convenience. Single serve beverages became the norm, and no one cared about recycling or reusing those containers. Folks driving their Buicks home from the “super market” felt no guilt whatsoever chucking that empty bottle or can right out the window. No problem – we can buy another soda anywhere! That’s why they were “the greatest generation.” Eventually in the 1960s folks started
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.
to worry about the “environment,” and with that came the widespread use of the “deposit,” a concept that saw the consumer charged for every container, with the money coming back to them only if they returned that bottle or can to be reused or recycled. It worked, but it was also “annoying.” That’s where I came in. I’ve spent my whole life storing used bottles and cans in some closet or basement, loading them up every six to 48 weeks, and braving the depot to get my money back. Where I grew up, the depot was across the tracks, in the bad part of town. There wasn’t much trouble at the depot though, because it was guarded by an army of drunk wasps. Continued on 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
MAILBOX THERE IS MUCH WE CAN DO TO PROTECT COHO FROM TOXIC RUNOFF
Dear Editor:
RE: Researchers Raise Alarm After Salmon Killed By Chemicals, Nov. 15 news story I’d like to thank the North Shore News for the front page article bringing the dangers 6PPD-quinone poses to our fish to public attention. The editorial of Nov. 14, Toxic Approach, is also appreciated, but stops short. It leaves the reader feeling helpless and powerless. It correctly states that stormwater carries 6PPD-quinone from our roads into our creeks, and that road runoff is a “toxic soup” (I’ll add, also containing hydrocarbons, salt, sludge and other toxins) into the naturalized creek environment. However, it fails to mention that we do know what to do about this toxic soup. We need to control road runoff and treat it. Obviously, we can’t collect and actively treat all runoff, but there are passive means to do it. Settling sumps are a
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A9 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must include your name, full address and telephone number. Send your letters via our website: nsnews.com/ opinion/send-us-a-letter. The North Shore News reserves the right to edit any and/or all letters based on length, clarity, legality and content. The News also reserves the right to publish any and/or all letters electronically.
small step forward. A bigger and better step are rain gardens, which slow the water, filter it and remove many toxins through interactions with the plants and soil. There are early-stage studies that show that even 6PPD-quinone is reduced by passing runoff through a rain garden. Readers are not helpless. They can assist by controlling runoff from their roofs and driveways so that instead of heading straight for the storm sewers and into our creeks, it passes into vegetated areas first. The municipalities can do more by installing rain gardens on public streets (the City of North Vancouver and some private business properties have done this), but in many cases new private construction is not required to do it and municipal construction isn’t either. It’s time for members of the public to insist we do more. We know what the problem is, and we know what the solutions are. We don’t have to wait for somebody else to something. We have the power, now.
Paul Lhotka North Shore Streamkeepers volunteer
Leave bottle sorting to the pros Continued from A8 In college my roommate and I started storing our bottles up against a wall in the kitchen. Eventually the wall was filled to the ceiling with cases of empties, our design influenced by the school of New Molsonism. We also decorated an adjacent wall with stacks of empty pizza boxes, and … sorry, what’s that? Why yes, we were popular with the ladies, why do you ask? I’m sad to say that things didn’t change all that much as I got married and had kids. Well, technically I’m not that sad, but my wife sure is! I was tasked with bottle return, and I’d let them pile up too long. When I finally made the trip to the depot I’d sort them into those little blue boxes – covered in grime older than Confederation – and wheel them over on those squeaky grey carts. And then I’d wash my hands for five minutes in ice cold and/or scalding water and come back home with the world’s hardest-earned $7.85. Now don’t get me wrong – I respect the hustle of everyone in the bottle depot, in particular the absolute gems that work there. Those folks have seen some stuff (and heard some stuff, and SMELLED some
stuff). They work hard for the money, but they’re never going to have to smell me again. Why? Return-It Express. I was skeptical at first, but my wife and my buddy convinced me to try it, and I’m never going back. I mean I am literally never going back into the depot to sort those bottles and wait in line for my eight bucks again. From now on I’m doing Return-It Express, dropping off a clear plastic bag full of bottles and then hustling out of there like I’ve left a grenade. On the drive home I’ll laugh and sing, grime-free and un-stung, knowing that the Return-It Express folks are happily going to do all the counting and sorting for me and then just send the money back my way. Game. Changer. I’m serious – no life change has hit me as quickly as this one did. When I just dropped off the bag and left, it felt like cheating. It’s not though, it’s just greatness. All the instructions are on the website, and I promise it’s easy. Try it. Bag ‘em, drop ‘em off, walk out the door and watch the cash roll in. That’s it. Smell ya later. Andy Prest is the editor of the North Shore News. His humour/lifestyle column runs biweekly.
SPONSORED CONTENT
Jonathan Wilkinson NORTH VANCOUVER’S MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT
November 22, 2023
Tackling affordability and climate change Climate change is a scientific reality. The effects of climate change surround us. The call to action has never been more resounding. But as we take action, it must be in the most thoughtful ways possible - ensuring that the costs of fighting climate change are as low as they can be and that the economic upside is maximized. Putting a price on carbon pollution is one tool. It provides financial incentive for people and businesses to pollute less. It is widely accepted by international experts as one of the most effective and efficient approaches to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate change while driving innovation. Canada is among approximately 50 countries that have some form of carbon pricing – double the number ten years ago. The Supreme Court of Canada recently described carbon pricing as “critical to our response to an existential threat to human life.” Canada’s independent Environment Commissioner says it is responsible for 30% of the emissions reduced in Canada since 2019. A price on carbon is also fundamentally about personal choice. The idea is to leave it to people and businesses to decide for themselves the best ways to lower their carbon footprint and associated costs. It is far more democratic than trying to reduce greenhouse gases through solely relying on regulations which tell households and companies what they must and must not do.
Affordability Further, if well designed, putting a price on pollution can also ensure that fighting climate change will be affordable for Canadians. In provinces where the federal carbon price applies, Canadians receive quarterly
rebates. These rebates are, in dollar terms, larger that what is paid by eight of ten Canadian families. And in fact, the rebates have a progressive impact where those who live on modest incomes typically are significantly better off as a result of the rebates they receive. It is important that we keep these facts in mind even in the context of rising concern around affordability. Presently, such affordability concerns appear to be weighing on Canadians’ priorities. The proportion of those saying climate change is among their top issues facing Canada has dropped from 40 per cent in 2019 to 22 per cent in a recent Angus Reid study. More than three-in-five of those surveyed said that the cost of living must be the top priority, even at the cost of climate change related policies. This need not and must not become an either / or proposition. A well-designed carbon price policy can ensure that fighting climate change will also be affordable for Canadians.
Ironic It is a bit ironic that carbon pricing began as a conservative idea promoted by leaders, including Preston Manning, as an economically logical way of using prices – the basic mechanism of free markets – to reduce pollution. With the future of our life-sustaining environment at stake, we can ill afford to treat climate policy as a political football for short-term electoral considerations. It’s time to assign carbon pricing to an appropriate place in the climate policy discourse and refocus, in a thoughtful and non-partisan way, on the big ideas that will restore climate stability and build a more prosperous and sustainable economy for everyone.
Contact us: Constituency Office 604-775-6333 Email: Jonathan.Wilkinson@parl.gc.ca Website: JonathanWilkinson.libparl.ca
A10 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com PROVINCIAL COURT
‘Porch pirate’ who scooped packages gets 60 days jail an open door to an underground parkade of a building at 160 East 6th St. Inside the parkade, they spotted two mountain bikes in the back of a pick-up truck and wheeled them out of the building. The value of the bikes was about $7,000 total, said Crown counsel Kenny Wu. Three days later, on Aug. 30, Smith was observed on CCTV surveillance entering the lobby of another apartment building at 108 East 8th St. Wu said Smith appeared to have entered the building through a back door, then went to the mailbox area at the front of the building where he was seen looking at Amazon packages. About 10 minutes later, Smith was seen opening the front door of the building to another man and the pair were observed collecting the Amazon packages in a shopping bag and leaving the building. Later that day, Smith and another man were seen outside an apartment building at 151 East Keith Road waiting for a resident to leave the building. When someone did, neglecting to shut the door securely Continued on A40
JANE SEYD
jseyd@nsnews.com
A ‘porch pirate’ who stole Amazon packages from the mail areas of two central Lonsdale apartment buildings and helped himself to two mountain bikes from the back of a truck in an underground parkade will serve 60 days in jail.
Elevated Living Just Got Easier For a limited time, beautiful suites are now available starting at $6,880*. These suites offer
Curtis David Smith, 43, was handed the sentence Nov. 7 after pleading guilty to four charges of theft in North Vancouver provincial court. The reverse delivery spree happened between Aug. 27 and Sept. 7, 2022, at three different apartment buildings, all in the neighbourhood of North Vancouver’s Victoria Park. In one case, Smith hit the same apartment building twice. All of the thefts involved Smith walking into the buildings through parkade or lobby doors that had been left open or hadn’t been securely shut. In the first theft, on Aug. 27, 2022, Smith and another man walked through
stunning south-facing ocean views, large balconies, air conditioning, and thoughtfully selected interiors. It’s not everyday you come across the perfect place to live, where refined comfort, convenience and stunning natural surroundings elevate the everyday. Plus, you’ll
MA RIN ED R
For your personalized tour, call Kirk at 604.922.9888 today!
parcliving.ca/westerleigh
k
SITE
TATLOW AVE
*Available until December 31, 2023
HOPE RD
BOWSER AVE
AV E
GARDEN AVE
RD
W DO L P
LI
NG
N
SA N
ELLE IS PL CURL I
ER TO
ON S CA GAT PI E L LA A NO NE RD MCGUIRE AVE
living your best life every day.
LL
B
classes, and engaging programming to ensure you’re
LE
FU
the perfect balance of delectable menus, fitness
N
benefit from PARC’s Active Living™ lifestyle offering
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 |
cozy savings CA N A D IA N G R A
IN FE D
Fresh Whole n Po r k T e nckd9.e90r/klgo i fa m il y pa
4
49 LB
C A L IF O R N
IA
Fresh ates Po m e g r a n
2
99 EA
Sprague Organic Soup 398 mL
26 $
FOR
Wild Pacific Sockeye Salmon Fillets previously frozen
349 /100 g
European Cheese Affair
1.5 lb bag Australia Fresh Juicy Gems Mandarins 680 g
499 each
Terra Breads Organic Sourdough Bread
480 g
649 each
Nature’s Choice Spices assorted 8 g - 42 g
2 $5 FOR
Roquefort Papillon Noir
sheep’s milk • unpasteurized
PRICES IN EFFECT FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24 - THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30
WEST VANCOUVER 1650 MARINE DR. • FRESHSTMARKET.COM
649 /100 g
A11
A12 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com LAW SOCIETY OF BC
Penny stock lawyer barred 15 years following fraud probe GRAEME WOOD
gwood@glaciermedia.ca
The Law Society of BC has reached a settlement with North Vancouver securities lawyer William Lorne MacDonald, who has agreed to a 15-year suspension after admitting he allowed his law firm to be used as a vehicle for offshore stock fraud schemes.
In a statement posted online Nov. 15, the society said MacDonald “admitted that in the course of acting for several clients, he continued to allow the use of his trust account where he ought to have known it was being used to facilitate unlawful or dishonest conduct.” MacDonald assisted his clients in a fraudulent scheme to manipulate the U.S. stock market and then made “representations” to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission “that he ought to have known were false or inaccurate.” MacDonald admitted he moved money through his trust account without providing any legal services and without making reasonable inquiries about the circumstances of the transactions.
Our lawyers can offer you comprehensive services in all areas of employment law.
William Lorne MacDonald has agreed to not apply to practice law anywhere in the world without first notifying the Law Society of BC. CANUCKS AUTISM NETWORK SCREENSHOT In Canada, due to charter-protected solicitor-client privilege, lawyers’ trust accounts are not regulated by Fintrac, the national financial transactions agency that enforces the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act. Continued on A41
How can we help you?
northshorelaw.com 604.980.8571
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A13
ARTS | ENTERTAINMENT | FOOD | HOME |
| HEALTH | COMMUNITY
MAGIC INGREDIENT
Health profession opening their minds to psychedelics BRENT RICHTER
brichter@nsnews.com
As the Vancouver Police Department and North Vancouver RCMP both carried out raids on retail stores or warehouses full of psilocybin – or magic mushrooms – in recent weeks, Donna Benson was watching with interest.
The North Vancouver clinical and psychosocial researcher has been taking note of the growing body of evidence showing conclusive therapeutic effects of psilocybin in treating people with mental illnesses like PTSD and major depressive disorder. “On the one hand, there is very sophisticated literature coming out. And then on the other hand, we’ve got the police raiding places,” she said. Benson, whose firm Medical Arts Health Research Group does work in Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, bipolar disorder and depression, said they are hoping to see medicinal psilocybin research expand and are looking for partners including doctors, psychologists or potential patients. Some may find it hard to disentangle the legitimate use of the drug with the illicit, but Benson said she encourages people to keep an open mind, especially as the medical community comes
Katy Kazemi, team co-ordinator with a North Shore based clinical research firm that is doing work on the therapeutic benefits of psilocybin mushrooms, prepares a treatment room. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN around. “It’s an emerging area and the work is being done with rigour and discipline and controlled protocols,” she said. Most people wouldn’t be eligible to take part because of the stringent requirements from Health Canada, which grants special exemptions for scientists studying controlled substances.
“Mom’s illness has everyone worried.”
The restrictions on the researchers are even more onerous, Benson said. When administering a dose of the drug, they must have two therapists present for the entire time the patient is under observation. It costs about $15,000 per patient for researchers to carry out one study, Benson said. “We had to go through
tremendous hoops to get positioned to do this kind of work, but I think it’s important work. People are very excited. They’re seeing the benefits that are better than they’ve seen in other treatments and the side effects are lower,” she said. Exactly what’s happening at a physiological level in someone’s brain as they’re going through
treatment with psilocybin is still being studied by neurologists, but Benson said it appears neurons and dendrites that have been damaged are being repaired. “We’ve heard a lot about neuroplasticity and this is showing, hopefully, to be an aid in helping that neuroplasticity,” she said. There is a movement afoot for decriminalization of psilocybin, but to be clear, Benson said she isn’t advocating for illicit or recreational use of the drug. People going to an unregulated dispensary to self-medicate for mental health problems are likely somewhere between curious and desperate, Benson speculated. “Personally, I wouldn’t touch anything that hasn’t gone through all the regulatory [process],” she said. “People die of bad mushrooms, right? So, it’s kind of risky… The controls just aren’t there that I have to meet when I do a clinical research study.” Even with the growing body of research, it will still be years before mushrooms are a go-to prescription, but the results scientists are seeing now are exciting, Benson said. “I’m always looking at interventions that have promise to improve health,” she said. “If something like this can help, why not? We should be doing the work to find out what are the best ways that we can help.”
Shylo Cares About Family! We are your local Home Care professionals and have been proudly serving seniors on the North Shore since 1980. We know how hard it can be on a family when a loved one is chronically ill or recovering from a recent trauma like a broken hip. Life does not stop. You still have a full-time job, kids that need you, and a loved one who cannot manage safely on their own. Let us help! We can be there with supportive care 24/7, medication assistance, meals, even rides to doctor’s appointments. This is the caring solution for your loved one and your family. Celebrating 42 years!
Call 604-985-6881 for a FREE In-Home Assessment.
ACCREDITED BUSINESS
ShyloHomeHealthcare.ca
A14 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com WEST VAN ART MUSEUM
Penhall exhibition questions our treatment of natural world MINA KERR-LAZENBY
MKerrLazenby@nsnews.com Local Journalism Initiative Reporter
GIFTED HOLIDAY ARTISAN MARKET NOV. 15 - 26 SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE This holiday season discover exquisite oneof-a-kind wares from local artisans & makers! You'll find unique, finely handcrafted gifts & items including jewelry, pottery, decor, apparel, cards, seasonal & more! For more info: westvanartscouncil.ca
It seems a juxtaposed dual career, the one of artist and firefighter, but for West Vancouver landscape painter Ross Penhall the two are intrinsically linked.
NERD NITE NORTH VAN: ART & ALE THURSDAY, NOV. 30, 6 - 9 P.M. MONOVA: MUSEUM OF NORTH VANCOUVER Learn how artists and scientists use artistic practices, from sculpture to music to needle felting, to share knowledge about history and science. Tickets include admission to the Museum’s Permanent and Feature Galleries, along with some entertainingly nerdy presentations and trivia! For more info: monova.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
His latest exhibition certainly wouldn’t have been brought into existence if it hadn’t been for his 29-year career battling urban and interface North Shore fires for the District of West Vancouver. Losing Control of the Landscape at the West Vancouver Art Museum, running until Dec. 16, examines Penhall’s relationship with the great outdoors, a relationship that has shifted over time as he has witnessed firsthand the effects of human’s interference with nature. “We wanted to set the context within the question of, how can you be a landscape artist in the time of climate change and climate emergency?” said exhibition curator Hilary Letwin. “Both of those jobs had a very deep impact on Ross, and his artistic development as a landscape artist.”
The exhibition, a two-year collaboration between Letwin and Penhall, showcases landscapes from across the country, with one gallery devoted to the views of the West Coast, another dedicated to the flat grasslands of the Prairies, and then a third focusing on Canada’s East Coast. The title of the exhibition, Losing Control of the Landscape, was very much intended to have a double meaning, said Letwin. Not only is it looking at the artist’s work in the context of climate change, and losing control of the landscape in that sense, but also in terms of his own painting style. “Oftentimes, when I paint, it’s me trying to get control. This is like losing control of the landscape, or losing myself in the landscape,” said Penhall. Hanging alongside the artist’s largescale works are recently painted panel studies, most of which were painted outdoors, and far more loosely constructed than his bigger, studio-produced works. “So many times when I start a painting, it’s just this leap of faith. You can’t get too precious with the imagery of the small ones,” he said, adding how he used to Continued on A15
WINTER FUN
Get ready for winter registration! Adult tennis - Tues, Nov 28/Junior tennis - Wed, Nov 29 7am North Van residents/9am all customers
The Polygon Gallery 101 Carrie Cates Court Territories of the Squamish, Tsleil-Waututh, and Musqueam Nations
Media Partner
@polygongallery thepolygon.ca
Swimming - Tues, Dec 5 7am North Van residents/9am all customers General programs - Wed, Dec 6 7am all customers Skating - Wed, Dec 6 7am North Van residents/9am all customers Winter programs run January to March Get info & register at nvrc.ca or call 604-987-7529.
nvrc.ca
604-987-7529
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A15
Inspiration can strike anywhere Continued from A14 paint primarily from photographs, but shifted to the great outdoors to embrace a more spontaneous and instinctual way of painting. “I have a little jump kit in my car that I keep with me and often I’ll pull over, find a spot to set up, and I’ll have no idea where it is or what it’s going to turn into, but I’ll find something to paint, just because I need to do it.” Ross Penhall’s Losing Control of the Landscape will run at The artist, who has the West Vancouver Art Museum until Dec. 16. BLAINE CAMPBELL lived in the same West Vancouver home for the past 35 years, said he is most often drawn devastation,” he said. “In fact, it’s quite to the landscapes closer to home, with picturesque and beautiful, and that’s how I Lighthouse Park and Horseshoe Bay being view it,” he said. regular sources of inspiration. “These paintings weren’t necessarily “I have a real respect for the coast, the painted to teach people a lesson. I just water and the mountains, and what they’re want people to have reverence for what’s capable of doing to you,” said Penhall, add- around them. We live in a very, very beauing how he hopes the exhibition’s audience tiful place, and we should be honouring it. will be moved by the beauty of his imagery That’s all I’m trying to do.” into a deeper respect for the outdoors, Mina Kerr-Lazenby is the North Shore News’ not coerced into it by stark or saddening Indigenous and civic affairs reporter. This subject matter. reporting beat is made possible by the Local “If you look at my imagery, it’s not Journalism Initiative.
Tickets
$29–$68
Tickets
$19–$40
MUSIC MATTERS FUND AT
Tickets: phtheatre.org/box-office/
Dec 1–17, 2023
Tickets
$19–$27
A16 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
20th
Anniversary
Anonymouus Art Show NORTH VAN ARTS 2023 ONLINE HOLIDAY FUNDRAISER Support your local art community with every $100 artwork you buy!
IN-PERSON & ONLINE PREVIEW: November 18, 10am – 5pm November 20-22, 9am - 8pm ONLINE SALES start: November 23 at 7pm to December 19, 5pm. @northvanarts
#anonymousartshow
CITYSCAPE COMMUNITY ARTSPACE 335 Lonsdale Ave, North Vancouver • northvanarts.ca 604-988-6844
REVITALIZE YOUR FESTIVE MARKETING APPROACH
HORTICULTURAL CRIMES
Gorgeous pumpkin with valuable seeds stolen from North Van gardener BRENT RICHTER
brichter@nsnews.com
Pumpkins disappearing from porches on Halloween night is an annoyance, but not usually a noteworthy occurrence.
But in Jeff Pelletier’s case, the thieves almost certainly don’t know what they made off with. The prize-winning Queensbury horticulturist’s field pumpkin, the second largest grown in B.C. in 2023, was a big hit with trick-or-treaters this year, but when he woke up the following morning, it was gone. As seasonal ornaments, pumpkins aren’t built to last. But their seeds contain unique genetics sought by competitive growers like Pelletier, who sprouted the 70-pound field pumpkin from the seed of the largest ever field pumpkin grown in Austria. He named his muscular gourd Arnold after Austria’s most famous bodybuilder and movie star Arnold Schwarzenegger. He was planning to harvest Arnold’s
EXPLORE NEW MARKETING TACTICS OR CHANNELS.
OFFER LIMITED-EDITION HOLIDAY BUDLES ON PRODUCTS / SERVICES.
PERSONALIZE FESTIVE CAMPAIGNS TO LOYAL CUSTOMERS. REFRESH YOUR BRAND’S IDENTITY FOR THE HOLIDAY SPIRIT.
MARKETING INSIGT WITH MICHELLE WEST
mwest@glaciermedia.ca
Arnold, the supersized orange field pumpkin, grows in North Vancouver gardener Jeff Pelletier’s backyard. It was stolen, along with its precious genetic seeds, on Halloween. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN FILES seeds and cross-pollinate them with one of his own gourdgantuan creations to produce an even greater pumpkin in 2024.
“That was one of the only fruits I brought back home with me [from the World Master Gardener competition] Continued on A17
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A17
Proven seeds sell for a premium Continued from A16 because I wanted its genetics,” he said. Among competitive growers, champion seeds are about as valuable as some precious metals on a per-gram basis. While a single seed from a champion giant pumpkin might go for $750, the “street value” of the seeds from the Austrian field pumpkin would sell for about $25 for a package of three, Pelletier said. “So, there’s a bit of value to them. But of course, you’re pulling out 500 seeds from a pumpkin,” Pelletier said. “[The pumpkin thieves] probably didn’t know and they probably got a nice sore back as a result of it because they weren’t the lightest pumpkins,” he added, breaking into laughter. Pelletier walked the neighbourhood searching for evidence of Arnold, but had no luck. If the gourd were still intact, the seeds would be fine, but if it had been smashed open, the seeds would have rotted by now, Pelletier lamented. Pelletier submitted the grand gourd as one of his entries in the annual World Master Gardener competition. He’ll learn in January how Arnold and his other giant veggies, which included a long gourd more than twice his height, ranked. While the seeds and genes may be
Vote for BC Playthings, serving our community with quality toys for almost 50 years.
North Vancouver gardener Jeff Pelletier with his prize-winning long gourd. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN FILES
lost, there is a silver (or orange) lining to the story. Pelletier shared Arnold’s sad update on Facebook, and the winner of this year’s competition to grow the largest field pumpkin reached out and offered some of his seeds. “It shows how generous people are in the sport,” he said.
VOTE NOW
604-986-4111 • bcplaythings.com
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
0%
UP TO
ASSIGNMENT FEE*
10% $100K DEPOSIT*
BUYER CREDIT*
Offer valid until Nov 30th. Freehold property, under construction. Completion early 2025.
LUXURY RESID ENCES
CALL NOW: 604.926.2398
ExecutiveonthePark.com
6 6 0 C LY D E AV E , W E S T VA N C O U V E R
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.
A18 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
LIONEL LORENCE
604.644.3700
en
Op
n Su
CLAYTON LORENCE
604.644.0500
2-4
Ambleside by the Sea…
Electrifying!
For Kings by the Sea…
Incredible park like setting, 3,000 +/- sqft, 3 levels, 5 bedrm, 4 bathrm, licensed 2 bedrm suite, lovely SW ocean views, steps to Ambleside beach! *access off Esplanade Ave..
Evelyn by Onni, 1,122 sqft, 2 bed + den, 2 bath, West facing, large covered balcony, modern contemporary design with loads of glass, pet & rental friendly!
Altamont, Just like new, custom built, 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
#204-788 Arthur Erickson Pl,West Van NEW LISTING $1,559,000
281 29th St, West Van NEW PRICE $4,998,000
SURPRISE! Come and See….
Ultimate Sunrises & Sunsets...
Chartwell British Properties, 15,000 sqft property, 2 levels, 4,000 sqft, 5 bedrms, completely rebuilt, spectacular panoramic views!
Beyond your expectations & imagination, Caulfeild, 2 levels, 3,400 sqft, 3 bedrms, gorgeous ocean views!
Don’t take too long or this Estate will escape you...
1371 Burnside Rd, West Van
NEW LISTING $4,988,000
4940 Meadfeild Rd, West Van
$4,695,000
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 NEW LISTING Call for Price
Very Classy & Fantastic Views…
West Bay Character…
Gorgeous 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.
It’s a Homestead Setting, 15,700 sqft property, 3 levels, 3,300 sqft, 5 bedrms, West Bay School Catchment, gorgeous ocean views!
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.
3381 Mathers Ave, West Van NEW LISTING $3,880,000
3095 Mathers Ave, West Van NEW LISTING $4,888,000
628 Kinghorne Mews, Van
Call for Price
RE/MAX LIONEL LORENCE #2001455 BELLEVUE AVENUE WEST VANCOUVER • 6049139842 / VISIT WWW.LIONELLORENCE.COM COLOUR PHOTOS & FLOOR PLANS
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A19
ASK THE EXPERT
Why did people collapse at the Remembrance Day ceremony? MINA KERR-LAZENBY
MKerrLazenby@nsnews.com Local Journalism Initiative Reporter
It had been a particularly memorable Remembrance Day ceremony in North Vancouver on Saturday – the public had turned out in their thousands, the service was particularly touching and even the sun had made an appearance, despite the gloomy forecast.
For some in attendance, however, the most unforgettable element of the day wasn’t the weather nor the tributes paid, but the sight of two dozen people collapsing like dominoes. North Shore Rescue, along with the aid of the BC Emergency Health Services, BC Scouts and the Cadets, were forced to swoop in on 23 separate occasions throughout the course of the day. Yet while it might have made for an alarming scene – there was chatter about the issue on social media platforms after the event, and one concerned citizen sent a note to
The North Shore community turns out to honour veterans at the City of North Vancouver’s Remembrance Day event at Victoria Park Nov. 11, 2023. MINA KERR-LAZENBY / NSN the North Shore News demanding an investigation – North Shore Rescue’s Peter Haigh offered assurances that attendees hitting the deck during such events isn’t an uncommon occurrence, particularly if they military personnel
standing at attention, . “It’s very normal in a crowd of that size,” he said, adding how rescue crews attend the service at the Cenotaph each year “just in case anybody has an issue.” Standing stationary in heavy
TrustYourVehicle
garments for long periods of time is enough to send anyone crumbling to their knees, he said, adding how this year’s larger number of faintings would have likely been related to the larger than usual turn-out, as well as people
with the Canadian Tire North Shore
Auto Service Team WINTER PASSENGER & CUV
WINTER TRUCK & SUV
being overdressed in anticipation of cold and wet weather. Those who collapsed were picked up and brought to the North Shore Rescue’s on-site weatherproof tent, given blankets and something to drink, he said. While a few adults with pre-existing conditions were among the 23, including one who had to be taken to hospital but was later releaqsed, the majority of the personnel to crumple had been young cadets still learning the tricks of the trade, said Haigh. “When you get into the military you learn how to stand for long periods of time – you have to stand on your toes, not on your heels. You have to have food in you to keep you going, and you have to be in the right sort of clothing for this sort of stuff,” he said. “It’s all knowledge that comes with time and training.” Mina Kerr-Lazenby is the North Shore News’ Indigenous and civic affairs reporter. This reporting beat is made possible by the Local Journalism Initiative.
FLUID SERVICE
Preventative maintenance will help your vehicle last longer.
BENEFITS OF FLUSHES: WE OFFER: Maximize performance ✓ Coolant Flush Condition internal components ✓ Power Steering Flush Prevent dirt and debris build-up ✓ Brake Fluid Flush ✓ Transmission Flush ... and more WE SERVICE ALL MAKES AND MODELS! Appointments are recommended, but not necessary
INSTANT SAVE WITH REBATE
$140 when you buy 4
SAVE WITH INSTANT
$130
REBATE when you buy 4
SAVE WITH INSTANT
$140
REBATE when you buy 4
SAVE WITH INSTANT
$130
REBATE when you buy 4
SAVE 25%
BLIZZAK DM-V2
X-ICE SNOW SUV
BLIZZAK WS90
X-ICE SNOW
WINTERCONTACT SI PLUS
ROAD RATED 98.0^
ROAD RATED 95.6^
ROAD RATED 97.5^
ROAD RATED 94.1^
ROAD RATED 96.1^
ON/OFF ROAD TRUCK
ALL SEASON TRUCK & SUV
ALL WEATHER PASSENGER & SUV
ALL SEASON PASSENGER & CUV
DUE FOR AN OIL CHANGE? Book an oil change while your new tires are being installed.
$64.99
Starting at
+taxes
*Pricing varies per vehicle; additional fees may apply.
SEASONAL TIRE CHANGEOVER SERVICE
INCLUDES: • Tire changeover • Installing tires on rims • Balancing
SAVE UP TO
INSTANT SAVE WITH REBATE
30%
$70 when you buy 4
$70 whenREBATE you buy 4
SAVE WITH INSTANT
SAVE 25%
DISCOVERER AT3 4S
$70 when you buy 4
DEFENDER LTX M/S
CROSSCLIMATE 2
DEFENDER 2
P8 CINTURATO SUV
ROAD RATED 99.2^
ROAD RATED 99.2^
ROAD RATED 94.7^
ROAD RATED 94.6^
ROAD RATED 96.1^
SAVE
WITH INSTANT REBATE
ON SALE UNTIL WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2023 1350 Main Street, North Vancouver 604-982-9102 • www.canadiantire.ca
PROUDLY CANADIAN... LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED
PLUS BONUS ALIGNMENT CHECK available upon request
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.
on qualifying tires and auto
service purchases totalling EQUAL PAYMENTS $100 pre-tax or more. NO INTEREST • NO FEE† **†See store for details. Balancing, for 24 months** sales tax, and eco fees are extra.
A20 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com IN THE CARDS
FATHER’S DAY SALE West Van man earns seat at MONTH SALE MONTH END END SALE
50
up to
CASH FOR GOLD
% OFF
GOLD AND DIAMOND JEWELLERY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22 ND TO SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26 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
prestigious World Series of Poker MINA KERR-LAZENBY
MKerrLazenby@nsnews.com Local Journalism Initiative Reporter
There’s no disappointment quite like it, receiving a Free Play lottery ticket or a free spin on the slot machine, presuming it’s a gift from the universe and visualizing how the cash will be spent, only to be met with emptiness when the win inevitably doesn’t pull through.
We’ve all been there. Or at least, everybody but West Vancouver performance coach Slava Royale. Instead, Royale’s $50 free play, a lure from online poker room GGPoker to get him back on the tables, wound up snagging him a seat at the prestigious World Series of Poker tournament. Royale’s showing in the Ultra Stepp Satellite game secured a $10,000 package comprising a 10-night stay at the Atlantis Paradise Hotel in the Bahamas, alongside entry into the Main Event of the series, where there is a prize pool of $15 million. “This is a small miracle, it’s a really big win for me,” said Royale. Royale had been among the 600 players
out of an initial 8,000 to turn that $50 free play Ultra Stepp Satellite game into a $600 win, qualifying him for the second leg where he would battle it out with 1,000 players for the $10,000 packages. The nine-hour game closed with Royale coming in 11th place and securing one of the lofty prizes – the result, he said, of fearless playing, and a spot of help from Lady Luck. “I’m an occasional, casual player. I go lightly,” he said, adding how previous poker playing experience had comprised only local casinos, online dabbling and the tourist trap gambling rooms of Vegas. Royale first started playing small-scale poker when he moved to Canada from Moldova, a country in the Balkan region of Europe, in 2005. It was in 2009, after becoming a citizen, that Royale played his first tournament at the Coventry Casino in Richmond. He hadn’t been a natural. “I was eliminated not even five minutes in,” he said with a laugh. “It was a rough, rough start. I didn’t even realize what was happening because I didn’t know the game, and people were telling me I’d been Continued on A21
Love your ears
UP TO
2000 OFF
$
your purchase of a pair of the latest hearing aids* plus take advantage of 12 month, 0% financing offer** I can now hear my grandson who has a low and soft voice. Now we can talk to each other without getting frustrated. So wonderful!”*** Sandra Wall
on how hearing aids make her life better.
Get started with a FREE hearing test today!* HearingLife
North Vancouver 1803 Lonsdale 1-888-353-3706 North Vancouver #201-1133 Lonsdale 1-833-319-5309
HearingLife (formerly NexGen Hearing)
North Vancouver #101 – 1221 Lonsdale 1-888-353-3709 Mention code:
NSP-2000-NSNW
Book online
HearingLife.ca/2000off
*A comprehensive hearing assessment is provided to adults ages 19 and older at no cost. The results of this assessment will be communicated verbally to you. If you request a copy of the Audiological Report, a fee will apply. This promotion is valid for select premium or advanced hearing aid models and cannot be combined with any other discount. Applies to private sales of select premium or advanced hearing aids and discount is applied after any Government funding has been deducted. Some conditions apply, see clinic for details. Offer not valid in Quebec. Offer expires 12/31/2023. **Financing options available for adults 19+. Financing options as a function of customers’ credit history. Financing provided by HearingLife’s credit partner, Affirm. On Approved credit based on soft credit check. Ask your clinician for more information. ***Source: Sandra Wall is a Campaign recipient who benefited from the Campaign for Better Hearing Give Back program. Learn more at https://campaignforbetterhearing.ca/blog/campaign-recipients/
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A21
MAJOR WARDROBE
LIQUIDATION SALE FROM 2 LOCALLY FILMED TV SERIES!
LARGE SELECTION OF L 0OF0 MENS & WOMENS ,0 30 ES EC PI OVER
WARDROBE!
Slava Royale will travel to the Bahamas in December for the prestigious World Series of Poker tournament. SLAVA ROYALE
World Series a whole new level Continued from A20 eliminated and I needed to leave. I was still sitting in my chair.” Since then, Royale said he has dabbled in other tournaments, and his knowledge of the game has certainly improved, but he has never experienced anything on the scale of the WSOP. The tournament will run in the Bahamas for the first time – usually the annual event is held in Paradise, Nevada
– from Dec. 3 to Dec. 14. As for whether he is anxious for the big game, Royale said there are no nerves. Instead, after securing such a win, he is feeling “limitless.” “I’m feeling like I can do anything,” he said. Mina Kerr-Lazenby is the North Shore News’ Indigenous and civic affairs reporter. This reporting beat is made possible by the Local Journalism Initiative.
RED THURSDAY 25 % OFF CLOTHING
EVERYTHING PRICED FOR IMMEDIATE LIQUIDATION! JEANS, PANTS DRESS SHIRTS, SKIRTS, SHORTS BLOUSES, HOODIES & DRESSES & SWEATERS
NOW! $
20
EDGEMONT VILLAGE 3065 EDGEMONT BLVD, NORTH VANCOUVER 604.986.4893 Store Hours: Tues - Mon-Sat. 11am - 5pm Sun, 12pm - 5pm
EA.
NOW! $
20
PRICED FROM
4,000+! $ PAIRS
5PER PAIR 75 TO
$
LARGE SELECTION OF LL COSTUME JEWELLERY, A NOW! BELTS & HATS
$
5
JACKETS, COATS & BLAZERS
NOW! $
EA.
ALL SHOES
EA.
30
EA.
LARGE SELECTION OF BRAND NAME WARDROBE BY: Vin
ce • Joe Jeans Rag & Bones • Smyth e Hugo Boss • L’Agenc e Veronica Beard • AG J Brand • All Saints Maje • Scotch & Soda Alicia & Olivia & So Much More...
W BROADWAY, FINAL SHIPMENT! 130VANCOUVER
E-Bikes by Glee
SHOES & BOOTS (selected styles ) HANDBAGS SALE ENDS NOVEMBER 26th
• Jeans • Dress Shirts • Blouses • Dresses • Sweaters • Dress & Casual Pants • Blazers & Sports Jackets • Sports Bras • Skirts • Yoga Leggings & So Much More!
• Yellow or White • Extra battery $49 *No additional discount on e-bikes
LIMITED Y IT QUA N T
(FORMER MEC LOCATION)
PAY PARKING ON ROOF OR STREET PARKING NEAREST SKYTRAIN: CAMBIE & BROADWAY
549*
$
ea.
FINAL SALE
Smart Helmets by Glee SALE PRICE $ 99
FINAL SALE • Smart Signal • Bluetooth (Answer/Call/Listen to Music)
69
ea.
Store Hours: Fri, Sat & Mon 10am-5pm Sun & Holidays Noon-5pm
• Bring your own shopping bags (none provided) • No large purses, jackets or baby strollers allowed in the store SALE CONDUCTED BY
LIQUIDATION GROUP
www.maynardsretail.com ALL SALES FINAL EVERYTHING SOLD “AS-IS”
A22 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
PROVINCIAL THRILLER
Royals score B.C. field hockey title with last-second heroics ANDY PREST
aprest@nsnews.com
For a squad that won everything in sight this season, the Handsworth Royals senior girls field hockey team sure needed some late heroics to complete their historic campaign.
The dramatic conclusion came on Nov. 10 at Chilliwack’s Townsend Park where the Royals faced Cowichan Secondary in the AAA provincial championships final. With the score tied 0-0 in the dying moments of the game, Handsworth’s Cam Jensen earned the team a short corner as time was about to expire, giving the Royals one last chance to score before regulation play ended. With the title on the line, the Handsworth players and coaches prepared for the final play. “If you looked over at the bench, I think I was hunched up on the ground praying to whatever deity I thought might answer me,” said head coach Sue Goddard with a laugh. “Some of the girls on the sideline were crying, they wanted it to happen so badly. But the girls on the field were pretty calm and cool.” The short corner found Handsworth’s top scorer, Sydney Le, who fired off a shot. “As soon as we heard the ball hit the back of the goal, they all just erupted and started sprinting down to the end of the field to where our goalie was and jumped on her, and there were lots of tears,” said Goddard, adding that she and assistant coach Susanne Morris and manager Jane Taylor
“aged about a million years” during the tense championship final that ended as a 1-0 win for the Royals. “It kind of always felt like it was going to happen, but it felt very surreal that it happened that way,” she said. “I don’t think you could have written a better, and for us, a more terrifying, ending.” The provincial title topped off a season that saw the Royals win all four possible championships available to them. This fall, Handsworth started their championship run by winning the prestigious Bridgman Cup invitational, known as the oldest field hockey tournament in North America. There were more late heroics in that tournament, with Handsworth topping Collingwood School in a shootout to win the Cup after battling to a 3-3 tie in the final. Handsworth then went on to win the local North Shore championship and the regional Vancouver Sea to Sky zone tournament before capping their quartet of championships with a win at provincials. The team was led by Grade 12 captains Stella Goddard-Despot and Kate Martin, goalkeeper Scarlett Kotar, who recorded 10 shutouts on the season, and Le, who scored six hat tricks on her way to a team-leading 35 goals for the year. The coach, however, credited the whole team with building and maintaining a fun and positive culture, which included a poster they created and brought with them to every game.
A last-second goal clinches the provincial title for the Handsworth Royals senior girls field hockey team. PHOTOS BY TARYN & MAE PHOTOGRAPHY
“This damn poster comes with us everywhere and they all tap it before they go out on the field,” she said with a laugh. “They’ve got so many songs and traditions … we have to get to games a little bit earlier than other people so they can get through all their different warm-ups.” But it’s that chemistry that helped push them to the top, said Goddard. “We’ve got quite a few players who are in the junior national development program, but I think the difference is how these girls build each other up and hold each other up.”
The Handsworth Royals senior girls celebrate their win at the AAA field hockey provincial championships Nov. 10 in Chilliwack.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 |
A23
LOWEST PRICES SAVE $100
SAVE $210 21’ MULTI-TASK ALUMINUM LADDER Grade 1A. 300-lb capacity. 61-0156-6
OF THE
YEAR
SALE 189.99 Reg 399.99
TI ULTRA-LIGHTWEIGHT CORDLESS VACUUM. Perfect for quick clean-ups. 43-9480-0
SALE 129.99 Reg 229.99
SAVE 60%
FOOD STORAGE SET. 142-4978-2
SALE 27.99 Reg 69.99
SAVE 40% SAVE $70
Starts Thursday, Nov. 23 to Thursday, Nov 30, 2023
1200A JUMP START AND POWER BANK. Compact yet powerful lithium battery technology. Includes USB and DC outlets for charging personal electronics. 11-2063-2
SAVE 50%
SCREWDRIVER SET WITH STAND. Storage can be wall mounted. Includes precision drivers, nut drivers, hex keys, and more. 57-6011-4
SALE 119.99 Reg 189.99
40“ MULTI-LEVEL CAT TREE WITH ND TOY, CONDO AND SCRATCHING POSTS. Multiple platforms for cats to lounge and play. 142-6930-2 SALE 38.99 Reg 69.99
SALE 19.99 Reg 39.99
SAVE $90
HARDSIDE SPINNER LUGGAGE SET. 76-0860-2
SALE 129.99
SAVE 60%
S7900 ALL-IN-ONE MULTIGROOMER TRIMMER. With 23 accessories. 43-8850-6
SALE 39.99 Reg 99.99
THURSDAY, NOV. 23 Spend $300+ on almost everything,
Reg 219.99
SAVE 30%
GET $50
Bonus CT Money
OUTDOOR 150 C7 LED LIGHTS REEL. Available in multi-colour or warm white. 151-3447-0/3452-6
in-store and online with Triangle Rewards.
Reg 49.99
*Single use only per Triangle Rewards Account. Conditions apply. Min $300 spend is on the pre-tax amount on the same tender and for a single transaction on items that earn CT Money.
SALE 34.99
1350 Main Street, North Vancouver 604-982-9100 | www.canadiantire.ca PROUDLY CANADIAN...LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED
Collect rewards even faster with Triangle™ Mastercard *Equal payments, no interest for 24 months with Triangle™
A24 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
DENTISTRY on BELLEVUE CALL US: 604 922 5711
DentistryonBellevue.com | info@dentistryonbellevue.com
GOAL ORIENTED
SFU striker Devin O’Hea named GNAC Player of the Year NICK LABA
nlaba@nsnews.com
With his consistent performance at the collegiate level, soccer player Devin O’Hea has earned the title of the Great Northwest Athletic Conference Player of the Year.
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
O’Hea’s dominant play in the regular season has the North Vancouver product record at least one point in 10 of 11 matches against conference competition, leading Simon With standout performance throughout the season, North Fraser University to its Vancouver’s Devin O’Hea led his SFU Red Leafs team to eighth conference title. become division champions for the first time since 2018. COURTESY OF SFU ATHLETICS The senior forward and team captain started and nine assists. But the SFU Red Leafs every match this season and logged 1,400 championship run ended quickly, with a minutes as part of the top-ranked offence 3-1 loss to Point Loma in Los Angeles. in the GNAC. O’Hea generated nine multiThe Red Leafs ended their 2023 campoint games, including a seven-match goal-scoring streak. paign with an 11-5-2 overall record (8-2-1 Heading into the NCAA Super Region in the GNAC) and as conference champs 4 Championships, O’Hea had nine goals for the first time since 2018.
trailappliances.com
On now until December 6 30"
Dishwasher with Front Controls - Stainless Steel
Smooth-Top Electric Range SmoothStainless Steel Stainl
4.4 cu.ft. Top Load Washer and 6.5 cu.ft. Dryer - White
3-Piece Kitchen Package Stainless Steel
• 8 Cycles Incl. Speed 60 • Adjustable Upper Rack
• 5.3 cu.ft. Capacity • Keep Warm Setting
• 11 Washer Cycles • Timed Dry System
• 17.6 cu.ft. Refrigerator • 6.3 cu.ft. Electric Range
SHE3AEM5N
YWFE515S0JS
NTW4519JW/YNED4655EW
DW80CG4021SRAA/NE63A6111SS/RT18M6213SR
$1199
$224994
$749
$899
98
96
98
YOU SAVE $50
PAIR
PKG
AFTER $300 INSTANT REBATE
Get the best prices of the year and save big on top brands! 31"
Bottom-Freezer Refrigerator - White
Dishw Dishwasher with Front Controls - Stainless Steel Contr
5.2 cu.ft. Front Load Washer and 8.0 cu.ft. Dryer - White
• 17.0 cu.ft. Capacity • Pull-Out Freezer Drawer
• 3 Cy Cycles Incl. Heavy Wash • Heated Drying System
• 7 Washer Cycles • Steam Refresh Cycle
RB17A2CWE
FFCD2 FFCD2413US
ELFW7437AW/ELFE743CAW
Available in:
$89998 YOU SAVE $50
North Vancouver Showroom - 1550 Marine Drive
Available in:
$47998 Tel: (604) 904-6575
$184996 PAIR
AFTER $150 INSTANT REBATE
|
We have 1000s of in-stock appliances on sale, ready to deliver!
Prices, unless otherwise stated, reflect all applicable rebates and offers. Federal and Provincial taxes are not included in our prices. Pricing in effect November 16-December 6, 2023 while stock lasts. Actual products may not be exactly as shown. The flyer reflects the most current information available at the time of printing. If despite our vigilance, errors occur, a notice will be printed in store. 2-1 Receive free local delivery on your first qualifying model of $750 or more. Maximum delivery credit is $79.95 per order. Must be purchased at ticketed price to qualify. Purchases made under our Price Match Policy may not qualify. One delivery offer per customer. Conditions apply. Offer is valid November 16-December 6, 2023. 2-2 Free haulaway on your first piece on qualifying purchases of $750 or more on major appliances. Maximum haulaway credit is $35 per order. One haulaway offer per customer. Conditions apply. Offer is valid November 16-December 6, 2023. 2-3 Receive a free 1-year extended product protection plan with the purchase of all qualifying appliances. Standard Comerco exclusions apply. Offer is valid November 16-December 6, 2023.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 |
A25
A26 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
When it’s hard to talk about what’s on your mind. It’s okay to ask for help. Visit vch.ca/onyourmind
Carson Graham’s Dallan Lewis attempts to push through South Delta’s defensive line during a playoff win for the Eagles at home on Friday. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN
BOUND FOR BC PLACE
Victorious North Vancouver football teams rush to semifinals NICK LABA
nlaba@nsnews.com
Playoff season for North Vancouver football has kicked off in fine form. On Friday (Nov. 17), Carson Graham
Secondary took a 22-12 victory over South Delta in the AAA BC High School football quarterfinals. On the same day, Ecole Windsor Secondary clinched a Continued on A27
BIG 21ST
ANNIVERSAR ANNIVERSARY SALE
20% OFF
ENTIRE STORE NOV 24 & 25
Inspired by Nature, Guided by Science to Make Life Better!
Victoria’s Health, 1637 Lonsdale Ave, North Vancouver 7 Lonsdale
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 |
November 28
A SPECIAL FEATURE OF THE
B1
B2 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
This time of year, many of us take the warmth and security of our homes for granted.
The North Shore Disability Resource Centre will be participating in GivingTuesday GivingTuesday is the world’s largest generosity movement. On November 28th, please consider supporting the NSDRC. Choose from 4 donation packs to help support various NSDRC programs or do a general donation amount if you prefer. No amount is too small!
For vulnerable individuals living with mental illness and facing homelessness, this is often the most difficult time of year. This holiday season, your gift to the Outreach Program run by the Canadian Mental Health Association North & West Vancouver Branch supports individuals living with mental health concerns many of whom live in their cars, on the streets, or in unstable and insecure conditions.
Your donation supports services for precariously housed individuals on the North Shore including but not limited to: • Vouchers for food • Transportation costs ie. Gas cards and bus passes • Moving costs • Counselling
Our Outreach Team relies on the generous support of donors like you to help individuals get on the path to mental wellness.
northwestvancouver.cmha.bc.ca/donate
Charitable Number: 10686 4143 RR0001
After School Snack Pack - $20 • Granola Bar, Juice Box, Fresh Fruit/ Vegetable, Cheese String, Cookie Sensory To-Go Kit - $40 • Squishy Ball, Expandible/Collapsible Breathing Ball, Snap Fidget Spinner, Rainmaker Liquid Timer 1 Month HandDART Pass for Community Housing & Inclusion Program Participant - $60
DECK THE HALLS WITH COHO FESTIVAL BANNERS!
$75 Save-On-More Gift Card for Groceries for Community Housing & Inclusion Program Participant Looking for unique and interesting Christmas stocking stuffer ideas?
Considering buying an iconic Coho Festival Banner or make a donation & support salmon conservation on the North Shore.
We assist anyone, regardless of age, with any kind of disability to help them live with dignity, freedom and joy. Help us reach our goal of raising $5,000! Visit nsdrc.org or GivingTuesday.ca to donate.
Prices start at $20.00! Go to WWW.COHOSOCIETY.COM for details Orders can be picked up at
JONES & COMPANY
BESPOKE PICTURE FRAMERS 1445 Bellevue Avenue, West Vancouver, BC V7T 13C
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | B3
GIVING TUESDAY
November 28
FRIGID FUNDRAISER
Sleep Out fundraiser gives executives a taste of the cold KIRK LAPOINTE
Contributing writer
I slept outside last Thursday – or at least tried to – and raised more than $31,000 for Covenant House Vancouver.
The annual event is called Sleep Out: Executive Edition, and I was joined by about 40 other business leaders. We collectively raised or donated more than $1.1 million. Covenant House is one of our region’s most successful organizations in turning around the lives of youth aged 16-24. Its “one-size-fits-one” system customizes a continuum of care, first serving up medical attention and nutrition, then counselling, then assistance in finding a job or resuming education, then eventually (but quite slowly in these days of our housing crisis) finding permanent shelter. Yes, it is certainly expensive. The amount we raised last Thursday will pay for a few months of just one of Covenant House’s programs. But when you consider how its involvement can avert down-theroad expenses and outcomes, it’s a smart
Participants in Sleep Out: Executive Edition get ready to spend a night in the cold to raise funds for Covenant House. Participants raised more than $1.1 million this year. COVENANT HOUSE investment in young people. And unfortunately, even in a conspicuously wealthy community with a hefty tax base, government support doesn’t meet these needs; it is necessary for charitable and non-profit organizations to pick up the slack. The logistics of the Sleep Out are pretty basic. After a couple of hours of
North Shore Neighbourhood House is building a safe, healthy and strong community. MISSION: to enhance the lives of our neighbours especially our most vulnerable. VISION: a safe, healthy and strong community, welcoming all ages, abilities and cultures – one where everyone has access to support, everyone is included, and where everyone matters. We provide services for all ages including; child care programs, Supported Child Development Program, Youth Parent Program, Youth Programs, Teen Club, Seniors Programs, Food Security Programs, Health and Recreation Programs, Volunteer opportunities. Looking towards 2024, The North Shore Neighbourhood House needs the communities support with donations to our Food Program. We have close to 1200 people per week receiving food, and these numbers continue to grow. You can donate online through our website. We are authorized to accept gifts of money, stocks and securities, real estate, personal property, life insurance policies and bequests.
NortH SHore NeigHbourHood HouSe nsnh.bc.ca • 225 east 2nd St., North Vancouver
touring the facilities, discussing the issues and meeting three young people in the program, you get a slab of cardboard and a sleeping bag, then lay in a laneway between about 10 p.m. and 5 a.m., and debrief as a group before going home or to work – and back into warmth and comfort. It was cold last Thursday (around two or
three degrees at its lowest), but it was dry with little wind. In other words, nothing too challenging. I’ve done this three times before, once in pretty steady rain. You’d be surprised how heavy rain feels when it lands on your prone face, just as you’d be surprised how sore your hip feels the next day from sleeping on your side, or how your neck feels from not having a pillow. But this is mild compared to the real world of sleeping on the streets. I once asked someone at Covenant House how well it resembles what he had experienced. It was about the same, he said, except we weren’t going to be on a noisy street out of necessity for safety and we weren’t going to have our shoes stolen at least once a week. Oh yes, and we had food available before, during and after. If you wish to support Covenant House, my webpage can still take in tax-deductible donations until Dec. 31 at support.covenanthousebc.org/goto/kirklapointe. Kirk LaPointe is a West Vancouver journalist and North Shore News columnist.
B4 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
PAUL SUGAR PALLIATIVE SUPPORT FOUNDATION
Your donation can help us to support those living with a serious illness in our community
Family Services of the North Shore Christmas Bureau needs your support this Giving Tuesday! YOUR GIFT OF: $75 Gives a lonely senior a personalized gift basket so they feel cared for $50 Provides a gift card to a vulnerable teen, giving them the gift of hope, choice and belonging
All our services and supports are free
Palliative Support Centre 3743 Delbrook Ave, North Vancouver
(778)729-1555
$25 Buys a grocery gift card to help a family with their meals over the holidays
Scan the QR code or go to www.familyservices.bc.ca to make a donation this Giving Tuesday!
Embrace the spirit of generosity this Embr
GIVING TUESDAY
by contributing to the well-being of your community. This season, reflect on the impact you can make by supporting a local charity or cause that holds special meaning for you.
n
Ric
and bratio erin le Lov ary ce n e s w r n e v n i A n with 50th an son ’s d n ilkin arbour a l W n her atha Silver H ve Sut a Jon MP tlett at hoto: D P un d Ga har
Jonathan Wilkinson Member of Parliament, North Vancouver
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | B5
GIVING TUESDAY
November 28
FIGHTING AGAINST HOMELESSNESS
Hockey community scores big with charity fundraiser DANIEL WAGNER
danielwagner@passittobulis.com
The issue of homelessness in Vancouver and across Canada can seem overwhelming. There are so many structural and systemic issues that underlie homelessness that it can sometimes seem like there’s nothing an individual person can do to help.
That’s where Hockey Helps the Homeless steps in, providing a way for people to help. Founded in 1996, the organization hosts hockey tournaments across Canada where amateurs can play with former professional and Olympic players, with all of the proceeds benefiting local charities. The need is particularly felt in Vancouver, where the rise in homelessness has been impossible to ignore. “Population is growing,
inflation is growing, people can’t afford rent in our city, and there’s more and more homeless every day,” said Ewan French, who brought Hockey Helps the Homeless to Vancouver 15 years ago. “I see it in my neighbourhood out in Dunbar, people sleeping in cars and vans – it’s unbelievable.” Vancouver will host their Hockey Helps the Homeless tournament on November 24 at UBC’s Thunderbird Arena, with a stated goal of raising $650,000, though they’ve bested that goal in each of the last two years. That money is disseminated through 13 different outreach partners. “We’re a bit of an anomaly for Hockey Helps the Homeless. All the other cities in Canada have 1-4 outreach partners. We’ve always had a bit of a bigger footprint,” said French. “Historically, it’s been all Vancouver, but we’ve seen a Continued on B7
Hockey Helps the Homeless Vancouver will be hosting a hockey tournament on Nov. 24 to raise money to help end homelessness. HOCKEY HELPS THE HOMELESS
THIS GIVING TUESDAY GIVE THE GIFT OF
WELLBEING!
Not just another day
WHY SUPPORT US? For over 47 years, North Shore Community Resources has been providing a range of programs to individuals and families on the North Shore. The aim of our all our work at NSCR is general individual and community well-being. 523 families received child care referrals 2,952 hours housekeeping services provided to seniors 604 grocery deliveries 1,075 clients served by our Community Legal Services team 629 tax refunds processed for lowincome individuals
HOW TO SUPPORT US Create a fund to honour someone special Become a monthly donor Leave a legacy gift Donate to support a program area important to you
DONATE NOW BY SCANNING HERE OR CALL 604-982-3327
Help save lives. Close to home. Donate Online: harvestproject.org 604.983.9488
info@harvestproject.org
B6 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
TIMES ARE TOUGH FOR EVERYONE, ESPECIALLY THOSE MOST VULNERABLE Our work is desperately needed and your support is appreciated now more than ever. Providing a safe place for homeless youth to come in off the streets Ensure seniors living in poverty remain housed Help a youth access post-secondary education House a senior who has fallen onto hard times Training tomorrows workforce
Hollyburn Community Services Society, helping those most vulnerable across North and West Vancouver
Hollyburn-Society.ca
Skip the cards this year, and put your Season's Greetings in the
Book by Dec 14 From $399 Publishing Dec 20
RESERVE YOUR SPACE NOW SALES@NSNEWS.COM
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | B7
GIVING TUESDAY
November 28
The cause is personal for Natalie Miller, wife of Canucks forward Continued from B5 rapid increase of homeless issues out in the Fraser Valley, so a lot of our outreach partners here in the city also have buildings and services out in the valley.” The tournament will feature 18 teams, each matched with a former professional or Olympic player, including former Canucks Dave Babych, Geoff Courtnall, Jannik Hansen, Denis Pederson, Doug Bodger, and Rich Sutter. Players pay a registration fee that covers the costs of the tournament and are also required to fundraise a minimum amount in order to participate.
Natalie Miller steps up to sponsor recovery team This year, one of the teams at the tournament will be a recovery team – a team of hockey players who have gone through recovery from drug and alcohol addiction. Natalie Miller, the wife of the Canucks’ J.T. Miller, is sponsoring the team. The Millers live in West Vancouver. “This recovery team is a group of guys pretty new in recovery from the New West recovery community,” said Miller. “They got
J.T. Miller of the Vancouver Canucks and wife Natalie are West Van residents. Natalie is a team sponsor for Hockey Helps the Homeless Vancouver. NATALIE AND J.T. MILLER into a hockey league last January and found a sense of community within each other, their sobriety, and the sport of hockey.” Miller is on the committee for Hockey
Helps the Homeless, joining the organization four years ago after she and J.T. came to Vancouver. She volunteered at one tournament and immediately caught the vision. “Living in Vancouver for such a short time, I noticed the need for support of the homeless community,” said Miller. “The money is put towards places that help people get off the streets and get back into society, sober. I love this city and everything it has to offer, I just want everyone else to have the opportunity to experience that as well.” A fellow committee member, Linda Lane Devlin, brought up that there was a team of players who had gone through recovery, many of whom had benefited from funds raised by Hockey Helps the Homeless, who wanted to participate in the tournament but would struggle to raise the necessary funds. As soon as she heard about this need, Miller immediately stepped up to help. For Miller, there was a personal reason for why the recovery team connected to her. “Growing up with a mother who
struggled with alcohol addiction and, at a young age, watching her go to rehab and go through the process of getting to the other side, I know what it means to these guys and I know how hard they are working to choose that new lifestyle,” said Miller. “I want them to be celebrated and encouraged and feel supported for how far they have come.” “I know my mom would be really proud,” she added. The Millers also sponsor the post-tournament dinner at Marine Drive Golf Club and J.T. helps with the annual auction which helps raise further funds for the charity. “J.T. is as involved as he can be during the season!” said Miller. “He does a great job by helping me collect all the auction item baskets from the players and any other miscellaneous items we can snag from the Canucks organization as well. He’s always been really supportive of me on any charity that we are involved in and we collectively agree as a family what’s important to us and where we would like to make a Continued on B8
IT ALL STARTS WITH YOU! Give the gift of healthy aging and help ensure that the West Vancouver Memorial Library can continue to deliver responsive programs and services to isolated seniors and those with different abilities in our local community. Do you know what your donation to the WVML Foundation could do? $60 or $5/month – add an audiobook or Large Print book to the Library’s collection $120 or $10/month – add one new item to our Brain Health Collection $600 or $50/month – purchase a new accessible reading device for people with print disabilities $1,200 or $100/month – double the size of the Brain Health Collection $5,000, or $415/month – fund a full year of an accessible program like our Library Bound Social Tea
DONATE TODAY at wvml.ca/donate
before December 31 to receive a 2023 tax receipt.
1950 Marine Drive, West Vancouver | 604.925.7425 | wvml.ca/foundation
B8 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
GIVING TUESDAY
November 28
Every game feels like a win at Hockey Helps the Homeless event Continued from B7 difference in this community.” Along with Miller’s sponsorship of the recovery team, North Vancouver’s Mario Vetro, co-founder of Vancouver-based K92 Mining and the top fundraiser for last year’s tournament, will be covering any fundraising shortfalls for the players. Funds raised go directly to local charities Organizations pitch their proposals to the Hockey Helps the Homeless committee for how their funds will be used to help people. Those funds have been used for everything from funding for recovery in shelters to mental health nursing to building beehives with Hives for Humanity. “We make sure that the money we’re investing in our community is actually going to frontline services,” said French. Those outreach partners also send volunteers to the tournament, who help host the event and keep things running smoothly, but also talk to each team about their organization, letting the participants know just how their fundraising
will impact the community. In addition, Academy Award-winning filmmaker David Fine, who is also on the Hockey Helps the Homeless Vancouver committee, makes a movie each year showing firsthand how the funds raised help people. “It’s pretty moving and it’s interesting to see the reaction of the guys in the room,” said French. “Some of them, it’s really their only exposure to the Downtown Eastside, in terms of the misery and chaos that is prevalent down there and how we provide a little bit of a ray of hope through our outreach partners. The talks that they give, they really resonate and you can see it in the faces of the players.” In addition, some of the professional and Olympic players who come to the tournament have stories of their own. “We play hockey with them all day and you’re in the dressing room with them for, like, six hours,” said French. “It’s amazing some of the stories they share. They’ll have family members who’ve gone through the same thing or they’ll talk about ex-hockey players who played pro
Give the gift of possibility. An NVDPL library card opens the door to endless possibilities: books, movies, early literacy & lifelong learning programs, digital resources, board games & more. If you’re in a position to donate, consider supporting NVDPL this GivingTuesday, November 28th. Your donation supports enhanced library services and programs.
Anything is possible with your library card.
who have gone through substance abuse or being homeless. So, they know it too.” HHtH Vancouver has grown rapidly It’s been a long journey growing Hockey Helps the Homeless Vancouver from its modest beginnings in 2008. “We started with six teams – we couldn’t even fill all of them,” said French. “But right from day one, we were able to get some Canucks alumni involved: Gino Odjick, Cliff Ronning, Doug Bodger and others. We raised only $65,000 that year, so it was not much, but for us, we felt pretty proud.” The tournament doubled in size the next year, then grew incrementally year by year until truly taking off in the last four or five years. “We’ve been pretty steady at making between $650,000 and $850,000,” said French. “It’s grown quite quickly, in our minds.” For French, it’s a perfect marriage between his passion for helping people and his passion for hockey. He grew up playing hockey in Montreal and dreaming of playing in the NHL, though those dreams soon had
to face reality. “I played against Mario Lemieux in Bantam,” said French with a grin. “His team was pretty phenomenal – they had, like, four NHLers on their team, like Marc Bergevin, Sylvain Lefebvre, and Tommy Kane, who played in the NFL. We lost by a lot every game.” But every game on November 24, whatever the score, will feel like a win, as it will represent funds going to where they’re needed and waking people up to the bigger needs in their community. “Most people get involved just because it’s a hockey tournament and they get to play with some NHLers and pros,” said French. “It’s after that we tie them into the good that we’re doing… A lot of people live in their insulated worlds, but there is a bigger, wider community that needs our help.” “That’s why it works,” he added. “Hockey is the gateway in.” While registration for the November 24 tournament has closed, people can get involved by donating or volunteering . French said that it typically takes 90 volunteers to run the event at UBC.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A27
BLACK
F riday *F
SALE
R
E
E
Carson Graham’s Ethan Samuels tracks down a South Delta wide receiver during a senior AAA playoff game Friday at Carson’s Confederation Field. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN
Eagles and Wolves headed to BC Place to fight for spot in finals
H W
HITENIN
NEW PATIENT EXAM We want you to keep smiling with confidence. Book your dental exam and receive a FREE Electric Toothbrush.
*
E FR
G
The world’s leading clear aligner. Invisalign treatment transforms smiles through pioneering research. Receive FREE Zoom Teeth Whitening with your Invisalign Treatment.
E ELECTRIC
TO
O
2
T
B
R
US
H
the Wolves did an excellent job at containing Robert Bateman’s explosive offence, explained Windsor head coach Malcolm Allen. Before that match, Bateman was undefeated and the No.1-ranked AA team in the province and top team in the East division. “Offensively we struggled to maintain blocks at all positions but made enough plays when we needed to control the game and come away with the upset,” Allen said. The Wolves will battle against John Barsby, the top team in the West division, on Saturday at 1:30 p.m. Having lost to Barsby in the regular season, Allen said the team should be ready to correct previous mistakes. “We need to get healthy and play incredibly physical to have a chance against a much bigger, run-dominant team who on top of that have the best athlete in AA football on their team,” Allen said. During his quarterfinal game, Wolves quarterback Emmet Ward threw for 177 yards with one touchdown, a two-point conversion and a 51-yard run to score another touchdown of his own. Ward currently leads all AA teams with 1,219 passing yards, averaging 174.14 yards per game. Receiver Samson Sachter led the offence with six catches for 93 yards, including a 53-yard touchdown. On defence, free safety Liam Russell led the team with eight tackles. Defensive ends Ronan Hoey and Hayden Verador both had five tackles and a sack each to keep the pressure on Bateman’s strong offence, Allen said.
ET
INVISALIGN PATIENT
H
Continued from A26 15-13 win over Robert Bateman in the AA quarterfinals. Now, both teams will travel to BC Place on Saturday where they will play in their respective AAA and AA semi-finals to fight for a spot in the provincial championship. The first half of the Carson Graham game on Friday was close, with a slim 8-6 lead for the Eagles going into halftime. But the team was able to pull ahead in the second half on the back of a great offensive and defensive effort, says head coach Brian Brady. Standout players were quarterback Liam Marshall, with 196 yards thrown and one touchdown. Marshall currently leads the provincial league with 1,361 yards thrown, averaging 226.83 yards per game. Running back Dallan Lewis scored 91 yards on 18 runs, 38 yards on four catches and two touchdowns. Receiver Eric Town scored 88 yards on eight catches, while Breylon Mcculler had 32 yards on four catches with four tackles and two quarterback sacks. On Saturday, the Eagles face GW Graham at 7 p.m. inside BC Place. “We’re really excited about our next game,” Brady said. “Our Grade 12s have put so much into the program.” Last season, Carson set the BC High School record for most passing yards in a season, but lost in the semi-finals. “This season they have built on that. This group are unreal competitors and young men of tremendous character,” the coach said. During Windsor’s quarterfinal game,
1
TE
BOOK NOW!
604-926-7621 1892 Marine Drive West Vancouver belcantodental.com
*T’S & C’S APPLY *SPECIAL ENDS 31 JAN 2024
A28 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
It’s time to vote! It It’s
BALLOTS OPEN UNTIL
NOVEMBER 30TH SCAN HERE
Vote for a chance to win $500 to Park Royal!
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A29
Library’s brain health collection offers a workout for the mind
Putting People First Since 1966
Burnaby’s Home Medical Experts All Your Home Health & Rehab Equipment Needs Under One Roof! Over 5000 products in stock in our 6000 sq ft showroom!
JANE SEYD
jseyd@nsnews.com
We know that physical exercise can help strengthen the body and boost muscle development.
But what about a workout for the mind? Librarians at the West Vancouver Memorial Library recently turned to that question as they considered the needs of the more than 12,000 seniors in West Van, particularly those facing cognitive challenges including dementia. The result is a new brain health collection, launched this fall at the library, that can help engage those with cognitive challenges and help strengthen neurological health. Librarian Ehlam Zaminpaima, who works with accessible services at the library, said she and her colleagues knew there was a need for support for the increasing numbers of seniors living with dementia, as well as their caregivers. Zaminpaima had seen those needs firsthand with her own grandmother, who had dementia. As her grandmother’s disease progressed, it impacted her quality of life, making it more difficult for her caregivers and immediate family to keep her brain engaged. With funding from the West Vancouver Library Foundation, Zaminpaima and her colleagues consulted with the Alzheimer’s Society of B.C. on recommended resources. The result is the library’s new brain health collection, which includes different sets of puzzles and activities designed to strengthen brain health and engagement with family members and caregivers at different stages of neurocognitive disorders. “Each of those items have been developed with a specific condition or stage in mind. So, some of the products are great for developing hand-eye co-ordination, others are good for mid- to late-stage Alzheimer’s,” she said. One of the items in the collection is a science-based toolbox developed under the guidance of Cynthia Green, an expert and author on memory fitness and brain health. That might involve an activity around scent and the memories it evokes. Or it might be activities that people can do as a group. There are also a series of large jigsaw puzzles specifically designed for people with dementia, sets of “aquapaintings” that reveal pictures when “painted” with water, and a board game designed to offer conversation starters and stimulate memories. Since it started, the idea behind the collection has also evolved to become broader,
• Lift Chairs • Hospital Beds • Mattresses • Stair Lifts • Patient Lifts • Bath Lifts • Bath Seats • Transfer Benches • Raised Toilet Seats
• Commodes • Grab Bars • Super Poles • First Aid & Wound Care • Power Wheelchairs • Manual Wheelchairs • Transport Chairs • Rehab Backrest • Rehab Cushions
• Electric Scooters • Folding Travel Scooters • Knee Scooter • Walkers • Canes • Crutches • Walking Poles • Aids for Daily Living • Adult Absorbent Briefs
• Incontinent Supplies • Catheters • Wedges & Cushions • Orthopaedic Pillows • Walking Boots • Braces & Supports* • Compression Therapy Products
In-house rehab equipment specialists available onsite!
Librarian Ehlam Zaminpaima tries out a new brain health collection of tools and resources for people with neurocognitive challenges. WEST VANCOUVER MEMORIAL LIBRARY
BLACK FRIDAY SALE! up to 50% OFF! November 24 - 8:30am-6:00pm
said Zaminpaima, to address other kinds of neuro-cognitive challenges like Huntingdon’s and Parkinson’s disease or people who are recovering from a stroke. “We wanted it to be as low-barrier a collection as possible and we didn’t want to limit it to only a specific group of people,” she said. In some cases, people might want to just pre-emptively give a workout to that grey matter between the ears. Nobody will ask why someone wants to borrow an item from the collection. “If people want to borrow it, they just need a library card,” said Zaminpaima. “People could just pick it off our shelves and take it home with them.” The other obvious beauty of the collection is it’s free to use. “All of these items are really costly,” said Zaminpaima, so while some people may have been able to buy one or two of them, “when someone uses the same items over and over again, people get bored with it.” This way, items can be regularly exchanged and “they’re not just stuck with one or two things at home.” So far, the collection has been well received. Members of North Shore organizations geared to people with neurocognitive disorders and people from seniors residences were invited to check out the collection when it launched at the end of September. Since then, the collection has circulated 45 times, according to the library, with plenty of positive commentary. One library user, whose wife has had Alzheimer’s for 15 years, said he wishes those kinds of resources had been available sooner for her to use. To see what’s part of the library’s brain health collection, you can visit westvanlibrary.ca.
www.regencymed.com
4437 Canada Way, Burnaby (at Willingdon) • 604-434-1383
North Shore’s Largest Selection of Ski Racks Starting From $229.95
324 East Esplanade N Van 604.987.7474
IF YOU SEE NEWS HAPPENING Contact our tips line 604.985.2131 editor@nsnews.com
nsnews.com
A30 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A31
Mayor calls for ‘common sense’ Continued from A4 former fire chief, have left their jobs with the municipality. The latest fire bylaw doesn’t stipulate what is allowed, but makes it clear the rules stem from provincial Fire Code and Building Code laws. Howard said while nothing has really changed in terms of what is and isn’t allowed to be stored in parkade areas, residents who disagree with any decision can appeal directly to the provincial B.C. Building Code appeals board, which has already ruled on several similar cases. Howard said the issue can be complicated and involve whether storage units were properly engineered to fire code and inspected as well as the overall size and design of the parkade and volume of potentially flammable material stored. “If you had a kayak and you had it on your roof rack that would be permitted.… But if we go in and there’s 100 kayaks, because everybody has two kayaks, that now becomes a problem,” he said. “There’s a grey area, and there has to be some discretion around the amount of things that can be stored and how they’re stored and where they’re stored,” he said. But when a larger quantity of
household materials is being stored, “generally our perspective is that needs to be in a properly built and rated room that’s designed for that purpose,” he said. “And those are different than just a parking garage and putting the stuff in a corner and building a little boxed-in area and putting the stuff in there.” “Our goal is to have safe buildings,” he said. Howard said he has seen photos of storage areas in some strata buildings where “people have built walls around their parking stalls and covered them in plywood and have got them filled with all sorts of things.” In response to questions from the North Shore News, the Ministry of Housing provided a statement saying, “The matter of combustible items in addition to motor vehicles in a parking garage is complex and requires analysis of the original building design and its compliance with the BC Building Code, as well as analysis of the BC Fire Code and applicable local fire bylaws.” At the Nov. 6 council meeting Mayor Mark Sager said he was confident the fire department will take “a common-sense approach” to the issue.
EDGEMONT VILLAGE 3065 EDGEMONT BLVD, NORTH VANCOUVER 604.986.4893 • Men’s & Ladies
A32 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
RUN ON OVER TO FORERUNNERS FOR OUR BLACK FRIDAY SALE & GET FIT FOR ALL YOUR SEASONAL RUNNING OR WALKING NEEDS!
FRIDAY NOV 24 TO MONDAY NOV 27
New Balance 1080v12
New Balance 880v13
NOW $ 99
NOW $ 99
Reg. $199.99
Reg $179.99
139
Saucony Peregrine 13
143
ALL In-Stock Altra Footwear
NOW
30% OFF Reg. Price!
SOCKS BUY 3 GET 1 FREE
NOW $ 99
119
Reg. $169.99
980 Marine Drive, North Vancouver (next to Everything Wine)
604.982.0878
MACKAY RD
FORERUNNERS EVERYTHING WINE
MACKAY AVE
SELECT RUNNING APPAREL 25% OFF REGULAR PRICE!
www.forerunners.ca
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A33
SECURITIES REGULATORS
Alleged B.C. stock manipulators turned back at Supreme Court
University of B.C. securities and financial law professor Cristie Ford says the ruling against four B.C. residents, who hoped to discharge allegations from Quebec’s securities commission, is a win for all of the country’s provincial regulators who now have clearer direction to proceed in complex inter-jurisdictional schemes. “I like this decision; it will have positive and practical effects. It makes clear that securities are different. You have to be able to respond to transnational fraud in a transnational way,” said Ford. In the case before the court, West Vancouver resident Frederick Langford Sharp (along with co-respondents Shawn Van Damme, Vincenzo Antonio Carnovale and Pasquale Antonio Rocca) argued Quebec’s Financial Markets Administrative Tribunal did not have the authority to adjudicate administrative charges brought by the Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF), Quebec’s equivalent of the B.C. Securities Commission. At issue was the AMF’s allegation Sharp orchestrated a “pump and dump” scheme in 2012, from B.C. using a Nevada-incorporated shell company that was registered to issue shares in Quebec. In such a scheme, promoters issue false or misleading marketing material to increase the value of a company’s stock. The AMF alleged the group earned $2.6 million from the promotion of Solo International Inc., which purported to be mining in Quebec. Most of Solo’s original shares were transferred to several offshore entities linked to Sharp’s group, the AMF alleged. But before the regulator’s case could be heard Sharp filed for a “declinatory exception,” arguing the Quebec tribunal was out of its lane. The tribunal denied the application but Sharp applied for a judicial review at Quebec Superior Court. That review was denied and Sharp appealed to the Quebec Court of Appeal, which dismissed the appeal as well. The Supreme Court of Canada heard the case earlier this year. Given that the justices agreed with the tribunal that the alleged scheme had “sufficient connections” to Quebec, “it would defeat the purpose of the cross-border nature of modern securities regulation to allow the defendants to escape the reach of Quebec’s regulatory oversight,” the ruling stated. Ford says it was important for the decision to have applied to all Canadian provincial regulators by bypassing the relevance of Quebec’s civil code, as Sharp argued it should. The nine justices, with the exception of Justice Suzanne Cote, made the ruling based on a prior case (Unifund) that established interjurisdictional rights, albeit one that didn’t specify securities regulations. “So this makes clear it applies in securities. The most important thing this ruling does is it connects the value of extraterritorial jurisdiction to the nature of securities regulations,” said Ford.
frustration for Ford. “I really don’t think we’ll have a national regulator in my lifetime. I have long thought a national regulator would be good,” said Ford. While provincial regulators may offer the advantage of being closer to their communities and local priorities, “not having a national securities regulator means enormous duplication and coordination problems,” noted Ford. The AMF case against Sharp, Van Damme, Carnovale and Rocca was brought to the administrative tribunal in Continued on A34
$ ) ) ) !) ) )* # + )
! !
#) % ' ' " % ') * ( ) * ( ( % ') % ) ) ) & % % )&
#) %+ ' ' " ' *" + % -/ " . ''' )/ " / ' "" + % -/ " . & '' . ''' + % + + /, $ $ / % / / / , / "" )+ / + +-- + # "" + % / / % / -/ & !+ - % # + % % / "" / // + + % # + % / / -/ " !# .0 ' % $ " % % / * -/ , + / + / ( / !+ - + / $ / ' '
" % &(#'
$ ) * ') % * % )' + !/- )' /- % + % + % ) / / -/ + % % & +!+ % + ) / %+ % )% + /+
" * $ +
The Supreme Court of Canada has affirmed the rights of provincial securities regulators to prosecute stock fraud cases that transcend multiple jurisdictions, with a near unanimous decision announced Friday.
Case highlights lack of national securities regulator, slow proceedings on fraud cases Of course, at the root of how and why this matter even got to the highest court is because Canada does not have a national securities regulator, as like the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Rather, Canada is a mishmash of provincial regulators with some level of coordination taking place by the Canadian Securities Administrators. There have been past efforts to establish one but constitutional and federal issues, especially with respect to Quebec, have hung up proceedings — a matter of
"
GRAEME WOOD
gwood@glaciermedia.ca
+ * +
% ! )' % ' ! ) % )' ) )' % ' )'
A34 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
Sharp faces criminal charges in U.S. Continued from A33 2017, and the allegations have not being tested before a panel of adjudicators. As such this case also exemplifies the slow nature of securities fraud cases, said Ford. “That’s not unusual in securities cases because the defendants typically have deep pockets and effective lawyers. It’s in securities that you tend to see cases that go on for a long time,” said Ford. And any future tribunal ruling against the foursome may always be appealed. As alleged by AMF, Sharp used the company Terra Equity LLC (Saint Kitts and Nevis of the Lesser Antilles), Peaceful Lion Holdings Ltd. (Samoa) and Morris Capital Inc. (Belize) “to conceal its central involvement in the scheme to manipulate the value of Respondent Solo’s stock.”
Meals delivered right
to your front door
• No contracts • Free delivery* • No subscriptions • *$30 minimum order
Sharp facing criminal charges in U.S. and civil claim in B.C. Sharp, a former B.C. lawyer, is not a stranger to court and administrative hearings. Last May he was barred by the B.C. Securities Commission from any participation in this province’s capital markets, but only after he was found civilly liable for his part in a $1-billion stock fraud
Approved Veterans Affairs Provider
778-308-4351
HeartToHomeMeals.ca
Chicken Pasta Florentine
Made for Seniors
scheme as alleged by the SEC, which called him the “mastermind.” After not responding to the charges, a U.S. judge ordered Sharp to pay disgorgement and prejudgment interest of US$28,934,433 and a civil penalty of US$23,990,781. Sharp is now barred from future trading in U.S. stocks. The SEC also brought securities fraud charges against Carnovale on Dec. 2, 2021, which remain unproven in court. With respect to the civil claim, Sharp faces parallel criminal charges brought in August 2021 by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Sharp is also engaged in a complex and longstanding constitutional challenge against the Canada Revenue Agency, which is investigating his offshore tax arrangements. The CRA made a criminal referral in 2013, alleging Sharp’s business, Corporate House Group of Companies (Corporate House), was involved in a complex tax evasion scheme. In 2016, Corporate House arrangements were revealed in the Panama Papers leak. While he did not respond to the SEC case against him, Sharp is defending himself in B.C. Supreme Court against the SEC’s efforts to sue him for US$28.9 million and seize some of his assets.
I ’s time It It’s time to ti t vote! vote! vo BALLOTS OPEN UNTIL
NOVEMBER 30TH SCAN HERE Vote for a chance to win $500 to Park Royal!
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A35
YOUR TRUSTED NORTH SHORE COMPUTER STORE SINCE 1995
In Home Service Now Available • Setup new PC and printer • Configure and optimize wireless • Network security check • Troubleshoot and repair • Virus removal and tuneup Apple/Linux/PC • Backup Solutions • Boost performance • Media sharing, streaming, shared folders, Smart TV • Computer pickup and drop off also available.
Call to book an appointment 604-629-9060
Broken Laptop Screen? Japanese maple, rhododendron and river stones frame a picture window of a Fred Hollingsworth-designed home in North Vancouver. BARBARA TILI
HOLY HOUSE
Tour requests surge for home blessed by the Dalai Lama NICK LABA
nlaba@nsnews.com
While the North Shore is famously blessed with homes designed in the West Coast Modern architectural style, not many have received blessings from one of the world’s most famous religious leaders.
Since the property at 825 Forest Hills Drive in North Vancouver listed on Nov. 10 for $3.3 million, there have been more than 200 tour requests to view the home, says real estate agent. The home was designed by famed architect Fred Hollingsworth, known for fashioning properties in the functionally elegant West Coast Modern style. But this particular building is drawing droves for a more pious purpose. During His Holiness’s “Education of the Heart” tour, the Dalai Lama was invited to visit the home. “The previous owners were deeply involved in Eastern traditions … and through Hollingsworth connections they were able to invite the spiritual leaders to the home,” Rodney explained. The North Vancouver property was chosen as a backdrop to host a meeting place where a blessing of the home was held. “The owners were gifted a framed picture that’s now hanging in the dining room,” Rodney said. “This is a detail the
current owners really want to pass on to the next custodians.” Apart from the Dalai Lama’s favour, the 3,865-square-foot home features five bedrooms and 3.5 bathrooms on a one-fifth acre lot in the Edgemont Village neighbourhood. Exposed timber beams and large picture windows connect the 1950-built home’s interior to the surrounding property, which hosts a Japanese-style pond. Akin to Modernist peers like Le Corbusier, Frank Lloyd Wright and Arthur Erickson, Hollingsworth also drew inspiration from Japan, Rodney said. “With the Lantern House, Hollingsworth tapped into Japanese wabi-sabi principles that seek to eliminate the inessential and find beauty in unembellished, humble materials,” he said. The architect’s vision for the modern home was articulated through a repeatable, post-and-beam design that was customizable for each family and in harmony with its natural surroundings, Rodney added. Originally smaller in size, Fred’s son Russell Hollingsworth designed a second storey for the home in 2000. Due to the number of tour requests, which can’t all be accommodated, Rodney said he’s considering hosting a twilight tea and signing bowl service at the home Dec. 5, 4 to 5 p.m., which is open to the public.
Your notebook screen is cracked. It may look like there’s an ink splotch on your notebook screen. Although the surface layer of the notebook screen isn’t damaged, the glass inside your notebook screen is. Notebook disassembly can be a complex and frustrating process, and without the right tools you can do more damage than good, but at Evergreen Computers we have screen replacement down to a science! Not only can we replace 99% of all screens, but we can do it for much less than you might expect!
Free Estimates
Computer problems? Bring your system in for Evergreen’s unique flat rates Diagnose any hardware or software problem for $29
Apple/Linux/PC
We fix all makes and Models
Virus Scan and Tune-Up Special Bring your computer in for a tune-up, and we will scan it for viruses and remove any we find
$260 $129 While Supplies Last
20 YEARS
2016
2017
2020
1914 Lonsdale Avenue • 778-717-0609 www.evergreencomputers.ca www.facebook.com/evergreencomputers
A36 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
W NO
S
IN L EL
G
ELEGANTLY URBAN In North Vancouver’s urban heart, Elle by Polygon offers a boutique collection of one, two, and three bedroom homes in a concrete 22-storey, mixed-use building just off Lonsdale and 15th. Located in a neighbourhood with a diverse mix of restaurants, shops and amenities lining Lonsdale, Elle puts homeowners at the centre of convenience. One bedroom homes from $ 918,000. Two bedroom homes from $1,188,000.
1604A Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver | Open noon to 5 pm daily (except Fridays) 604.239.3382 | elle@polyhomes.com | polyhomes.com
north shore news nsnews.com
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A37
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
The North Shore News is hosting a film festival The North Shore News is aiming to host a celebration of the vibrant and diverse filmmaking talent right here in our community via a weekend film festival in 2024.
Submissions can be of any length, but preference may be given to shorter films to accommodate a diverse program. All genres and styles are welcome. Films must be submitted electronically by the deadline. Submitters must have rights to show films in a ticketed film festival setting.
As a community renowned for its picturesque landscapes and burgeoning film industry presence, the North Shore has become a hub for creativity and cinematic innovation.
Who can submit We invite local filmmakers of all levels, from seasoned professionals to emerging talents, to submit their original works for consideration. Whether you’re a graduate of Capilano University’s esteemed School of Motion Picture Arts, a local independent filmmaker, or someone with a compelling story to tell through film, we want to showcase the richness of our community’s cinematic voice. Submission categories The festival is open to films of all genres, including but not limited to narrative, documentary, animation, shorts and experimental works. We encourage submissions that highlight
Film crews set up for a shot on the City of North Vancouver waterfront in April 2021. CITY OF NORTH VANCOUVER the unique character of the North Shore and its residents, fostering a sense of community and creativity. Important dates Submission deadline: Dec. 31, 2023 Notification of acceptance: Jan. 31, 2024 Festival dates: winter/spring 2024 Submission guidelines Films must be produced by individuals residing or working in North Vancouver, West Vancouver, Sea to Sky Country or surrounding areas.
How to submit To submit your film please email a link to publisher@nsnews.com. Please include a brief synopsis, filmmaker bio, and any relevant production details. The North Shore News aims to create a platform for local filmmakers to share their stories and connect with the community. Selected films will be showcased during the festival, providing filmmakers with an opportunity to engage with audiences and fellow creatives. For inquiries or more information, contact Matt Blair at publisher@nsnews. com. We look forward to receiving your submissions and sharing the brilliance of the North Shore’s filmmakers with our community!
UBC Faculty FacultyofofDentistry Dentistry UBC UBC Dentistry is screening patients UBC Dentistry is is screening screening UBC Dentistry is patients UBC Dentistry screeningpatients patients 12 years of age and older who whorequire require 12 years of age and older 7 years of age and older who 7 years of age and older who require require
Braces Braces Braces
(Full orthodontic treatment cost:$4,200) $4,200) (Full orthodontic treatment cost: $1,000 to $4,200) (Full orthodontic treatment cost: (Full orthodontic treatment cost: $1,000 to $4,200)
For information, visit www.dentistry.ubc.ca/gradortho For information, visit www.dentistry.ubc.ca/gradortho Graduate Orthodontics Program Graduate Orthodontics Program
To arrange a screening appointment: To arrange a screening appointment: 604-827-4991 (12 (12 years 604-827-4991 years&&older) older) 604-827-0706 (7 (7 to to 10 604-827-0706 10years yearsold) old) or email gradorthoclinic@dentistry.ubc.ca or email gradorthoclinic@dentistry.ubc.ca T THHE EUUNNI V I VEERRSSI T I TYY OORR BBRRI ITTI ISSHH CCOOLLUUM MBBIIAA
Developer’s Preliminary Public Consultation Meeting Darwin Properties, in partnership with BC Housing and Klahanee Park Housing Society, are proposing to construct two 6-storey apartments and a 24-storey apartment at 370-380 Klahanie Court in West Vancouver. The proposal includes approximately 169 non-market senior rental units, 95 non-market family rental units, and 347 market rental units. Community feedback is important to our project team, and we are hosting an information meeting before we apply to the District of West Vancouver. Date:
Tuesday, November 28th, 2023
Time:
6:00pm – 8:00pm (drop-in, open house format)
Location:
Capilano Rugby Clubhouse 1910 Glenaire Dr, North Vancouver, BC V7P 1Y1
Notification flyers are being distributed within a 100-meter radius of the site. If you would like more information, please visit Darwin.ca or contact Christa Strand of Darwin Properties at 604-929-7944. *This is not a West Vancouver District function; it is a pre-application meeting. West Vancouver District Council may receive a report from staff on the issues raised at this meeting and may formally consider the proposal at a later date.
A38 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
NOW SELLING
LIFE AS LARGE AS THE
MTNS
COMING 2026 1 – 3 BEDROOM CONDOS AT THE STORIES This is not an offering for sale, as an offering can only be made after the filing of a disclosure statement, and only in jurisdictions where qualified in accordance with applicable local laws. E.&O.E.
MTNVillageByAnthem.com
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A39
TransLink still needs to secure funding
Continued from A1 If TransLink can secure funding for the projects from all three levels of government, the agency will go through a procurement process in 2025 aiming to have the bus rapid transit system rolling out in 2027, Quinn said. The Mayors’ Council does, however, have an interim plan that will see transit improvement on the North Shore even sooner by extending the existing R2 RapidBus from Phibbs Exchange to Metrotown, likely replacing the 222 express bus. There is no timeline for when the R2 extension will come online but before it can happen, TransLink will have to acquire more buses and make bus priority infrastructure improvements along the route to ensure the RapidBus doesn’t fall behind schedule in general vehicle traffic. Buchanan expressed confidence that the extension of the R2 would be an impactful measure in the meantime. “I think people are wanting fast, reliable service and we want to make sure that we deliver that. There’s not an alternative competitive route other than the car,” she said. “Providing that immediate extension while we
York Region’s bus rapid transit service is being cited as an example for how TransLink’s version should look when it starts rolling out in 2027. TRANSLINK simultaneously plan for the entire corridor of rapid transit gives people what they’ve been asking for.” The proposed BRT timeline is far too tight to build any kind of a new rapid transit crossing over Burrard Inlet, Quinn acknowledged, so work is happening simultaneously on a longer-term rapid transit solution for the North Shore, he said. Neither the Bus Rapid Transit route nor the extension of the R2 will involve re-purposing any of the existing lanes on the Ironworkers Memorial Second Narrows Crossing for buses only,
Quinn said. District of North Vancouver Mayor Mike Little acknowledged that traffic weary residents and commuters might like to see BRT arrive sooner than 2027, but he said bus service on every route will improve as the new infrastructure comes online in phases. “We don’t have to wait till it’s all completed to get some of the benefits,” he said. “We obviously want to see it progress as quickly as we reasonably can. We’re all committed to talking to our counterparts in Victoria and Ottawa to try to get their supports moved up and, hopefully, the construction moved forward.” There was stiff competition among the municipalities to get to the top of the list of nine BRT lines included in the Mayors’ Council’s 10-year plan, said chair and Port Coquitlam Mayor Brad West, but the routes were agreed to by the council members based on their ability to maximize people’s access to rapid transit, along with ridership potential and population growth. TransLink estimates there are already 120,000 people and 90,000 jobs within walking distance of the North Shore BRT route.
Family Services of the North Shore Christmas Bureau Needs Your Help! This year, the need in our community is greater than ever. Support your North Shore neighbours by sponsoring a family or an individual this holiday season. Find sponsor forms at familyservices.bc.ca, or scan the QR code. Founding Sponsor
A40 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
Same building targeted twice 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
Continued from A10 behind them, Smith went inside, where CCTV cameras captured him roaming around the storage locker area as well as the gym. Just after midnight, Smith was seen loading a dumbbell set into a suitcase and wheeling them away from the building. A week later, on Sept. 7, Smith was back at the apartment at 108 East 8th St., where he again waited for someone to leave the building to gain access A ‘porch pirate’ who stole Amazon packages from North Vancouver apartment buildings has been sentenced to 60 and scoop up six Amazon days in jail. NSN FILE packages from the mail area before leaving. three years old and started taking drugs Wu said Smith has an extensive in his early 20s. Both of his parents have criminal record, mostly involving similar since died, but Smith told the judge he is property offences in the Kelowna area. He hoping to move to Ontario following his is currently still serving a jail sentence for sentence to be reunited with his father’s similar convictions of stealing packages family. His lawyer said he is also hoping to from apartment buildings in Kelowna get into a rehabilitation program. between Jan. 21 and Feb. 8 of 2023. In addition to the jail term, Judge Smith’s defence lawyer told the judge Joanne Challenger sentenced Smith to one his client had an abusive upbringing, was year probation. in and out of ministry care since he was
One lucky person will receive a prize package full of stocking stuffers from the sponsors below.
Prize is valued at $525! Scan the code below to enter. Thank you to the following businesses who sponsored this contest:
No purchase required. The contest begins on November 21, 2023, at 10 a.m. PST and ends on December 11, 2023, at 11:59 p.m. PST. There is a total of one [1] prize retail value of $525 available to be won. Skill-testing question required. Open to legal residents of British Columbia, Canada, who are the age of majority in the province at the time of entry. Odds of winning depend on the number of eligible entries received before the contest closes. Limit 1 entry per person.
SCAN TO ENTER!
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A41
‘Suspicious circumstances’ noted Continued from A12 As a result, it is up to the society to police trust accounts and ultimately uphold the integrity of the legal system. MacDonald also agreed to not apply to practice law anywhere in the world without first notifying the society. And should the lawyer, who has practiced since 1999, choose to reapply for a licence, he must demonstrate he is of good character and fitness to practice law via a credentials hearing. MacDonald was not fined by the society. “The law society recognizes that misconduct by lawyers that facilitates securities fraud poses significant risks to the public, and takes such matters very seriously. The law society appreciates the co-operation of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in this investigation,” the statement reads. MacDonald admitted he moved money through corporate offshore accounts, including the British Virgin Islands and Hong Kong “in objectively suspicious circumstances,” according to the admission of misconduct and undertaking. In many instances, MacDonald would incorporate companies without properly verifying identification.
MacDonald’s citation specifically references the movement of about US$3.5 million and just over C$420,000 through his accounts for the transactions in question. MacDonald first attempted to keep the citation from public scrutiny by applying to the society for an anonymization order; however, a society hearing panel ruled Jan. 30 there were no grounds to justify the application. Part of his stated reason was to shield scrutiny of the Canucks Autism Network, for which he was the chair of the board of directors. The charity’s website shows MacDonald is no longer on the board. The society said the companies and charity have an interest in knowing of the allegations. The society also noted MacDonald’s “role in the companies and the charity do not outweigh the public interest in publication.” MacDonald is a prolific participant in Vancouver’s investment industry, working as a director or legal consultant of dozens of junior public companies since being called to the B.C. bar in 1999. The society states he has recently wound down his practice (at MacDonald Tuskey) and closed the firm’s physical office. The firm no longer has an online presence, as well.
LIMITED TIME OFFER 5% DOWN & UP TO $30K IN SAVINGS* 73 modern townhomes with an artisan retail village on the shores of the Howe Sound. Displays & Presentation Centre Open Daily 12 - 5pm 351 Copper Drive, Britannia Beach
britanniabeachliving.com 604.980.0016
This is not an offering for sale. Sales by disclosure statement only. E.&0.E. Sales & Marketing by Adera Realty Corp. Britannia Residential Adera Projects Ltd. *Available on select homes only.
A42 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
PUBLIC HEARING
3288 Brookridge Dr and 1135-1147 Ridgewood Dr
MOVE ON
West Vancouver couple gears up for electric lifestyle HEATHER DRUGGE
Contributing writer
West Vancouver residents Alexis Chicoine and partner Barry Chisholm are converts to electric wheeled life.
When: Tuesday, November 28, 2023 at 7pm Where: Council Chamber, 355 West Queens Road, North Vancouver, BC How: The Public Hearing will be held in a hybrid format with a combination of in-person and electronic participation by some or all members of council, staff and the public. The public are invited to attend at the Council Chamber where they will be able to see and hear the entire proceedings. Those wishing to view or to participate in the meeting electronically may do so at https://dnvorg.zoom.us/j/67910218298 or by phone by dialing 1-778-907-2071 and entering Meeting ID: 679 1021 8298 What: A Public Hearing for Bylaw 8555, proposed amendments to the Official Community Plan (OCP) and Bylaw 8554, proposed amendments to the Zoning Bylaw, to permit the creation of a 12-unit townhouse development at 3288 Brookridge Drive and 1135-1147 Ridgewood Drive. What Changes: Bylaw 8555 proposes to amend the OCP land use designation of the subject site from Residential Level 2: Detached Residential (RES2) to Residential Level 3: Attached Residential (RES3), and designate the subject site as Development Permit Areas for Form and Character of Commercial, Industrial, and Multifamily Development; and Energy and Water Conservation and Greenhouse Gas Emission Reduction. Bylaw 8554 proposes to amend the District's Zoning Bylaw by rezoning the site from Single Family Residential Edgemont Zone (RSE) to a new Comprehensive Development Zone 140 (CD140). The CD140 Zone addresses permitted and accessory uses, conditions of use, and zoning provisions such as density, amenities, setbacks, height, building and site coverage, landscaping and storm water management, and parking, loading and servicing requirements.
PROPOSED*
*Provided by applicant for illustrative purposes only.
The actual development, if approved, may differ.
When and How can I provide input? We welcome your input on Tuesday, November 28, 2023 at 7pm. You may sign up to speak at the hearing by contacting the Municipal Clerk at signup@dnv.org prior to 3pm, Tuesday, November 28, 2023. You may also provide a written submission at any time prior to the close of the public hearing by sending it to the Municipal Clerk at input@dnv.org or by mail to Municipal Clerk, 355 West Queens Road, District of North Vancouver, BC, V7N 4N5. After the speakers list has been exhausted, there will be an opportunity for additional speakers who had not signed up in advance to make submissions. Please note that Council may not receive further submissions from the public concerning this application after the conclusion of the public hearing.
Need more info? Relevant background material and copies of the bylaws are available for review at the Clerk's Office, 355 West Queens Road, North Vancouver, BC, Monday to Friday, 8am to 4:30pm, except holidays from November 14 to November 28, 2023 or online at DNV.org/public-hearing
DISTRICT OF
NORTH VANCOUVER
Questions?
Taylor Jenks, Development Planner jenkst@dnv.org, 604-990-2428
First, Chicoine got an electric bike attachment for her wheelchair. To keep up, Chisholm bought an electric trike. Their pup, Kuma, enjoys riding in a carrier attached to Chicoine’s wheelchair. The cats, Sushi and Toby, while bike-curious, stay at home. Alexis Chicoine and Barry Chisholm say they are all-in on The entire family lives electric rides, opting to take their “e-bikes” for most of their at the manufactured home trips for shopping, work and play. HEATHER DRUGGE park near Park Royal shopping center, right by the “I think it has become realistic for people Spirit Trail. This location and their “e-bikes” to consider getting an e-bike and using that have meant that they cycle to go shopping, attend meetings, visit friends and everything for six months of the year,” says Chisholm. “You could not insure your car; save that in between. money and buy an e-bike.” Before moving down the hill, Chicoine Now that Barry and Alexis are reguand Chisholm lived in Upper Lonsdale. lar rollers, they’ve noted some room for “I had to get in my van to do anything,” improvement on the Spirit Trail, which they said Chicoine. “I wanted to just go out my love and use all the time. “There is a baldoor and go for a roll.” ance we need to strike when using shared So she bought a power assist front-drive, which attaches to her wheelchair in a couple pathways,” said Chicoine. “Now that so many people use the Spirit Trail, safety and of easy moves. The device lifts the wheelchair’s casters off the ground, creating a new speed have become a big issue. Separating the path for pedestrians from people on e-bike that can go over terrain that is not rolling devices would be ideal. Also, people easy to access with a manual wheelchair. with visual disabilities, who use a white “Sometimes you just need that little cane, can’t navigate the path independently extra power – especially on a steep hill in without tactile strips or hard curbs to guide a manual chair. That’s when an electric them, so it’s not inclusive.” bike attachment is a wonderful piece of Chicoine knows her stuff on this equipment.” count. She’s chair of the North Shore-wide But still, living above the highway didn’t Advisory Committee on Disability Issues and offer a lot of nearby amenities or even safe works as a consultant, helping companies infrastructure where she could use her new create inclusive workplaces. wheels. So, the couple relocated to their “After COVID showed everyone that new home, which provides flatter terrain, better bike paths, stores and services within working from home was possible, I am only at the office one day a week, so I drive less blocks. and less,” said Chicoine. “We want to sell One of the first things they did after one of our vehicles because we don’t use Chisholm got his trike was go shopping at both.” the Save-On-Foods on Marine Drive. Chisholm summarizes their experience “I didn’t like carrying a big load on the so far: “We love this lifestyle and recomback of my original e-bike,” said Chisholm. “The trike means I can carry a lot without mend it to anyone looking to add e-biking for being off balance or swinging my leg over a transportation. Just do it.” milk carton full of groceries.” Heather Drugge is a sustainable transporA mortgage broker, Chisholm hasn’t been tation advocate who has used her bike for to his office for more than two years and transportation for more than 20 years.She’s meets with clients at coffee shops he can got an e-bike now,and maybe a jetpack next. walk or ride to. Northshoremoves@gmail.com.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 |
Metro Vancouver’s Hyperlocal Weather App. Get the most accurate weather forecasts in your pocket with the free Weatherhood app! Giving you access to more weather stations in your community than any other app. Download the App for iOS or Android
WEATHERHOOD.COM
A43
A44 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 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
Heaths and heathers boost health of endangered native bees LAURA MARIE NEUBERT
Contributing writer
“The problem is the solution” is a foundational principle of permaculture that has on multiple occasions, solved more than one perceived problem in our landscape.
The amazing Valerie Jerome
Photo: NVMA, 43-2-1
Nov. 20-26 is Canada History Week. This year’s theme is the History of Black Achievement. Here is a photo of 16-year-old Valerie Jerome from the 1960 North Van High yearbook, the same year she competed alongside her brother Harry at the Olympic Games in Rome. After retiring from racing in 1966, Valerie became a teacher, a track coach, and an advocate for youth sport and the environment. In 2007 she helped found the Jerome Outreach Society which aids sports programs at low-income schools. In 2010, she was chosen to serve as a torchbearer for the Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver. 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
Three years ago, when we were installing a food forest pathway around our garden, I was mindful of the 75-year-old laurel hedge that pens in our embedded wire fence. The three-metre deep hedge is a fortress of sorts – an adopted habitat for several species of small mammals, birds, bees and all manner of insects. A complex web of life thrives in the dense interior branches, in the leaf litter and in the soil ecosystem. The heavy spring and summer traffic in and out of the hedge deposited a mess of twigs, dirt balls and detritus atop the “tidy” pea gravel path, which while delightful, seriously muddied-up the classical English garden vibe I was aiming for. After considerable deliberation and research, we decided to border the gravel path at ground level, with snow white Erica X darleyensus “Alba,” an inexpensive winter white heath (heather) that blooms brilliant
Beautiful and hard-working perennial heather, placed here and there among raised beds. LAURA MARIE NEUBERT silvery white against lime green foliage from late October through May. For interest, we alternated hardy heath and our favourite native sword fern three-to-one along both sides of the path, and up tight against the hedge. By year two, the heath and ferns had closed gaps between them, growing tall enough to form a wind-proof barrier to keep organic litter inside the hedge, and many natural predators out. We are delighted that, during the cold dark months of winter, what Continued on A45
Part-time Drivers Needed to Help Seniors on The North Shore A SHOWCASE FOR CONTEMPORARY COAST SALISH ARTISANS
INDIGENOUS ARTISAN MARKET
FRIDAY, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23 NOVEMBER 24 11AM–5PM 5–8PM
If you enjoy meeting seniors in our community, we’d love to talk to you. Are you a recent retiree, or semi-retired, and looking for a fulfilling and purposeful way to spend your retirement years? Are you working part-time and Rides by Shylo escorts local would enjoy some extra hours spent with the fabulous seniors seniors to medical appointments and running errands. in our community?
If this sounds like an opportunity you’d enjoy, please contact us at 604-985-6881 or HR@ShyloHomeHealthcare.ca
monova.ca
www.RidesByShylo.ca
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 | A45
Bees co-evolve with native plants Continued from A44 was once a dark and uninteresting monoculture now offers layers of contrast and texture, punctuated by masses of reflective white blooms. A heartwarming bonus has been a marked increase in the number and species of birds and insects nesting and foraging in the laurel year-round, but the very best gift that the heath solution delivered is an incalculable increase in availability of food and zoopharmacognosy (plant medicine) for endangered native bees when they appear during the early blossom-barren months of spring. There are hundreds of species of native bees in Canada that have co-evolved biologically with native plants over millions of years. Biodiversity lost to urban, industrial and agricultural development threatens not only native bees’ future, but ours. Consider that solitary native species like mason bees visit up to 2,000 flowers per day and pollinate at more than 90-per-cent efficiency, compared to their non-native honey bee cousins performing at a considerably lower rate. Nectar sourced from heaths and heathers, as it turns out, is rich in the phytochemical callulene, which is used by bees for defence against a dangerous insect
gut parasite. Researchers in the United Kingdom have highlighted the importance of protecting natural highland ecosystems rich in heaths and heathers, to support bee populations. In Canadian cities, where winters are long and cold, and many of our urban plantings are non-native and/or incompatible with native insects, we can do our part to advocate for native bee health. In our particular neighborhood, during late March or early April when native mason bees emerge from their cocoons, there are few to no flowers in bloom to feed them. I take comfort then, that our newly established heathers and heaths have become a dependable source of nourishment. This year, long into the early days of June, there was a palpable hum along the shaded pathway as thousands of bees and other pollinators feasted on heath flowers below, and emerging flowering vines above. In October, when most other blooms have faded, the heath begins blooming again, offering a final gift of sustenance before the frost. 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.
I know this market... I’ve been selling homes on the North Shore for over 35 years. Let me help you get started.
Al Sutton
604-720-4889 | alsutton.org
Life Member
35 Years
CROSSWORD
Solutions can be found in the Wednesday November 29th issue.
CLUES ACROSS
1. Spinning toys 5. Defeat 9. Health spot 12. Harbinger 13. Large sandwich 14. Every single one 15. July 4th events 17. Mushy stuff 18. Express 19. Hockey shoe 21. Exercise program 25. What bit Cleopatra 28. Granny 29. Significant periods 33. Harness strap 35. Glide over snow 36. Toward the rising sun 37. London goodbye: 2 wds. 38. Await judgment 40. “____ kingdom come . . .”
41. Offense 44. Thing of value 47. Bent 51. Bumped into 52. Unceasingly 56. Climbing veggie 57. BLT dressing 58. Ponder 59. Undercover man 60. Erupt 61. Still asleep
CLUES DOWN
1. Bean curd 2. Exclude 3. Sassy 4. Scoff 5. “____ Done It?” 6. Personal pronoun 7. Irritate 8. Sheriff’s gang 9. Long narrative 10. Conspire 11. Sunburn soother 16. Brown songbird 20. Leg joint 22. Pants 23. Penned
45. Trickle 24. Bangor’s state 25. Picasso’s field 46. Command to Fido 26. Mermaid’s home 27. Deep hole 48. Members-only group 30. Fink 31. ____ Wednesday 49. Choice word 32. Hog’s home 50. Tinted 34. Moniker 53. Knock gently 39. College head 54. Private ____ 42. Bits of news 55. Tough ____ to hoe 43. Stage production Crossword puzzle answers use American spelling 44. Hi-fi blasters Wednesday November 15th Solutions:
Daily crossword available at: nsnews.com/crossword
A46 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 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 Obituaries
One Final
Gift
Scatter me not to restless winds, Nor toss my ashes to the sea. Remember now those years gone by When loving gifts I gave to thee. Remember now the happy times The family ties we shared. Don’t leave my resting place unmarked As though you never cared. Deny me not one final gift For all who come to see A single lasting proof that says I loved... & you loved me. by DJ Kramer
Obituaries
Obituaries
ENGEL, Nancy Lynn May 17, 1957 − March 23, 2023 Born in Edmonton, Alberta, and later calling North Vancouver her home, Nancy Lynn Engel lived a life devoted to her loved ones. With a heart as big as her love for travel, she spent years contributing to her community as a North Vancouver Commissioner for the Girl Guides of Canada and working reception at the Harvest Project. Professionally, Nancy’s dedication and expertise in the lumber industry were evident through her contributions at Hollyburn Lumber, Curtis Lumber, and her eventual retirement from Dicks. Nancy’s spirit of adventure began early on her family’s boat, later taking her to the vibrant lights of Las Vegas, around the world, and on unforgettable journeys in her RV. Nancy leaves behind a legacy of love and memories with her husband, Jens; her children, Kirsten (Tyler) and Alex; her adored grandchildren, Mason and Everly; and her many dear friends. She was predeceased by her sister Lori and her loving parents, Jean and Alvin. Donations in Nancy’s honour can be made to the Harvest Project as a tribute to her generous spirit.
KONING, Mary Anne (Molly) December 8, 1925 - November 8, 2023 Molly Koning (nee Seery) passed away peacefully at Lions Gate Hospital on November 8th, 2023 with her family at her bedside. She was born in Glasgow, Scotland. She was predeceased by her loving husband Frans (1986) and is survived by her sister Meg, daughter Margot, grandson Ryan and granddaughter Lindsay. She was trained as a nurse and midwife in Manchester, England. She travelled to Canada with her sister in 1956 and nursed in Trail, B.C. for a couple years, where she met her husband. They then moved to North Vancouver, where she began her long nursing career at Lions Gate Hospital, ultimately becoming nursing supervisor. Molly loved family and gardening. In her retirement she volunteered with the blood pressure program and was very active with her church.
Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes
A celebration of her life will be held at St. Catherine’s Anglican Church, 1058 Ridgewood Drive, North Vancouver, November 28, 2023 at 11 am with a reception following. Donations may be made in Molly’s honour to Lions Gate Hospital or to an organization of your choice.
VERDUN−JONES, Simon N. August 3, 1947 − August 21, 2023 Simon Nicholas Verdun−Jones, PhD, JD, died after a long struggle with multiple myeloma. Simon taught in the School of Criminology at SFU for more than 40 years and helped form the School. He loved his family and was devoted to his work. He is survived by his wife, Valerie Gregory, daughter Maritza Verdun−Jones, four grandchildren and three great−grandchildren. He mourned deeply the death of his youngest daughter, Carmen, in 2022. He was predeceased by his brother Lance and by his adoptive parents. A celebration of life will be held on Saturday, February 17, 1−4 pm at the Fraternal Order of Eagles, 170 3rd St W, North Vancouver.
Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes on: legacy.com/obituaries/nsnews
Fond memories linger every day, Remembrance keeps them near.
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 |
A47
REMEMBRANCES
ELLIOTT, Isabella Margaret Isabella Margaret Elliott passed away peacefully in her sleep one month after her 95th birthday. The Celebration of Life for Isabella Elliott will be held at the West Vancouver Seniors Centre Marine Room on Sunday, December 10, from 1:30-3:30pm. Bring your memories. Tell any friends from those good old days. And if possible let me know who can make it by emailing: susanstoutyvr@gmail.com In Issy’s own words: Isabella Margaret Elliott born in Vancouver in 1928 of a Pioneer Vancouver Family. (daughter of Nina Gertrude Chambers and Lachlan McLean Elliott.) My grandfather Sidney Claude Elliott has a Park (and lake and mountain) named for him on Northern Vancouver Island. (Her maternal grandfather was a sea captain in the Maritime provinces) I graduated from Lord Byng High School (The comment in the 1946 year book reads: Issy Elliott: Issy, our talkative blond with the infectious chuckle, spends her spare time skiing as a member of the G.M.S.C. Destination: Nursing school, to be a lab technician). Attended UBC. Graduated from St Paul’s Hospital as a Laboratory Technician. Worked on Staff for a few years. Worked in Toronto, Trail & Victoria. Went to work with the World Health Organization. Took a Course with them in Rome in Malaria then went to India for 2 years to work in the villages checking for Malaria. Returned to Canada & moved to Calgary where I worked in a Lab. I had started my skiing up Grouse in the 1940’s when one hiked up the Mountain and worked on some Ski Races as an Official. When I was in Calgary got very involved with Calgary Ski Club and our National Ski Team working on many races.
REDAHL, Shirley Anne In loving memory of Shirley Anne Redahl, 85, who passed away peacefully on October 30 at the Vancouver North Shore Hospice. Her “Viking toughness” and stoic will to live had her fighting cancer at her North Vancouver home for a two year period until just a few days before her passing.
Frank Walden passed away quietly on October 4, 2023 predeceased in 2019 by his beloved wife Virginia. He leaves behind his son Chris (Karen), daughter Jane (Michael) and youngest son Doug (Marsha); grandchildren Jessica, Shanleigh, Johnathon, Ross and Claire, and great-grandson Bennett. He is survived by his younger siblings Chester, Joan and Mona, and was predeceased by his brother Don and parents Ken and Mary.
Born August 12, 1938 in Kinistino, Saskatchewan. She graduated from Hapnot Collegiate in Flin Flon, Manitoba and went on to graduate from the Victoria General Hospital School of Nursing in Winnipeg 1959.
Frank’s early days were in Peace River country, Alberta. He learned to hunt, played hockey on frozen rivers and lakes, and mastered the delicious art of making ice cream. His family eventually moved to Summerland and then Kamloops, where he met the love of his life, Virginia Dalgleish, at high school. Their romance spanned seventy years.
Shirley became a Flight Attendant with Air Canada, Vancouver base in 1959, was promoted to Flight Service Director, retiring from a very rewarding 30+ year career almost 30 years ago. She made life long friendships in the airlines, most of all Annie, Merle, Gayle, Carol, and Viviane. Merle was a staple in Shirley’s life. They talked on the phone 3 or 4 times a week. Shirley traveled many times to California to visit Merle, especially at US Thanksgiving. Shirley was a great skier and did some skiing with her friend Gayle in Whistler. She and Annie played a lot of tennis in their younger years and later Shirley took up golfing. She also liked bicycling. She really enjoyed her time with the Air Canada Maple Wings Flight Attendant group.
Retired from work as a Lab Technician.
She is survived by 10 nieces and nephews who fondly remember her determination to enjoy life in the everyday, often engaging in outdoor activities with friends, her talents and teachings in how to run a household, an immensely practical woman but was also a lot of fun, her worldly glamour, her incredible honesty, sense of humour, and amazing love for animals.
Bought a 6 Acre Island (Nocturne) up the Coast with a Friend and we built a house. Lived on it all year round and also worked part time on a local fish farm.
She is also survived by her sister Caren, cousin Arlene, and sisters-in-law Angelika and Gretta and by her cousin Britt in Norway. She maintained close relationships with them all.
Moved back to North Vancouver and met Jack Owen on a hike with a senior group. We got married in 1991 and had 14 good years together with ski and golf holidays.
She is predeceased Gordon, and Vernon.
Then returned to Vancouver and worked for an Allergist. Again got very involved with major ski races and was a Race Secretary to some of them. Also spent a lot of time with Vancouver’s Ski Swap.
When (Jack) died I got involved with the West Vancouver Senior Center and joined their hiking group and led many hikes with the group. will finish this later - Isabella Unfortunately, later never came. Issy is predeceased by her sister Eleanor Monroe (née Lowe) and husband John (Jack) Owen. She will be fondly remembered by Eleanor’s daughters (her nieces) Barbara (Monroe) Dowie, Susan (Monroe) Whittaker and Margaret (Monroe) Smoller; her second cousin Sandra Keller; her goddaughter Karen Kirker; Jack’s niece Carol Brown; and many ‘several times removed’ cousins; as well as fellow hikers and skiers. No flowers. If you wish, make a donation to Parkinson’s research.
WALDEN, Frank Courtleigh June 30, 1929 - October 4, 2023
by
her
brothers
Ronald,
Shirley had a very close and loving relationship with her Aunt Doris, who was a source of guidance and support in her life. The family would like to thank Annie and Viviane for their dedicated friendship and help these last many months, the Vancouver Cancer Clinic, and Lions Gate Hospital’s dedicated and wonderful staff, especially Farimah, Shirley’s social worker. We would also like to thank Shirley’s dear and very kind neighbor, Stephanie. Annie, we are so grateful our aunt had you in her life, you are a blessing. Shirley wished to be interned with family at Norden Lutheran, Saskatchewan. The family plans to gather there in her memory and in celebration for her life. Rest in peace dear Auntie Shirley
Frank joined the Royal Canadian Navy, but the war ended shortly after his naval training was completed in Halifax. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts from UBC and had a great way with words, perhaps learned from his father, who was a schoolteacher for many years. In Vancouver, he entered the work force as a reporter and subsequently covered politics from Victoria, ultimately rising to become night editor of The Vancouver Sun. In the mid-seventies, Frank left the newspaper business and joined a public relations firm, eventually buying the company and forming Walden Public Relations Ltd. By retirement, he had worked with many of British Columbia’s business and political leaders -- writing speeches for BC premiers and luminaries, helping the forestry industry polish its reputation, and expanding to become one of the pre-eminent PR firms in Canada. He served as President of the UBC Alumni Association and was the ghostwriter for a published novel. Frank and Virginia had many dear, long-time friends and, together, they were excellent hosts and knew how to party! Frank enjoyed many Friday lunches with friends, clients and colleagues at the Sylvia Hotel. He had the driest sense of humour and was an old-school gentleman always. He relished a good cigar and a spicy joke. Frank and Virginia traveled widely and had an appreciation for history and exploring the world, often with friends or family. They made regular visits to Hawaii, the UK and European continent as well as treks to Egypt, Central America and the Caribbean. They instilled the joy of travel in their kids, including a cross-Canada train trip to Expo 67, magical visits to Disneyland and Oregon beaches, a Mediterranean cruise as well as many happy drives in the paneled station wagon to visit family in BC and Alberta. Frank was an athlete throughout his life - as a star basketball player in high school, a sturdy defenseman for the Arbutus Club hockey team, a spirited competitor at the curling rink and badminton court, a dedicated runner for 35 years, and a cyclist into his 80s. Most importantly, Frank was a fun-loving and dedicated family man. Family dinners involved meticulous questions about the kids’ day. Advice and support were always provided. Frank was a good-natured chauffeur for soccer games, band practices, 6am hockey, and special events like Grey Cup. Many rainy days were spent watching from the sidelines or waiting in a cold car for practices to end. He enthusiastically shared in the joys of fishing and boating at Shuswap, crabbing at Tsawwassen beach, skating at Lac Le Jeune or tobogganing down a snowy Kamloops hill. But it was Frank’s example that spoke loudest. He was a keen writer, as is Chris; his artistic talents have been amplified in Jane; he was a trusted business advisor, as is Doug; and his athleticism in sports and love of good food were gifted to his grandchildren. He welcomed the chance to take grandchildren to White Spot for post-game meals or dip an amaretto cookie into Chris’ mascarpone cheesecake or leave behind fresh apples to inspire Karen to make a pie. And, every family dinner was finished with ice cream (for the grandkids, of course). It was a long life, well lived. Frank was a superhero to his family and he is sorely missed.
A48 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
REMEMBRANCES Obituaries
Funeral services
North Shore’s Only Family Owned Funeral Provider WILLIAMS, Hazel Hazel passed away peacefully in her home with her family beside her on November 7, 2023. Born February 11, 1935 in Rhosllanerchrugog, North Wales, she lived in Pentre Buchan until she went to University. Hazel was raised by her paternal grandparents and her father’s sister, Aunty Mary. In 1953 she attended the Bangor Campus of the University of Wales where she met the love of her life, husband to be, John, who was in his final year. He was determined to put an engagement ring on her finger before he left and he did. Hazel had a trained soprano voice and she took the lead in three Gilbert and Sullivan productions at the university. But her greatest musical achievement was competing in the University Eisteddfod with her friend Jean in the open class duet-from Mozart’s Magic Flute. It had to be sung in German. Hazel had never taken any German but Jean and John had and they coached her so she could memorize. Hazel and Jean won first place against competitors from the other three campuses. The adjudicator said the diction was perfect but he had a question. He wanted to know why the soprano wasn’t competing in the open class soprano solo. Hazel said she knew her limitations. In 1956 John and Hazel married, and in 1958 son Tim arrived and Nigel followed in 1959. In 1960 this little Welsh family emigrated to Canada and settled on the North Shore. John and Hazel began their teaching careers in North Van where John taught high school and Hazel taught elementary school for five years. She then transferred to West Van where she taught at a variety of schools for 27 years. John and Hazel welcomed son Peter in 1967 and life was busy and fulfilling. Hazel took on greater work responsibility when she moved into administration and was a vice-principal at three West Van schools. She then became a very well respected and beloved principal at Ridgeview Elementary for ten years until her retirement in 1995. Hazel had always enjoyed sports throughout her life and after retirement she took up tennis and five pin bowling. She was an avid follower of the NFL and also enjoyed watching curling and tennis on TV. She continued playing bridge which she had started in her university days and after retirement she was known to play up to four times a week. After coming to Canada she joined the Bach choir and was a frequent soloist at many North Shore United Churches. Both wonderful hosts, Hazel and John enjoyed entertaining and most weekends they would welcome family, colleagues or friends to their home. Throughout the 63 years she lived and worked on the North Shore she made many friends whom she truly treasured over many years. She was also a dog lover and had many wonderful pets over the years that gave her so much pleasure. A strong, well-informed lady of style and grace, Hazel was very brave right to the end of her life. Her three sons and their families gave her so much joy over the many years. Sadly Hazel was predeceased by her husband John in 2008 and leaves sons Tim (Patti), Nigel, Peter (Alys) and five grandchildren (Carrie, Kelsey, Stephen, Emma, Sophie) to celebrate her wonderful life as well as many dear friends who will miss her kindness and generosity. In memory of Hazel, please consider making a donation to a charity of your choice. No service by request.
As you share the stories and the memories of how they lived their lives and how very much they meant, may you find comfort...
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.
Tel: el: 778.742.5005 President, Heritage Trust Tel: 778-742-5005
Let our experienced lawyers help you.
604-230-1068 | westcoastwills.com 604-210-2211 *A law corporation
But when God sent you to me Heneversaid thatyouweremine, That I could keep you always – Only borrowed for a time. Now, He’s called you home, I’m sad and I shed tears. Yet I’m glad He loaned you to me And we had these many years.
Westcoast Wills & Estates
Probate made easy.
Good times we had together, The moments that we shared We didn’t have to tell each other How much we really cared.
Now my life is all confused Since you went away. You took a part of me And for help I daily pray. Nicole L. Garton
heritagetrustcompany.ca
Each loss is very different, The pain is so severe. Wil I ever stop missing This one I loved so dear?
I never dreamed you’d go away, Never thought of sorrow. So sure you’d always be here Took for granted each tomorrow.
ExEcutor sErvicEs
Caring and Professional Executor, Trustee and Power of Attorney services based on the North Shore
Each Loss
Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes
To advertise in the Classifieds call: 604-653-7851
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 |
CELEBRATIONS
MARKETPLACE
Birthdays
Wanted CASH for your CLUTTER I will pay CASH for your UNWANTED ITEMS! I specialize in RECORDS, English Bone China & Figurines, Collectibles, Tools, Antiques, ETC
Rob • 604-307-6715
Jacki Thiel (Gilbert) Turns 50...
Happy birthday to a wonderful mother, daughter and darling sister. Congratulations on the big 50.
Please recycle this newspaper.
Call 604-653-7851 604-630-3300 to place your ad
announcements FIRST MEMORIAL FUNERAL SERVICES BOAL CHA 3.00000X4 R0011941698 :: #745727 ANNOUNCEMENTS
TWANEK HOTEL AND WATERS EDGE SPA 2.50000X1 R0021941664 :: #745710 CRAFT FAIRS/BAZAARS
GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE!!!
COME STAY AT THE BEACH!
The holidays are fast approaching and we understand that this can be a difficult time of year without your loved one. With that in mind, we would like to invite you and your family for a time to remember and reflect. The ceremonies will be held on Saturday, December 2, 2023 at 2:00pm and 7:00pm at First Memorial Boal Chapel, 1505 Lillooet Road, North Vancouver. All are welcome.
NEW TO YOU
Christmas Craft Fair
RCL Legion #118 123 West 15th Street Sat., Dec 2nd from 10:00 am to 3:00 pm A unique holiday gift sale of local handmade items. Free Admission
St. John’s Christmas Fair & Bake Sale Saturday, November 25 10:00am - 1:00pm
220 West 8th, North Vancouver
Festive baking, crafts, raffle baskets & more Come for lunch and hot apple cider!
Saturday, Nov. 25th, 10am -1 pm. 530 East 12th Street, North Van. Christmas gift baskets, jams and jellies, silent auction, Raffle for Lions Gate Hospital, and much more!
CRAFT SALE
If you would like to attend, please contact either of our locations on the North Shore First Memorial Boal Chapel 1505 Lillooet Road North Vancouver Ph. 604-980-3451
CRAFT FAIRS/BAZAARS
ST. AGNES’ FALL FAYRE
Seasonal Remembrance Service
Lost
craft fairs/ Bazaars
www.tuwanekhotel.com phone: 604-885-3442 7545 Islets Place, Sechelt, BC
COMMUNITY
SET OF keys lost Sat, Nov 11th. Incl two fobs including one for a Subaru. On a Ronald Macdonald House keychain. Near Whole Foods at Park Royal. 604-921-4066
Christmas Corner
BED AND BREAKFAST AND SPA
Celebrate with a Birthday Greeting in the classified section!
A49
Sat, Nov 25th, 10 - 4pm. 865 East 17th Street, North Van. Large Variety of items. Cash only.
Hollyburn Funeral Home 1807 Marine Drive, West Vancouver Ph. 604-922-1221
Your junk is someone’s jackpot.
Highlands Advent Festival Nov 24th, 6pm − 9pm Nov 25th, 10am − 3pm Nativity Exhibit Thrift Sale, Craft & Bake Sale
www.highlandsunited.org Highlands United Church 3255 Edgemont Blvd, North Van, BC
Charlotte Market
Happy Holidays
1405 Charlotte Road North Vancouver
12:00pm - 5:00pm Saturdays & Sundays
Nov 25 26 Dec 2 3 9 10 16 17 23
Just in time for the Holidays! A curated pop-up market with a selection of products from local crafters, jewellers, potters, jams & jellies as well as artisan baked goods, aprons, pj’s and lots more. A perfect way to get a jump on your holiday shopping and support your local small businesses. Follow @einaidesigns on Facebook and instagram #pocketmarketoncharlotte
To advertise call
604-653-7851
A50 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
LEGAL LegaL/PubLic Notices
LegaL/PubLic Notices WAREHOUSE LIEN ACT
S
Development Information Session Early Public Input Opportunity - Rezoning Application Proposed Market Strata Residential Housing – 2416 Western Avenue
Architectural Collective Inc. has applied for a Zoning Bylaw Amendment application to rezone the property from Existing Zone (RS1) to a new Zone CD zone to allow three residential buildings of two and three storeys, with a total of eighteen (18) units at a density of 1 FSR. The proposal includes lane dedication along the north side of the lot connecting the rear lane to Western Avenue, fourteen (14) vehicle parking stalls, a parking variance for 5 parking stalls, transportation demand measurements and the provision of twenty-nine (29) secure bicycle parking stalls. Interested members of the public are invited to participate/attend the Virtual Developer Information Session with the applicant for an early opportunity to review the proposal and offer comments.
This meeting is required by the City of North Vancouver as part of the land use application process.
The following vehicles will be sold, as per the Warehouse Lien Act; 1. The Following vehicle will be sold, 2011 Chevrolet Equinox VIN: 2CNFLDE54B6231843 Registered owner: Scammell Devon Debt amount as of December 7, 2023 is $2,947.61 2.The following vehicle will be sold, 1993 Volkswagen Euro-van VIN: WV2PG0702PH116684 Registered owner: Orman-Giguere Joseph Debt amount as of December 7,2023 is $5,343.69 If you have claim to a said vehicle, please respond in writing by December 7, 2023 to: Coquitlam Towing and Storage Company, 218 Cayer Street Coquitlam, B.C, V3K 5B1
BUSINESS SERVICES
RENTAL
Home care
aPartmeNts/ coNdos for reNt .
If you would like to participate/attend, please contact: Carman Kwan (Architectural Collective Inc.) 604.266.4679 ext1 carman@architecturalcollective.com
“Caring for you in the home you Love”
TO LEARN MORE & TO PROVIDE INPUT cnv.org/Applications Search by property address
Date: Wednesday, December 6, 2023 Time: 6:00 - 8:00 p.m. Place: Virtual Meeting by Zoom
PROPOSED BUILDING
Applicant Contact: Carman Kwan Architectural Collective Inc. carman@architecturalcollective.com 604.266.4679
Hot Spot For Sale
604-653-7851
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!
Licensed Caregivers providing personal assistance with activities of daily living. • All personal care needs • Nutrition • Lifts & Transfers • Dementia Care • Disability Care, all levels • Transport Services to appointments/activities • Companionship Call Eva for more information 604-290-6061 evas688@yahoo.ca
THE EDWARDIAN 1330 Clyde Ave,
AMBLESIDE, West Vancouver Bachelor Ste; 4th floor, $1800, Avail Dec 15. 1 Bedroom; 2nd floor, $2200, Avail Jan 1, 2024 Quiet bldg. No pets, N/S. By Appt: 604-926-3741
classifieds.nsnews.com
LOCATION
City of North Vancouver Contact: Bram van der Heijden, Planner Planning & Development 141 West 14th Street, North Vancouver planning@cnv.org 604-983-7357
Grow Your Business
To place your ad conTact Dawn at 604-653-7851 or nmather@glaciermedia.ca
north shore news nsnews.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023 |
A51
HOME SERVICES
Maid it Bloom
Spring, regular, office, move out & same day housecleanings.
Call 604-833-7217
A CLEAN SWEEP! Home and Move Out Cleaning. 778-836-9970
ConCrete
AGGRECON SPECIALTIES
• Polished Concrete Floors • Pumping • Placing • Sealing • Acid Staining • Decorative Concrete • Forming • Demolition • Foundation Pouring
eleCtriCal
HanDyperson
DNE Electric
Capilano Home Improvement
604-999-2332
Best Rates & Free Est. Res/Com/All Electrical Service/Panel Upgrade
ALP ELECTRIC #89724
Low price, big/small jobs, satisfaction guar. Free est
Insured & WCB
604.219.0666 Handyman on the North Shore Fully Insured & WCB 604−551−4267 www.nv−handyman.ca
Professional Work
778-919-7707
N.C.B. CONCRETE LTD. Specializing in residential concrete. Repair, removal and new installation. Patio specialists 604-988-9523 or 604-988-9495
Kitchen and Bathroom remodeling Plumbing, Tiling, Paving Drywall, Carpentry, Deck, Fence Door and Window ood, Laminate Hardwood,
604-765-3329
FenCing
lanDsCaping Flooring
SHAW LANDSCAPING LTD. Complete Landscaping Fall Clean-up. Lawn Cuts.
Drywall
Shrubs & Tree Pruning.
778-688-1012
Hardwood Floor Refinishing Experts DRYWALL PATCHING & REPAIRS. We Fix it -
• Repairs • Staining • Installation • Free Estimates
Small & Large Jobs OK!
604-376-7224 centuryhardwood.com
778-227-6573
INSTALLATION,
A & A Millwood Quality Drywall Service. Repairs, renos, new construction. Prompt service.
Richard cell 604-671-0084 or 604-986-9880
eleCtriCal
YOUR ELECTRICIAN Lic#89402. Insured. Guar’d. Fast same day service. We love BIG & small jobs! 604-568-1899 goldenleafelectrical.com
All Electrical, Low Cost, Licensed, Res/Com, Small job expert, Renos, Panel changes.
(604)374-0062 Simply Electric
REFINISHING, SANDING. Free Est. • Great Prices. Satisfaction Guaranteed. 604-518-7508
gutters
• Gutters Cleaned • Power Washing • Christmas Lights • Window Cleaning • Awnings Cleaned
Free Estimates & Quality Service
lawn & garDen
A.A. BEST PRO
GARDEN SERVICES LTD.
Lawn maint, aeration & moss control, power raking, trims, pruning, topping, cleanups.
Free Estimates Call Sukh
604.726.9152 604.984.1988
SERAFINA
classifieds.nsnews.com
Find help in the Home Services Section.
painting/ wallpaper D&M PAINTING .
Exterior/Interior Specialist Many Years Experience. Fully Insured. Top Quality • Quick Work. Free estimate.
RICKY DEWAN PAINTING Exterior Interior // Interiors Exterior Spring Specials Fall FallSpecials Specials BOOK NOW. Serving the North shore for over 20+ years
604-299-5831 or 604-833-7529 pluMbing
COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL
www.serafinagardens.ca 604-984-4433 contact Cari GREAT LOOKING Landscapes. Full service landscape & garden maint. Call Dave: 604-764-7220
Moving
ABE MOVING • DELIVERY and Rubbish Removal
604-999-6020
10%
OFF
your total bill
604-437-7272
TREE SERVICES
Pruning, Hedge Trimming Tree & Stump Removal 75 ft Bucket Trucks
604-787-5915
.
www.treeworksonline.ca
$50 OFF
* on jobs over $1000
WATERPROOFING STUCCO COATINGS DECK COATINGS ROOF COATINGS
ALL WEST TREE SERVICE
Topping, trimming, hedges pruning, cleanups and take away. Free est. 604-726-9152
ALLWEATHER COATINGS 778-773-1789 Locally Owned on the North Shore
..
RAIN FOREST STONE MASONRY 18 Years serving the North Shore Walls, Fireplaces, Brick, Stairs & Patios New & Repairs
Michael
ALL RENOVATIONS •Kitchen •Baths •Additions •Patio •Stairs •Deck •Fences •Painting •Drywall & MORE
778-892-1530 a1kahlonconstruction.ca
MASTER CARPENTER
• Finishing • Doors • Moulding • Decks • Renos • Repairs Emil: 778-773-1407 primerenovation.ca
Find the professionals you need to complete your renovations in the Home Services section
rooFing
Bros. Roofing Ltd.
.
A-1 Contracting & Roofing
• Licensed & Insured • No Job Too Small • Hot Water Tanks • Specializing in Waterline
604-729-6695
a1kahlonconstruction.ca
Build Results
tree serviCes
atozglass1451@gmail.com | 604-770-0406
New Roofs & Re-Roofing ALL TYPES All Maintenance & Repairs GUTTER CLEANING Gutter Guard Installations • RENOVATION WORK • WCB. 25% Discount • Emergency Repairs •
DELBROOK PLUMBING & DRAINAGE
Delivery & Moving Services Prompt. • 604-999-6020
1451 Marine Drive, North Vancouver, BC V7P 1TS
To place your ad email nmather@glaciermedia.ca
• Hot Water Tanks • Plumbing • Heating • Furnaces • Boilers • Drainage • Res. & Comm. • 24/7 Service
ABE Rubbish Removal +
• 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
604-802-7850
• Fall Clean-Up & Maintenance • Pruning, weeding etc. • Design & advice • Professional & experienced
$45/hr per person. 24/7
Paint the town
604-653-7851
Garden Services
Call Simon for prompt & professional service 30 yrs exp.
604-230-0627
To advertise call
604-724-3832
604-644-9648
Gutter Cleaning, Power Washing, Window Cleaning, Roof Cleaning
A TO Z GLASS AND MIRROR LTD.
Small and big ig jobs jo
License No: 89267
rubbisH reMoval
renos & HoMe iMproveMent
PROMOTION
Cleaning
Jag • 778-892-1530
Over 40 Years in Business SPECIALIZING IN CEDAR, FIBERGLASS LAMINATES AND TORCH ON.
Re-Roofing & Maintenance Repair SPECIALISTS
20 Year Labour Warranty Available Family owned & operated.
604-591-3500 604-502-8683
allseasonsroofing.ca
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
FIND HELP FOR YOUR PROJECTS
classifieds. nsnews.com
A52 | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2023
north shore news nsnews.com
‘Tis the season for adventure.
Honda Sensing™ Safety Technologies
ECON Mode & Eco Assist™
i-VTM4™ AWD System
Apple CarPlay® Hands-free Access & Android Auto™ Power Tailgate
PASSPORT 1,000
QUALIFIED HONDA OWNERS †
THE DYNAMIC 2024
GET A
LOYALTY BONUS
RESERVE YOURS TODAY
* Over 94.5% of Honda vehicles sold in Canada in the last 10 years a are still on the Over 94.5% of Honda vehicles sold in sCanada inroad thetoday. last 10 years are still on the road today.*
‘Tis the season for adventure.
Honda Sensing™ Safety Technologies
ECON Mode & Eco Assist™
i-VTM4™ AWD System
Apple CarPlay® & Android Auto™
RIDGELINE THE RUGGED 2024
Remote Engine Starter
2,000
QUALIFIED HONDA OWNERS
†
GET A
LOYALTY BONUS
RESERVE YOURS TODAY
* Over 94.5% of Honda vehicles sold in Canada in the last 10 years a are still on the Over 94.5% of Honda vehicles sold in sCanada inroad thetoday. last 10 years are still on the road 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: $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 December 31, 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: $2,000 bonus on Ridgeline 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 December 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.