Tri-City News September 9 2015

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WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 9, 2015 Your community. Your stories.

TRI-CITY

NEWS

The Terry Fox Run is a huge event in the Tri-Cities and it will be an even bigger happening this year to mark the 35th anniversary of Fox’s Marathon of Hope. Read the first installment of The Tri-City News’ four-part series on page A3.

RIGHT: JANIS WARREN/THE TRI-CITY NEWS; LEFT: COURTESY OF CANADIAN MUSEUM OF HISTORY, ARTEFACTS

Fred Fox, manager of supporter relations for the Terry Fox Foundation and the organization’s executive director Britt Andersen, a Belcarra resident, show off the foundation’s national office atop Burnaby Mountain at SFU. The foundation works on fundraising for cancer research and works with the provincial organizations that coordinate hundreds of Terry Fox Runs. Left: A photo of Terry Fox’s prosthetic leg.

BACK TO SCHOOL

Dogs go back to school, too, to help kids; also: some educational reading for parents: see pages A4 & A5

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ALLAN SCHOENBORN

‘High-risk’ designation sought for Schoenborn Child killer’s day passes, previously, approved, could be revoked JANIS WARREN

The Tri-CiTy News

The man incarcerated in Coquitlam for killing his three

children could be deemed a high-risk offender under new federal legislation. Tomorrow (Thursday), the criminal justice branch of B.C.’s justice ministry will seek to have the designation apply to Allan Schoenborn. The move under section 672.64 (2) of the Criminal Code of Canada, if approved by a judge, would mean that

Schoenborn’s escorted day passes would be revoked. He would be allowed to leave the institution for medical reasons or for any purpose that’s necessary for his treatment. Last July, the Criminal Code was changed through Bill C-14 to allow the designation of “high-risk accused” for adults who have been found not

criminally responsible (NCR). In its application tomorrow, the Crown must prove there is a substantial likelihood the accused will endanger the life or safety of someone else or that his offences were so brutal that there’s a risk of grave physical or psychological harm to others.

see CROWN, page A6

CONTACT THE TRI-CITY NEWS: newsroom@tricitynews.com / sales@tricitynews.com / delivery@tricitynews.com / 604-472-3040


A2 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, TRI-CITY NEWS

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TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, A3

Terry Fox’s Marathon of Hope captured the attention of a nation in 1980. Ever since, millions of Canadians have carried on the campaign of Port Coquitlam’s most famous son by taking part in the annual Terry Fox Run...

New Fox HQ a nod to Terry’s past with an eye to foundation’s future With this article, The Tri-City News launches a four-part series leading up to the 35th anniversary of the Terry Fox Run.

THIS SERIES • Friday, Sept. 11: The Tri-City News visits the Terry Fox Research Institute to talk to the two B.C. researchers who recently won Terry Fox New Investigator Awards. • Wednesday, Sept. 16: A childhood cancer survivor — who had the same cancer that took Terry Fox’s leg — shares her story. • Friday, Sept. 18: Tri-City Terry Fox Run details and the Mayors’ Challenge.

JANIS WARREN The Tri-CiTy News

A

top Burnaby Mountain, the ever-expanding UniverCity neighbourhood is home to the national office of a cancer-fighting organization whose name needs no explanation to Canadians. The Terry Fox Foundation relocated its headquarters from Chilliwack in mid-June, a move deemed necessary by the foundation’s board of directors to be closer to Vancouver in order to attract bigger donors. Being part of the Simon Fraser University campus was a natural fit for the charity given the Port Coquitlam hero’s connection to the institution, his brother Fred Fox said. In 1977, Terry Fox was an 18-year-old kinesiology student and a member of the SFU junior varsity basketball team when he was diagnosed with osteosarcoma, a type of bone cancer that resulted in the amputation of his right knee. Since his death in 1981, SFU has continued to honour Fox’s legacy by supporting the Terry Fox Humanitarian Award (previously administered by Fox’s former coach and friend, the late Lorne Davies); the annual designation of the Terry Fox Gold Medal; and Terry’s Cause on Campus, a fundraiser held at its Burnaby, Surrey and Vancouver campuses. SFU is also close to the Fox family as it recognized its matriarch, Betty, with an honorary degree for her commitment to cancer research. Indeed, the foundation’s sunny new digs on University High Street are a step up from its former HQ in Chilliwack.

JANIS WARREN/THE TRI-CITY NEWS

Fred Fox (left), manager of supporter relations, and executive director Britt Andersen in the new Terry Fox Foundation national office in the UniverCity neighbourhood at SFU. The foundation moved from Chilliwack to Burnaby Mountain in June. The office is on the ground floor and is the first unit to greet visitors to the awardwinning Cornerstone Building. Inside the double-glass doors is a variety of Terry Fox memorabilia: a replica of the blue Adidas shoe he wore on his historic Marathon of Hope in 1980; commemorative stamps; an original painting of the MV Terry Fox; and a copy of Toronto Star reporter Leslie Scrivener’s book on Fox. Best of all, Fred Fox chuckled, “We have windows,” adding, “I think it’s been a good move for us.” Although it has raised nearly $700 million in the past 35

years, the Terry Fox Foundation is known for operating on a shoestring. Compared to other Canadian charities, it is considered an industry leader in fundraising accountability, with 16 cents from every dollar raised going to administration and collection donations. That means 84 cents from every buck collected is spent on cancer research — most of it on the Terry Fox Research Institute (TFRI) that was set up seven years ago. In the last fiscal year, $27 million came into the foundation in Canadian funds, of which 86% went directly to TFRI (Terry’s younger brother, Darrell, is on the institute’s

board of directors). Still, despite its efficiencies, Britt Andersen said the administration costs are too high and he wants to cut them further. Last November, the Belcarra resident and UBC commerce grad was hired as the foundation’s new executive director to oversee the operations of the seven employees at HQ plus liaise with the nine provincial directors (who are in charge of 850 run sites across Canada — all of which are led by volunteers — and some 8,500 school runs) plus the international division led by Terry’s sister, Judith Fox-Alder, and her daughter, Jessie Alder.

Andersen said his first goal as executive director was to give the organization more clarity and direction. He also wanted to increase the number of online giving opportunities. Now, 70% of the foundation’s contributions come in through the click of a computer mouse, he said. Andersen is no stranger to bringing in big cash for healthrelated causes. Previously, he worked as the CEO of the Coast Mental Health Foundation, a group established to raise money for the Coast Foundation Society. He was also the regional manager at Canadian Blood Services.

A Métis link – and an honour – for Fox family Order of the sash awarded due to Betty Fox’s mom JANIS WARREN

The Tri-CiTy News

Terry Fox may be known as a Canadian icon but did you know he’s also celebrated by the Métis for his outstanding contributions? The Port Coquitlam hero’s grandmother — Betty Fox’s

mother, Mary Ann Wark — was an aboriginal from North Dakota, said Terry Fox’s brother Fred Fox, who has visited her American birthplace. This past spring, the president of the Métis Nation of B.C. bestowed the Order of the Sash to Darrell Fox, who took part in the Marathon of Hope with Terry Fox in 1980 and helped raise millions of dollars for cancer research. The posthumous award from Bruce Dumond honours people who have served the

Métis Nation and/or Canada. At a ceremony in Abbotsford, Darrell Fox also received his own sash after he formally established his Métis citizenship. Fred Fox told The Tri-City News last week the family is proud of its heritage and both he and his sister Judith, who oversees the international division of the Terry Fox Foundation, are now applying for their Métis citizenship.

jwarren@tricitynews.com @jwarrenTC

“‘When I heard about the opportunity to work with the Terry Fox Foundation, I had to jump on it,” Andersen said. “I remember being 13 years old in Golden and the picture of this young man running across Canada captivated me. I will never forget when he had to stop. The image of it still burns in my mind.” With the 35th annual Terry Fox Run landing in his inaugural year, Andersen said he’s heading to Prince Edward Island with Darrell Fox to run the 13-km Confederation Bridge — a fundraiser that, for the 25th anniversary, saw 14,000 people and raised $375,000. Fred Fox will be in Gatineau, Que., where the Canadian Museum of History is currently hosting a Terry Fox exhibit, while dad Rolly will be in Terry’s birthplace of Winnipeg and Judith — the youngest of the Fox clan — will be at Stanley Park in Vancouver, where the Marathon of Hope was supposed to end.

jwarren@tricitynews.com @jwarrenTC

Tri-CiTy FOX rUN DeTAiLs

MÉTIS NATION OF BC PHOTO

Darrell Fox accepts the Order of the Sash from the Métis Nation of BC on his late brother’s behalf.

The Tri-Cities hosts four Terry Fox runs on Sept. 20 — including in the hero’s hometown of Port Coquitlam: • Port Coquitlam: Hyde Creek recreation centre, 10 a.m. start; • Port Moody: Rocky Point Park, 10 a.m. start; • Coquitlam: Blue Mountain Park, 10 a.m. start; • Anmore: Spirit Park, 11 a.m. start.


A4 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, TRI-CITY NEWS

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BACK TO SCHOOL 2015

Some back-to-school reading – for parents JUSTIN BEDDALL GLACIER MEDIA

It’s usually students who get a reading list their first week back at school. But here’s some suggested reading for parents: Insider’s Guide to K-12 Education in BC: What every parent and educator needs to know. The book was written by three B.C. principals, David Mushens, vice-principal at Burnaby’s Cariboo Hill secondary; David Starr, principal at Byrne Creek secondary, also in Burnaby; and Faizel Rawji of Sunnyside elementary in Surrey. Published by Pacific

Education Press, it provides parents — and educators — answers to all sorts of important questions about B.C. schools, everything from what makes a good school good to how parents can choose the right programs for their kids to dealing with issues like bullying and life online for students. Mushens says as principals, they field a steady stream of questions from parents — and many parents have the same types of concerns. “We answer these questions so much we thought clearly we’re lacking a guide, a place for people to look,” he said. The trio of educators met around 15 years ago when

they were all teaching in the Coquitlam school district and have remained in contact. Whenever they got together, inevitably they would talk shop. And often, they would discuss the questions parents routinely asked. “It just really came from there — there really isn’t really anything that talks to parents, primarily, about how systems work,” Mushens said. “So when parents come into our office when they are upset or they are confused, a lot of it just comes from they don’t have the information that they need. And like any system, whether it’s medical or school

or whatever, we all sort of have our own jargon because we live in it so we know. “What we set out to do was ‘OK, let us try and demystify some of the things that you’re thinking about as you head into school.’” Along with teaching parents to navigate the school system, it also teaches them how to access resources and support. It’s also an invaluable tool for educators to help parents. • Insider’s Guide to K-12 Education in B.C. is available at Kids Books, or online at www.pacificedpress.educ.ubc. ca and theinsidersguide.ca.

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“Insider’s Guide to K-12 Education in BC: What every parent and educator needs to know,” was written by three B.C. principals, David Mushens, vice-principal at Cariboo Hill; David Starr, principal at Byrne Creek; and Faizel Rawji of Sunnyside elementary in Surrey. Said Mushens: “What we set out to do was ‘OK, let us try and demystify some of the things that you’re thinking about as you head into school.’”

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Answer a minimum of 20 questions and you will be entered in a draw for a $500 Gift Certificate at Coquitlam Centre

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TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, A5

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BACK TO SCHOOL 2015

Back to school is going to the dogs Canines help kids deal with anxiety

SUGGESTIONS FOR REDUCING ANXIETY • Turn off devices an hour before bedtime to promote sleep. Encourage reading in bed to calm the mind. • Promote good nutrition and exercise to help the body deal with stress. • Practise calming breathing techniques — breathing out can slow down the central nervous system. Practise this when your child is calm. • Model calm and present behaviour — put the cell phone down or away when you are engaged with your children. • When they are worried and upset, acknowledge their concerns, don’t dismiss them, and encourage them to focus on things that are going well, such as times when they successfully dealt with challenges in the past. • Know when to seek professional help — when a child’s anxieties are keeping them from their normal life and activities.

DIANE STRANDBERG Tri-CiTy News

Leah Pells is learning alongside her students this first week of school as she moves from being a teacher and part-time counsellor to her new job as a full-time counsellor working at two Tri-City middle schools. Pells, a former Olympic runner, is used to challenging situations but she admits the transition is both nerve-wracking and exciting. To help her make the adjustment is Smokey, a five-year-old black lab who has been trained as a canine assist intervention dog. Smokey is such a draw, he quickly has a crowd of fans surrounding him. One teacher even bends to greet him face to face and is greeted with a lick. “He’s so calm, he just relaxes everyone,” says Pells as she takes Smokey on her first official stroll through Como Lake middle school in Coquitlam. This is the school’s second dog trained by the Pacific Assistance Dog Society, which prepares dogs for various rolls, including canine assist intervention dogs (CAI) for professionals, such as teachers, nurses, police officers and others who work with people in

RESOURCES FOR TEENS & PARENTS

DIANE STRANDBERG/THE TRI-CITY NEWS

Leah Pells, a School District 43 counsellor, brings Smokey, a canine assist intervention dog, trained through the Pacific Assistance Dog Society, to Como Lake and Citadel middle schools, where she works. challenging situations. He should be a big help this week as students adjust to new routines, Pells says, noting that students who wouldn’t normally seek help will connect with Smokey. And if they come to her office, they’ll get the Smokey treatment, which is to be squished into the corner of the couch and

licked before Smokey drops his large, heavy head on their lap for the duration of the visit. “He seems to know what kids need an extra bit of loving,” Pells said. Relaxed, the students are ready to face their day. Technology may be the culprit behind the increasing rates of stress and anxiety among

students, and Pells says students are virtually leashed to their devices, constantly connected to their peers, which causes worry. On top of that, they stay up late using social networks and playing games, then struggle through their days with less than optimum amounts of sleep. “Kids are not as rested as they once were.”

• www.mindcheck.ca: Provides information about stress and anxiety, and ways to deal with them. • teencrisisconnection.com: Includes phone numbers, websites and resources for dealing with issues and crises. • www.heretohelp.bc.ca: Self-screening tests, information sheets, links for help with back-to-school anxiety. • Tri-Cities Youth Clinic (200-205 Newport Dr., Port Moody, 604-614-7688) is open Wednesdays 3:30 to 7 p.m. It services people up to age 21: emergency contraception, birth control, STI/HIV testing and treatment, pregnancy testing and counselling, smoking cessation, stress counselling immunization, nutrition information and general health information. • Fraser Health also has information at fraserhealth.ca. need to show them the way. September is the perfect time to practice mindful techniques for dealing with stress, and Pells’ top tips are in the blue box above.

Add to this homework and the constant scheduling of sports and other events, and students, especially those who aren’t as resilient as others, may struggle. Children can learn to calm down and re-focus but parents

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A crashed SUV plastered with cellphones served as a symbol for last Thursday’s launch of a new distracted driving campaign by police departments across British Columbia.

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Police on distracted driving crackdown The blitz comes ahead of move to toughen penalties JEFF NAGEL BLACK PRESS

A month-long enforcement blitz is underway across B.C. to reduce deaths and crashes from distracted driving. The new campaign launched last Thursday by police forces and ICBC came ahead of an expected move by the provincial government this fall to stiffen the penalties for repeat offenders. “B.C. drivers know it’s against the law but far too many still make excuses for their behaviour, then continue to put themselves and others at risk,” said Staff Sgt. Dale Somerville of B.C. RCMP Traffic Services. “That’s why we’re cracking

down on those who cannot police themselves.” According to ICBC, an estimated one in four deaths on B.C. roads involves distracted driving, which is the leading cause of crashes with pedestrians, cyclists and motorcyclists. Nearly 90 people die in distracted driving-related crashes each year in B.C., about a third of them in the Lower Mainland. Cell Watch volunteers will be roadside across the province reminding drivers to leave their phones alone. Somerville noted cellphone use is against the law even when a vehicle is stopped at a red light or in slow-moving traffic. ICBC road safety co-ordinators will also visit community events with a driving simulator the public can try. Supporters can also take a stand against distracted driv-

ing and encourage others to do the same by picking up a free decal to display on vehicles from ICBC licensing offices and Autoplan dealers. Justice Minister Suzanne Anton said the province’s recent review of the distracted driving penalties made it clear the public agrees the fines are too low. “The cost of a distracted driving ticket in B.C. is only $167 — the second lowest in Canada — yet the cost of a distracted driving crash can be a person’s life,” she said. “We are going to fix this. Over the coming months, we will make our roads safer with tough, fair, and effective sanctions to curtail this alarming but preventable problem.” Motorists are considered four times as likely to crash if they use their phone while driving. jnagel@blackpress.ca @jeffnagel

ALLAN SCHOENBORN

Crown ‘high-risk’ bid to court tomorrow

continued from front page

Crown Counsel’s bid comes three months after the B.C. Review Board controversially granted Schoenborn escorted day passes into the community despite pleas from his former wife, Darcie Clark, who also lives in the Tri-Cities. Schoenborn, 47, murdered their three children — Kaitlynne, 10, Max, eight, and Cordon, five — in Merritt in 2008; he was found NCR two years later because of a mental illness. Attorney General Suzanne

Anton did not appeal the board’s decision as she said the government had no legal basis to do so. In a statement issued last Friday, Anton offered her sympathy to Clarke and her family, saying, “I hope they’re able to find some comfort resulting from this decision by Crown Counsel. I can’t imagine what an ordeal this has been for them over the past number of years.” Family spokesperson Dave Teixeira told The TriCity News Clarke and her relatives are “ecstatic” about

the application to keep Schoenborn behind bars. Thursday’s appearance at the B.C. Supreme Court in New Westminster is expected to be short, with a formal hearing date set within six weeks, he said. Schoenborn is due to reappear before the B.C. Review Board in May 2016 at the Forensic Psychiatric Hospital in Coquitlam. A “high-risk accused” status would also extend Schoenborn’s review period to once every three years. jwarren@tricitynews.com @jwarrenTC

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A8 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, TRI-CITY NEWS

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

TC OPINIONS

TC

THE TRI-CITY NEWS IS A DIVISION OF LMP PUBLICATION LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, PUBLISHED AT 115-1525 BROADWAY ST., PORT COQUITLAM, B.C. V3C 6P6

OUR OPINION

Let’s open our arms I

t was a shockingly simple image that captured the world’s attention this week and propelled the desperation of the Syrian refugee crisis into our collective psyche. A small boy lay face down in the sand, as though he were sleeping. But he was not sleeping. He had drowned. In a second photo, a police officer carried the child’s body, his feet dangling, up the beach. What parent who has carried their own sleeping child did not feel a stab of recognition and imagine for a few seconds their own worst nightmares? That image brought the Syrian crisis home in a personal, emotional way that repeated United Nations reports could not. For a moment, the world was a witness, in the way it was decades earlier when the photo of a naked girl fleeing a napalm attack in Vietnam

was seared into our consciousness. Of course, the humanitarian crisis in Syria is not new. For years, a desperate population has been attempting to flee the country’s civil war. Reports of atrocities in that country on the part of all combatants have been horrific. Children have been imprisoned, tortured, killed and gassed. That families would take a desperate gamble in trying to flee is a sad and unsurprising result. So far, the response of the West to those people caught in the crossfire has been entirely inadequate. There is no simple answer for what to do about the wider, complex war that spawned this horror. But we hope a more immediate response will be for nations like ours to open their arms a little wider.

– North Shore News (Glacier Media)

DOA JOE RUNS

“He is no kook. I think he would be a refreshing change and a good representative. I only wish he retained his DOA name...it would have made for an entertaining lawn sign. :)” Misanthropist comment on a story about punk rocker Joe Keithley running for a B.C. Green Party nomination in the TriCities

“They’ve been there for 60 years. Maybe you should have investigated before moving there.” email: newsroom@tricitynews.com phone: 604-630-3300 www.tricitynews.com/opinion

NEWS

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YOU SAY

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CONTACT

TRI-CITY

Mainlander comment on a letter to the editor about effects of PCT piledriving in Port Moody

Nigel Lark PUBLISHER

Richard Dal Monte

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EDITOR

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n THE TRI-CITY NEWS is an independent community newspaper, qualified under Schedule 111, Part 111, Paragraph 11 of the Excise Tax Act. A division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership, it is published Wednesday and Friday. Copyright and/or property rights subsist in all display advertising and other material appearing in this issue of The Tri-City News. Second class mailing registration No, 4830 The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. The publisher’s liability for other errors or omissions in connection with any advertisement is strictly limited to publication of the advertisement in any subsequent issue or the refund of any monies paid for the advertisement. n CONCERNS The Tri-City News is a member of the BC Press Council, a self-regulating body of the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complainant. If talking with the editor or publisher of The Tri-City News does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the BC Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent within 45 days to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby St., Nanaimo, B.C. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 1-888-687-2213 or go to www. bcpresscouncil.org.

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TC LETTERS

TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, A9

CONTACT

email: newsroom@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3030 www.tricitynews.com/opinion/letters

TRI-CITIES DEVELOPMENT

Construction is having an effect on water in Tri-Cities The Editor, Re. “Trees fall, habitat ruined as larger homes are built” (Letters, The Tri-City News, Aug. 19). A letter to Coquitlam city council: I would like to follow up on Brenda Gable’s letter. I have seen mega-home construction in the vicinity of my house, and it is really disturbing. Next door to me, a new house foundation has covered most of the small lot and the new wall is not 10 feet from my property line, as Ms. Gable mentioned in her letter, but just six feet. This mega-home is built on a 550 sq. m lot and is taking up a significant portion of the lot surface with a foundation trench more than 10 feet deep. Instead of the two neighbours my property had some 20 years ago, today there are four, including two recently built large homes and one megastructure under construction. My basement has a small drainage well and I had ob-

TRI-CITY NEWS FILE PHOTO

New houses are taking up more and more space on established lots, affecting drainage, says the letter writer. served water there for most of the year before the new development began. The grass in my yard stayed green without any need for watering all year round and several large trees were also growing well. With subdivision development and deep drainage to accommodate large basements for two-storey buildings, water in my drainage well has become less and less frequent and

the grass has required watering more and more often. It has become obvious to me that year after year, the water table has been lower and lower with all of the consequences. There is less rain water getting into the soil because more and more rain water lands on the roofs that are more densely packed. Also, larger houses are being built where the water becomes diverted as waste into the city

drainage system. This rain water has not been given the opportunity to help the local environment and vegetation or support a sustainable underground water resource. To make the situation worse, with limited feeding of the aquifer by rain, the water table has been further lowered by drainage, which today is deeper and deeper to allow larger and larger homes to be built. Furthermore, global weather changes and warmer and dryer summers like this year’s should be expected to be more frequent. The same water resource that has been in abundance in the past will become more and more scarce. By building these megahomes, we are creating an environmental problem with a growing water deficiency. This problem will be impossible to solve in the future unless we change our construction habits today or accept desert as the standard around our homes. Marek Gnatowski, Coquitlam

Things That Matter Coffee House Chat For those in Education. With Ron McKinnon, Liberal Party Candidate, Coquitlam-Port Coquitlam.

Wednesday, Sept 16 • 6:30 pm Ron McKinnon Campaign Office 2636 Shaughnessy St. 604 475-8858 • info@ron-mckinnon.ca

Authorized by official agent for Ron McKinnon

TRI-CITY PLACES OF WORSHIP King of Life Lutheran Church

Sunday Worship with Sunday School at 10am Adult Faith Study at 9am

1504 Sprice Ave. (at Schoolhouse)

604-936-2939

Pastor: Eric Krushel www.gslcc.ca

2211 Prairie Ave (at Shaughnessy St.) Port Coquitlam

604-942-0022

www.ucpoco.ca

Sunday Worship 10:30 am Sunday School & Nursery

Thrift Shop Open Wed. Noon - 9pm Thurs. 9am - 3pm

Sunday School 9:30 am Worship Service 10:30 am 604-941-0552 1198 Falcon Drive, Coquitlam

Corner of Falcon & Guildford

w w w. k i n g o f l i f e . c a

THE LUTHERAN CHURCHES OF COQUITLAM INVITE YOU

Pastor Kathy Martin

To let Tri-City residents know about your place of worship

Call

Marianne

604-472-3026

Adult Carriers Needed With reliable car to deliver newspapers door-to-door to households in the Tri-City area Wednesday, Thursday & Friday. Call 604-472-3040

TRI-CITY NEWS FILE PHOTO

A memorial outside the Coquitlam home of Tima Kurdi, aunt of Alan and Ghalib Kurdi, for the Syrian boys and their mother.

REFUGEE CRISIS

Why don’t the Saudis help? The Editor, Re. “Refugee crisis hits home in Coq.” (The Tri-City News, Sept. 4). It’s interesting how Saudi Arabia is quiet when it comes to refugees. One of the richest countries just watches the suffering.

Its main focus is on power, money and oil. Saudi Arabia has, for decades, been buddies with the U.S. but has duped the Americans more than once in this unholy alliance and now the crunch is coming. Brian Robinson, Coquitlam


A10 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, TRI-CITY NEWS

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

REFUGEE CRISIS

‘We can move mountains’ for refugees JEFF NAGEL BLACK PRESS

B.C. ANNOUNCES $1 MILLION TO HELP

B.C. took in just 72 government-assisted refugees from Syria over the past two and a half years and advocates say there’s room for many more. They compare Canada’s response to the current refugee crisis, in which Ottawa has pledged to take 10,000 Syrians spread out over three years, to how the country stepped up to accept fleeing Vietnamese boat people. In 1980, Canada welcomed more than 19,200 southeast Asian refugees and nearly 60,000 more were sponsored over two years by churches and other groups. “If there is political will, we can move mountains,” said Chris Friesen, chair of the Canadian Immigrant Settlement Sector Alliance. “So far, we haven’t seen that under the Harper government. We have been far more generous in the past than we have in recent times.” The current trickle of arriving government-assisted Syrians, perhaps a dozen a year into Surrey alone, is a drop in the bucket of the city’s rapidly growing population, which climbs by about 1,000 new residents a month. The number of additional church-sponsored Syrian refugees is uncertain but is likely tiny, according to Friesen, who is also director of settlement services for the Immigrant Services Society of B.C. Most of the 72 Syrians have come to B.C. from Lebanon but others have arrived via Turkey and Malaysia, he said, and they come from a range of ethnic backgrounds from Kurds to Sunni Muslims. “Surrey, Burnaby and New West are the primary destinations at the moment, largely due to the ability to find affordable housing,” Friesen said. Friesen said he and other immigrant advocates want Ottawa to enact an emergency refugee plan that was drawn up as a contingency in 2002 following the Kosovo refugee crisis to swiftly bring in a significant number of additional refugees, in consultation with the UN. In addition, he says the gov-

The provincial government has pledged $1 million for programs to help settlement agencies and private sponsors support Syrian refugees coming to B.C. Funds announced Tuesday by Premier Christy Clark will complement existing provincial and federal support programs, and will go toward trauma counselling for Syrian refugees, programs to help B.C.-based professional agencies review and approve foreign credentials, matching funds for businesses wiling to train and commit to hiring a Syrian refugee, support for local government welcome programs, and funds to assist private sponsors work through the refugeesponsorship process. To learn more about this one-time investment fund, call 1-877-952-6914.

WHAT YOU CAN DO TO HELP

A groundswell of public demand to aid refugees has followed the tragic drowning of two young Syrian boys and their mother, whose sister in Coquitlam wanted to bring them all to B.C. “People want to do something,” said Chris Friesen of the Immigrant Services Society of B.C. “Many are looking into how to sponsor a refugee.” He suggests Lower Mainland residents consider volunteering with one of the agencies that assist refugees. “We are always looking for longer term families to be matched with refugee families to provide them with additional support services.” Other avenues for making a difference include donating to charities assisting refugees overseas or the UN Refugee Agency. ernment can and should issue minister’s permits to immediately reunify extended family members of Syrians already in Canada. That provision allows those family members who are in danger to come here in as little as 72 hours, leaving some aspects of refugee application processing, such as medical exams and clearances, to be conducted in Canada. “The minister has a number of tools at his discretion which currently have not been used and given the current crisis should immediately be initiated.” As for the slow pace of meeting Canada’s commitment to take in Syrians, Friesen said that’s due to the government’s insistence most be sponsored by the faith community, rather than being government-assisted. “They should have committed to 10,000 governmentassisted refugees and then allow church communities to undertake additional sponsorship,” Friesen said.

Immigration lawyer Richard Kurland believes there are plenty of churches and other groups and individuals eligible and willing to sponsor more refugees, but Ottawa has arbitrarily imposed a quota that creates a slow bottleneck for processing sponsored applications. “The problem is the immigration minister is processing about seven or eight cases a day,” Kurland said, arguing that could be changed at the stroke of a pen as there’s no lack of staff or resources. “If the minister says instead of processing about eight cases a day, process 20 or 25, it’s an immediate solution.” As it sits, he said, a flawlessly completed new refugee application filed now faces a 42-month processing wait. “The only thing blocking the entry to Canada is the minister’s decision on the quota.” He said accelerating approval of sponsored refugees would come at no cost to the government because sponsor groups are volunteering to pay.

TRI-CITY NEWS FILE PHOTO

Tima Kurdi speaks to reporters last Thursday outside her Coquitlam home about the death of her nephews and sister-in-law, Syrian refugees who were trying to leave Turkey when they drowned.

Save the Date Crossroads Hospice Society’s 22ND ANNUAL Fundraising Gala

together we can make a difference

jnagel@blackpress.ca

Saturday NOVEMBER 21 2015

{doors open at 6:00pm}

Hard Rock casino – 2080 United BLVD, Coquitlam Magical Giving Trees • Dinner with Wine Live Entertainment • Dancing • Valet Parking Tickets $125 • 604.945.0606 • Www.treasuresofchristmas.ca (MA, MA, RCC, CCC)

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In support of compassionate, end-of-life care for patients and their loved ones


TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, A11

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

SIGN ME UP 2015! BACK TO SCHOOL

Want a healthy kid? Make healthy lunches BC Children’s takes bite out of healthy lunch-making With the new school year beginning in full today (Wednesday), nutrition experts at BC Children’s Hospital shared some fresh ideas to help parents prep lunch boxes. “Lunches are important for growing, learning bodies. By finding nutritious foods and fun ways to share those foods, B.C. children will be better equipped to concentrate on school and all other facets of their lives,” Lorrie Chow, a registered dietitian, said in a BC Children’s press release. Added Dr. Jean-Pierre Chanoine, the head of the hospital’s Department of Endocrinology and Diabetes: “With a little time and attention, food can be made healthy and fun for kids of all ages. Make small changes to start, and add more ideas in when you can. The start of a new school year is a great time for everyone to renew their approaches to food.” Here are some tips from the experts at BC Children’s Hospital: • Involve your kids: Take your kids to the grocery store and have them help choose the menu. When children have invested time and energy in their lunches they’re more likely to eat them. Make grocery shopping fun by involving kids in picking themes or colours to guide lunch choices.

• It takes two: When prepping morning snacks for recess, choose two foods from two different food groups for a balanced diet. For example, cheese and crackers or yogurt and fruit. • Eat the rainbow: Colourful fruits and vegetables are great ways to add nutrition. You can chop up some green, red, yellow and orange peppers, carrots, green beans, and celery for crunchy snacks and add a healthy dip like hummus. Strawberries, kiwis, and oranges are also great sources of Vitamin C. • Infuse your water: Add extra flavour to your water bottle with strawberries, oranges, watermelon, cucumbers or mint, for a fun and healthy alternative to pop. • Think outside the average lunch box: Look for attractive reusable lunch packaging that can keep food cool or warm depending on the dish. Presentation is important – sometimes more so for children. • Work together: Work with your children and family to make healthy eating a priority. Set an example and remember that it takes time to develop good habits. Encourage each other along the way.

MORE INFO

For information about healthy eating and healthy weights, visit www.bcchildrens.ca/ healthyweights.

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LEARN • CREATE • PERFORM

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PARENT EDUCATION

Helping boys succeed in school you through the seven things you can do as a parent to help your son find success in school and life. Everyone is welcome on Tuesday, Sept. 22, 7 to 8:30 p.m. Registration is appreciated. For more information, visit Terry Fox Library at 2470 Mary Hill Rd., Port Coquitlam or call 604-927-7999.

Why do boys seem to struggle more in school than girls? Pam Withers will help answer this question and more at Terry Fox Library later this month. Withers is co-author of Jump-Starting Boys and an award-winning author of 17 adventure books for teens. She will guide

WEST COAST GOJUKAI KARATE NEW! Beginner Adult Classes

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• Dragon’s Class 5-7 years • Japanese Jujitsu Class

You wanted to do martial arts when you were younger — it is never too late. Join us for a safe and enjoyable training experience

1001D Austin Ave. (at Blue Mountain) Coquitlam 778-355-4658

Visit our website: www.gojukai-bc.ca

• • •


A12 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, TRI-CITY NEWS

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

SIGN ME UP 2015! HEALTH EDUCATION

Drug use, abuse is covered in forum Drug education series will start tonight in Port Moody

Share Alcohol and Drug Program invites you to attend any or all of its upcoming education series. The program is open to everyone in the TriCities and will offer important information for those who have an alcohol or drug problem, or for those concerned about their use. It will help those people affected by others’ use to understand addicts and addictive behaviour. There is no cost for this group. The format consists of a video, a brief presentation and open discussion, and topics will vary from week to week, as outlined below: • TONIGHT, Sept. 9: Use, misuse, abuse — gain a better understanding of substances. • Sept. 16: Medical aspects and effects of alcohol and drug abuse. What happens to the body and mind under the influence? • Sept. 23: Alcohol — how dependence develops; controlled using; effects on pregnant women. Also, you will learn briefly about drinking, drugs and driving. • Sept. 30: Cocaine and crystal meth — the struggle to recover, and what long-term recovery looks like.

• Oct. 7: Marijuana — a second-class addiction? • Nov. 18: Heroin and other common depressants/opiates — addiction, struggle and recovery. • Nov. 25: Trauma and substance use — the possible effects of the influence of trauma on substance use. • Dec. 2: Anger — understanding your anger and learning how to manage it more effectively. • Dec. 9: Stress — learning how to cope with little and big problems without using. • Dec. 16: Mental Illness, depression and addiction — understanding the links between the mental illness and addiction will be the goal. • Dec. 23: Relapse prevention — discussion on the psychological, emotional and physical aspects of relapsing and what can be done. • Dec. 30: Substance-affected — how others’ misuse of alcohol and drugs affects us, and how to help others. • Jan. 6: Stage 2 recovery — life in the future. • Jan. 13: Problem gambling — gaining a better understanding about gambling addiction and recovery. Sessions will run Wednesdays from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at Share on the second floor, 2615 Clarke St., Port Moody. For more information, phone 604-936-3900.

in the heart of your Tri-City community

A familyoriented dance studio...

BREAKDANCING CLASSES FOR BOYS OF ALL AGES

With Instructor, World Cup Champion Jhaymee Hizon

Girls can make their own discoveries as part of the weekly Girls in Science program at Coquitlam Public Library that starts in midSeptember. Girls in Grades 3 to 5 can join the program to create fossils, extract “dinosaurs” from eggs, learn computer coding, travel through geological time periods, snap together electric circuits, build LED flashlights, program Lego robots and

Honest, Quality Service & Advice You Can Trust!

build the tallest towers. A partnership with Science AL!VE at Simon Fraser University, Girls in Science will run at the Poirier branch every Thursday from Sept. 17 to Oct. 22; meetings go from 3:45 to 5:15 p.m. The program is free, but space is limited. Visit www.sciencealive.ca for application forms or call the library at 604-937-4142 for more information.

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Jhaymee Hizon (Bboy Eloquence) is known and respected throughout the Lower Mainland as a dancer, teacher, choreographer, and as one of the members of the infamous Now or Never Crew

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SCIENCE EDUCATION

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For class schedule contact: maryman@shaw.ca Visit our website at: www.manifoldhighlanddancers.ca


TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, A13

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

SIGN ME UP 2015! SUPPORT GROUPS

There’s plenty of support, no matter the challenge

Yuen’s Family Martial Arts Character Development Centre

Marmont Ave. Coquitlam. Info: 604-688-1716. • Port Moody Alanon Family Group open meeting, Wednesdays, 8 p.m., St. Andrews Church, 2318 St. Johns St., Port Moody. Info: 604-461-6991. • Al-Anon Adult Children meets at 8 p.m. Tuesdays, Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, 1504 Sprice Ave. (at Schoolhouse), Coquitlam. • Fibromyalgia support group meets, 1-3 p.m., on the fourth Thursday of each month (except December) at Coquitlam Public Library, Poirier branch, 575 Poirier St. Education and support for adults who are living with this chronic illness. Info: Julie, 604-936-6027. • Recovery International is a self-help, peerto-peer support meeting for people who struggle with stress, fear, anger, depression, anxiety, panic and nervous symptoms. The goal is to help reduce symptoms by practising cognitive behaviour techniques. There is a group in PoCo. Info: Phyllis, 604-931-5945 or www.recoverycanada.ca. • Have you experienced the death of a loved one and found yourself struggling? Gathering with others who have also experienced a loss is known to be one of the most helpful ways of coping with grief. Sharing your story is important to healthy healing. Crossroads Hospice Society is running closed grief support groups. Registration: call Castine, 604-949-2274.

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Yuen’s Family Martial Arts CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT CENTRE

Recreational/ Competitive and Company classes in: Jazz, Tap, Acrobatics, Ballet, Hip Hop, Musical Theatre/Stage, Lyrical, Contemporary, and much more. Classes available for dancers 3 years to adult.

Established in 1999. Over 15 years sharing our love of dance with the families of the Tri-Cities.

OPEN HOUSE ◗ SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 12TH • 1:00-5:00PM

#101 - 1730 Coast Meridian Rd., Port Coquitlam 604-942-1070

www.melladodanceelite.ca ★ info@melladodanceelite.ca

Director/Owner Carla Mellado-Robertson’s goal is to provide an elite, dynamic dance studio with the highest quality instructors. She endeavors to create and maintain a caring, positive and professional atmosphere for all dancers.

Established in the Tri-City area for over 40 years FULLY QUALIFIED & ACCREDITED TEACHERS

10:45 am Little Champions 5 & 6 years old

11:30 pm Main Program 7 years old & above 12:15 pm Open Class

www.yuensmartialarts.com

see page A14

DANCE REGISTRATION

10:00 am Little Dragons 4 years old

1106 Austin Avenue, Coquitlam 604-939-0978

www.scoutsfranco.com

Following are listings from the Support Groups section of The Tri-City News’ Community Calendar: • GriefShare is a support group for people who have lost a spouse, child, family member or friend through death. This 11-week, Christ-centred, biblically based support group meets every Saturday, 10 a.m.-noon, Northside Church, 1460 Lansdowne Dr., Coquitlam. Each session has a video presentation followed by small group discussion and you can attend at anytime. Info: 604-472-9988. • Al-Anon, a fellowship of friends and family of alcoholics who come together to share their experience, strength and hope, meets on Mondays, 7:30-8:30 p.m., Women’s Resource Centre, 2420 Mary Hill Rd., PoCo. Info: Elaine with Al-Anon Central Services Society, 604-688-1716. • Alateen meetings, 8-9 p.m. on Wednesdays, St. Andrews United Church, 2318 St. Johns St., Port Moody, for teenagers whose lives have been affected by someone else’s drinking; meetings are anonymous and confidential, and closed to the general public. Info: 604-688-1716 or www. bcyukon-al-anon.org. • TOPS chapters meet weekly at numerous Tri-City locations. For information on group near you: Gail, 604-941-2907. • Al-Anon Family Group meets at 1 p.m. Mondays, 8 p.m. Wednesdays and noon Saturdays at Como Lake United church, 535

You can add your non-profit community event to The Tri-City News’ online calendar — for free, no registration required. At www.tricitynews.com/community/submit-an-event, you can add your event. As always, to add items to the printed Community Calendar, email newsroom@tricitynews.com.

60th Anniversaire 1955-2015

Scouts francophones C.- B. Jeunes: 7-21ans Inscriptions/Registration Fatima Centre/Sept 21 or phone 604-936-3624

Adultes bénévoles en animation. BECOME A LEADER and: -parler français -aimer la nature/ plein-air-parler français -disponible 2-3hrs/semaine

BC’s Largest Dedicated Gymnastics & Trampoline Facility!

NOW ACCEPTING STUDENTS FOR FALL CLASSES Classes at:

The Evergreen Cultural Centre (Pinetree Way, Coquitlam)

St. Laurence Church Hall (near Como Lake Village, Coquitlam)

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For further information visit either our Facebook page or www.heatherjolleyhighlanddancers.com or call “Heather” at 604-936-8548

#111 - 1611 Broadway St. PoCo Recreational to Competitive drop in & birthday parties

Office hours: Mon to Fri 12.30 to 6.30

tagsports.ca tagsports@telus.net 604-468-0121


A14 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, TRI-CITY NEWS

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

SIGN ME UP 2015! SUPPORT GROUPS

Grief groups, caregiver help and family support continued from page A13

• Irritable bowel syndrome support group meets monthly in PoMo to exchange information, to offer one another support, and to share experiences and coping strategies. Info: 604-875-4875 or www.badgut.org. • Crossroads Hospice Society hosts a free walking group for the bereaved, Fridays, 10:30 a.m.-noon. Group meets at Crossroads Labyrinth Healing Garden in Pioneer Memorial Park at Ioco Rd. and Heritage Mountain Blvd. Hospice volunteers will be present on the free walk through Rocky Point Park or Orchard Park. Newcomers can register by calling Castine at 604-949-2274. • Christian 12-step group for people with alcohol, drug, and gambling addictions meets at 7:15 p.m. every Monday Coquitlam Presbyterian Church, 948 Como Lake Ave., Coquitlam. Info: 604939-6136 or www.hiscpc.org. • Coquitlam Support Group: Change, Crisis to Creativity meets Thursday evenings. Group meets twice a month to support one another through major changes, including unemployment, family crisis, death, illness, separation/divorce, empty nest, retirement, etc., and working towards positive, creative lifestyle. Info: Mara, 604-931-7070. • Fibromyalgia support group meets every fourth Thursday of each month at Dogwood Pavilion, 1 to 3 p.m., except December. Info: Joan, 604-944-2506. • Dogwood White Cane Club meets every Thursday from September to June, 12:30-2:30 p.m., Dogwood Pavilion. Those who are legally blind (registered with the CNIB) are welcome. • CancerConnection peer volunteers offer one-to-one information and emotional support to people living with cancer. Info: 1-888-939-3333. • Tri-Cities Caregiver Network gives caregivers a safe place to express and deal with their emotions and concerns. Group discussions, speakers and films are part of the program. Meet every 2nd and 4th Friday of each month from 10 a.m. to noon. • DivorceCare is a special weekly seminar and support group for people who are separated or divorced, Tuesdays, 7 p.m., Coquitlam Alliance church, corner of Mariner and Spuraway,

Coquitlam. Seminar sessions include “Facing my Anger,” “Facing my Loneliness,” “Depression,” “Forgiveness” and “New Relationships.” Info: 604-464-6744. • TRICEPS, Tri-Cities Early Psychosis Support meets the second Wednesday of each month, 7-9 p.m., at Eagle Ridge Hospital (Parklane Room), PoMo. TRICEPS is a non-profit support group providing education and support to parents, spouses and siblings whose family member has recently been diagnosed with psychosis. • Women in Mid-life Self-help Group meets first and third Wednesdays of each month, Mountain View elementary school, Coquitlam. Info: Lynne, 604-937-3946. • Coquitlam Prostate Cancer Support and Awareness Group meets the first Tuesday of every month, 7 p.m., Pinetree community centre. Info: 604-936-2632. • PoCo Stroke Recovery Branch would like to welcome new members; meetings are held Mondays, 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. at Wilson Centre, PoCo. There is opportunity for speech maintenance, meeting others that have gone through the similar situation and light exercises or bocce. Info: Deanna, 604-942-2334.

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Register NOW for September! Carillon Preschool Program • (ages 2-4)

• Learn piano through the development of a variety of skills including ear training, note reading, rhythm, technique, singing and composition • 3 year program • 1 hour lesson each week • Parent participation

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• Skill development similar to Red Program, including learning repertoire through ear development and sight reading • 2 year program • 1 hour lesson each week • Parent participation

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• Skill development in ear training, note reading, rhythm, repertoire, technique, theory, singing, chording, composition, improvisation and transposition • Multi-year program • Parent participation optional

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Studies are indicating that children who take music training can achieve better academic results. Source-MuSICA Research musica.uci.edu

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• LifeRing Secular Recovery support group is being established in Coquitlam. Info: 604-377-1364; lifering@shaw.ca, www.unhooked.com, www.lifering.com. • Food Addicts Anonymous meets Mondays, 7:30 p.m., Room 338, Columbia Tower, Royal Columbia Hospital, New Westminster. Info: Michael, 604-930-8338 or www.foodaddictsanonymous.org. • B.C. Schizophrenia Society meets the second Monday of each month, 7:30 p.m., McGee Room, Poirier rec centre, 630 Poirier St., Coquitlam. Info: 604-523-1072. • Coquitlam Women’s Transition House is an emergency shelter for physically and/or emotionally abused women and their children. Info: 604-464-2020. • 12-Step meetings for individuals struggling with relationships, dysfunctional behaviours or substance abuse. 12 Steps are used in a Christian context, Wednesday or Thursday nights at 7:30 p.m. Info: 604-942-7711. • Irritable Bowel Syndrome Support Group meets first Tuesday of each month at Eagle Ridge Hospital at 7:30 p.m. Info: 604-8754875.

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For more information or to reserve your spot call 778-355-4658

1046F Austin Ave., Coquitlam

604.931.3311 SunHangDo.com

Donna Gardecki, M.Sc. is a Certified Kinesiologist, Registered Yoga Teacher, Rehabilitation Therapist. She brings 28 years experience to you. “Beginner yoga... just one hour, once a week, for an entire year: the result has been whole-body conditioning. This means I am able to participate in other activities I enjoy with noticeably fewer injuries, aches & pains. I am more flexible than I was 10 years ago; I’m 51!”

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Pancake Breakfast SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12TH, 8 AM TO 11AM, SUTER BROOK VILLAGE PLAZA, PORT MOODY

Linda Reimer, MLA PORT MOODY - COQUITLAM

Telephone: 604-469-5430 Email: linda.reimer.mla@leg.bc.ca Website: www.lindareimermla.ca


TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, A15

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

TRI-CITY LITERACY

Madness and science make book bedfellows A GOOD READ MICHAEL DEKOVEN

T

here is a long history of crazy scientists in books and movies, but sometimes it’s the science itself that is mad, unexpected or just plain strange. You could start with Randall Munroe’s book What If? Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions. Munroe provides scientifically valid — though highly speculative — answers to such pressing topics as “Can you build a functional jet pack from downward firing machine guns?” and “What would happen if the Earth stopped spinning but the atmosphere retained its velocity?” The author is well known for his web comic xkcd. com and the few questions that have been recycled from his website feature expanded answers. Mark Miodownik, a professor of material science at University College London, introduces us to the wondrous inner life of materials such as glass, steel, plastic, and concrete through some everyday objects most of us take for granted. Stuff Matters: Exploring the Marvelous Materials that Shape our ManMade World is based around a photo of Mark in his London

rooftop garden. The concrete of a nearby skyscraper, the porcelain of his tea cup, the paper in a book lead him to muse on the history, physics and chemistry of the material involved as well as the psychology of how we interact with these materials. The strangeness enters when he presents some less commonly encountered modern materials such as graphene and silica aerogels. Any evil genius should have a variety of appropriate science trivia at hand and Mad Science: Einstein’s Fridge, Dewar’s Flask, Mach’s Speed, and 362 Other Inventions and Discoveries that Made Our World, edited by Randy Alfred, provides a convenient list of 365 random scientific breakthroughs or inventions — one for each day of the year.

From the introduction of the Gregorian Calendar on Jan. 1, 1583 to the first use of an early version of the breathalyzer on New Year’s Eve 1938 and everything in between, Wired magazine’s “This Day in Tech” team give a breezy and often punfilled page on a wide range of subjects, including space science, computers, medicine, food and war. Science journalist Sam Kean takes us on a fun and painless tour of what he considers “one of the great intellectual achievements of humankind” in The Disappearing Spoon and Other Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements. Kean outlines the properties of each of the elements and how they interact with each other (enabling the creation of chemical compounds) in a readable and engaging style. He keeps the tone lively, with lots of anecdotes about the scientists involved in the discovery of the elements as well as the related commercial, scientific, and political shenanigans resulting from some of those discoveries. Moving from general works to the reminiscences of a particular scientist, one of the best books ever written by a scientist has to be Richard Feynman’s Surely You’re Joking Mr. Feynman:

Adventures of a Curious Character. Feynman was a member of the Manhattan Project team that built the first atomic bomb, and he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1965 for his work in quantum

electrodynamics; he had an intense, wide-ranging curiosity about life and was more than a bit of a prankster. The book is a rambling series of funny stories about his life and obsessions in rough chronological order.

You can find these and other popular science titles at your local library.

A Good Read is a column by TriCity librarians that is published on Wednesdays. Michael DeKoven works at Port Moody Public

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A16 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, TRI-CITY NEWS

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TC ARTS/ENT.

TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, A17

CONTACT

email: jwarren@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3033 www.tricitynews.com/entertainment

ORIGINELLE DESIGNS

Bee catches a raindrop

PHOTOS NEEDED

Pictures of scenic views, parks, festivals, active living and landmarks in Port Coquitlam continue to be sought for the city’s 2016 calendar. A dozen photos will be picked for the city’s 9” by 12” glossy calendar as well as for other civic publications and the online gallery; photo credit will be given. To upload photos, send horizontal photos in a jpeg or tiff format (at least 300 dpi, 13 wide by 10 deep, or at least 2 MB) to portcoquitlam.ca/photos.

ARTIST CALL

Visual artists have a bit more time to apply to be part of the city of Port Moody’s inaugural Day of Arts celebration. Last week, the municipality extended the deadline to Sunday, Sept. 13 to allow more visual artists to sign up for the event, which will happen Sept. 26 at PoMo city hall from noon to 5 p.m. The festivities coincide with Culture Days, an annual focus on the fine arts nationwide. Among the Tri-City artists registered for the Day of Arts include sculptor Ati Ahkami, drawer Tracey Costescu and the Caufield School of Dance. Food and beverage vendors will also offer tasty treats. Go to portmoody.ca.

READING BUD

Pupils in kindergarten to Grade 3 looking for a bit more help with their reading can join Port Coquitlam’s Reading Buddies. Young students are paired with a teen volunteer to help them practise their literacy skills. The free program starts Sept. 22 at the Terry Fox Library and runs each Tuesday from 3:45 to 4:30 p.m. until Oct. 27. To apply, pick up a form at the library (2470 Mary Hill Rd., PoCo) . Meanwhile, Tri-City residents whose English is not their first language can join a free conversation group at the library on Thursdays. The meeting is co-sponsored by Share and runs from 10:30 a.m. to noon. jwarren@tricitynews.com

Gold Creek trees and DeBoville Slough grasses in Coquitlam, an area Joseph Therrien explored while growing up in the Tri-Cities in the 1950s and ‘60s.

PLACE DES ARTS

PHOTOGRAPHY

Nature, in black and white JANIS WARREN The Tri-CiTy News

His days growing up hiking and camping around the northeastern part of the Tri-Cities set the stage for his career in the arts. Back then, Joseph Therrien explored DeBoville Slough and Minnekhada regional park with his friends and fellow Cubs and Scouts. The area had not seen much development and the semirural charm piqued Thierren’s love for nature. As a teen, he discovered the pictures of Ansel Adams, the renowned photographer and environmentalist who captured black and white landscapes of the American west. Thierren was immediately entranced. “I saw in his work some of the things I was experiencing myself,” he said. “I thought, ‘Wow, that’s amazing. I would love to do that.’” And so, at the age of 17, Thierren bought a cheap, Russian-made Zenit-E camera and set up a darkroom studio at home. By then, Thierren was also falling in love with other creative forms and was taken under the wing of his Centennial secondary teacher, Don Portelance. After graduation, Thierren studied at the Vancouver School of Art — later renamed Emily Carr University of Art + Design — but dropped out after two years. He enrolled in the faculty of education at UBC, majoring in fine arts, and took classes with some of the best art instructors at the time such as Bob Steele,

PLACE DES ARTS

Left: Fraser Canyon. Above: Minnekhada Marsh, at the regional park in Coquitlam.

who guided him in printmaking. Soon, the Port Coquitlam resident gained work as a visual arts teacher in the Surrey school district, helping his students through drawing, painting, ceramics, sculpture and, of course, film photography. When the industry moved to digital, Thierren was resistant at first. Digital photography was still in its infancy and the cost of a digital camera was prohibitive. But he could see the tech-

nology moving quickly and Thierren eventually decided to jump on the bandwagon. A decade ago, he took a course and bought his first digital camera. However, he continued to teach the basics of film photography to his students as well. “They learned how to use aperture and shutter speeds so when they went to digital, they had some tools. Digital isn’t just point and shoot.” Two years ago, around the same time he retired, Thierren could see the digital advances

had taken a significant leap so he picked up a new camera: a Nikon D800. He also purchased an Epsom printer and “I’m getting results that, in my opinion, look like silver gelatin prints from a dark room. It’s remarkable.” Now, Thierren travels to places near and far to compose ideal landscape photos. On Friday, he’ll open an exhibit at Coquitlam’s Place des Arts — ironically, the same facility where Portelance teaches gifted art students — and will show 24 pieces documented over the past two years. There are images of his beloved DeBoville Slough, Golden Ears Park, Pitt Meadows and the Fraser Canyon. He also added scenes from a trip to Yellowstone Park. None are in colour. “I think in black and white,” he said. Thierren is pleased with the results of his show. “It reflects

a lot of how I feel about nature. They are interpreted through my inspiration of Ansel Adams and other black-and-white landscape photographers like John Sexton.” He added, “It’s hard to describe the love of nature as expressed through photography. It’s hard to capture it. Sometimes, you feel the place but the light is wrong or the time of day isn’t right. But you try to use your skills to express that feeling you see before you, which can be breathtaking.” • The opening reception for Joseph Thierren’s exhibit is Friday, Sept. 11 at 7 p.m. at Place des Arts (1120 Brunette Ave., Coquitlam). Also opening that night are displays from Jeanette Sirois and Place des Arts’ teachers and staff. Admission is free. Call 604-6641636 or visit placedesarts.ca.

jwarren@tricitynews.com @jwarrenTC


A18 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, TRI-CITY NEWS

WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM

VISUAL ARTS

Teens can learn to draw like the masters JANIS WARREN

Recently, I have opened my program to young individuals who have a real earnest desire to unravel the mysteries of expressing realism. I am amazed to see their level of enthusiasm and focus despite our modern “just-press-this-button” automated digital world.

The Tri-CiTy News

For the past two years, Mark Anthony has guided students at the Port Moody Arts Centre with their drawing techniques. And this week, he starts a new series that helps teens learn the traditional and classical styles of the European masters. Today (Wednesday), Anthony launches Great Masters - Louvre Museum while tomorrow he kicks off Great Illustrators - Norman Rockwell. The fall workshops will be followed in late October with Great Illustrators - JC Leyendecker and Great Masters - Metropolitan Museum. The Tri-City News caught up with Anthony last week to find out why he’s offering the classical drawing series and who would best suit it. Tri-City News: What is your arts background? Mark Anthony: I was born into a traditional European family and culture and, as far back as I can remember, I had a romantic fascination with old Europe with all of its elegance and poetic charm. At 12 years of age I fell into an inspiring experience that defined the rest of my working life. Within a few minutes, while watching a live portrait session for the first time, I made a decision

COURTESY OF MARK ANTHONY

Mark Anthony will lead a classical drawing series at the Port Moody Arts Centre this fall, for teens aged 12 to 15. His first two workshops — Great Masters - Louvre Museum and Great Illustrators Norman Rockwell — start this week. The next two begin in late October. and said to myself, “This is what I want to be, a portraitist.” So began my lifelong passionate study to understand how the Great European Masters executed such dramatic and poetic expressions of life using the simplest of tools. It wasn’t the medium they used but their deep visual understand-

ing and genius that allowed them to draw with simple handmade tools like charcoal and ink with the power of a well-executed oil painting. TCN: How long have you taught at PMAC? MA: In 2013, I had the privilege of meeting Ruth Hoyem

who at the time worked as the director at the centre. Since then, I have enjoyed working along with other qualified instructors at the centre. My programs are generally adult based and I place heavy emphasis on learning fundamental lessons from great masterworks and collections.

TCN: Why do you teach teens about classical drawing? MA: Classical drawing stems from the Greek classical period. The great sculptures from this period profiled an ideal approach to understanding and expressing beauty especially in terms of the human form. This is what lit the European world on fire during the Italian Renaissance and the leaps-and-bounds advancement of realistic, gestural and poetic expression especially in painting and drawing. We live in a very photography-bound society. Artists today rarely push themselves to work hard enough to express realism the way our human mind understands visual stimulation and selective focus. It is easy to see that much representational artwork today is generated through a camera lens, which sees differently than our mind sees. The old masters were not burdened with photo technology. This makes them excellent models to learn from. TCN: Why did you choose

Louvre, Norman Rockwell, Leyendecker and the Metropolitan as your topics? MA: I regret that our exposure to great masterworks is so limited in Canada. Especially, with a large population base in the Lower Mainland, it would be nice to have some corporate and government sponsorship to build a real landmark this side of the country. New York did it with the Met. France did it with the Louvre. Russia did it with the Hermitage. I would love to see small centres like PMAC hosting a small, world-class Great Masterworks exhibit once in a while…. It is also great for young people to see the unbroken thread of traditional fundamentals as they also provide the foundations for modern illustrating.

TCN: Can a beginner register for your class? MA: Yes, absolutely. Drawing is a natural human activity. Any toddler responds to the desire to draw just as they do to the desire to walk, sing, dance, etc. Drawing is the most direct connection between what we see and what we express artistically. All that is required is that someone helps them to understand what they see in definable terms. • To register for one of Mark Anthony’s classical drawing workshops, call at 604-9312008 or visit pomoarts.ca.

Mark Hellman in

THE INCOMPLEAT FOLKSINGER by Pete Seeger

“...Beautiful tunes, accomplished storytelling and an immense heart.” - Janis Lacouvée

COURTESY OF PLACE DES ARTS

Place des Arts’ annual open house on Saturday is organized by fine and performing arts programmer Oliver McTavish-Wisden (above, holding an arts passport).

OPEN HOUSE

A pAssporT To The ArTs AT pdA Take a trip to Coquitlam’s Place des Arts this Saturday and get your “passport” stamped. On Sept. 12, the arts and music centre invites participants to take a tour of the facility, join an activity station and earn a sticker in their Passport to the Arts for a chance to win prizes.

Kids and teens can create selfies, comic jam, practise tap steps, pound the drums and make masks, among other things. Youth must go to at least six stations and complete the crafts to get a sticker while adults will be required to attend at least four stations and talk to teachers to get answers to questions in the passport.

The aim of the annual open house is to entice residents to learn more about Place des Arts’ programs. The event runs from 2 to 4 p.m. at 1120 Brunette Ave. Admission is free but registration is appreciated by calling 604-664-1636 or visiting brownpapertickets.com. jwarren@tricitynews.com

September 22 - 26, 2015 8pm + 4pm Saturday Documentary Sept 20 | Talk Back Sept 22/24

Tickets 604-927-6555 | evergreenculturalcentre.ca


TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, A19

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ARTS BRIEFS

Help Syrian refugees

JANIS WARREN/THE TRI-CITY NEWS

The Lou Sekora amphitheatre, south of Place des Arts in Maillardville, has been closed for at least two years now. The area is under review as part of the city of Coquitlam’s new strategic arts plan.

ARTS CULTURAL PLANS

Ready for the visions The long-awaited arts and culture visions for the cities of Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam are expected to go before their respective city councils next month. And it’s anticipated the blueprints will provide clarity for how the municipalities can benefit from having more arts programs and services to satisfy the growing population over the next 15 to 20 years. This summer, Coquitlam staff presented its key findings from a consulting firm that gauged public feedback on current needs and wants. But of the 601 people randomly picked to be interviewed by phone, only half were residents of Coquitlam. Of those who lived in Coquitlam, 88% said they ranked arts, culture and heritage as “very important” or “somewhat important.” They said they want events to take their families to and/ or have some outdoor and multicultural component. A large proportion also said they want more investment in the Coquitlam Public Library, which has a renovated branch

on Poirier Street and a new branch in City Centre. Michelle Hunt, Coquitlam’s director of planning businesses services, told The Tri-City News the consulting firm also identified more than 200 cultural resources in Coquitlam. “It was a bit of a surprise,” she said. “Everybody thinks about our five big arts centres but what gets lost are how the private companies and non-profit groups also contribute.” The call for an arts strategic plan came up during council’s 2013 budget discussions. The following year, it earmarked $100,000 to take a deeper look at how the city could expand the industry. When complete, the document will dovetail into the city’s final parks and recreation master plan. Coquitlam has plenty of gaps and redundancies to address, Hunt acknowledged. The Innovation Centre — next to the Evergreen Cultural Centre — is under-utilized and several capital and operating projects have been sidelined until the new arts strategy is adopted. Among them, the seating area for the

Lou Sekora Amphitheatre in Carré Heritage Square. Two years ago, the city closed the Maillardville venue for safety reasons. Since the facility was installed in 1999, the stones have become loose and the pavers uneven. “It’s no longer just a maintenance issue. It needs something more of a permanent solution,” said Joan McCauley, executive director of Place des Arts. Still, Hunt said the city has already made headway in a number of areas including moving forward with a new amphitheatre at Town Centre Park. She said the consulting firm found 81% of respondents in favour of the proposed site. “We’ve been getting some bad press about this but the general population clearly wants it for outdoor festivals.” Meanwhile, in Port Coquitlam, city council is set to hear from its consultant in late October or early November. The consultant’s presentation was delayed in July to gather more information, a city spokesperson said. Port Moody is set to revise its arts strategy next year.

FILM

COQ. FLICK IN SAN FRAN DANCE FEST A Coquitlam dancer and filmmaker will see her latest work shown at the San Francisco Dance Film Festival. Linda Arkelian and her film partner David Cooper — the acclaimed Canadian dance and theatre photographer — produced Eclipse, a 2013 piece focusing on Thibaut Eiferman and Darren Devaney, two former Ballet BC dancers. The film will run Oct. 10 at the Brava Theatre and both Arkelian and Cooper will attend. “It’s an honour to be there,” she said. It’s not the first time the two have paired up. She collaborated with Cooper on the 2012 flick Hands, also dance film. Arkelian, who teaches advanced ballet/pointe class

Get your dancing shoes on this Saturday night and support an emergency relief effort. The Hot Salsa Dance Zone will donate all proceeds from its party at the Evergreen Cultural Centre to the United Nations Refugee Agency (unhcr.ca) in Canada to assist the Syrians escaping their war-torn country and flooding into Europe. The fundraiser will happen in the Evergreen rehearsal hall (at the back of the building) from 8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. Tickets at $10/$8 are at

the door and parking is free. Visit hotsalsadancezone. com or call 604-725-4654.

FRINGE

A Port Coquitlam native is seeing her company remount its first production during the Vancouver Fringe Festival . Maryanne Renzetti of Staircase Theatre is starring in Oh the Humanity (and other good intentions) by Will Eno at the Firehall Arts Centre (280 E. Cordova St., Vancouver) until Sept. 16. The show is directed by Brian Cochrane, a Jessie

award winner, and also includes actors Brad Duffy and Tom Pickett. “We couldn’t have been happier with the results,” Renzetti said in a news release. “This was our first time producing and back in 2010 we learned a lot of things by trial and error. We had a lot of help from our more experienced friends and we somehow pulled it off.” Tickets are $14 plus a $5 membership through vancouverfringe.com.

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Eclipse will be shown at the San Francisco Dance Festival Oct. 10. The Dance Centre at the ScotiaBank Dance Centre, is well-known in dance circles, having performed with the

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TC SPORTS

CONTACT

email: sports@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3035 www.tricitynews.com/sports

ON THE PITCH

POZZOLO PERFECT AS KAOS WIN CUP

ELAINE FLEURY PHOTO

The Port Coquitlam Euro-Rite club took on Penticton during under-15 girls soccer action at Town Centre Park as part of the 29th Annual Labour Day weekend tournament in partnership with the SX Cup.

The Coquitlam Metro-Ford Kaos are SX Cup champions after taking down the Prince George Timberwolves 1-0 in the finals of the under-17 Labour Day Tournament. Goalie Josie Pozzolo only allowed one goal all weekend, earning three shutouts including a 4-0 in over Port Moody and a 1-0 win over the Delta Coastal Sting. The team’s other win was a 2-1 decision against North Shore and with the 3-0 record in round-robin play the club quickly advanced to the finals. A strong defence from players like Maggy Spency and Kara Plican was also a factor in the club’s success, as well as strong work at the midfield from Mady Weir. The Kaos also got some timely goals, with Catrina Olstrom, Renee Baker and Amanda Kristiansen all chipping in with markers over the course of the weekend. The team finished up the tournament with four wins, eight goals for and one goal against. sports@tricitynews.com

AT THE RINK

Jr. hockey clubs get down to business GARY MCKENNA The Tri-CiTy News

The Coquitlam Express may be 0-5 in exhibition play, but none of that will matter when the team starts playing for keeps this weekend. The British Columbia Hockey League club starts their 58-game schedule on Saturday against the Chilliwack Chiefs, a team the Express lost to last weekend in a pre-season matchup. While roster spots are still

being firmed up, Coquitlam coach Barry Wolff will get a chance to see how his team performs when there are two points on the line, wins the team will desperately need if it hopes to be on the right side of the playoff bar come March. The Express had a tough showing last week as the team slogged its way through a fivegame exhibition schedule. On Saturday, in the final preseason match, Coquitlam fell 4-2 to the Surrey Eagles at the South Surrey Arena. The team

also had a difficult time in last Thursday’s matchup against Wenatchee — the BCHL’s newest franchise. The American squad put up six goals while Coquitlam was not able to garner any offence. While the regular season will be under way starting this weekend, it will be a while before any local fans get a taste of the action. The Express are not scheduled to play at the Poirier Sport and Leisure Complex until October 3, when the

club is expected to take on the Cowichan Valley Capitals.

PANTHERS

The Coquitlam Express are not the only junior hockey team gearing up for the season. The Pacific Junior Hockey League’s Port Moody Panthers are also set to launch their 44-game junior B season this Saturday when the Ridge Meadows Flames come to the Port Moody Arena. The Cats have won a game

and lost a game to the Flames during exhibition play, a fourgame series that saw the club go 1-2-1. Aside from the loss to the Flames last week, the club also dropped a 3-0 decision to the Grandview Steelers on Friday. Saturday’s Port Moody Panthers home opener will start at 7:45 p.m. at the Port Moody Arena. For more information go to www.portmoodypanthers.com. sports@tricitynews.com @gmckennaTC

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RESULTS

Have a minor sports team that wants to get their game results into The Tri-City News? Send us a brief description of the match, the sport, the league, the level and the score and we will try and fit it in the paper. Any photos must be at least one megabyte in JPEG format. Results can be emailed to sports@tricitynews.com.

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There’s a new TRUE NORTH game in town! BASKETBALL SCHOOL

ELAINE FLEURY PHOTO

Basketball Camp TRUE NORTH TRUESummer NORTH 3-on-3 Basketball 3-on-3 BasketballProgram ProgramFall Fall2015 2015 BASKETBALL SCHOOL BASKETBALL SCHOOL Where: Middle School andTBA TBA Where:Pitt PittRiver RiverTRUE Middle School and NORTH SUMMER The camps offered by The True North Basketball School aim to help develop young boys & girls basketball skills. At the same time they will compete in games and achieve awards. The camps will be held at Pitt River Middle School in Port Coquitlam.

UNIVERSITY SPORTS

PoMo’s Jones notches first of season for SFU Port Moody soccer player Kyle Jones scored the lone goal for the Simon Fraser University Clan during a 1-1 game against the California Baptist Lancers in a match that was eventually called early because of a lightning storm. SFU outshot their opponents 20-3 and were dominant for most of the match, which ended 17 minutes early because of the weather. The Clan started off the match with back-to-back shots on net but the Lancers were able to turn the play around and make it 1-0. That is when Jones managed to score on a free kick two minutes later, firing a low shot through traffic that found

Coquitlam Sunwood Square #320-3025 Lougheed Hwy Congratulates (at Westwood St.)

KIDS CUTS

The Coquitlam Metro Ford Soccer Club’s under-18 team took on Edmonton during the SX Cup Labour Day tournament last weekend.

Lightning ends match early as teams tie 1-1

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Grade 7-12, 9:00 am - 1:00 pm - Shooting Camp ..........$135

July 2nd -young July 3rd TheTrue camps offered by The True North School aimboys to help develop boys & girls The camps offered by The North Basketball School aimBasketball to help develop young & girls basketball skills.will At the same in time theyand will achieve competeawards. in gamesGrade and achieve 7-12, 9:00awards. am - 1:00 pm - Offensive Skills Camp...$135 basketball skills. At the same time they compete games The camps be held at Pitt River Middle School in Port The camps will be held at Pitt Riverwill Middle School in Port Coquitlam. JulyCoquitlam. 6th - July 10th Grade 2-5, 9:00 am - 12 Noon - Elementary Camp .......$175

BASKETBALL SCHOOL

instruction. A new concept will be the focus each week. What is it: The first 90 minutes of each session will focus on 3-on-3 concepts July 6thSUMMER - July 10th TRUE NORTH TRUE SUMMER Who: Open to boys &NORTH girls in Grades 9SCHEDULE to (separate programs for boys & girls) - Middle School Camp .$175 andCoaching instruction. A new concept will be the12focus each week. Staff Coaching Staff BASKETBALL

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its way passed Lancers’ netminder Noah Oyler. In the second half, the Clan had a 7-1 advantage on the shot clock but could not find a way to score the go-ahead marker. The tie was particularly disappointing for new head coach Clint Schneider, who is still looking for his first career win with the a record of 0-1-1 so far this season. “The boys are disappointed they haven’t been rewarded for their efforts but we are not discouraged,” he said. “We proved today that we have a special squad and now it’s a matter of finishing our chances and eliminating mistakes.” The club is scheduled to play its home opener tonight (Wednesday) September 9 at Terry Fox Field at SFU at 7 p.m. The day also marks the start of the university’s 5th anniversary celebrations that will feature

fireworks following the Clan’s match at around 8:45 p.m. Rich Chambers

VOLLEYBALL

Grade 6-9, 12:30 pm - 3:30 pm

RichBASKETBALL Chambers DonSCHEDULE Van Os July 13th - July 17th June 29th - June 30thJune 29th - June 30th Grade 8-12, 9:00 am - 2:00 pm - Secondary Camp .......$195 7-12, 9:00 am - 1:00..........$135 pm - Shooting Camp ..........$135 July 20th - July 24th Grade 7-12, 9:00 am - 1:00 Grade pm - Shooting Camp Grade 2-7, 9:00 am - 12 Noon July 2ndSchool - July 3rd 2nd - July 3rdBasketball The camps offered July by The True North aim to help develop young boys & girls Elementary/Middle School Camp .........................$175 Grade 7-12, 9:00 am - 1:00 pm -and Offensive Camp ...$135 7-12, 9:00 am -time 1:00 they pm - will Offensive Skills Camp ...$135 basketball Grade skills. At the same compete in games achieveSkills awards. 20th - July 22nd July 6thMiddle - July School 10th in July TheJuly camps be held River Port Coquitlam. 6thwill - July 10that Pitt Grade 7-12, 12:30 am - 3:30 pm - Shooting Camp .........$145 Grade 2-5, 9:00 am -Camp 12 Noon - Elementary Camp .......$175 Grade 2-5, 9:00 am - 12 Noon - Elementary .......$175 Cutting Edge Skill Development July 6th - July 10th August 24th - August 28th July 6th - July 10th TRUE NORTH Grade 5-8,SUMMER 9:00 am - 12Camp Noon .$175 6-9, 12:30School pm - 3:30 pm - .$175 Middle School 6-9, 12:30 pm - 3:30 Grade pm - Middle Camp CoachingGrade Staff Youth Development Camp .................$175 Rich Don Van Os BASKETBALL SCHEDULE Hind17th July 13th Tony DonChambers Van Os -Scott July 17th Pre-Season JulyMichael 13th - July (GST not included) Grade 8-12, 9:00 am 2:00 pm Secondary Camp .......$195 Grade 8-12, 9:00 am - 2:00 pm - Secondary Camp June 29th - June 30th.......$195 20th Julyam 24th July 20th Registration - July 24th July Grade 7-12,- 9:00 - 1:00 pm - Shooting Camp ..........$135

Summer Camp Coaches Included: Basketball Rich Chambers, Tony Scott and Don Van Os. The last 90 How much: $150 pluseach. GST minutes will be for 3-on-3 games lasting 10 mins

Includes 21 hours of instruction and 3-on-3 games in a league format. Individual’s players welcome. You do not needGST to enter a team. Teams will change each week. StandHow much: $150 plus = $157.50 per person July 2nd will - July 3rd www.truenorthbasketball.ca ing be kept by individual player. Elementary/Middle School Camp .........................$175 Includes 21 hours of School instruction and- Offensive 3-on-3 games Elementary/Middle Camp .........................$175 Skills Camp ...$135 in a league format. Individual’s Who: Open to boys & girls in Grades 9 to 12 (separate programs for boys & girls) Online registration at:

Grade 2-7, 9:00 am - 12 Noon Grade 2-7, 9:00 am - 12 Noon

Name: _____________________________________________ M: Grade 7-12, 9:00 am - 1:00 pm

F:

20th - July 22nd Emma Jennings led the July 20th______________________________________________ - July 22nd July Fax Registration 604-941-6385 Address: Age:___ July7-12, 6th 12:30 - Julyam10th - 3:30.........$145 pm - Shooting Camp players welcome. do not need enter a.........$145 team. will change each week. Grade 7-12, 12:30 You am - 3:30Grade pm - Shooting Camp Grade 2-5, 9:00 am - 12____________________ Noonto - Elementary Camp .......$175 REGISTRATION City:_______________________________ Code: Clan with 17 kills but it was SPACE ISTeams LIMITED! 24th - P.August 28th August 24th - August August 28th LOCATION Camp July 6th July 10th Telephone: _____________________________________________________ Gradeindividual 5-8, 9:00 am - 12 Noon player. Grade 5-8, 9:00 am - 12 Noon Standing will be kept by SPACE IS LIMITED! Number Grade 6-9, 12:30 pm - 3:30 pm - Middle School Camp .$175 not enough for the volleyball True North Basketball Pre-Season Youth Development Camp .................$175 Michael Hind Tony Scott Pre-Season E-mail: Rich Don________________________________________________________ VanYouth Os Development Michael Hind TonyChambers Scott July 13thCamp - July .................$175 17th Suite 516 - 34A - 2755 Lougheed Hwy. (GST not included) (GSTGrade not included) Port Coquitlam, B.C., V3B 5Y9 School in Sept: __________________________________________________ 8-12, 9:00 am - 2:00 pm - Secondary Camp .......$195 club to defeat Chaminade Registration JulyOnline 20th -registration July 24th at: Online registration at: Personal Health No. ______________________________________________ University, which rallied from Registration Grade 2-7, 9:00 am - 12www.truenorthbasketball.ca Noon www.truenorthbasketball.ca Fall Club teamM: tryouts for Boys Grades 4 to 8 are the week of September 14th Name: _____________________________________________ M: F: Elementary/Middle School Camp .........................$175 _____________________________________________ F: Date: ________________________ a 2-1 deficit to take down Name: Fax Registration 604-941-6385 July 20th - July 22nd Address: ______________________________________________ Age:___ Fax Registration 604-941-6385 Address: ______________________________________________ Age:___ Parent or Guardian Signature: ________________________________________ Release Play against the top in BC and Western Washington Grade 7-12, 12:30 am - teams 3:30 pmREGISTRATION Shooting Camp .........$145 City:_______________________________ P. Code: ____________________ SFU in five sets at the Hawaii REGISTRATION Application Signature:____________________________________________________ City:_______________________________ P. Code: ____________________ AugustCamp 24th - August 28th LOCATION LOCATION Camp Telephone: _____________________________________________________ Telephone: _____________________________________________________ GradeNumber 5-8, 9:00 am - 12 Noon Number Invitational in Honolulu last True North Basketball True North Basketball E-mail: ________________________________________________________ Pre-Season Youth Development .................$175 E-mail: ________________________________________________________ Michael Hind Tony Scott Suite 516 - 34A Camp - 2755 Lougheed Hwy. Where: River Middle School Suite 516 - Pitt 34A - 2755 Lougheed Hwy. notCoquitlam, included) B.C., V3B 5Y9 week. School in Sept: __________________________________________________ Port Coquitlam, B.C., (GST V3BPort 5Y9 School in Sept: __________________________________________________ Registration 8 pm September 22nd, 29th and October 6th When: Tuesdays: 6 -Online Personal Health No. ______________________________________________ registration at: Jennings, a Port MoodyPersonal Health No.______________________________________________ www.truenorthbasketball.ca Where: Pitt River Middle School Name: _____________________________________________ M: F: 6________________________ - 8 pm September 28th and October 5th Mondays: Date: Date: ________________________ player who recently transferred Fax Registration 604-941-6385 Parent or Guardian Signature: ________________________________________ Address: Age:___ Release Parent or ______________________________________________ Guardian Signature: ________________________________________ Release from the University of Toronto When: Tuesdays: 6-8 pm September REGISTRATION 22nd, 29th and October 6th Application Signature: ____________________________________________________ City:_______________________________ P. Code: ____________________ Application Signature: ____________________________________________________ LOCATION Camp Get ready for the upcoming season and sharpen your skills at the Telephone: _____________________________________________________ this year, was joined with Number True North Basketball Monday: 6-8 pm September 28th and October E-mail: ________________________________________________________ True North Fall Boot Camp. Open to boys5th and girls in grades 5 to 8, the Suite 516 - 34A - 2755 Lougheed Hwy. Devon May, who had 14 kills Port Coquitlam, B.C., V3B 5Y9 School in Sept: __________________________________________________ boot camp covers all basic skills in anskills ideal at learning environment. against the Silverswords as her Personal Health No. ______________________________________________ Get ready for the upcoming season and sharpen your the True North Fall club went up 2-1 in the first Date: ________________________ Boot Camp. Open to boys and girls in grades 5 to 8, the boot camp covers Parent or Guardian ________________________________________ HowSignature: much: $50 plus GST = $52.50 per personall basic Release three sets. Application Signature:____________________________________________________ skills in an ideal learning But the Chaminade for allenvironment. 5 sessions!!! University team was able to How much: $50 plus GST rally in the final two series, sending the Clan to its second Register online to secure your spot at today! loss in a row at the tournament. Visa and Mastercard accepted.

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A24 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015, TRI-CITY NEWS

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THANK YOU

W

e are proud and grateful to announce that the runners’ den has reached another milestone in the history of our company. We celebrate our 15th anniversary. We want to take this occasion to thank our customers, employees, clinic leaders, family and friends for being a loyal and sincere part of the runners’ den. It’s amazing when we stop to think about how many people have been instrumental in establishing and growing our business. Some have been with us since our very first year; others just a few months. Thank you for making us part of your lives and helping us grow professionally and personally. The life-long relationships we’ve built over the last 15 years are priceless. We are fortunate to be surrounded by so many extraordinary individuals and look forward to the opportunities that lie ahead.

239 Newport Drive

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