December 13, 2023

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WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 13 2023

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MOSQUITO CREEK

Mass eviction notice causes ‘mad scramble’ at North Van marina MINA KERR-LAZENBY

MKerrLazenby@nsnews.com Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

Permanent live-aboards at North Vancouver’s Mosquito Creek Marina are breathing a sigh of relief following the news the boatyard will be keeping them safe from its impending mass eviction.

Yet the sigh is a small one. While in the clear for now, long-term residents are still in fear of being given the boot further down the line, while hundreds of part-time residents and boat and boatshed owners still face an uncertain future and potential large-scale financial loss after the Nch’ḵay̓ Development Corporation, run by the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation), announced it would be closing a number of the marina’s docks for repairs. On Tuesday, Dec. 5, 459 houseboat, boat and boatshed owners were told to vacate their slips or moorage by May 31, 2024.

In a meeting with residents Thursday evening and in a release issued on Friday, Nch’ḵay̓ said it had reconsidered its decision following the public outcry from residents. “We understand that this news is having a significant impact on the community at Mosquito Creek Marina,” the release said. “We now have a more fulsome understanding of the reliance many community members have on the docks for their primary housing, and the full impact of this notice on those residing on boats and in boat sheds at Mosquito Creek.” Nch’ḵay̓ said it will “repair and reorganize” some of the marina’s docks in a way that will ensure permanent tenants can stay, alongside those living in float homes. “In response to new information about people currently living on their boats or in boat sheds as a primary residence, we will be working directly with these residents to explore viable Continued on A37

Eddie Osland, a 16-year resident at Mosquito Creek Marina, is facing an uncertain future along with hundreds of other boat owners after a recent notice announcing the imminent closure of many of the marina’s docks. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN


A2 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

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A4 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

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FOR NEWS AT ANY TIME, GO TO NSNEWS.COM FORBIDDEN FRUIT

Truckloads of oranges dumped at North Van waste centre

Canadian Inspection Agency specifications and grocery retailer requirements. “These specifications are numerous and include colour, firmness, decay, surface defects and bruising,” the company said.

NICK LABA

nlaba@nsnews.com

A mountain of ripe mandarin oranges. In her 30 years going to the North Vancouver dump, gardener Sonia Rivest had never seen anything like it.

Three days later, she returned to find another mountain, and then another on her next visit. And then another. Rivest assumed there must be something wrong with the oranges – either they were rotten, were infected with listeria or had some other defect. Eventually, she tried one. “They were delicious,” she said. “They’re completely edible … they look fantastic.” And Rivest wasn’t the only one who thought so. Other gardeners had made a habit of filling their bags with oranges when a new shipment arrived. She started to ask around about why the fruit was being dumped, and was told by a transfer station employee that they had ripened too early for the holiday season, so the food broker was getting rid of them, Rivest said. As for how many oranges were being dumped, the employee told her that at least one dump truck load had been coming every day for two months, Rivest said. Metro Vancouver, which operates the North Shore Recycling and Waste Centre, said it’s aware

A huge pile of mandarin oranges sits in the organic waste area at the North Shore Recycling and Waste Centre on Nov. 16. SONIA RIVEST of large quantities of fruit being dropped off as organic waste at the station. “While it’s unfortunate to see food go to waste, there are no rules against accepting edible items,” said Paul Henderson, general manager of solid waste services for Metro. Diverting avoidable food waste is a priority for the regional district, he added, supported through organizations like Food Mesh and the National Zero Waste Council. “Staff from the solid waste services team are actively working on contacting the company

responsible for the orange loads in hopes of connecting them with food recovery resources,” Henderson said. But the distribution company behind the dumped produce, Fresh Direct Produce, said the mandarin oranges were of a “sub-standard” quality. “As with all fresh fruit and vegetables that arrive at our facilities, these oranges were carefully inspected by our trained staff and were determined to not meet the standards required for distribution to our retail customers,” Fresh Direct said in an emailed statement. “Food safety

is our highest priority, and we do not compromise on our standards in this regard.” The company said it takes food waste “extremely seriously” and has long-standing relationships with food banks and other non-profits where it regularly sends produce whenever it’s safe to do so. “In this instance, the quantity and condition of the oranges did not make this possible,” Fresh Direct said. When asked what was wrong with these oranges specifically, the company said mandarins are examined for compliance with

‘If food is fashion, we have a huge problem’ Rivest said she’s yet to experience any adverse effects from eating the dumped fruit. “I’m confused as to why Metro is accepting it to begin with,” she said, pointing to France, where there are laws banning large grocers from sending food to the landfill. “If we have people that can’t eat, we have people in this country who don’t have access to food on a regular basis, then it should be absolutely illegal to throw any kind of perishable food away, especially if you’re in a huge corporation,” Rivest said. Large amounts of wasted food is evidence that society is running on pure, unadulterated capitalism, Rivest said. “If food is fashion, we have a huge problem,” she said. “[It] means that if it’s not fashionable, it is not to be eaten. If it’s too unfashionable to even sell, food is no longer a necessity. It’s a commodity.” “The whole thing is insanity,” Rivest said.

VELVET ROPE

Mandatory day passes return for Mount Seymour Provincial Park BRENT RICHTER

brichter@nsnews.com

BC Parks is once again implementing a day-pass system for people wishing to park near the top of Mount Seymour Provincial Park during the high-demand winter months.

Starting on Dec. 14, anyone planning to access the park’s trails via the P1 and Lower P5 parking lots must first secure a free pass online at reserve.bcparks.ca/dayuse/.

Each pass secures a spot for one vehicle carrying up to eight passengers. Passes can only be reserved up to two days in advance and users must decide if they want an a.m. pass, which is valid between 7 a.m. and 1 p.m., or a p.m. pass, which is valid between 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. Those coming for skiing at Mt. Seymour Resort are not required to book a day pass if they have a resort ticket, according to the province. Visitors arriving by shuttle

service, on foot, or by bicycle are also exempt. After Jan. 7, the passes will only be required on weekends and holidays. Because cell coverage on the mountain can be spotty, visitors are encouraged to save a screengrab of their QR code before heading to the mountain. BC Parks, which operates under B.C.’s Ministry of Environment and Climate Change, has implemented day passes for its

most popular parks since 2020 as a means to curb the number of visitors and the impact on the parks. In the past, the day pass system has drawn criticism from parks advocates who argue BC Parks should be attempting to increase access to nature by building up more capacity at parks, rather than limiting the number of people who can visit. Mount Seymour typically brings in more than a million visitors per year.


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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 | A5

HORSESHOE BAY

West Van police release images of ‘party house’ arson witnesses BRENT RICHTER

brichter@nsnews.com

West Vancouver police say they are looking for four people who may have information about an arson fire that levelled Horseshoe Bay’s famous “party house with a view.”

The boarded-up home on Tyee Point, which had been covered with graffiti by trespassing squatters and partiers, burned to the ground on Sept. 21 of this year. At the time, West Vancouver Fire & Rescue’s chief said the blaze was likely human caused. West Vancouver police issued a release Dec. 5, confirming the fire is now considered a case of arson, alongside surveillance images of four people seen leaving the area before the first crews arrived. Police described the people captured on video as a white male wearing a black hoody with white printing on the front, black pants and black and white shoes; a white female wearing a dark brown or black jacket, a multi-coloured backpack, black pants, black and white shoes as well as a black, grey and white camouflage Tilly style hat; a white male wearing a black hoody with yellow or white lettering across

the back, baseball hat, black pants, black shoes and carrying a dark bag; and a white female wearing a black crop top under a pink hoody, black pants and white shoes. McLean said it isn’t clear if the people are suspects in the arson or witnesses who can provide key information to investigators. In either case, police are hoping they or someone who recognizes them will come forward. The 1951 home had long been a curiosity for passing ferry travellers, with its idyllic setting but decrepit state. Since 1992, the property has been owned by PAK Construction Ltd., a company with an address at a residential home in the British Properties. The two principals of the company, Kazem and Efat Askari, are both citizens or permanent residents of Canada and live in West Vancouver, according to B.C.’s Land Owner Transparency Registry. They’ve owned the house since 1992, when their company bought the property for just over $2 million. It was last assessed at almost $8 million. Anyone with information about the arson is asked to contact West Vancouver Police Department’s non-emergency number 604-925-7300.

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This image shows one of the people West Vancouver Police Department investigators are hoping to speak to about a Sept. 21, 2023 arson fire near the Horseshoe Bay ferry terminal. Visit nsnews. com to see more images released by police. WVPD

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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 | A7

NEWSBRIEFS 10-YEAR-OLD BOY REPORTS SUSPICIOUS INTERACTION

North Vancouver RCMP are seeking witnesses to a “suspicious” incident, where a 10-year-old boy was offered candy by a passenger in a white truck. At around 12:30 p.m. on Monday, Dec. 4, the child was walking to a friend’s house when a white truck was driving by, near the intersection of West 13th Street and Mahon Avenue, police said. “The passenger of the truck asked the boy if he wanted candy,” according to a statement from North Vancouver RCMP. “The boy became suspicious of the male and ran the opposite direction toward a nearby library.” The boy later explained the incident to his parents, who reported it to police. There was no physical contact during the incident, and nothing further was said, RCMP added. The truck is described as white in colour, “not new or old,” and possibly a two door. The driver is described as white with black facial hair and black,

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messy hair. “At this time, we have no evidence of a criminal offence,” said Const. Mansoor Sahak of North Vancouver RCMP. “We are treating this as a suspicious incident, and are asking anyone who has information regarding this investigation to contact us.” Anyone who was parked in the area – on West 13th Street between Jones and Chesterfield avenues, or Mahon Avenue between West 13th and West 14th streets – who may have witnessed the incident, or has video surveillance or dash-cam footage, is asked to contact police. Potential witnesses should quote file number 23-25846. “Police are also asking that the individual involved come forward to provide their account of the interaction,” Sahak said. – Nick Laba

COPS SEEK STRANGER WHO HELPED INJURED SENIOR

North Vancouver RCMP are seeking a good Samaritan who helped an

injured senior get to the hospital. Lions Gate Hospital staff alerted the RCMP on Friday, Dec. 1, when an elderly person with a head injury was dropped off by a stranger. The senior couldn’t say how they received the injury and no one had contact information for the anonymous helper. Police are asking the individual who brought the senior to the hospital to come forward as they may have information that will assist them in finding out how the senior sustained their injuries. “This kind-hearted community member’s actions directly led to this injured person seeking medical attention and ultimately being treated,” said Const. Mansoor Sahak, North Vancouver RCMP spokesperson. “We’d like to extend our sincere appreciation for this person’s actions and are asking them to come forward by calling us.” Anyone with information about the incident is asked to call the North Vancouver RCMP at (604)-985-1311 and quoting file No. 23-25562. – Brent Richter

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A8 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

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Waste not

C

harles Dickens famously noted in A Christmas Carol that this is the time of year that want is most keenly felt. It’s why images of thousands of edible Mandarin oranges left to rot at the North Vancouver transfer station prompt such visceral reactions. How, in this time of record food bank use and escalating prices, can society allow such a mountain of waste? We cannot claim to be experts in the logistics of produce distribution, food inspection, or the capacity for non-profits to redistribute perishables. But we do know about $6 billion worth of food goes to waste each year in B.C. alone, according to the Greater Vancouver Food Bank. If you’re upset about the thousands of oranges being left to rot, we urge you

to channel that anger into something positive. When it comes to keeping tummies full with nutritious food at the best possible value, the folks at the Greater Vancouver Food Bank and the Harvest Project are the experts. Much of what they provide is donated by the food industry and non-profits that work to divert perfectly nutritious food from the compost pile before it’s too late. They make it exceedingly easy to donate online. Because of their non-profit acumen, they can stretch those dollars well beyond the average consumer, and they know how to get food to the people who need it most. To throw away edible food is a tragedy. To let this story pass without taking some action, now that would truly be a waste.

Kahlon rises from housing minister to NDP’s ‘point man’ He has only had the housing ministerial portfolio for a year, but NDP Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon has emerged as a major political force within the NDP government.

Kahlon, who is also the government house leader, shepherded through the legislature during the fall sitting four landmark pieces of legislation that represent the biggest upheaval of housing laws in B.C. history and that also fundamentally alter the very nature of municipal governments. First elected in 2017 and first appointed to cabinet as Jobs Minister in 2020, Kahlon is the NDP government’s point man on the most ambitious part of the government’s agenda. The targets he has set for new housing

– about 250,000 units over the next 10 years – are almost mindboggling in scope, and it is far from clear whether he can pull this off. It may be View From several years before The Ledge we get a solid read Keith Baldrey on the impact of all the changes. Even the authors of the “modelling report” he commissioned hedged their bets when it came to making solid projections and predictions, noting that “assumptions” were based on a lot of different factors that could change over time.

Nevertheless, the plan is largely in place. Now we shall see how things play out at the local level, and just what kind of potential fights Kahlon gets into with mayors and councils who don’t like their wings getting clipped and their traditional turf encroached on. Given that we are heading into an election year, I suspect Kahlon will try to employ a soft touch when dealing with recalcitrant mayors and other municipal officials. While Bill 44, the Housing Statutes (Residential Development) Amendment Act, does give him the power to issue direct ministerial orders regarding bylaws, zoning and regulations, I doubt he’d use these nuclear options in an election year. Still, there is an urgency regarding the

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.

housing crisis and taking baby steps is not going to get it done. But there are nagging questions: can municipalities afford to build the infrastructure – sewage and water pipes, hydro lines – that is required with a large increase in housing, and are there literally enough skilled construction workers to build all those units? Then there is the question of whether housing will become more affordable even with all these changes. The modelling report estimates that prices will continue to climb (single family lot prices are expected to climb 7.5 per cent in the short term) but says the increases will be smaller than if nothing was done. The housing crisis has vexed Continued on A9

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MAILBOX LET’S GET BUS RAPID TRANSIT FUNDED AND BUILT ASAP

Dear Editor:

As a regional economic driver and with a North Shore workforce of more than 3,000 people, Seaspan is pleased to see the Metrotown-Park Royal Bus Rapid Transit project prioritized by TransLink’s Mayors’ Council. With credit to North Shore Connects, the partnership between the three North Shore municipalities and the Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh Nations, the case for prioritizing this line was clear and compelling. With TransLink’s recent announcement that the Burrard Inlet BRT will be among the first three to be built, turning this from a priority on paper to a concrete initiative requires funding commitments from all three levels of government. To secure this funding, residents and employers must speak up. As members of this community, we all have a role to play in supporting this project and ensuring it moves forward. Transportation is a key challenge for our two North Shore shipyards. Congestion has a major impact on businesses like ours that rely on a large skilled trades workforce that needs to be on-site to perform their work. Most of these employees live off the North Shore and alleviating congestion will help people spend more time living and less time commuting. We also know that commuting to North Vancouver has an impact on our ability to recruit and retain all types of professional employees in engineering, project management and finance, employees who have many choices when it comes to where they work. Improvements in transportation to and from the North Shore will help us be a competitive employer while easing the burden of long or uncertain commutes on working families.

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 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.

At Seaspan Shipyards, our workforce will be building world-class ships for all Canadians for the next 25-plus years. Providing safe, reliable and efficient access to North Vancouver will facilitate our mission. I applaud the hard work it has taken to get this project to this stage. Now, I’m appealing to TransLink, the Province of B.C. and the Government of Canada to confirm the necessary funding to make this line a reality.

Brent Hale CAO, Seaspan Shipyards

MY HUSBAND WAS LUCKY TO LAND AT LGH TO TREAT A RARE TUMOUR

Dear Editor:

In April my husband lost his balance and our doctor sent him for a CT scan at Lions Gate Hospital. They discovered a very rare brain tumour. We were lucky enough to get a master diplomat and excellent surgeon, Dr. Shahid Gul. He indicated the problem, but not to the extent that would panic us. Meanwhile he fast-tracked us to surgery less than a week later. He was excellent and did all he could. The staff at LGH were outstanding, the food better than home in the post-operative care. The nurses were caring and helpful, and they event went into express mode when I collapsed from dehydration through stress. And the accommodation post-op was great. My husband felt like a VIP. I can’t say enough about the great experience, even though it was not wanted, that we had at LGH. Incidentally, Dr. Gul never quit checking until he was sure my husband was in the hands of another competent doctor. The B.C. health system is not broken if you are in an urgent situation!

Pene Hollingworth Maple Ridge (formerly North Vancouver)

Housing crisis a daunting challenge Continued from A8 government at all levels and of all ideologies. The B.C. crisis is unique in scope and complexity, and we simply don’t know if these massive changes are going to solve something considered unsolvable for years. At the very least, the sheer scope and size of the legislation leaves the impression that the government is actually setting a lot of wheels in motion in order to tackle the problem. That’s not a bad look to take into an election year.

And Kahlon will be the face of this unprecedented attempt to right the housing ship. For the past few years, the NDP government has largely been dominated by ministers, such as Health Minister Adrian Dix and Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth, who largely led the government’s response to the pandemic, as well as the two premiers. Now it’s Kahlon’s turn to take the stage. Keith Baldrey is chief political reporter for Global BC.

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A10 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

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A12 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

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north shore news nsnews.com

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 | A13

ARTS | ENTERTAINMENT | FOOD | HOME |

| HEALTH | COMMUNITY

ICONIC RESTAURANT

Remembering Diamond Almas, king of the Seven Seas NICK LABA

nlaba@nsnews.com

To bring fresh fish to the diners of North Vancouver, one man charted the Seven Seas.

Famed for his floating restaurant on Ferry No. 5, which operated at the foot of Lonsdale Avenue for 42 years, Diamond Almas died suddenly on Nov. 5 at the age of 84. A respected restaurateur and active member of the North Shore community, Diamond was also a devoted family man, who is survived by his six children, two grandchildren and great granddaughter. Among the biggest moments in Diamond’s career was his induction into the BC Restaurant Hall of Fame in 2008. It was a very exciting moment for him, as he was a gentle person who would never speak or promote himself in that way, said his daughter Mairzee Almas. “It was a little overwhelming for him to have so much love and support thrown at him from an area that he didn’t realize how he had impacted the community. And so having lots of people expressing their gratitude and their love for him was very wonderful,” she said. “His heart was very, very filled by it.” At the age of 20, married and with his first kid on the way, Diamond opened the Seven Seas Seafoods restaurant with the help of his uncle, Jim, who ran the popular King Neptune Restaurant in New Westminster, and his father, Harry, who opened the Hippocampus Restaurant on Denman Street in downtown Vancouver. Diamond was next in line to carry on the

Diamond Almas ran the Seven Seas Seafoods restaurant in North Vancouver from its opening in 1959 until its last day in 2001. COURTESY OF MAIRZEE ALMAS family legacy of serving ocean-caught cuisine under the glow of charming neon signs. Describing himself during his Hall of Fame speech as “full of vinegar” at the time the restaurant opened, Diamond took on the challenge of turning a decommissioned passenger ferry – which used to take travellers from downtown to North Vancouver – into a thriving family restaurant and community staple. After leasing it from the city in perpetuity, the Seven Seas opened for business in 1959. Mairzee Almas said she grew up inside that restaurant. She remembers a prank her dad used to play on her and her siblings.

“You could often hear sounds of chains ... really it was Cates Tugs next door, making all sorts of sounds underneath the water,” she said. “And dad used to scare us when we were little kids and say, ‘Ooo, it’s Long John Silver, Long John Silver lives under here.” Mairzee also remembers her brothers jumping off the boat into the ocean during the summer. “The water was a lot cleaner back in the ’70s.” “We were all working there as teenagers,” she said. While she and most of her siblings would eventually move on to other careers, one of her brothers stayed at the Seven Seas until its last day.

Outside of his beloved floating eatery, Diamond was well-known for being active in the surrounding community. He ran for and served as alderman in both the city and district of North Vancouver, for one term each. The family grew up in a house on Grand Boulevard, and Diamond would later move to Upper Lynn Valley during his second marriage. Following a fire at the restaurant, the Seven Seas shuttered for good in 2001. The news devastated her father, Mairzee said. “As you can imagine, his whole life was in this restaurant,” she said. “He was always saddened by that … but he was resilient.” While Diamond never quite got over the loss of his business, he moved ahead, and would transition to a career as a security supervisor for a casino company. After his death in November, his phone was still buzzing with messages from friends, some of whom were former employees at the Seven Seas. It was difficult to respond to everyone, telling them her dad had passed away. But the loving words she got back warmed her heart. One message was from a former employee of nearly three decades. “Diamond, he was great human, a great boss. Mr. Almas, senior, and Mrs. Almas and all of Diamond’s children, we were just one big family at the Seven Seas, and my family is forever grateful to have gotten my first job with your family for 27 good years…. And may your dad and my boss, rest in peace. Love you all, Albert Williams.” A celebration of life was held for Diamond at Mountain View Cemetery on Dec. 9.

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A14 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

north shore news nsnews.com GETTING WET

Atmospheric river breaks rainfall records on North Shore JANE SEYD

jseyd@nsnews.com

It was wet and warm on the North Shore last week as an atmospheric river brought rainfall that smashed previous records.

SCIENCE SHOWS: TREE TALKS SATURDAY, DEC. 16, 2:30 - 3:30 P.M. MONOVA: MUSEUM OF NORTH VANCOUVER This show will give you a whole new perspective on the trees in your neighbourhood. Tree Talks covers tree identification, the history of logging on the North Shore and its technology, how trees are linked to the city’s water supply, and the importance of protecting our old growth forests. For more info: monova.ca IN AWE: TRANSFORMATIVE LANDSCAPES NOV. 29 - DEC. 21 SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE Dramatic & evocative interpretations of familiar mountain vistas, forests & shorelines by gestural semi-abstract artist Shweta Patil & vibrant realist painter Riitta Perione. For more info: westvanartscouncil.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

About 81 millimetres of rain fell during the storm Monday, Dec. 4 and into Tuesday, Dec. 5, including 70.2 mm on Monday alone, breaking the previous Dec. 4 record of 52.2 mm, recorded at the West Vancouver weather station in 2004. Other areas of the Lower Mainland and Fraser Valley receiving a deluge from the Pineapple Express included Mission, with 100 mm of rain, Pitt Meadows and Squamish at 91 mm each and Port Mellon on the Sunshine Coast, which was soaked with 102 mm. An “atmospheric river” is a narrow band of moisture originating in the tropics, said Environment Canada meteorologist Derek Lee, that brings warm air carrying large amounts of water vapour to the temperate West Coast. Warm air brought in by the weather system persisted into Tuesday, Dec. 5, setting high temperature records for overnight

Rain slams the North Shore on Dec. 4 during an ‘atmospheric river.’ MARK TEASDALE lows, said Lee. On the North Shore, lows only fell to 8.6 degrees overnight between Dec. 4 and 5, breaking a previous record of 7 degrees. Overall, this El Niño winter is expected to bring warmer than usual temperatures to the West Coast, said Lee. That doesn’t mean every day will be warm, however. North Shore residents were hit with a blast of cold on Saturday, with wet snow hitting residential areas, turning into rain as the weekend progressed. Current forecasts, however, are not calling for a white Christmas on the North Shore this year.

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north shore news nsnews.com

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 | A15

EDGEMONT VILLAGE

Skiers and boarders get a lift on the Easy Rider Quad Chair for their first runs of the season at Cypress Mountain, the first of the North Shore ski hills to open on Dec. 7, with Grouse Mountain opening the afternoon of Dec. 8. Limited terrain is available to riders at this time until further snowfall and snowmaking increases the base. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN

SNOW BUSINESS

Ski and snowboard season kicks off at Cypress and Grouse NICK LABA

nlaba@nsnews.com

After a warm and wet start to the winter season, some welcome cooler weather has allowed two of the three North Shore ski hills to open.

Cypress Mountain Resort was first out of the gates on Thursday, Dec. 7, with limited access to its bunny hill, Runway, and Collins terrain park. Since then, the West Vancouver ski and snowboard destination has opened its Eagle Express Quad Chair, with access to the Panorama, Windjammer and Upper Fork runs. Grouse Mountain opened one day later, with access to Paradise and Paradise Jib Park via the Greenway Chair. Now, the Peak Quad Chair is also open, with access to Heaven’s Sake, Peak and Lower Peak. For mountain-goers, the good news is that new snow has been falling – 17 centimetres was added to Cypress’s snowpack on Sunday, according to the resort. But “early-season conditions persist,” reads a Monday update. “Conditions will be best on our open runs where our groomers and snowmaking team have worked their magic.” Cypress also stressed the importance of staying on marked terrain, as last week’s rainfall resulted in running water under the snowpack, which has created “openings and potential hazards.” Both ski hills said they’re working to

open more terrain as soon as possible. Meanwhile, Mt. Seymour – which doesn’t use snowmaking equipment – has yet to announce an opening date. This winter season is expected to bring higher-than-normal temperatures, according an outlook from Environment and Climate Change Canada. “El Niño conditions, which contributed to extreme global temperatures during the summer and autumn of 2023, are expected to continue through this winter season,” the outlook reads. “El Niño conditions are due to natural variability in the climate system and will likely contribute to the higher-than-normal temperatures in Canada this winter, intensifying the warming effects from human-induced climate change in what is shaping up to be the hottest year recorded in human history.” Last year, marked by La Niña conditions, brought a higher-than-average snowpack and a season start date of Nov. 12 – a week earlier than the previous season. Other activities open at local mountain resorts include cross-country skiing at Cypress’s Nordic area, with snow tubing opening on Friday, Dec. 15. At Grouse Mountain, you can visit Santa’s workshop or skate at the ice pond. Santa is also taking appointments at Seymour, which has also opened its tubing and tobogganing area.

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A16 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

north shore news nsnews.com

MINDFUL ARCHITECTURE

Firm combines Indigenous values with modern design MINA KERR-LAZENBY

MKerrLazenby@nsnews.com Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

Walking towards an architectural project borne by North Vancouver’s Mindful Architecture can feel like slipping into a utopian reality, to a place where homes are interwoven with nature in both aesthetic and function.

Crafted in response to the dire need for affordable housing for Indigenous communities, the homes are designed to blend traditional ancestral systems with contemporary architectural design. Landscape views and seamless transitions between indoors and outdoors are a priority, as are eco-conscious power solutions, home-based food production and cultural resonance. “We learn from the sophisticated simplicity of the traditional Indigenous housing strategies that interweave with the lands in a regenerative manner,” said Geneviève Noël, who founded

Mindful Architecture founders Genevieve Noël and Maginnis Cocivera. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN

the firm in 2017 alongside architect partner T. Maginnis Cocivera. A design currently in its planning stages, the Solar Plank House, sees a grouping together of multiple singular

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the community wants, these Elders, the youth, the knowledge keepers,” said Cocivera. “We then enter a co-creation process with the community so that their hopes and dreams become integral to the design.” For a more cost effective and eco-conscious option, the firm is collaborating with a 3D-printing company in Italy that produces natural, concrete-like materials. Sequestering carbon rather than emitting it, the materials provide a “significant positive impact” on the abatement of climate change, said Noël. “We have to stop looking at the planet as a resource for extraction, and instead as a living organism that we’re a part of,” she said. “We are an integral part of this system, we are not a separate entity.” Mina Kerr-Lazenby is the North Shore News’ Indigenous and civic affairs reporter. This reporting beat is made possible by the Local Journalism Initiative.

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north shore news nsnews.com

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 |

Christmas trees and window displays, Gingerbread men and hot chocolate, Decorations and lights. It’s a magical time of year, And magic it lives here. This holiday season come find the magic, In the villages of Ambleside and Dundarave.

As a thank you to the community for supporting our local shops, services, and restaurants this past year, the Ambleside Dundarave Business Improvement Association has installed a 30’ Christmas Tree adorned with over 10,000 lights. Thank you for supporting local!

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Come take a photo and share it with us on social media using #villagetreewv and tag @adbiawv.

A17


A18 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

north shore news nsnews.com

NORTH S

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Tour the Local Christmas Lights with Rides By Shylo! Rides by Shylo is offering 2hour driving tours this holiday season to view the local Christmas lights around the North Shore! We can accommodate up to three passengers per trip. To book, please contact 604-985-6881 or Office@ShyloHomeHealthcare.ca

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SCAN THIS QR CODE TO SEE THE FULL LIGHTS MAP ON nsnews.com


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A20 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

north shore news nsnews.com

LIKE MOTHER, LIKE DAUGHTER

Sentinel wins B.C. volleyball title, stirring memories of 1984 NICK LABA

nlaba@nsnews.com

They both scored the winning point to secure victory for the Sentinel Spartans at the B.C. provincial high school volleyball championships – nearly 40 years apart.

Karen Kirkwood won the team’s first title with a tip in 1984, and her daughter Karissa won with the same attack in 2023. This year, co-coach Kirkwood was courtside from season start to finish, helping the Spartans repeat history at the senior girls AAA provincial finals on Dec. 2 in Dawson Creek. As the final attack flew past the Vernon Panthers, the Spartans coalesced in a mass of limbs, cheers and beaming faces. For Kirkwood, it was a moment of déjà vu. “It was all in slow motion,” she said, unable to hold back happy tears. “I just sat there on the bench. I couldn’t even jump up. They were all jumping around, and it just seemed like a dream.” Goal to win the season from the get-go, coach says As it was for her single-A team years ago, the win didn’t come easy for the Spartans.

The Sentinel squad came into the provincial tournament strong as the No. 1 seed. In their pool they went 3-0 to earn a bye into the quarterfinals. There against Nelson’s LV Rogers – a team that had an “exceptional” left side hitter, according to Spartans coach Dave Gibson – the Spartans won in four sets. That set up a rematch in the semis against fourth-seeded Little Flower Academy, a team the Spartans topped in pool play. LFA took the first set but the Spartans took the next three. The final was a back-and-forth battle with Sentinel taking the first set, then Vernon taking the next two. “In the fourth set we fell behind and things looked grim, but as we’ve done countless times this season we rallied and squeaked out a fourth set win,” Gibson said. In the last, tie-breaking set, the back-and forth continued, but Sentinel started to pull away. Vernon kept it close, coming back from 14-9 to 14-12, but Karissa put the final ball down to take the victory 15-12. “The crowd was electric, the refs were tough but fair, and the people of Dawson Creek were so nice and welcoming, it was a memorable experience for all involved,” Gibson said. Continued on A22

Karissa Kirkwood and her mom, Spartans co-coach Karen Kirkwood, compare their championship-winning volleyballs from 2023 and 1984. NICK LABA / NSN

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north shore news nsnews.com

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 |

A21

SPONSORED CONTENT

Transform a young life by giving the gift of sight this holiday season

Vancouver-based charity, Seva Canada, empowers children with opportunities by restoring sight and preventing blindness with help from Canadian donors “When I was walking, I couldn’t see. It was really scary,” recalls Jaonah, of Sambava, Madagascar, who had lost his sight by eight years old. “My biggest worry? That he would die,” shares his father. Jaonah’s situation is more common for children in low- and middle-income countries than for children here in Canada, and yet, four out of 10 children who are blind would be able to see if they had early access to care. Over 800,000 children could be cured of blindness, and two out of three are girls in lowincome countries—where even the most basic eye care services continue to be out of reach. That’s where Seva Canada steps in, coupled with the generous gifts made by Seva Canada donors. Seva works with local partners to create sustainable and equitable eye care programs that achieve long-term change, are culturally sensitive, and reach those most in need—women, children and people living in extreme poverty and isolation. “Girls are blind more often than boys because of the barriers they face in accessing care,” says Liz Brant, executive director, Seva Canada.

“Our programs are designed to try to overcome those barriers, we give counselling to the entire family and child, provide transportation, food and accommodation, all to try to increase the chance that the child will ultimately get the help they need.” Tejitu from Ethiopia, was blind from cataracts since age three, but because of Seva Canada donors, girls like her have equal access to eye care services. When Tejitu was 17 years old, her sight was restored with surgery and she was able to continue her education and pursue her dream of becoming a doctor. Jaonah’s story has a happy ending, too. After being diagnosed with cataracts at the eye hospital run by Seva’s local Malagasy partners, he received sight-restoring surgery, paid for by

H JAONA

CAR DAGAS VA, MA SAMBA

TEJITU

Seva Canada provides communities with access to high-quality eye care that will restore sight and prevent blindness.

ETHIOPIA PHOTOS VIA STEPHANIE C. GLOTMAN

Canadian donors. Now 15 and an active teen, Jaonah has been able to return to school, laying the foundation for a full and independent life. And, he has big aspirations, “I want to be mayor of our town and help our community.”

Solutions to help children and families thrive

When a child can see, they can go to school, play with friends and help lift themselves and their family out of poverty, and ultimately, benefit entire communities. As was the case for Jaonah; both he and his family now have a better life. “We don’t have to worry about him and take care of him all day,” his father revealed. Finding and treating children with eye problems early is crucial to ensuring healthy vision for life. Seva Canada establishes Community Eye Centres (CECs) in remote communities that provide year-round access to eye exams and glasses.

“We use eye care advocates, community volunteers and/or outreach workers to go door to door in remote communities to find children in need of eye care and connect them to the eye care services (always in conjunction with the nearest CEC & eye hospital),” says Brant.

How your donation helps kids to see

You can give kids in low- and middle-income countries the gift of sight for as little as $25. When you donate by December 31, 2023, you will double your impact. All donations up to $2,500 will be matched to a maximum of $100,000. A little goes a long way in making a difference in preventing blindness and restoring a child’s ability to see. Look what your donation will accomplish: • $25 doubles to $50 and helps 10 children see with prescription glasses • $50 doubles to $100 to provide eye screenings for children in schools to catch eye problems early

• $150 doubles to $300 and cures two children’s blindness with cataract surgery including a lens implant; follow-up care is provided along with glasses, medications and transportation This holiday season, you have the power through your donation to help twice as many children see, helping to ensure their good health, well-being, and educational attainment, as well as, help them realize their own potential—just like Jaonah and Tejitu.

For more information, visit seva.ca, or donate at seva.ca/see-their-potential.


A22 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

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PROVINCIAL RUNNER-UP

Coach ‘couldn’t be prouder’ of Carson Graham’s football season NICK LABA

nlaba@nsnews.com

What was surely a disappointing end to a strong season for Carson Graham’s football team doesn’t come without silver linings.

While the team suffered a 21-0 defeat at the hands of Vancouver College on Dec. 2 in the provincial AAA final at BC Place, Carson’s Carson quarterback Liam Marshall has been named an AAA coach is praising his Provincial All-Star and offensive MVP. BLAIR SHIER team’s dogged defence and Dame, and Mt. Douglas, is widely recogexcellent play throughout the year. nized as one of the top conferences in Vancouver College scored on their Canada,” he said. “We finished 6-1 in this first possession, and made it 14-0 with conference including a cross-over league three minutes left in the second quarter. play win against another traditional power, The score held until 3:49 left in the game St. Thomas More.” when Vancouver College scored a final Playoff wins against South Delta and touchdown. GW Graham were also “tremendous” team “Our defence forced VC to earn every moments, Brady said. yard and played extremely physical,” said “I couldn’t be prouder of this year’s Carson head coach Brian Brady, adding team. We had an absolutely phenomenal that his team’s offence wasn’t able to find group of seniors, and our younger players any traction throughout the game. took great strides toward being impact “Vancouver College’s defence was preplayers,” he said. “I’m most proud of the ownership players took for our culture in pared and more aggressive,” he said. their selflessness, effort and attitude.” With 15 tackles, Carson’s Ryan Barber At the season’s end, four Carson players won Lineman of the Game. Breylon were recognized as AAA Provincial AllMcCuller had eight tackles and Ethan Stars: wide receiver Fin Nemeth, flex/wide Samuels had seven. receiver Eric Town, linebacker Breylon On offence, quarterback Liam Marshall McCuller, and Marshall, who was named threw for 89 yards, adding 14 carries for 73 offensive MVP. Offensive lineman Oscar yards. Lopez, defensive lineman Ryan Barber and This year, the Eagles accomplished a lot defensive back Andrew Macintosh were as a team, coach Brady said. also recognized as all-stars in the Western “Our conference, with traditional Conference. powers such as Vancouver College, Notre

Spartans cap off dominant season Continued from A20 Recognized players on the Sentinel team include Parva Jabbari (Grade 12) as first team all-star, twins Claire and Cate Eisler (Grade 11) as second team all-stars, and Jayme Bracewell (Grade 9) as an honourable mention for her play as libero. The win stamped a hard-earned milestone for Sentinel’s senior girls volleyball team, which made provincials last year for the first time in decades. This season was nothing short of dominant. The Spartans went 10-0 in league play, won the Vancouver Sea to Sky Zone championship, and came first at Handsworth’s North Shore Invitational,

where they played against AAAA schools. They also came second at Trinity Western University’s Spartan tournament, Vancouver Island University’s senior girls tourney and Riverside’s Red Serge Classic Invitational. The team’s impressive overall record was 48-7. Kirkwood said she was quoted in a newspaper article 39 years ago saying it was her team’s goal from the get-go to win the provincial championship. “And that was exactly how we started our season this year,” she said. “So that was in the back of their head, I guess … even when it looked quite dire, they just never gave up.”


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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 |

Community Update - December 2023

Neptune Terminals has been part of the North Shore for more than 53 years.We are driven by our commitment to safe, environmentally responsible operations, consideration for our neighbours, and support for our local community.

New Leadership at the Helm

Coming Together For Men’s Health

In October Neptune welcomed a new President, Megan Owen-Evans. Megan is an experienced leader on the Vancouver waterfront, having previously served as President of Fibreco for several years, in addition to many years of other terminal and operations management. A Capilano University alumna, Megan has a long-standing connection to the North Shore and an affinity for all things outdoors.

Megan Owen-Evans President of Neptune Terminals

“Neptune’s investment in the local community and the close bond between team members are some of the things that attracted me most to the role,” says Megan, who is committed to excellence and driven to maintain a people-centric environment. “As a critical gateway to exporting Canadian resources around the world, Neptune plays an important

role in both the regional and national economy. I am excited to spend more time at the terminal getting to know my colleagues across all the different parts of the organization.” Megan intends to continue prioritizing operational excellence and safety, and is very engaged in workplace equity, diversity and inclusion, acting as the co-chair of the Waterfront Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (DEI) Council. Joining Neptune, she says, she quickly recognized that people are the company’s strength. “Since I’ve started, we’ve run a large United Way campaign, exceeded the Movember targets the team set, and are in full swing raising holiday funds for those in need across the North Shore,” she confirms. “I am looking forward to continued growth of both our team members and the organization in 2024.”

Bull Kelp Restoration and Resilience Neptune has partnered with the University of British Columbia (UBC) on an important research project examining bull kelp restoration and resilience in Burrard Inlet. Working with Dr. Patrick Martone at UBC, with support from Dynamic Ocean Consulting, Neptune is funding the Bull Kelp Restoration Program. The terminal’s water lots in the Inlet are a key part of the ecosystem and Neptune is committed to environmental stewardship. This project, which is focused on understanding how to protect and enhance bull kelp populations in Burrard Inlet, will help bolster climate resiliency within the local kelp population.

“We are at the forefront of this kind of kelp restoration work, and our progress to date bodes very well for our research goals. Bull kelp is a very charismatic species, and we know that many people all along the West Coast are watching and paying attention to this work.”

“Neptune is giving us the opportunity to grow and advance research in this important field,” says Dr. Martone, who is a Professor in the Department of Botany at UBC.

Read more about this important project on our website: neptuneterminals.com/news/our-commitment-bull-kelp

“As a fundraising team we are equally committed to raising both awareness and dollars,” says Jason Anderson, Movember team lead and a Project Manager at Neptune. “From the leadership team to

the boots on the ground at the terminal, we are all in this together. There is still a stigma in our industry associated with men’s mental health and cancers. My hope is that initiatives like this will bring us all closer together so that we can support each other in good times, and bad times.” There were 33 registered team members this year, and even more people supporting in the background. Weekly draws rewarded donors with fantastic prizes, donated by many of Neptune’s contractor and supplier partners. In addition to this external support, Jason is particularly pleased to see how collaboration and connection with the Movember campaign has grown across terminal departments. The winner of the ‘Caterpillar Cup’ was Tony Fiorvento, Assistant Warehouse Superintendent. The Cup is voted on by the whole company and the team wrapped up the campaign with a celebration at Batch on Plaza, who also supported with prizes.

Tony Fiorvento, winner of the Caterpillar Cup.

Jason Anderson gets a clean shave by the Village Barber’s Sorav Bhanot.

Supporting Families and Teens This Holiday Season Family Services of the North Shore Christmas Bureau supports many of our neighbours who need a helping hand over the holidays. The Christmas Bureau helps ensure low-income families, individuals, and seniors living in North Vancouver, West Vancouver, Lions Bay, and on Bowen Island have what they need to celebrate the season.

We are fortunate to live and work in one of the most spectacular places on Earth. Investing in this sentinel species is of huge importance to Neptune as part of our ongoing commitment to environmental protection —caring for what exists today and also working to make it better for tomorrow.

See our community updates in full and subscribe to our e-newsletter at NeptuneTerminals.com or by contacting us at community_questions@neptuneterminals.com or 604-983-7935

Neptune’s Movember team is in its fifth year of fundraising for this important initiative that raises both dollars and awareness for men’s mental health and suicide prevention, prostate and testicular cancers. Neptune matched staff donations and provided funds to run a fun and engaging campaign. With this support the team exceeded their expecations and raised approximately $85,000! The campaign included fun team-building events and company-wide events like the BarberQ, custom toques and custom ‘Movembeer’ brewed by Twisted Traditions. The BarberQ was sponsored by one of Neptune’s contractors, B&B Construction, and raised funds through donations for lunch. Sorav Bhanot, owner of the Village Barber, donated his time to ensure team members got a clean start for Movember.

Outplanting different strains of bull kelp will help inform how resilient they are.

One of Neptune’s areas of focus once again this year is young people aged 11-18 who may

@neptuneterminals

not be interested in toys or games. Making gift cards available to youth in need enables them to participate in much-needed and important social interactions like meeting up with friends for a coffee, an afternoon at the mall, or catching a movie. For more information on ways you can donate this holiday season visit: familyservices.bc.ca/find-support/christmasbureau

facebook.com/neptuneterminals

Neptune T E R M I NALS

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DANGEROUS DRIVING

Woman charged in West Van wrong-way motorhome crash JANE SEYD

jseyd@nsnews.com

A 29-year-old woman from Fernie, B.C., has been charged with five counts of dangerous driving causing bodily harm in connection with an accident last year, in which a motorhome driving the wrong way on West Vancouver’s Highway 1 crashed head-on into a passenger car and caused a chain reaction involving several other vehicles.

Charges were sworn against Alexandra Georgson Nov. 22 in North Vancouver provincial court. Georgson is scheduled to make a court appearance Dec. 13. Six people were rushed to hospital, two of them in critical condition, on Sept. 21, 2022, after the crash near the Cypress Bowl Road exit. People in two other cars swerved at the last minute to get out of the way, ending up in the ditch or next to the median. One witness said on social media that her husband had a

split second to swerve as they saw what she described as a van “roaring full speed in the wrong lane on Highway 1 near Taylor Way.” There was no time to warn anyone and the car just behind them was hit and “flew through the air,” the woman wrote. Miraculously, one of the people who was in that car posted on social media hours later to say both he and his brother were OK. “At any moment your life can just end,” he wrote. “Today me and my brother dodged death after a person driving on the wrong side of the highway hit us! We flew [through] the air and rolled about 4-5 times can’t believe we’re alive.” Matt Furlot, assistant fire chief of the West Vancouver Fire Department, described arriving on the scene last September to find a camper van on top of another vehicle with smoke coming from the vehicle. Bystanders had already pulled the injured driver of the motorhome out of the vehicle. Miraculously, the driver of the

A motorhome rests on top of a car on Highway 1 in West Vancouver near the Cypress Bowl Road exit following a crash on Sept. 21, 2022. NATE GODDYN

vehicle partially crushed by the motorhome walked away from the scene with only minor injuries. Due to the serious nature of the incident, members of the Integrated Collision Analysis and Reconstruction Service (ICARS) attended and took control of the scene. Police did not give any information about why the driver of the motorhome is believed to have been driving the wrong way on the highway at the time.

Charges have now been laid following this dramatic crash on the Upper Levels highway Sept. 21, 2022. LISA SMYTHE

HOPE • PEACE • JOY • LOVE

Sharing the Christmas story that started it all…

Celebrate this special time of year at your local United Church – ALL ARE WELCOME! ST. ANDREW’S UNITED 1044 St. George’s Ave, North Van 604-985-0408 • www.st-andrews-united.ca Wednesday, December 20 7 pm Blue Christmas Join us for a joint candlelit service at St. John’s Anglican Church, 220 West 8th Street – a service of remembrance and hope. Thursday, December 21 Free Community Christmas Dinner 11:30 am – 12:30 pm First Sitting 12:30 – 1:30 pm Second Sitting

LYNN VALLEY UNITED 3201 Mountain Hwy. North Van 604-987-2114 • www.lynnvalleychurch.com Monday, December 18 7 pm Soul Spa Celebrating Winter Solstice with live music. Wednesday, December 20 5 pm Eat Play Love Stories, food, and fun for people of all ages. Thursday, December 21 7 pm The Story of Christmas in Song Music Immersion Experience. Christmas Eve 10:30 am Morning Service

7 pm Longest Night of the Year Come and celebrate the beginning of a new period of increasing light and growth in your life 4:30 pm Family Christmas Celebration (Yalda, in the Iranian tradition) with music, poetry 8 pm Carols, Candlelight & Communion and prayer. Whoever you are, wherever you’re at on your Christmas Eve journey, there is a place for you at LVUC. 7 pm Christmas Eve Candlelight Service Experience the joy of Christmas at a traditional service of lessons and carols in our candlelit WEST VANCOUVER UNITED Sanctuary. 2062 Esquimalt Ave, West Van Christmas Day 604-922-9171 • www.wvuc.bc.ca 10 am Family Christmas Service Christmas Eve 4 pm Christmas for Kids Chaos and fun (with some treats too!)

7:30 pm & 9:30 pm Carols and Candlelight* Come and be surrounded by peace and light. *Also available online and throughout the evening at wvuc.bc.ca/live and on Facebook.

NORTH LONSDALE UNITED 3380 Lonsdale Ave, North Van 604-985-4911 • www.nluc.org Christmas Eve 5:30 pm* All Ages Celebration Service Join us for a Christmas Eve celebration service of carol-singing and all-ages fellowship. All children who attend are invited to join in our “pop-up Christmas pageant”(just show up on the night of) as part of this service. Costumes will be provided, or you can bring your own! *The 5:30 service will also be livestreamed on our YouTube channel at www.youtube.com/@ northlonsdaleunitedchurch 11 pm Contemplative Communion Service You’re invited to come and rest in a quieter, contemplative space late-night on Christmas Eve, as we gather to reflect and to celebrate Holy Communion together. This service will include simple songs, Scripture readings, and times of silence.

ST. DAVID’S UNITED 1525 Taylor Way, West Van 604-922-3961 • www.stdavidsunited.com

HIGHLANDS UNITED 3255 Edgemont Blvd, North Van 604-980-6071 • www.highlandsunited.org

Thursday, December 14 7 pm Quiet Christmas Vancouver harpist, Rebecca Blair, with Monique Creber. Comfort and support in sad times.

Sunday, December 17 11:30 am Highlands Family Christmas with live animal nativity scene, music, and refreshments.

Featuring the Creber family, joined by the combined church choirs of St. David’s United, St. Christopher’s and St. Catherine’s and the Cypress Singers. (A ticketed event.)

Christmas Eve 10 am* Carols and Readings with Re:Sound Choir.

Christmas Eve 10:30 am Sunday morning worship celebrating “Love”.

7 pm* Christmas Eve at Highlands. Settle into this traditional service of candles, carols and readings. Feel the wonder of Christmas.

Thursday, December 21 7 pm Service of loss and light Sunday, December 17 Join us for a candlelit service at St. Catherines, 10:30 am Service of Lessons and Carols We will be joined by guest vocalist Marcus Mosely. a gentle oasis of peace and beauty as we make space for grief and loss that may be Monday, December 18 accompanying us this season. 7 pm The Magic of Christmas Concert

10 pm Candlelight Service Come with Family and friends for a traditional candlelit service.

MOUNT SEYMOUR UNITED Sunday, December 31 1200 Parkgate Ave, North Van 604-929-1336 • https://mtseymourunited.com 10:30 am Sunday morning worship Hymns & prayers for the New Year Wednesday, December 20 7 pm Blue Christmas Candlelight Service with Marcus Mosely & Dominique Hogan Christmas Eve 4 pm Young Families Christmas Eve Service 7:30 pm Traditional Candlelight Service

4 pm Family Christmas Pageant with God’s Free Spirits & Genesis Too Youth Choirs.

10 pm Contemplative Christmas service with music, candles and prayer. *Available via Livestream at https://www.youtube. com/c/HighlandsUnitedChurch


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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 |

Winners | Shoppers Drug Mart | Save-On-Foods | Specialty Shops | FREE PARKING

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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 | A29

FOREIGN OWNERSHIP

West Van homeowners pay second-highest vacancy tax in B.C. JANE SEYD

jseyd@nsnews.com

Figures released by B.C.’s finance ministry last week showed homeowners in West Vancouver paid more than $8.754 million in the province’s speculation and vacancy tax in 2022.

The amount of speculation and vacancy tax paid by homeowners in West Vancouver was the second highest among B.C. municipalities, after Vancouver, where owners forked over $19.08 million, and just ahead of Richmond, where owners paid $8.74 million. But while the total speculation and vacancy tax paid by owners in Vancouver and Richmond went down from previous years, in West Vancouver the total has continued to go up. There were also far more homeowners paying the tax in Vancouver and Richmond. In West Vancouver, there were 302 “non-exempt” owners paying the tax in 2022 on 192 “non-exempt” properties. About 1.4 per cent of homeowners in West Vancouver paid the tax. That’s similar to the share of property owners paying the tax in Kelowna, and about double the percentage of homeowners who pay the tax in most other Lower Mainland

communities, including Vancouver and Richmond. As in other areas of Metro Vancouver, most of the homeowners paying the tax in West Vancouver were foreign owners or members of “satellite families” – where some members of the family live locally but the breadwinner typically earns most of the household income overseas. Together, those owners accounted for more than $6 million of the tax paid. B.C. residents collectively paid about $1.4 million of the tax in West Vancouver, while owners elsewhere in Canada paid $406,000. Since 2019, the speculation and vacancy tax charged on properties owned by foreigners and satellite families has been two per cent of assessed value. B.C. residents and other Canadians are taxed at 0.5 per cent of a property’s assessed value. According to the provincial statistics, between six and nine per cent of the homes in West Vancouver have some degree of foreign ownership. But other statistics, including data from the Canadian Housing Statistics Program analyzed by SFU researcher Andy Yan, have put that figure higher – at

Homeowners in West Vancouver paid $8.75 million in speculation and vacancy tax in 2022 - the second highest amount in the province. MIKE WAKEFIELD, NSN just under 13 per cent of single-family homes in West Vancouver. A vast majority of residential properties in West Vancouver qualified for an exemption to the tax, according to the ministry. The biggest category for exemption was the owners who were occupying the home as a principal residence. The

Thank you for supporting the Christmas Bureau this holiday season! Family Services of the North Shore Christmas Bureau is still gratefully accepting donations and grocery gift cards to brighten the holidays for our North Shore neighbours. Visit familyservices.bc.ca, or scan the QR code. Founding Sponsor

second biggest exemption category was for homes being rented to long-term tenants. Elsewhere on the North Shore, there was far less speculation and vacancy tax paid by property owners. In the District of North Vancouver, 171 owners of 72 non-exempt properties paid about $1.08 million in the tax. Of about 28,797 residential properties in the District of North Vancouver, foreign owners, satellite families, corporations or a combination of owners owned 963 properties. In the City of North Vancouver, 183 owners of 101 non-exempt properties paid $788,000 in the tax. Foreign owners, satellite families, corporations or a combination of owners owned a total of 1,021 city properties. The ministry estimated revenue received from the tax for the 2022 tax year province-wide at about $81.9 million – up from $78.4 million in 2021. The tax has had its share of local critics. One couple previously said they were dinged the tax because the province got their residential address wrong and assumed they weren’t living in their house. In other cases, one spouse’s foreign citizenship triggered a tax bill.


A30 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

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PROVINCIAL COURT

Crown urges jail time for North Van trail groping sex assault JANE SEYD

jseyd@nsnews.com

A Mission man who sexually assaulted a woman on a North Vancouver trail last year should go to jail, a Crown prosecutor urged.

Crown counsel Sean Harvey told a judge that JairusPaul Covacha Sacramento, 23, should spend between 90 and 120 days in jail for his actions and be placed on 18 months’ probation. Harvey asked for the jail term during a sentencing hearing Nov. 27 in North Vancouver provincial court before Judge Joseph Galati.

The hearing follows a trial earlier this year in which Sacramento was found guilty of sexual assault for grabbing a woman’s buttocks from behind as she walked along a trail in Lynn Valley. The incident happened on Feb. 13, 2022. The victim, whose identity is protected by a court-ordered publication ban, testified in the trial she was walking over the small bridge exiting the Varley Loop Trail near Rice Lake Road when a stranger approached her from behind and grabbed her buttocks and genital area. Within 30 seconds of the assault, the victim testified she started recording video of her attacker as he tried to cover

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his face and walk away. North Vancouver RCMP later released an image of Sacramento’s face, hoping it would result in tips from the public. He was arrested a month after the assault in Abbotsford, after two witnesses identified him after seeing news reports about the incident. In a victim impact statement read out to the court, the victim said while some people might dismiss the assault as a “grope,” the incident has left her with severe psychological harm including sleeplessness, agoraphobia, nightmares and hyper vigilance around men. “I suddenly found myself feeling fearful of all men. It took a significant amount of therapy to convince my brain that all not all men are dangerous,” she said. The woman said she’s had to take time off work and has experienced panic attacks at night, thinking someone might break into her home and attack her. “What Mr. Sacramento did is not OK,” she said. “It was criminal, and it was dehumanizing … A woman has the right to go for a walk in a beautiful park on a sunny day without having her body violated. Our bodies are not up for grabs.” A pre-sentence report pointed to Sacramento “greatly minimizing his actions” and lacking understanding of the effects of his actions on the victim, said Harvey. Sacramento maintained to pre-sentence report writers he “did not grab the victim but just tapped her on the butt” and “barely got a piece of it,” said Harvey. Harvey said Sacramento had also considered how he could “pick up a chick” on the way home and had a line prepared, specifically, “’Excuse me. I thought you were my girlfriend.’” “He believed that, executed properly, his approach would have worked,” said Harvey. Other comments that pointed to lack of insight included Sacramento declaring “’It’s not my fault if she was wearing revealing clothes,’” and suggesting, “The victim probably would have liked it if she was younger,” said Harvey. A pre-sentence report put Sacramento at “moderate” risk to re-offend, said Harvey. Mitigating factors are Sacramento’s lack of a criminal record and the fact he was only 22 at the time of the incident, said Harvey. Harvey said Sacramento should still get a jail term, arguing he doesn’t have the right mindset for rehabilitation and that a “short sharp jail sentence” is needed for deterrence. “Women need to feel safe walking on public trails in North Vancouver, and the sentence imposed today needs to be sufficient to prevent the accused and others from committing similar offences in the future,” he said. Defence lawyer Ashleigh Singleton asked the judge for a conditional discharge, describing the sex assault as being “on the lower end of the scale.” Singleton said a two-year probation with 50 hours of community work service and counselling orders should be sufficient. Singleton also asked the judge not to place Sacramento on the sex offender registry, which the prosecutor requested. The judge is set to hand down his the sentence later this month, when Sacramento will also be sentenced for a gun offence of possessing a Glock handgun in a location where he was not permitted to have it.


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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 | A31

FEE HIKES

Utility rates are going up for North Shore homeowners JANE SEYD

jseyd@nsnews.com

Utility rates paid by homeowners for water, sewer and garbage collection on the North Shore are going up.

Rising labour costs, greater demand for service in places like public parks, and the need to replace or upgrade aging infrastructure are among the factors driving rate increases soon to hit North Shore households. Some of those are beyond the control of municipalities, local politicians stressed as they discussed the fee hikes at council meetings across the North Shore. Just what kind of sticker shock is coming likely won’t be known until Metro Vancouver comes up with a plan and final cost to complete stalled construction on its North Shore Wastewater Treatment Plant – and who will be footing the bill. Municipal staff recently walked the North Shore’s three councils through the increases coming this year, and what some of those fee hikes could look like in the years ahead. In West Vancouver, fees for solid waste – including garbage, recycling and organics – are expected to go up around $34 this year – from $313.74 last year to $347.68 for single-family homes. Key cost drivers include

inflation, increased use of public parks and an associated increase in garbage collection and expanded recycling programs in parks. A staff report in West Vancouver noted that after years of declining residential waste volume, during the COVID-19 pandemic, the amount of trash being tossed as people worked from home increased and has yet to fall back to pre-pandemic levels. Volumes of green waste also spiked 10 per cent higher. Sewer and water rates are also going up, fuelled by the increased cost of buying bulk water from Metro, plus local system maintenance and upgrades.

Pumping station upgrades, new reservoir on tap in West Van Two major projects expected to impact future water costs in West Van include a $15.4-million Westmount pump station and reservoir upgrade and a $6.3 million replacement for the aging 11th Street pump station. A second $4.2-million reservoir on Cypress Bowl Road to provide water to neighbourhoods above the highway in West Vancouver is also in the works. Water costs in West Vancouver will go up an average of five per cent – from $884.78 to $928.80 – or a $44 increase for a median

single-family homes and $100 for apartments. That will mean utility fees of $1,801 for single-family homes, $1,606 for duplexes and $872 for apartments in the city – up between 12.3 and 14.4 per cent over last year.

Work on the massive new sewage treatment plant in North Vancouver takes place in March 2021. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN single-family household. Sewer costs are also going up, rising from current fees of $1,438 to an estimated annual charge of $1,553 for single-family homes in 2024 – up about $115 over last year. Similar increases to utility fees were adopted in the District of North Vancouver where utility fees will increase a combined 7.1 per cent for single-family homes, resulting in utility fees of $2,172 for an average single-family home in 2024 – an increase of just over $143. Utility fees for apartments are expected to clock in around $1,550 in 2024 – a 7.8 per cent increase. Utility rates are also going up in the City of North Vancouver – by just under $200 for

Half of utility fees from Metro levies Staff reports at all three municipalities noted that about 50 per cent of the utility fees come from Metro Vancouver, which supplies water as well as sewer treatment. Staff also noted that future projections so far don’t include the true costs of the North Shore’s new sewage treatment plant, currently budgeted at more than $1 billion. That figure is expected to rise significantly when final cost estimates are revealed sometime next year. City of North Vancouver Mayor Linda Buchanan pointed out that North Shore politicians were key in pushing the Metro board to adopt a 30-year amortization period for the beleaguered project – twice Metro’s usual 15-year amortization schedule. City of North Vancouver Coun. Don Bell said when tax notices go out, it’s important that the city spell out what part of the bill is set by the city and what is set by Metro or the province (in the case of the school tax).

Harvest Project’s Christmas Holiday Campaign On your behalf, we ‘extend a hand up’ to our North Shore neighbours who are facing difficult times. We provide coaching, counsel, a Rent Bank, grocery and clothing supports and more. We look to households, businesses and community groups to support our work. Thank you for your making your donation this season. Help save lives. Close to home.

Donate online: harvestproject.org 604.983.9488 info@harvestproject.org 1073 Roosevelt Cr. North Vancouver V7P 1M4


A32 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 | A33

B.C. SUPREME COURT

District of North Vancouver sued for shoddy home’s approval BRENT RICHTER

brichter@nsnews.com

The District of North Vancouver is being sued by a pair of homeowners alleging district inspectors signed off on shoddy construction and engineering.

In a civil claim filed in B.C. Supreme Court, Petra Andrea Smyczek and Saeid Behmanesh say they paid just over $4 million for their Madeira Court home in August 2021. When they moved in, however, they noticed loose railings and drywall cracks, prompting them to hire a structural engineer. The suit lays out 19 different deficiencies and defects they say should have been caught by the district’s inspector before granting an occupancy permit when the house was completed in 2019. Among them, according to the suit: improperly constructed walls, floors, and ceilings that are not square and/or level, excessive loading of beams, improperly designed and/or constructed

building envelope vapour barriers and pipes, wet walls and moisture throughout the house, non-functional in-floor heating, downspouts not properly draining, double-tapped circuit breakers, floor framing not fastened to the concrete foundation and failure of the retaining walls in the property’s rear yard. “The engineer identified numerous defects and deficiencies in the house’s design, materials and workmanship, all of which are attributable in whole or in part to the district’s negligent inspection of and approval of the design, construction, and occupancy of the house,” the claim states. The homeowners say they’ve had to deal with cracked drywall, water ingress around the house, mould, pests, erosion, and soil and wood falling into the neighbour’s yard. The defects and damage pose dangers to health and safety, the suit continues, including slope instability, compromised structural integrity of the house, respiratory

North Vancouver District is facing a lawsuit from homeowners alleging the district granted occupancy permits for a faulty home. GETTY IMAGES issues stemming from mould and infestation as well as fire risks from the home’s electrical wiring. District staff knew or ought to have known the building’s overall design was completed by a home designer rather than an architect, which the law requires for homes of that size, and none of the issues were caught by the district’s

inspectors during their numerous visits over the course of the construction, they allege. “It issued the building permit and the occupancy permit when it knew or ought to have known of the defects,” the court documents state. “If an architect had been involved with the project, it is probable that the defects, resulting

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damage and dangers would not have occurred or, alternatively, would have been less grave than they are.” Because of its role as a regulator, the district owed Smyczek and Behmanesh have a common law duty of care to be aware of the issues and see that they were corrected before granting an occupancy permit, the claim states. Smyczek and Behmanesh say they’ve endured the costs of investigating and remediating the damages, increased maintenance costs, property damage, loss of use and enjoyment of their home, as well as emotional and psychological stress. Smyczek and Behmanesh are asking the courts to award them general and special damages as well as interest. None of the allegations have been proven or heard in court, and the District of North Vancouver has not yet field a response to the claims. District of North Vancouver staff declined to comment.

The next Regular Council Meeting is January 8, 2024. Agendas for upcoming meetings and minutes of past meetings are available online at DNV.org/council. Council agendas are also available for viewing at all District libraries or you can sign up to receive agendas by email at DNV.org/agendanotice. Council meetings are 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 proceedings and, at a minimum, the Municipal Clerk, or designate will be in attendance. Public input on agenda items, both in-person and virtually, will be facilitated by signing up in advance prior to 3:00 p.m. on the day of the meeting by contacting the Municipal Clerk at signup@dnv.org. Speakers will then be contacted by the Municipal Clerk with instructions on how to participate either virtually or in person. Participation can be in person, via video or telephone. The public may also observe meetings via Zoom. Details are given in the agenda for each meeting, which are available at DNV.org/council after 10:00 a.m. on the Tuesday preceding the meeting.

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NORTH VANCOUVER

DNV.org/Council2024 DNV.org/council O


A34 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

Weather in your neighbourhood– that’s Weatherhood. Weatherhood has established dozens of new weather stations in neighbourhoods across the Lower Mainland. In doing so, we’ve tripled the amount that previously existed in the region! This means we’re able to show you—in near-real time—what’s happening at your destination before you cross a bridge, choose your shoes, or plan for your commute, trip or event.

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north shore news nsnews.com

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 |

How is Weatherhood different than what you use today? Today, Environment Canada (EC) along with radar and satellite readings are used by all major weather services. What most people don’t realize is that EC doesn’t have any weather stations in Vancouver, Surrey, or North Vancouver and in most other regions the only weather station is at the airport. Weatherhood has worked hard to partner with great organizations in your area to strategically place weather stations where we live. Environment Canada only has ~20 stations between Sechelt and Chilliwack using grid modeling, which doesn’t take realtime conditions into account

Weatherhood’s network includes 300% more sensors between Sechelt and Chilliwack than were previously in place, and updates forecast six times more often throughout the day.

A35


A36 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

north shore news nsnews.com

Failed theft attempts net jail time JANE SEYD

jseyd@nsnews.com

Skip the cards this year, and put your Season's Greetings in the

Book by Dec 14 From $399 Publishing Dec 20

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2024 Council Meeting Schedule The 2024 Council Meeting Schedule is now available on the City’s website at cnv.org/CouncilMeetings. The first Regular Council Meeting of 2024 is scheduled for Monday, January 15, 2024. Agendas for upcoming meetings are available online at cnv.org/CouncilAgendas or at the North Vancouver City Library, 120 West 14th Street. Regular Council Meetings are open to the public, held electronically and in person in the Council Chamber, and begin at 6:00pm. Watch the meetings online at cnv.org/LiveStreaming.

A trio of unsuccessful attempts to steal from commercial businesses has netted a North Van man a 45-day jail sentence.

Stephen Russell, 48, was handed the sentence Nov. 28 after pleading guilty in court to breaking into a bookstore and an auto parts store in North Vancouver, and pinching a pair of runners from SportChek in West Vancouver. Russell was spotted all three times and quickly nabbed by police. The first break-in happened in the early hours of July 1, when a resident phoned police to report two people trying to pick the lock of a residential building across the street. When they couldn’t get the lock open, they moved on to the ground-level bookstore, said prosecutor Victoria Hanna. When police arrived, Russell was found inside with a backpack containing pry bars, screwdrivers, box cutters, pliers and wire cutters, said Hanna, although nothing was

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taken from the store. On July 12, Russell was seen taking a pair of shoes worth about $200 from SportChek and leaving the store. He was later arrested and the runners recovered and returned to the store. Then on Aug. 10, the owner of a Lynn Valley autobody store called police around 2 a.m. to report he could see someone inside his business putting items in a bag on a live feed from his CCTV camera. Russell was still in the store when police arrived, said Hanna. Russell’s defence lawyer Mitchell Fogel said his client is remorseful for what he did. “He was short of work at the time,” he said, adding Russell admits to being “drunk and acting very stupidly.” The crimes weren’t very sophisticated, he added. Fogel asked for a conditional sentence to be served in the community, but Judge Joseph Galati rejected that, sentencing Russell instead to 45 days in jail. He will also serve 12 months’ probation.

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Mooring options very limited Continued from A1 options for their homes,” it read. “While we are currently unsure of what those options may entail, we can assure these residents that they will not find themselves without a place to live come May 31, 2024.” That offered some relief for live-aboards at risk of homelessness, but there is still much uncertainty and worry amongst those tenants. “Residents can stay beyond the May 31 deadBoat owners are facing an uncertain future after a recent line, but how far longer notice announcing the imminent closure of many of the than that is anybody’s docks at Mosquito Creek Marina. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN guess,” said Eddie Osland, a permanent resident of tight moorage already at marinas across Mosquito Creek Marina for the past 16 the Lower Mainland, he said. years. “It could be another month, it could “It’s a multi-year waitlist industry-wide. be another three months.” It’s not just here, it’s everywhere. It’s Osland said the community is still in incredibly unfortunate this has happened,” “shell shock,” with residents in “a mad said Sirri last week, adding that many boat scramble” trying to understand their owners will likely be forced to sell or, if options. unsuccessful given the flooded market, “I feel like I have had my world ripped abandon their largest assets. out from underneath me, I’m scratching “This is going to create a very signifmy head as to what I’m going to do,” he said. icant impact on the entire industry,” he Residents had been in floods of tears said. on Wednesday as they grappled with the Teunis de Raat and his wife Patricia had news of the mass eviction, fearing the loss been on a waitlist for “many years” before of their homes, workspaces, and local they were finally able to moor their 1972 community, said Sasha Selby. sailboat at Mosquito Creek Marina in 2021. “What am I going to tell my children? Not being live-aboards, both are quick That we’re homeless? It’s horrific,” Selby, to point out their situation is “far less who has lived on a boat in a boatshed severe” than those who live at the marina, with her husband and two children for yet the prospect of finding a new location nine years, told the North Shore News to moor after such an extensive wait to get Wednesday. their current site is a daunting one. In the lengthy, multi-page Q&A, the “I don’t know what’s actually going development company addressed rumours to happen. People are going to have to that the evictions were to make way for abandon their properties,” de Raat said. further development at the marina. “And these are not rich people. They’re “We do not have a plan for the marina regular, working people who have no other beyond ensuring the safety of people and alternative than to rent. For some of them, the environment,” it said, going on to detail it’s truly a horrible occurrence.” how the measures taken were a result of Nch’ḵay̓ Development Corporation “findings and recommendations of indesaid the marina and the Squamish Nation faces an “urgent situation” and emergency pendent professionals” that the majority repairs will be made immediately to stabiof the marina’s docks had reached their lize the docks for the winter. “functional end-of-life.” Planning work will begin in January “We can assure you that there are no to develop “extensive” rehabilitation or definitive plans in place at this time for the redevelopment plans, with the May 31 future of the Mosquito Creek Marina.” departure date for the affected tenants Marina tenants who must now look for remaining an “unfortunate necessity.” a new place to store their boats are in a Mina Kerr-Lazenby is the North Shore News’ tough spot, said Odai Sirri, general manIndigenous and civic affairs reporter. This ager of Vancouver’s Coal Harbour Marina reporting beat is made possible by the Local and Harbour Cruises. Relocating a boat Journalism Initiative. will be a near impossible task given the

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PUBLIC NOTICE 2 024 CO U N C I L M E E T I N G SC H E D U L E Public notice pursuant to section 127 of the Community Charter: The District of West Vancouver Council has established the 2024 Council Meeting Schedule (date, time, and place of regular Council meetings).

The schedule is:

• on the District’s website at westvancouver.ca; and • on the external bulletin boards at West Vancouver Municipal Hall.

QUESTIONS? Contact Legislative Services: 604-925-7004 | info@westvancouver.ca

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A38 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

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Twilight fans might recall this familiar staircase found in a West Vancouver home that is for rent. ARCHIBALD REAL ESTATE GROUP

Age 55+ now welcome to apply

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Rent Edward Cullen’s home for $20K a month

The five-bedroom, four-bathroom home in the British Properties was designed by famed architect Arthur Erickson in 1954 and later updated by Brian Hemingway in 2001. Sitting on a half-acre lot, the 5,117-square-foot house sits close to Capilano Golf and Country Club as well as Collingwood School. The home’s exterior features an outdoor pool and spa. There’s been “tremendous” interest in the property, says Kayla Gerak, operations co-ordinator with Archibald Real Estate Group. Regarding the $20,000 rent, “It is a very special property that will be perfect for the right person,” she said.

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nlaba@nsnews.com

If you’re the lion hoping to fall in love with the lamb – or vice versa – the perfect property has just hit the market.

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For a mere $20,000 a month, you can take your Edward Cullen cosplay to new heights by renting the home at 118 Stevens Dr. in West Vancouver, which was home to the heartthrob vampire in some of the Twilight Saga movies. At least some fans have already fantasized about haunting the Cullen manor, as a TikTok video by real estate agent Casey Archibald has garnered nearly 700,000 views.

For more info call 604-926-0102 or see our website kiwanisnorthshorehousing.org

HOLIDAY RECYCLING COLLECTION SCHEDULE Please check your holiday recycling schedules below. City of North Vancouver Tuesday

Wednesday

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RECYCLING ONLY

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GARBAGE GREEN CAN

Friday

In the City of North Vancouver Monday zone, recycling will be collected on Tuesday, December 26. Garbage and Green Can will be collected Wednesday, December 27. This does not affect recycling collection Wednesday through Friday of this week. To view the full recycling guide and for more information: RecycleBC.ca/NorthShore

West Vancouver

District of North Vancouver Friday

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Download the app at RecycleBC.ca/App


north shore news nsnews.com

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 | A39

BREAKING BAD

Crown seeks two years for British Properties drug lab operator BRENT RICHTER

brichter@nsnews.com

A man arrested for running a drug lab out of a British Properties home is facing up to two years in prison.

Residents around the home at 1318 Crestwell Rd. called 911 in the early morning hours of March 7, 2022 after an explosion and fire rocked the neighbourhood. When police arrived, they found a shirtless man outside who informed them he had been cooking MDMA in the kitchen. Gerald Terrance Yaremchuk, 58, was later charged with 11 counts under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. Yaremchuk was in Vancouver Provincial Court Thursday to plead guilty to one count of production of a controlled substance and two counts of unlawfully possessing precursor chemicals and equipment. The remaining charges of possession for the purposes of trafficking will be stayed. Crown prosecutor Irene Sattarzadeh told the judge that Yaremchuk should face two years less a day in jail for his role in the cook house. After the fire was out, the RCMP’s clandestine drug lab team conducted a search, which turned up a “large scale” operation with propane burners, drying ovens, reaction vessels, mixing trays, air filters, modified wiring, containers of chemicals, a pill press and scales. In terms of actual drugs, they seized some ketamine and methamphetamine, almost 17 kilograms of raw MDMA, and 57,000 MDMA pills, which would be worth up to $450,000 sold individually on the street, the court heard. There was also evidence the house, which was in a state of filth and disrepair including blood stains on the floors, had once been used as a cannabis grow op, the court heard. Sattarzadeh said it was clear from text messages on Yaremchuk’s phone that he was an employee who was still learning the ropes, frequently providing batches of dubious quality and at least one being spoiled completed. While his early guilty plea, lack of previous criminal record and his co-operation with investigators were mitigating factors in the sentencing, the size of the lab and the danger it posed to the community were aggravating ones, Sattarzadeh said. “This was in a residential neighborhood,” she said. “There’s a risk always with clandestine labs, but this risk

came to fruition so to speak. There was a fire. Inside the residence, there were chemicals, a propane tank, a not-to-code electric system and all of this made for a large public safety risk.” Given the chemicals and haphazard production, Sattarzadeh said people buying the party drug would have been at considerable risk themselves. “It’s quite terrifying to think that drugs made in this manner are being consumed by an unknowing, unwitting people,” she said. A two-year sentence would be at the low end of the range for similar cases, Sattarzadeh said. Yaremchuk’s defence lawyer, however, said his client should be able to serve his sentence through house arrest and probation. Joel Whysall said Yaremchuk’s behaviour was an “isolated aberration,” and that he poses no threat to society if he is allowed to stay in the community. At his hearing, the court heard that Yaremchuk began producing drugs in 2019 after becoming burnt out and despondent in his career as a commodities broker. He turned to the dealer who provided him with recreational cocaine for connections to find work in the drug world. “He was being used. He was being used by people who are taking advantage of him to go and work in this dangerous and unsafe house, making this product for them,” Whysall said. Although he had the right to remain silent, Yaremchuk voluntarily told police and firefighters about the chemicals in the house because he did not want to see any of them hurt while dealing with the scene. “I think that speaks to his character,” Whysall said. “His true colours show that he’s a good person.” Yaremchuk has legal employment lined up in his new home on Vancouver Island, Whysall said. Yaremchuk is due back in court in January to set a date for sentencing. Civil forfeiture case Apart from the criminal process, the province is seeking to seize the Crestwell property under the Civil Forfeiture Act as the proceeds or instruments of crime. Court documents filed by the director of civil forfeiture identified the registered owner as Shuangfeng Deng, who the province alleges knew or was wilfully blind to what was going on in the house. Deng has since filed a response denying the allegation and opposing the seizure. Deng bought the property with

legal income and hired a real estate agent to rent it out, the response document states. “If any tenant of the property used the property to produce illegal drugs contrary of any laws of Canada, Mr. Deng had no knowledge of this,” the court document states. “The forfeiture of the property is clearly not in the interests of justice. Mr. Deng did not directly or

indirectly acquire the property as a result of unlawful activity. Mr. Deng was the rightful owner of the property before the alleged unlawful activity occurred and was deprived of control of the property by means of the alleged unlawful activity.” The civil forfeiture allegations have not been tested in court. The property was last assessed at just over $4.3 million.


A40 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

north shore news nsnews.com

TIME TRAVELLER

HEALTH SYSTEM

A weekly glimpse into North Shore’s past from MONOVA: Museum of North Vancouver

Eby says B.C. residents accessing expanded pharmacy care BRENT RICHTER

brichter@nsnews.com

Roughly 300,000 people in B.C. have gone to their pharmacists for prescriptions and/or free contraception since the provincial programs began offering them in April and June this year.

Salvaging the Empress of Japan

Photo: NVMA, 5608

The Empress of Japan, also known as The Queen of the Pacific, was a CPR Steamship that travelled from Vancouver to Asia more than 300 times, gathering passengers, silks, and tea. After being refitted for service in the First World War, the ship was scrapped in 1927. The picture above shows the ship being broken up on the Lynn Creek mudflats. The dragon figurehead was saved and put on display near the Xwáýxway village site in Stanley Park. The original figurehead was later moved to Vancouver Maritime Museum, with a replica put in its place in Stanley Park. 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

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“I have difficulty moving around like I used to.”

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annual family passes

Premier David Eby delivered an update on the programs at the Lynn Valley Shoppers Drug Mart in North Vancouver on Friday. Eby said 129,000 people have gone to pharmacists to get prescriptions for minor ailments like pinkeye, rashes, urinary tract infections and allergies in the last six months – issues that once would have required an appointment with a doctor or a trip to the walk-in clinic. “It’s faster and easier for people to access health care, especially those without a family doctor. It relieves pressure on clinics and emergency rooms,” Eby said. Since B.C. became the first province in Canada to make contraception free in April, 188,000 people have taken advantage, Eby said, saving them $300 per year if they are on the pill, and $400 for an IUD. Eby noted that his wife is a family doctor

who, until this year, frequently heard from patients that they could not afford the cost. North Vancouver-Seymour MLA Susie Chant, who is also a registered nurse, said the update is reason to celebrate. “Costs should never be a barrier in accessing health care. This is one of our government’s foundational values, and free contraceptives empowers more people to make the choice about their reproductive health that’s right for them,” she said. Mahin Hanifian, pharmacist and owner of Lynn Valley Shoppers, said she was proud of how her colleagues had stepped up to benefit the health of British Columbians. “I’m extremely happy with the opportunity that has been provided for pharmacists to be there, to be accessible for our patients and reduce the pressure from the other sectors of the health care [system],” she said. “I hope to see more expansion of our scope of practice.” While on the subject of everyone’s health, Eby said 1.25 million British Columbians had received their updated COVID-19 vaccines so far, and 1.42 million Continued on A41

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north shore news nsnews.com

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 | A41

CROSSWORD

Solutions can be found in the Wednesday December 20th issue.

Premier David Eby and Mahin Hanifian, pharmacist and owner of Lynn Valley Shoppers Drug Mart, address the media at announcement on Friday. PAUL MCGRATH / NSN

Flu shots available at pharmacies Continued from A40 had this year’s flu shot. He encouraged everyone who hadn’t gotten theirs yet to sign up and do it quickly. “It’s free. It’s easy, and pharmacists are waiting to assist. You really want to do this before the holidays. Let me assure you. If you’re a sick parent with kids or you have a sick kid during the holiday break, there

is nothing more miserable than the sixth round of Paw Patrol Saves Christmas,” he said. “We don’t want you in the hospital. You don’t want to be in hospital during the holiday break.” A full list of 21 ailments that pharmacists can now provide prescriptions for is available at gov.bc.ca/seeapharmacist. Vaccination appointments can be booked at immunizebc.ca.

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

41. Lower CLUES ACROSS 43. View closely 1. Part of a list 44. Plastic material 5. Grate 9. Also 47. Small mark 12. Tennis term 49. Bitter resentment 13. Soprano’s solo 50. Reword copy 14. Bind 53. Turn down 15. Meat cut 56. Attack! 16. Mischievous kids 57. Traffic barrier 17. First number 58. Like the desert 18. Swordplay 59. Inquire 20. Become narrower 60. Look after 22. That female 61. Country 24. Strengthened CLUES DOWN 27. Number of 1. ____ at ease bowling frames 2. Also 28. Gaucho’s wear 3. Testimony 29. Broil 4. List of options 33. Rainbow’s shape 5. Transport 34. Canonized systems person 6. Extension 36. Duo number 7. Drink a little 37. Hive dwellers 8. Adhesive 39. Statistics 9. At the summit of 40. Coolidge’s 10. Four plus five nickname 11. Forest dweller 19. Recedes, as the

tide 21. Some are personal 22. Random try 23. In this place 25. Pen name 26. Disputed 30. List ender: 2 wds. 31. On vacation 32. Cameo, e.g. 35. Waterproofed cover

38. Sneaky 42. Make a choice 44. Traveler’s permit 45. Pupil surrounder 46. Most of a giraffe 48. Egg-shaped 51. Gentle animal 52. Stopover place 54. Metal can 55. Not even Crossword puzzle answers use American spelling

Wednesday December 6th Solutions:

Daily crossword available at: nsnews.com/crossword


A42 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

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REMEMBRANCES Obituaries

Obituaries

Obituaries

Each Loss Each loss is very different, The pain is so severe. Will I ever stop missing This one I loved so dear? Good times we had together, The moments that we shared We didn’t have to tell each other How much we really cared. I never dreamed you’d go away, Never thought of sorrow. So sure you’d always be here Took for granted each tomorrow. Now my life is all confused Since you went away. You took a part of me And for help I daily pray.

Cameron, William James “Jim”

COLES, David J. April 29, 1931 − December 4, 2023

With deep sadness, we announce the passing of William James “Jim” Cameron on December 2, 2023. He was 79 years old. He was a longtime resident of West Vancouver, by way of the United Kingdom. He spent most of his career as a dentist practicing on West Georgia Street.

David John Coles, a charismatic soul whose journey began on April 29, 1931, peacefully departed this world on December 4, 2023. He leaves behind a legacy of love, resilience, and a life well−lived, surrounded by cherished family and friends.

Jim loved cars, travelling, sharing stories, and telling jokes. He was adventurous, quick-witted, gregarious, and loving.

David is survived by his adoring wife, Jean Evelyn Lewis, and his sons: Stephen Coles, Michael Coles, Adam Coles, Matthew Coles, Kevin Coles, Steven Lazenby and David Coles Jr.

Jim is survived by his children, Sarah, Andrew, and Diana, and his four grandchildren. A celebration of life will be held in Victoria in early January, 2024. For those interested in attending in person or by web stream, please email wjcfuneral@gmail.com.

Predeceased by his sister, Valerie Coles, David’s life was marked by challenges and triumphs. Reflecting on war times, he shared memories of evacuations and the resilience displayed during the London Blitz.

But when God sent you to me He never said that you were mine, That I could keep you always – Only borrowed for a time.

A man of diverse interests, David enjoyed various hobbies, including hockey, tennis, skiing, billiards, bocce, motorcycling, and jewellery making. His passion for life extended to his professional endeavours as well. Starting as an apprentice jeweller, he evolved into an accomplished ring designer. Upon moving to Canada, he transitioned to the automotive industry, ultimately becoming the co−owner of Capilano Volkswagen in North Vancouver.

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.

David was a raconteur with a love of words and wordplay. He often demonstrated his storytelling prowess, reminiscing joys spent skiing Whistler, Sun Valley or playing in Santa Rosa hockey tournaments. There wasn’t a limerick or anecdote he couldn’t make bawdy for a laugh.

GRAHAM-CUTTS, Ronald 1936 - 2023 Funeral Mass for Ron Graham-Cutts, at 11:00am, Friday December 15th at Christ the Redeemer Parish, 599 Keith Road, West Vancouver.

David John Coles will be deeply missed but forever remembered for his charm, sense of humour, competitive nature, love of games, and the stories that brought happiness to those fortunate enough to share in his journey. May he rest in peace, surrounded by the eternal love of those who went before him.

HANLON - McMILLAN , Marie-Jeanne Thérèse (Tessie) (nee Francoeur) April, 1928 - December, 2023 Following a stroke on November 28, 2023, Thérèse passed away peacefully at Comox Valley Hospital. In her final days, she was never alone, as several of her children were nearby supporting her. Thérèse was born in Victoire, Sask., the youngest of Frank and Emerilda Francoeur’s 11 children. She moved to North Van in 1948 and later married Joe Hanlon, together they had 10 children. Several years after Joe died in 1981, Thérèse married Norman Stanley McMillan and they enjoyed a travel-filled retirement until his passing in 2006. Through her senior years, Thérèse always maintained her strong Catholic faith, saying the Rosary and attending Mass daily. She continued to enjoy meeting new & old friends, keeping up with daily news, and attending seniors’ dances. Thérèse was a bright light of enthusiasm and participation wherever she went. Thérèse is survived by her children Hugh, Juanna, Terrence (Trudy), Edward, Martin (Laurie), Bob and Elaine; her grandchildren Neale, Salome, Jeremy, Aidan, Michael, Vincent, Therese, Emily, Patrick, Ethan, Andrew and Tessa, and great grandsons Blake and William. Thérèse is predeceased by her husbands, Joe Hanlon and Stan McMillan, sons Joey, Eric, and Gerard and grandson Colin. Funeral services will be at Holy Trinity Catholic Church, 2725 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver, on Thursday, December 21st. Prayer service at 10am. Funeral Mass at 11 am.

As you share the stories and the memories of how they lived their lives and how very much they meant, may you find comfort...


north shore news nsnews.com

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 |

A43

REMEMBRANCES Obituaries

Obituaries

Obituaries

the more you

GIVE

PROWSE, Carole April 20, 1936 − December 4, 2023 On the morning of December 4th, our mom, Carole Prowse, passed away at Evergreen House in North Vancouver. A full obituary and online condolences are at www.dignitymemorial.com.

The more you give, The more you get,

The more you laugh, The less you fret. LANGFORD, Michael Russell June 5, 1935 − December 7, 2023

GLASER, Helmut It is with heartfelt sadness that we announce the death of Helmut Glaser on December 3rd, 2023 at Fir Park Village in Port Alberni. We like to think that he has been reunited with his recently deceased wife, Christel. They would have celebrated their 70th wedding anniversary on December 29th this year. The family would like to thank the staff at Fir Park for their care and support of Helmut during his time as a resident and his final days there. Helmut was born in Breslau, Germany on December 23rd, 1931. He was 14 years old when the war ended. Helmut was then educated as an electronics engineer and trained in various shops as a mechanic. He had a natural aptitude for fixing things. He loved to tell the story of rewiring the ignition system of a Russian army motorcycle in hopes that it would be abandoned when they came back to reclaim it. Even though he didn’t get to keep the bike, he was proud to watch the invading soldiers have to push it away because their keys no longer worked. He eventually got a motorbike of his own and used it to impress his future wife, Christel.

Michael (Mike) Langford Senior passed away peacefully at the age of 88. Michael was raised in Marpole, moving to North Vancouver in 1960 with his then wife Helga, and raised two sons: Michael junior and Andrew. Mike attended UBC (Mechanical Engineering) and worked at Vancouver School Board for over 30 years. After retirement, he found his passion for flying, obtaining his private pilot license and instructor license and spent many happy hours flying from Boundary Bay airport. Predeceased by his sons Andrew (1995) and Mitchell (2023) and survived by his son Michael (Dolores), grandchildren Michaela and Caelan, and sister Joanne. Many thanks to Berkley Care Centre in N. Vancouver for caring for Mike in his last year. No service by request.

SCHAFF, Catherine Norma May 13, 1926 − December 1, 2023 It is with deep sadness that our family announces the passing of our dear Mother, Catherine Schaff. Predeceased by her loving husband John Schaff and daughters Chrystal Douglas and Melody Schaff. Survived by her children Heddy Bing, Kandys Merola, Thomas Schaff, Daniel Schaff, David Schaff, and Alexandra Schaff.

Before the age of gps and internet, Helmut explored his new province with his young family by veering off the main highways onto gravel logging roads. His favourite saying was “I wonder where this road leads to?” He was happiest after launching his hand-built canoe to the far side of a lake we happened upon, setting up camp and fishing for rainbow trout. Helmut was an excellent marksman and won many trophies at the Capilano Sportsman Club but his love of animals and his squeamishness at the sight of blood kept him shooting only at targets.

In lieu of flowers, please consider donating to RCL TVS Branch 44, rcl44@shaw.ca or TB Vets Chairty (www.tbvets.org/donate). To share a tribute, visit: www.mem.com

A hymn sing will take place on December 21st at Fir Park Village at 3:45 pm.

In Loving Memory of our mother, grandmother, great grandmother, and friend, Valerie Daphne Logan (nee Moore). Valerie Logan passed away peacefully on Saturday, November 11, 2023 at the age of 80 at Cairnsmore Place, Duncan, BC with loved ones by her side. Valerie graced the world with her presence in North Vancouver on March 15, 1943 to parents, Daphne and Norman Moore. She grew up on the North Shore until moving to Vancouver Island in the late 80’s. Once on Vancouver Island, she embarked on continuing her education and Graduated from the University of Victoria with Distinction with her BSW. Valerie loved helping others, and this was her biggest honour. Val leaves behind her children, Nick and Teresa, and her grandchildren, Eowyn, Sarah, Vanessa, and Chris, Cousin Jill and Nephew Chris, and something questionable in the back of the fridge. For anyone that knew Val closely, please always remember her sense of humor and love of literature and music.

The young newlyweds immigrated to Canada in 1955. They bought a house in North Vancouver after Helmut got his first job as a radio engineer at CKLG. After working his entire career of 36 years, the LG73 and FOX family proudly inducted Helmut into the LG 73 Hall of Hits. A YouTube video can be viewed - Larry and Willy Hijack TV with Helmut the Engineer. They made Lynn Valley their home for 63 years.

Helmut will be lovingly remembered by his daughters Sarina Koch (Philip) and Tamara Glaser. As a grandpa, he was generous and caring to his grandchildren Rowan, Melina, Taylor and Harrison. Christmas was a special time of the year for Helmut and Christel and their family will greatly miss their presence.

LOGAN, Valerie Daphne (nee Moore) March 15, 1943 - November 11, 2023

“Still round the corner there may wait A new road or a secret gate And though I oft have passed them by A day will come at last when I Shall take the hidden paths that run West of the Moon, East of the Sun.” ~ J.R.R. Tolkien

Funeral service will be held on Sunday, Dec. 17, at 2:00 pm at St. Christopher’s Anglican Church, 1068 Inglewood Ave., West Vancouver.

As you share the stories and the memories of how they lived their lives and how very much they meant, may you find comfort...

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

The more you do unselfishly. The more you live abundantly. The more of everything you share, The more you’ll always have to spare. The more you love, the more you’ll find, That life is good and friends are kind. For only what we give away, Enriches us from day to day. Teresa Piercey-Gates


A44 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

north shore news nsnews.com REMEMBRANCES Obituaries

One Final

Gift

SORENSON, Jens W. August 17, 1936 − November 27, 2023 Jens William (Bill) Sorenson was born on August 17, 1936, and departed us on November 27, 2023. He was predeceased by his father Svend, mother Ethyl May, brother Darwin, and sister Marie. Bill is survived by his loving wife Melvena; brothers Wayne (Dianne), Jim, and Jack (Corrine); and sister Kristine (Dick). Bill was married in 1960 to Marilyn Bird (nee Stonehouse) and had three children, Dennis, Lindsay and Kristen, adding Debbie Crarer (nee Rathbone) to the family when he remarried in 1984 to Melvena. 2024 would have marked 40 years for Bill and Melvena, a significant milestone that we celebrate now pre−emptively. A private memorial and celebration will take place early in 2024. A more detailed celebration of Bill can be found on the Dignity Memorial website at the following link: www.dignitymemorial.com/ obituaries. Please take a moment to add your celebration of Bill. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the BC Children’s Hospital Foundation.

THOMPSON, James (Jim) Wilson (Born in North Vancouver 1946 - 2023) Jim, beloved husband of Carol Thompson, departed from this world on November 21st, 2023. He is survived by his devoted wife Carol Thompson, cherished daughters Tamara Whitman (Kasey) and Alexis Muir (Grant), as well as his adoring grandchildren: Colton, Brooklyn, Scotia, and Presley. Jim will be fondly remembered for his infectious laughter and constant smile that could brighten anyone’s day. He was known for his warm-hearted nature and leaves behind a legacy of love and kindness that will forever live on in the hearts of his family and friends. Among the many cherished memories he leaves behind, one that stood out was a recent trip to Maui with his family, a testament to the joy and love he shared with his loved ones. In lieu of flowers, the family kindly requests that donations be made to the Royal Columbia Hospital in honour of the exceptional care Jim received during his time there, or to the BCSPCA to support Jim’s love for animals. While Jim’s physical presence will be deeply missed, his spirit and the wonderful memories he created will continue to resonate with all who had the privilege of knowing him. Celebration of Life to be held January 19, 2024 at the Wallace in North Vancouver at 2pm.

SEGULAM-SINGH, Elvina Talmani June 25, 1937 - September 6, 2023 She grew up just a few miles down the road from my home and we both attended the Longdenville Government School. She would often remind me that in Standard Four we were cast as the romantic leads in our class play: Princess and Prince. After her elementary school graduation her father, a civil engineer, accepted a position in Guyana. It would be four years until I saw her again . . . she was then 17 and myself 18. I was once again smitten. After a six year courtship we were married in 1960. In 1966 I told her, “I want to run away with you to a secret place where the world would never find us”. Our destination? British Columbia. Our application was received and after a short interview at the Trinidad Hilton, we were accepted. The following year we settled in the West End overlooking English Bay. Eventually making North Vancouver home until present day. In 1975 she encouraged me to return to school, so I enrolled in the Faculty of Education at UBC. During that period she began her banking career to help support the family. With her “mad money” she proudly bought herself a brand new Mustang (“Sue T”) and her journey was renewed. Adult education classes (math and physics), dabbling in poetry and the occasional “love” letter sent my way. On top of being a voracious reader. Often reading close to 175 murder/mysteries annually in her final years. Prior to immigrating, she was a qualified home economics instructor and trained nutritionist (John Donaldson Technical Institute). It was to no one’s surprise when she returned to school (Vancouver Community College) in 1991. After taking a couple of part-time courses in the Culinary Arts she decided to become a certified chef. Most of her classmates were half her age. The highlights during those years: winning the annual bursary, graduating with the highest GPA in her class and receiving 100% on her final project: a personally designed restaurant menu for the aptly named, “Chez Elle”. She excelled to say the least. She is survived by her husband, Rudy, children Jini and Rob and grandchildren: Roxanne, Emma and Gabrielle. Elvina grew up in Edinburgh Rd - Carlsen Field, “That’s where the sugar cane and cashew trees grow wild, and the fragrance of the orange and mango trees, in blossom, linger awhile. There I shall once again walk alone and be lonely at times in those places we use to know waiting for you. So as to decide what next shall we play my love”. You are always on my mind. Happy Birthday, Dearest Sue Talmani “May your heart be light. And your path be bright. In years that lie before you. May sky’s be blue. And a dear one still true. And never a cloud to come o’er you” ~Rudy (1954)

YOUNG, Darren

December 19, 1961 - November 24, 2023 It is with heavy hearts we announce the peaceful passing of Darren Young on November 24, 2023. Devoted husband to Karen, his wife of 37 years and beloved father to Mackenzie. Predeceased by his mother Sally and survived by his father Dan and brother Chris (Tina). He will be deeply missed by his many nieces and nephews, extended family members and friends. Darren will forever be remembered for his boisterous laugh, enthusiastic dance moves, his easy-going nature and glass half full attitude. He was a true sports fanatic. A gifted athlete, coach, and fan. He was selected by the Canadian Soccer Association to play on the National Youth Team; a knee injury sidelined him in Europe but his passion for the sport kept him on the playing fields well into his 50’s. Darren was particularly proud to have had the opportunity to coach his son’s soccer and hockey teams. Later, he would run into one of the young men in the neighbourhood and his face would light up as they called out “Hey Coach!” His career in the charter bus industry, most recently as President of International Stage Lines, spanned more than 30 years. His integrity, mentorship and dedication forged many longlasting relationships with both colleagues and the tourism community. A recent house move to Lonsdale Quay was a bucket list wish come true. Sitting on the balcony watching the unparalleled city, harbour and mountain views, listening to loud 70’s rock was his idea of Heaven. A Celebration of Life will be held Saturday January 6, 2024 at 1:00pm at the Stanley Park Pavilion, 610 Pipeline Rd Vancouver. To write a condolence to the family, please visit www.mckenziefuneralservices.com

Online

legacy.com/obituaries/nsnews

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


north shore news nsnews.com

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 |

A45

REMEMBRANCES ObituarieS

ObituarieS

North Shore’s Only Family Owned Funeral Provider

FRANCO, Anna It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of Anna Franco, 87, of North Vancouver BC. She died peacefully at her home on December 5th, 2023. She was surrounded by her two children David and Elizabeth as well as her son-inlaw John and her beautiful grandchildren Julia, Alexandra and Jade. She was predeceased by her husband Donato Franco in 2001. Anna immigrated to North Vancouver from Enna Sicily in 1961. She would spend the remainder of her life in this beautiful city. In 1963 she married Donato, raised two children and cultivated her Dressmaking business for over 4 decades until she retired. One of her greatest accomplishments was becoming a Canadian Citizen. It was one of the most proudest days of her life when she took the Oath Of Citizenship to become a Citizen. She devoted her life to working in Canada and loved the life and home she had created here. Anna touched so many people with her open heartedness. She loved having parties and bringing people together. She welcomed everyone with open arms. Always quick to invite someone in and listen to what they had to say. Good or bad, Anna would lay down a plate of pastries and a coffee and enjoy passing the time with anyone. The remainder of her years was spent becoming a fine arts painter, learning how to play the piano and making magical delicious baking goods. She became the artist she always wanted to be. Her laughter was infectious, her eyes always twinkled, she wore her heart on her sleeve. Her hugs were memorable. Hummingbirds and roses were undeniable gifts from heaven. Her gorgeous garden encapsulated her with all of it’s colors and smells. She spent hours watching the joy of nature unfold in her garden oasis. Her modo was simple. Just love. Love all you can, anytime you can, with as many people as you can. She was here to give, and that she did. She will be missed.

PAULLEY, Kenneth Gordon June 11, 1929 - November 6, 2023 It is with deep sadness that the family announces the passing of Kenneth Gordon Paulley on the evening of November 6 at Evergreen Nursing Home in North Vancouver, BC. He was 94 years old. Ken will be lovingly remembered by his daughters Cheryl, Kim (George) and Deborah (Ed); stepchildren Jim (Evelyn), Marsha; grandchildren Sean (Cheryl), Michelle (Fran), Charlotte (Nathan), Nicole, Natasha; stepgrandchildren, Lyla, Michael, Mitchell, Mathew; great grandchildren Vanessa, Mateo, Hunter, Ana. Sharing their loss are cousins, nieces, nephews and friends. He was predeceased by his sister, Doreen Anderson, brother, Dick Paulley, second wife, Harriet, last partner, Genie Kubryn, and granddaughter, Catherine. He is survived by his first wife, Dorothy, (nee Luke). A life long love of golf began at an Elmwood golf course, near his family home in Winnipeg. His yearbook noted his passion for crooners, such as Dick Haymes, and an ambition to become an accountant. Ken worked for Canadian Pacific from age 18 to 59, a true company man. First with CP Air, then CP Transport, where he made his ascent up the management ladder. In 1969, his promotion to Traffic Manager for Western Canada took the family from Winnipeg to Vancouver. In 1991, Ken packed up his golf clubs and gold watch, and with second wife, Harriet, retired to Vernon. Ken could be counted on by his family, never missing a birthday or that Christmas morning call. He loved to tell a joke; his quick wit could easily catch you off guard, ne’er did he miss a beat. A memorial service will be held February 17, 2024 at 2:00pm at St. Agnes Church in North Vancouver. In lieu of flowers, donations to the BCSPCA or BC Cancer Agency may be made.

George & Mildred McKenzie

604-926-5121 • mckenziefuneralservices.com 200-100 Park Royal South, West Vancouver

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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 Dignity Memorial is a division of Service Corporation International (Canada) ULC.

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ExEcutor sErvicEs

Caring and Professional Executor, Trustee and Power of Attorney services based on the North Shore Brian Dougherty

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A celebration of life will be held at West Vancouver United Church, Sunday January 14th, 2024 at 1:30pm, 2062 Esquimalt Ave, West Vancouver BC V7V 1S4. In lieu of flowers, please make donations to the Palliative Care Ward at Lions Gate Hospital.

UYEYAMA, Dorothy November 8, 1936 - December 7, 2023 Dorothy resided on the North Shore for 55 years, she passed away on December 7th, 2023 at the Inglewood Care Home.

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

Funeral ServiceS

Predeceased by her husband of 60 years Eiji Uyeyama and her nine siblings. Survived by her children; Kim, Pamela and Michael. No service as per request. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to a long term care facility.

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A46 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

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COMMUNITY Announcements

coming events

LEGAL

MARKETPLACE

PETS

LegAL/PubLic notices

WAnted

Pet memoriAms

Warehouse Lien Act .

ShipyardsVendors Annual Christmas Market December 16th and 17th Starting at 10am in the ShipYards. Your favourite local ShipYards Artisans Vendors will be in the Pipeshop building with great Christmas gift ideas. Come join! northvancouvershipyards district.com

coming events

Winter Gift Gallery at the Seymour Art Gallery Shop local this holiday season! We’ve brought together an amazing group of artists to inspire your holiday shopping. Find unique, handmade gifts like ceramics, jewelry, paintings, and much more. Your support helps local artists and our non−profit gallery! Open daily from 10am − 5pm until December 24 visit seymourartgallery.com for more information

MEMORIAL DONATIONS LIONS GATE HOSPITAL FOUNDATION (NSN) 5.28569X2 R0061925348 :: #746056 MEMORIAL SERVICES

North Shore Hospice & Palliative Care

Notice is hereby given that Econo Moving & Storage will be holding a public auction on December 27, 2023 at 9:00 AM. The following accounts are in delinquency and will be sold to recover monies owing under the ‘Warehouse Lien Act’ Harrison Bradbury, Ziba Soleimannasab, Azadeh Hosseini, Paul Stegavig, Stephen Russell 991 West 1st St, North Vancouver, BC. V7P 1A4 (604-980-3333)

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12:00pm - 5:00pm Saturdays & Sundays

Nov 25 26 Dec 2 3 9 10 16 17 23

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December 17 • 10am - 4pm Free Entry!

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Even though it’s been so many years, I miss you still. You were a wonderful dog. Love Mom

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www.tuwanekhotel.com phone: 604-885-3442 7545 Islets Place, Sechelt, BC

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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023 |

A47

HOME SERVICES FenCing

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Specializing in residential concrete. Repair, removal and new installation. Patio specialists 604-988-9523 or 604-988-9495

Drywall

DRYWALL PATCHING & REPAIRS. We Fix it -

Small & Large Jobs OK!

778-227-6573 A & A Millwood Quality Drywall Service. Repairs, renos, new construction. Prompt service.

Richard cell 604-671-0084 or 604-986-9880

eleCtriCal

INSTALLATION, REFINISHING, SANDING. Free Est. • Great Prices. Satisfaction Guaranteed. 604-518-7508

ABE MOVING • DELIVERY and Rubbish Removal $45/hr per person. 24/7

604-999-6020

.

Lic#89402. Insured. Guaranteed.

Fast same day service. We love BIG & small jobs!

604-568-1899

goldenleafelectrical.com

DNE Electric 604-999-2332 License No: 89267

Best Rates & Free Est. Res/Com/All Electrical Service/Panel Upgrade

• Gutters Cleaned • Power Washing • Christmas Lights • Window Cleaning • Awnings Cleaned

1451 Marine Drive, North Vancouver, BC V7P 1TS

DELBROOK PLUMBING & DRAINAGE • Licensed & Insured • No Job Too Small • Hot Water Tanks • Specializing in Waterline

renos & HoMe iMProveMent

LOOKING TO FREE UP SOME

Free Estimates & Quality Service

Call Simon for prompt & professional service 30 yrs exp.

604-230-0627

rooFing

PLANNING A RENO? .

A-1 Contracting & Roofing

ENDS DECEMBER 31, 2023

HanDyPerson

Small and big ig jobs jo

Kitchen and Bathroom remodeling Plumbing, Tiling, Paving Drywall, Carpentry, Deck, Fence Door and Window ood, Laminate Hardwood,

RAIN FOREST STONE MASONRY

New Roofs & Re-Roofing ALL TYPES All Maintenance & Repairs GUTTER CLEANING Gutter Guard Installations • RENOVATION WORK • WCB. 25% Discount • Emergency Repairs •

Jag 778-892-1530

18 Years serving the North Shore Walls, Fireplaces, Brick, Stairs & Patios New & Repairs

a1kahlonconstruction.ca

Michael

604-802-7850

604-765-3329

To place your ad email nmather@glaciermedia.ca

Call 604-653-7851 or email

nmather@glaciermedia.ca

ALL RENOVATIONS

& MORE. Quality Workmanship

778-892-1530

a1kahlonconstruction.ca

Bros. Roofing Ltd. Over 40 Years in Business SPECIALIZING IN CEDAR, FIBERGLASS LAMINATES AND TORCH ON.

Liability Insurance, WCB, BBB, Free Estimates

604-946-4333

OnSiteRenovations.com

Mike Getzlaf 604 351 9316

MASTER CARPENTER

• Finishing • Doors • Moulding • Decks • Renos • Repairs Emil: 778-773-1407 primerenovation.ca

tree serviCes

Re-Roofing & Maintenance Repair

SPECIALISTS

20 Year Labour Warranty Available Family owned & operated.

604-591-3500 604-502-8683

allseasonsroofing.ca

classifieds.nsnews.com

TREE SERVICES Pruning, Hedge Trimming Tree & Stump Removal

75 ft Bucket Trucks

604-787-5915

.

www.treeworksonline.ca

$50 OFF New Roofs, Re-Roofing, Repairs & Gutter Cleaning. WCB.BBB. • GLRoofing.ca

604-240-5362

rubbisH reMoval

604-999-6020

..

• Kitchen • Baths • Additions • Stairs • Patio • Decks • Fencing • Gates • Painting • Drywall

rooFing

ABE Rubbish Removal + Delivery & Moving Services. PROMPT. RELIABLE.

Insured & WCB

604.219.0666

"Working with owners and award winning designers since 1991"

TREE WORKS

604-913-0103

604-653-7851

Kitchen and Bathroom

Locally Owned on the North Shore

MENT

YOUR DESIGN & DRAWING PACKAGE

Gutter Cleaning, Power Washing, Window Cleaning, Roof Cleaning

WATERPROOFING STUCCO COATINGS DECK COATINGS ROOF COATINGS

Expert Home Finishing

ALLWEATHER COATINGS 778-773-1789

GET 30% OFF

604-644-9648

OFF

your total bill

• glass and mirror cut to size • wood and metal customized frames • storefront glass replace • windows and screens replacements • patio door screens and rollers • shower doors and railing glass • emergency board ups

atozglass1451@gmail.com | 604-770-0406

604-437-7272

RICKY DEWAN PAINTING

604-299-5831 or 604-833-7529

#89724

Low price, big/small jobs, satisfaction guar. Free est

10%

Serving the North shore for over 20+ years

gutters

Handyman on the North Shore Fully Insured & WCB 604−551−4267 www.nv−handyman.ca

ALP ELECTRIC

• Hot Water Tanks • Plumbing • Heating • Furnaces • Boilers • Drainage • Res. & Comm. • 24/7 Service

604-729-6695

Capilano Home Improvement YOUR ELECTRICIAN

COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL

Painting/ wallPaPer

Exterior Interior // Interiors Exterior Spring Specials Fall FallSpecials Specials BOOK NOW.

On Site

A TO Z GLASS AND MIRROR LTD.

GARDEN SERVICES LTD.

Spring, regular, office, move out & same day housecleanings.

• Polished Concrete Floors • Pumping • Placing • Sealing • Acid Staining • Decorative Concrete • Forming • Demolition • Foundation Pouring

renos & HoMe iMProveMent

A.A. BEST PRO

Maid it Bloom

ConCrete

PluMbing

PROMOTION

Cleaning

* on jobs over $1000

ALL WEST TREE SERVICE

Topping, trimming, hedges pruning, cleanups and take away. Free est. 604-726-9152

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!


A48 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2023

north shore news nsnews.com

Give yourself the gift of performance & efficiency.

‘Tis the season for adventure.

Honda Sensing™ 18" Shark Grey One-touch Power Safety Technologies Aluminum-alloy Panoramic Moonroof Wheels

i-VTM4™ AWD System

ECON Mode & Eco Assist™

RESERVE YOURS TODAY

THE ADVENTUROUS 2024

ECON Mode & Eco Assist™

i-VTM4™ AWD System

Apple CarPlay® & Android Auto™

Remote Engine Starter

IN STOCK NOW

Honda Sensing™ Safety Technologies

THE RUGGED 2023

PILOT

ECON Mode & Eco Assist™

i-VTM4™ AWD System

Apple CarPlay® & Android Auto™

Remote Engine Starter

IN STOCK NOW

THE DYNAMIC 2023

RIDGELINE PASSPORT

TRAILSPORT

QUALIFIED HONDA OWNERS GET A $

Honda Sensing™ Safety Technologies

1,000 LOYALTY BONUS

GET A $

QUALIFIED HONDA OWNERS

1,000 + LOYALTY BONUS HONDA BONUS 2,000

$

QUALIFIED HONDA OWNERS

1,000

$

GET A

ß

GET A

LOYALTY BONUS†

NORTH SHORE NEWS

2023

2022

9

#Limited time finance offer is from Honda Canada Finance Inc, (HCFI), on approved credit. Finance example: $35,000 at 4.99% for a 24-month period, for a total of 24 monthly payments of $1,535. Total finance obligation is $36,848. Finance payments include freight and PDI of $2,000 and applicable fees, but do not include lien registration fee (up to $85 in certain regions) and lien registering agent fee (up to $6), which are due at time of delivery. No down-payment required. Taxes, insurance, license, and registration fees (all of which may vary by region) are extra. †Enhanced Loyalty Honda Bonus is available to eligible customers who: (i) are the current owner/lessee of a Honda or Acura vehicle and reside in BC, AB, SK, MB or ON; and (ii) have a current Honda Financial Services (HFS)/Acura Financial Services (AFS) lease or finance account, or a previous HFS/AFS account that expired within the past year (365 days). This offer is not transferable to any other person. Proof of eligibility is required and must be submitted to HFS to qualify for this loyalty offer. Loyalty Honda Bonus will be applied only to a Honda brand vehicle leased or financed through HFS, on approved credit, as follows: $750 bonus on CR-V models; $1,000 bonus on Pilot models; $1,000 bonus on Passport models; $1,000 bonus on Ridgeline details 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. Honda Bonus” lease or finance cash of $2,000 on select in-stock 2023 Ridgeline models available on lease or finance transactions from HCFI on approved credit only, deducted from the negotiated selling price after taxes. Offer ends January 2, 2024 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. Models may not be equipped as shown and are for illustration purposes only. Visit Honda.ca or your Honda dealer for details.


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