WHAT THE HECK IS A SHIMMER?
A ‘shimmer’ is the latest device crooks are using to steal information from PIN-protected debit and credit cards, and they’ve been discovered at a business in the Tri-Cities, so cops say you should use the tap function if you can.
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Guitars, Robbie Burns and a new year BRANDON JANSEN INQUEST
Fight has just begun for grieving local mom Jansen wants to make sure recommendations are implemented SARAH PAYNE
The Tri-CiTy News
Michelle Jansen isn’t slowing down now that the coroner’s inquest into her son’s death has concluded. Instead, she’ll be channelling her energy through the Brandon Jansen Foundation to make sure the jury’s 21 recommendations are implemented.
“It’s my initiative and my mandate now to hold these people accountable,” Jansen told The Tri-City News. “We don’t have the luxury of these recommendations sitting on someone’s desk… we don’t have the luxury of time.” The jury deliberated for a day and a half after eight days of testimony wrapped up at the coroner’s inquest. Wednesday evening, they came back with the verdict: Brandon’s death of an opioid overdose at the Sunshine Coast Health Centre in March 2016 was accidental. see RECOMMENDATIONS, page 8
TC
INSIDE: Big bucks coming up for city workers? [pg. 3] / TC Sports [pg. 27]
FRIDAY, JAN. 27, 2017 Your community. Your stories.
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FROM THANKSGIVING FIRE TO GIVING THANKS
JANIS CLEUGH/THE TRI-CITY NEWS
Darci Menard is the owner of Port Coquitlam’s DM & Co. Hair Studio, which flooded last Thanksgiving Day after a neighbouring business burned down. The salon, which had only been open four days at the time of the fire, had its grand re-opening last week. See story, page 11.
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TRI-CITY GOVERNMENT
Civic wage increases set table for Tri-Cities New Westminster city staff get 7% over four years JANIS CLEUGH
The Tri-CiTy News
While union locals representing hundreds of Tri-City municipal workers continue to hash out new collective agree-
ments, a neighbouring city has signed a deal with its workers. Yesterday (Thursday), New Westminster and CUPE Local 387 announced they had agreed to a four-year contract — effective Jan. 1, 2016 — that will see an overall wage boost of 7%: 1.5% this year, 1.5% in 2017, 2% in 2018 and 2% in 2019. According to a press release, unionized staff ratified the agreement with 95% support
and it has also been endorsed by New Westminster city council, the city’s police board and the New West Public Library Board. The move comes after Surrey ratified its contract last November with CUPE Local 402 (9% over five years); Burnaby OK’d its agreement with CUPE Local 23 last August (7% over four years); and Vancouver approved its deal with CUPE Local 1004, repre-
senting outside workers, last April (7% over four years). In the Tri-Cities, all three civic union contracts expired Jan. 1. Coquitlam has yet to meet with the union but Nikki Caulfield, the city’s director of corporate and personnel planning, said negotiations are expected to begin this year (a request for comment from CUPE Local 386 was not returned). Port Coquitlam met six
times last year with committee officials from CUPE Local 498, which represents about 350 staffers, and did so again Tuesday. Details of negotiations are not being made public, PoCo chief administrative officer John Leeburn said. And in Port Moody, Local 825 president Irene Jakse said her executive met this week to follow up on last year’s six discussions with the city.
Negotiations are slow because of the change in the CAO position, she said. Lower Mainland municipal bargaining got underway in September 2015 in Surrey, marking the start of negotiations for more than 17,000 unionized staff throughout the region. In total, there are 21 CUPE locals at 30 bargaining tables with 20 municipalities. jcleugh@tricitynews.com
THE ENVIRONMENT
Acclaimed PoMo filmmaker’s passion project highlights Mossom hatchery Phoenix of Mossom Creek was shot in her hometown DIANE STRANDBERG The Tri-CiTy News
ABOVE: DIANE STRANDBERG/THE TRI-CITY NEWS; RIGHT: WUNDERMAN FILM INC.
Above: Eva Wunderman films Mossom Creek hatchery founder Ruth Foster during the grand opening of the newly built facility. Wunderman is a Port Moody filmmaker who was recently in Kugluktuk, Nunavut (bottom right) to film the documentary “Edna’s Bloodline” for Swedish TV. “I had no idea about fish, none at all,” said Wunderman, recalling how a chance conversation with Mossom volunteer Elaine Willis got the ball rolling on the volunteer film project. “As I went along, it became more interesting because I could see the potential... Then it grows with yourself learning about Mossom Creek and fish hatcheries.” The documentary might have lacked some of the drama of her other recent film projects but Wunderman said she enjoyed the lack of structure and the freedom to be spontaneous, not knowing how it would all turn out. “I had to find the drama,” she said, noting she discovered that element in the video she shot of thousands of coho that died when the oxygen was cut off by sediment in the plumbing after
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the fire. Also providing some tension was the concern about getting enough funds to rebuild the hatchery into a state-of-the art education facility. “The community spirit was amazing to see,” Wunderman said. Now that the Mossom project is edited and available on the website (mossomcreek. org), Wunderman is busy with another project for Swedish TV that has an imminent deadline. Called Edna’s Bloodline, it follows the European ancestry of former Nunavut commissioner Edna Elias, whose great-grandfather was a goldseeking Swede named Petter Norberg. Wunderman went to Kugluktuk, Nunavut in April to film a reunion between Elias and Frederick Norberg, a Swede and one of Petter Norberg’s distant nephews.
It was a challenging project, working in an extremely cold environment, but Wunderman believes she succeeded in showing how the Inuit and Swedish families could come together despite their cultural divide. At one point, Elias’ family offers to cook some polar bear meat, which appears to shock the Swedish relatives, who were thinking about the politics of eating the meat of an endangered species while the Inuit look at it as a means of survival. “It’s seeing how we can understand each other,” said Wunderman of her documentaries, including the Mossom film. “We don’t have to always agree but [understanding] will help us get along in the world.” dstrandberg@tricitynews.com @dstrandbergTC
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Port Moody filmmaker Eva Wunderman has been to Canada’s high Arctic to film a reunion between Swedish and Inuit relatives, heard the stories of grieving Second World War vets in caves in Micronesia, and chronicled the lives of recovering crystal meth addicts. But a film recounting community and business efforts to rebuild PoMo’s Mossom Creek Hatchery after a 2013 fire appears to be winning her the most acclaim locally after it was posted to the volunteer organization’s website last week. Wunderman, who divides her time between Hope and Port Moody to run her film company, said she is pleased with the results of the Mossom doc even though her other projects kept her from being on hand for every milestone of the 17-month rebuilding. Phoenix of Mossom Creek — After the Fire shows the devastation after a Dec. 13 fire destroyed the hatchery and education centre, and recounts how the community came together and a $1.2-million project was completed at roughly half the cost because of donated materials, time and resources. Using her Canon XF 105, Wunderman shot the project in various stages of construction, including the grand opening and the day the first coho were released into Burrard Inlet.
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B.C. SENIORS
Report requests big money push for B.C. seniors’ care $300M request over the next five years: BCCPA BY KATYA SLEPIAN BLACK PRESS
The B.C. government needs to hire more staff and upgrade infrastructure at seniors’ homes, a care providers’ group says. The BC Care Providers Association (BCCPA) released its annual report on Tuesday calling for an investment of $300 million over the next five years. The group hopes the federal government will chip in the same amount. “Only 29% of British Columbians believe that seniors’ care will be there when they need it,” BCCPA CEO Daniel Fontaine told reporters at a news conference in Burnaby. More than 90% are already feeling the crunch, Fontaine added, as part of the sandwich generation of people caring for both their children and their parents. The report said the proposed funding would go toward training, staff time, better infrastructure and new models of care, and would mean more direct at-
WHERE TO FIND THE REPORT The report Strengthening Seniors Care: A Madein-BC Roadmap is available at bccare.ca (click on the button labelled Care Can Be There — Learn More). tention for seniors in residential care, doubling the minimum home care visit to 30 minutes.
FAMILIES STRUGGLE
Metro Vancouver resident Natasha Aruliah said she has felt the lack of support for athome care for her 80-year-old father for the last year. “My father needs full-time care. He’s towards the later stages of Alzheimer’s,” said Aruliah. “My father has regressed back to his childhood in Sri Lanka — speaking Tamil, wanting string hoppers [a noodle dish] and our food.” Providing those comforts to her father has proved all but impossible with only 15 minutes of home care four times a day. “It’s not enough. They barely get time to take off their boots and their coats and then they have to go out the door again,” said Aruliah. “It means my dad has to feed and toilet on demand at the times that they arrive, not at the times when he’s needing to.”
The lack of familiarity leaves her father confused and upset. “They don’t know who he is. They don’t know the story of this man who is an electrical engineer, a telecommunications expert who’s travelled and lived in most countries in the world,” she said. “These strangers are coming in and doing some of the most intimate actions with him as they try to clean and care for him.”
ACUTE CARE CLOG
Fontaine challenged the province to keep seniors out of acute care beds. Currently, 13% of all acute care beds in B.C. are being used by patients that should be in other levels of care. “Every single one of those acute care beds is $1,800 a day in public investment,” he said. “Compare that to a residential care setting, which would be $200 a day and even less than that for home care.” Aruliah can understand why people call for emergency care.
In 2015, her father was in acute care four times because there wasn’t anywhere else for him to go. By the time he got to the top of the waiting list, he had regressed too far to use it. “My dad worked hard. I don’t want to see him discarded on a rubbish pile because we don’t have the time and resources to give him what he deserves.”
WHAT’S NEEDED
Among the 30 recommendations are the following: • Set as a minimum 3.36 direct care hours per day, per senior in publicly funded care homes. • Increase the minimum home care visit from the current 15 minutes to 30 minutes. • Invest up to $5 million per year over the next five years to recruit, train and retain the necessary workers to support a rapidly ageing population. • Allocate up to $20 million to re-purpose under-utilized/ unused care beds in order to meet the BC government’s commitment to further expand end-of-life care by 2021. • Allocate up to $2 million for a Care Credits program so seniors or their families can choose the caregivers of their choice. newsroom@tricitynews.com
BC CARE PROVIDERS ASSOCIATION PHOTO
The BC Care Providers Association launched a campaign earlier this week titled “Care Can Be There” to raise the awareness of the need for improvements in how seniors’ care is delivered. The report Strengthening Seniors Care: A Made-in-BC Roadmap offers 30 recommendations for improvements to residential care and home care.
Mad about science? Share your experiments with us at our Science Expo. Working alone or in pairs, students in grades 4 to 12 may submit project proposals by Monday, April 3. Cash prizes and trophies will be given for the top projects in four grade categories: Elementary (4–5) • Middle (6–8) • Junior (9–10) • Senior (11–12) For more information, go to www.coqlibrary.ca/sci-expo Coquitlam Public Library Science Expo 2017: Thursday, May 11 • 3:30–8:00 p.m. City Centre Branch • 1169 Pinetree Way Presented in partnership with Douglas College and School District 43
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THE SNOW AFTERMATH
Salt could cause trouble in creeks GARY MCKENNA The Tri-CiTy News
Salt solutions used to de-ice roads during the recent spate of freezing temperatures could have an adverse impact on local rivers and streams. Several hatcheries and streamkeeping groups told The Tri-City News that increased exposure to sodium chloride can affect salmon and trout’s ability to spawn. “There has been some concern,” said Craig Orr, a conservation advisor with Watershed Watch and a member of the Coquitlam River Watershed Roundtable. “Environment Canada says high concentrations of salt can be potentially toxic.” He added that when fish are accustomed to fresh water and certain concentrations of salt, their ability to osmoregulate — essentially, to maintain balanced fluid levels — can be affected. “It is a stressful period for salmon,” Orr told The Tri-City News. Information provided by Fisheries and Oceans Canada states that a typical inland freshwater body contains 150 mg per litre of sodium chloride. When those levels increase into the 600 mg range, long-term exposure can harm not only fish but, also, plants, trees and many stream insects. Salt can be particularly problematic in the early life stages of trout and salmon. Some local hatcheries and streamkeeper associations are taking measures to ensure that the amount of sodium chloride in the water does not reach toxic levels.
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Salt solution that was used to melt snow and ice on local streets could have a negative effect on local creeks and rivers. “We took precautions to reduce or interrupt intake flows from the creek to the incubators to [keep] salt and road contaminants from affecting the eggs and alevin until a first flush of rain,” said Robbin Whachell, president of the Hoy-Scott Watershed Society. “Our fingerlings in our rearing pond fared well. We resumed new water intake after the first heavy rains had run for a period of time.” During dry-weather periods, she noted that it is not unusual for road contaminants such as washer fluid, brake dust and oil to accumulate and eventually make their way to streams and tributaries. Ed Beye, vice-president of the Hyde Creek Watershed Society, told The Tri-City News that as the rains started last week, hatchery volunteers switched from creek water to well water in an effort to limit the amount of accumulated contaminates from making their way into the creek. He added that the measures are similar to what the society would do ahead of ex-
pected precipitation following a long dry spell in the warmer months. “It is a matter of monitoring what we have and trying to respond as well as we can to whatever the situations are,” he said. Steffanie Warriner, Coquitlam’s manager of environmental services, said the city does not expect any long-term effects on fish and fish-bearing streams as a result of the deicing solution used on local roads. She said there are no other chemicals in the brine, which is 23% sodium chloride plus water. “It is unlikely there will be any long-term impacts to fish health as a result,” she said. “Over the long term, the amount of precipitation [both snow and rain] and the overall filtration capacity of our storm drain system and watersheds should provide sufficient buffering capacity to preserve local water quality.”
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OPEN HOUSE
Come see our new middle and high school campus in Pitt Meadows! Spaces are available in some grades for this and next school year.
When: Tuesday, January 31st from 9:30 -11:30am and 6:30-8:00pm Where: Elementary School - 3151 York St, Port Coquitlam High School - 18477 Old Dewdney Trunk Rd, Pitt Meadows Our evening session will showcase the K-12 program and our morning sessions will allow families to experience ‘learning in action’! Please extend an invitation to your family and friends to attend our Open House and find out what it means to be a part of the Hope community.
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LET’S PLAY BALL BASEBALL REGISTRATION
Home of the 2016 9-10 Year Old Provincial Champions
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COQUITLAM RCMP
These “shimmers” were found in point-of-sale terminals at a Coquitlam business recently and Coquitlam Mounties are warning consumers to be careful when making purchases.
CRIME
Tap if you can and beware ‘shimmers’ Devices are used to steal info from debit, credit cards
Consumers are being advised to use the tap feature on their credit or debit cards when making a purchase after a Coquitlam business discovered a new method fraudsters are using to scam banking information from shoppers. According to a Coquitlam RCMP press release, on Jan. 11, staff were conducting routine checks of point-of-sale terminals when one test card remained stuck inside the machine. When the terminals were opened, they contained four very slim, plastic card “shim-
mers” that contained microchips meant to illegally capture the banking data on shoppers’ debit and credit cards. The stolen data can be used to create fake credit or debit cards. Coquitlam RCMP’s Economic Crime Unit (ECU) said the new, tiny shimmers make the old bulky overlay systems — known as “skimmers” — almost obsolete and that they’re “starting to pop up everywhere.” “You can’t see a shimmer from the outside like the old skimmer versions,” said Const. Alex Bojic in a release. “Businesses and consumers should immediately report anything abnormal about the way their card is acting” — particularly if the card is stick-
ing inside the machine. Consumers are advised to use the tap feature on their cards because it transfers only a very limited amount of banking information and it can’t be used to clone a card. The ECU is urging all businesses to call police immediately whenever they find a shimming device, noting multiple frauds can be linked over time and the evidence from each pointof-sale fraud can be crucial. Any business that discovers a shimmer is asked to call police immediately at 604-945-1550 or 911 if the crime is in progress. No suspects have been arrested yet in Coquitlam but the investigation is ongoing. spayne@tricitynews.com @spayneTC
Register Now
Scout Hall at Blue Mountain Park,Corner of Porter & Winslow • • • •
First time players - proof of date of birth is required (birth certificate, care card, etc.) League Age: 4-9: as of December 31, 2017, 10-18: as of April 30, 2017 Fee includes team & individual photos, hat, T-shirt and free meal at Picture Day Uniforms must be returned at the end of season - failure to do so will incur a $75.00 levy to your Bonzi account. • Players must register and pay for the highest division they’re being evaluated for. Refunds sent out in June.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION FOR 17-19 YEAR OLD PLAYERS
Coquitlam Little League is registering 17-19 year old players for play in the Continental Amateur Baseball Association (CABA) 19U division. E-mail: bluemountain@coquitlamlittleleague.ca for more information.
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BRANDON JANSEN INQUEST
Recommendations for ministry, rehab facilities and staff continued from front page
They also made 21 recommendations to government ministries, health authorities, medical professionals and substance use treatment centres, including that: • the Ministry of Health develop specific substance use treatment facility regulations, including educational qualifications for facility staff; ensure free opioid maintenance drugs in the community for people leaving correction centres; and, improve adolescent substance abuse treatment facilities; • the health minister and regional health authorities consult with people who have experience with substance use dependency in policy and program development; • health authorities require all treatment centres educate clients about opioid maintenance treatments, the risks of relapse and training in use of naloxone kits provided upon discharge; treatment centres be required to report back to health authorities on client outcomes; and expand treatment programs using phar-
BRANDON JANSEN maceutical grade heroin and Dilaudid for chronic opioid users; • the Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General develop a standard of practice for inmate release, including a requirement that those on opioid maintenance be assigned to physicians capable of treating them; • the minister of education review drug education resources and implement a substance abuse and addiction program into the curriculum beginning at elementary school; and schools have naloxone kits with trained personnel on site;
2017
• and all licensed substance use treatment centres review policies regarding cell phone use; all baggage of both clients and visitors is searched upon entry; and greater security measures are considered for monitoring clients and visitors. Jansen said she was pleased with the comprehensive recommendations, though she would have liked to have seen more stringent and specific requirements for security measures and best practices at treatment facilities, including room checks, ensuring those who are at risk of relapse are not placed in a bedroom alone and that staff ensure clients are taking — not hoarding — prescribed medication. BC Coroners Service spokesperson Barb McLintock said the service has no power to enforce recommendations but requests that each recipient replies in writing to explain if and how the recommendations will be implemented and if not, why not. Those responses are then posted on the Coroners Service website. spayne@tricitynews.com @spayneTC
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A10 FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS
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PARENT EDUCATION
Intelligence. The approach is aimed at fostering healthy relationships, helps people make sound decisions, enhances well being and helps achieve desired outcomes at school, home and the workplace. The RULER Approach: Building Emotionally Supportive Families will take place at 6:45 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 16 at Citadel middle school (1265 Citadel Dr., PoCo). To attend, email ssfspe@
gmail.com by Feb. 13 and include the names of those attending and the number and ages of children requiring child minding. Admission costs $8 per couple and cheques can be made payable to SSFSPE or Southside Family of Schools Parent Education. Walk-in registrations will only be accepted if there is space available. dstrandberg@tricitynews.com @dstrandbergTC
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Port Coquitlam’s Southside Family of Schools Parent Education group is hosting a presentation next month on the RULER approach by Hampton Park elementary school principal Tamara Banks. Banks was schooled in the RULER approach — Recognizing, Understanding, Labelling, Expressing and Regulating emotions — at the Yale Centre for Emotional
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City of Coquitlam
Notice of Intention to Lease Land or Improvements Notice is provided pursuant to Section 26 of the Community Charter that the City of Coquitlam intends to lease a portion of the property (approximately 960 square feet) having a civic address of 2150 Como Lake Avenue, Coquitlam, B.C. to the Coquitlam City Soccer Association, doing business as Coquitlam Metro Ford Soccer Club. The property is legally described as: “Parcel Identifier No. 028-745-787, Lot A, District Lot 362, New Westminster District, Plan BCP 49920”. The lease term shall be from February 15, 2017 to February 14, 2020 at no cost. For further information please contact Mr. Jeff Burton, Manager Real Estate, City of Coquitlam at 604-927-3678 or jburton@coquitlam.ca.
BURQUITLAM-LOUGHEED NEIGHBOURHOOD PLAN COME REVIEW THE DRAFT PLAN We are now in the last phase of the Burquitlam-Lougheed neighbourhood planning process and have a draft plan ready to share. Please attend one of these drop-in community information sessions and review the land use options for your area and let us know what you think. Wed. Feb. 1
Wed. Feb. 8
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TRI-CITY NEWS FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, A11
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JANIS CLEUGH/THE TRI-CITY NEWS
Above: Darci Menard stands in front of her hair salon, which recently re-opened after water damage related to a fire at a neighbouring business closed her down in October just days after her first opening. Below: Menard and her colleagues back together again.
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arci Menard is overwhelmed. Overwhelmed by the bouquets of flowers, balloons, cards, bottles of wine and countless well-wishes she and her fellow stylists have received over the past week since her business re-opened following a major fire in downtown Port Coquitlam last year. Overwhelmed by the city, which she said came to her rescue and pumped out the thousands of gallons of water from DM & Co. Hair Salon in the early morning hours of Thanksgiving Day when the bakery next door went up in flames. Overwhelmed by the show of support from city council, which offered words of encouragement and a management plan to get her newly opened shop up and running again. And overwhelmed by the business community that banded together following the second major fire in a year for the downtown core. “I’m stunned, just stunned,” Menard said, her eyes welling up. “I want to thank everyone for helping me out. I feel blessed.” She didn’t feel that way in October. Then, the sudden loss of her business couldn’t have come at a worse time. For years, Menard had been searching for a “forever home” to accommodate her and four friends, said fellow stylist Sue McCartney. They had worked on and off in various locations
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around the Tri-Cities and were eager to come together to work under the same roof. Last August, Menard was on her way to take a photo of her niece on her first day on the job at Me-n-Ed’s pizza parlour when she noticed a For Lease sign in the basement window of the McAllister Avenue building. She contacted the landlord and, by September, Menard and her tradespeople were renovating the 1,000-sq. ft. space. The grand opening was Oct. 5. But four days later, on Thanksgiving Day, the building’s owner alerted her to a fire close to his building. He told her not to panic but when Menard’s niece arrived for work that morning, she told her aunt about the flooding in her salon — the water was four feet deep. Menard rushed over to see the damage herself. She couldn’t believe her eyes. Firefighters tried to stop her from getting closer. “That’s my business,” she told them.
Menard talked to the fire captain and city crews. And when the doors finally opened, at around 1 p.m., she saw her lifelong dream dashed: the floors, walls and furniture — “basically, anything that was wood” — were ruined. McCartney played a video clip from the day of the disaster, when Menard spoke to a reporter about her loss: They will get through it, she said. They will be stronger. “It was a bad day,” Menard said. “I don’t know how I got through it.” Menard also scanned through her phone to show The Tri-City News the correspondence she received immediately after the blaze. Susanna Walden, executive director of the Downtown PoCo Business Improvement Association (BIA), pitched in, as did Tara Stroup, PoCo’s emergency program officer, and Catherine Polonio from Coquitlam Florist. Acting mayor Laura Dupont also rallied. “I felt for her after
all the work she put in,” she said. Former employers of Menard’s stylists also helped out by offering their rental chairs back until DM & Co. could reopen. Menard had to return to her last gig at Shaughnessy Mall. On Nov. 23, her insurance company allowed her to start renovations. The floors took the longest, she said, and the opening was delayed as tradespeople had to clear out newly found asbestos. Finally, last Saturday, it was time for the grand re-opening. “I didn’t think anybody was going to be here,” Menard said, “but they came all day. It was unbelievable. They were happy that it finally happened for us.” She added: “We feel very lucky to be in this community. I want to be on BIA board now. I want to be a good neighbour. I want to walk down the streets every day and thank everyone. Port Coquitlam is truly a hometown.” jcleugh@tricitynews.com
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THE TRI-CITY NEWS IS A DIVISION OF LMP PUBLICATION LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, PUBLISHED AT 118-1680 BROADWAY ST., PORT COQUITLAM, B.C. V3C 2M8
INGRID RICE
OUR OPINION
Buck & bus stops
T
o make housing affordable, two things are in our future whether we like it or not: density and transit. But Coquitlam is thinking of going the other way, increasing density but also increasing parking requirements for townhouses and row homes from 1.5 stalls per unit to two, which some say would drive up housing prices. That is not the way to go. Instead, any new development should be near a bus stop or within walking distance of community services. That should be a requirement to make people’s lives without cars easier. Changing habits is tough but we’ve already done it before. Remember when we used to throw everything away? Then we were forced to recycle more. It was, and still is, a hassle, but the result is that Metro Vancouver waste has been cut in half in 10 years and we don’t have to ship our garbage to the U.S. Will people’s habits have to change? Yes. Will councillors get heck from people complaining about a lack of street parking? Yes. But the buck has to stop somewhere.
WHAT’S YOUR OPINION? VOTE AT tricitynews.com/opinion/poll
THIS WEEK’S QUESTION:
Do you support increased parking requirements for townhouses and row homes?
LAST WEEK’S QUESTION:
Would you like to see a commercial and residential development on the site of the Flavelle property?
RESULTS: YES 63% / NO 37%
PROVINCIAL POLITICS
Donations to BC Liberals are far from ‘grassroots’ M AS I SEE IT
DERMOD TRAVIS
Dermod Travis is the executive director of IntegrityBC. www.integritybc.ca @integritybc
NEWSROOM 604-472-3030 DELIVERY 604-472-3040 DISPLAY ADS 604-472-3020 CLASSIFIED ADS 604-630-3300 n
ere hours before the New York Times went to press with its look at the BC Liberal party’s ethical scorecard, the party chose to get its 2016 fundraising results out ahead of the storm — one last chance at political counter-spin, and what a marvel of spin it was. In a statement released on a Friday, the BC Liberals reported that individual donors had outnumbered corporate donors by a four-to-one margin in 2016, with 9,324 individuals and 1,876 corporations handing over cash. The party may want to check the auto-correct function on its computers because it seems to have arbitrarily replaced donations with donors. It would have been quite the year-to-year jump. Just the year before, the BC Liberals reported 2,084 individual and 1,124 corporate donors giving in excess of $250. The 2016 report posted to the party’s website has 15,941 donations but not from 15,941 unique donors. There are 7,582 donations for $100 or less in the ’16 report and 8,359 donations from $100.36 to $200,000. Party donations over $100 accounted for $11.7 million of the party’s $12.15 million total. Among the do-
TC
nors, the six-figure crowd. The party reported 15 six-figure cheques from 11 unique donors totalling $1.7 million, including Dennis — better known as Chip — Wilson of Lululemon fame, luxury car dealer MCL Motors, Arizona-based RPMG Holdings (Onni Construction) and Teck Resources. Their generosity wasn’t limited to the 15 cheques either. Ten of the 11 kicked in another $200,000 in smaller donations. Three others — including the New Car Dealers Association of BC and the Independent Contractors and Businesses Association — gave a total of $341,550. Effectively, 14 donors gave close to 20% of the party’s total haul. The donations for $100 or less would normally pass unnoticed, except for the big deal the party made of them just hours before that New York Times article. In its statement last week, the party boasted, “Since Christy Clark became party leader, we’ve made a focused effort to grow our base of grassroots donors, including individuals and small businesses.” The 2016 report includes 7,582 donations — from $5 to $100 — totalling $449,384 (for context, Wall Financial gave
$403,250 through four companies). But what a grassroots crowd it is. Canadian Forest Products Ltd. cut a cheque for $84.73, although its total donations came in at $63,285. London Drugs made a $98 contribution. The company donated $16,098 to the Liberals. The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers gave $50 as part of its $11,225 total. Gateway Casinos and Entertainment made three donations for less than $100 towards its $84,118 contribution. Gibsons/Sechelt Coin Laundry gave $100, possibly in loonies and quarters. To its credit, the BC Liberal party posted donors under $250 as well, which it’s not required to do under the legislation. Among them were the Britannia Mine Museum, the Boundary Family and the Port Theatre Society, all registered charities. The grassroots spin to the party’s statement may have seemed the way to go in light of the Times article, but when donations under $100 account for less than 3.7% of the party’s haul and 14 donors nearly 20%, you’re not really left with a warm and fuzzy grassroots feeling.
Shannon Mitchell PUBLISHER
TRI-CITY
NEWS
118-1680 Broadway St., Port Coquitlam, B.C. V3C 2M8 audited circulation: 52,692
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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.
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nization established to deal with acceptable journalistic practices and ethical behaviour. If you have concerns about editorial content, please contact editor@tricitynews.com or 604-472-3030. If you are not satisfied with the response and wish to file a formal complaint, visit the web site at mediacouncil.ca or call toll-free 1-844-877-1163 for additional information.
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CONTACT
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MENTAL HEALTH
One story of mental health The Editor, So Wednesday was Bell Let’s Talk Day to raise awareness about mental health and remove the stigma that surrounds mental illness. Many people changed their social media profiles to include a Let’s Talk background. But just as I don’t wear pink to talk about bullying, I won’t change my profile to talk about mental illness. Bullying and mental health are topics that we should be able to talk about anytime. Anyone who knows me knows I was bullied mercilessly as a kid, and those people close to me know I struggle on a daily basis with mental illness. Mental illness is insidious and it can creep up on you when you least expect it. It is also like the frog in a pot of water set to boil: If you don’t pay attention to the early warning signs, the next thing you know, you’re in a pot of boiling water and in trouble. My most recent bout of mental illness began in late 2014. Over a period of six
months, my fiancée and I had two miscarriages, one which I posted about and the other I did not because it was just too damn painful and I did not feel like I had anyone to talk to. Between dealing with the loss, struggling to pay my bills and get out of debt, struggling with my relationship with both my fiancée and my family, and a less-than-supportive work environment I found myself slipping further and further into depression. Over the years, I had become adept at putting on my game face, not letting people see how I was struggling in-
“Over the years, I had become adept at putting on my game face, not letting people see how I was struggling inside. When you are depressed, you tend to isolate yourself and not want to deal with things, and I was very good at hiding in plain sight.” Rob Bottos, a Coquitlam resident side. When you are depressed, you tend to isolate yourself and not want to deal with things, and I was very good at hiding in plain sight. My family tried to tell me I needed help and, like a drunk who is not ready to acknowledge he has a problem, I could not hear what they had to say. By the time my employer noticed I had a problem, it was far too late, and I finally had a meltdown at work last year,
coming close to losing my job. I could cast all the blame I wanted but, at the end of the day, I had to decide if I wanted to get better and what I was going to do about it. I went back to my family doctor and had the first conversation to start my road to recovery. Almost a year has passed since I had my meltdown. Am I feeling better? Yes. Am I “cured”? No, and to be honest,
I don’t think I ever will be. I suspect my depression will be my constant dark companion for the rest of my life. But as long as I keep an eye on it, it shouldn’t cause me too much grief. I know it will cause me trouble at times, and I may need to either pause or hit the reset button. What I won’t do is let it stop me from reaching my potential and trying to make a difference in the lives of my family, friends and community. So, if you’re feeling like no one understands, or that you’ll be judged, know that I understand and I will never judge you. There will be those who think that by divulging this, it could come back to bite me. I say bollocks to that and am owning my depression. It’s part of who I am and if people can’t accept that, too damn bad. Life is precious, and we can all make a difference. Don’t let depression take away all your possibilities. Rob Bottos, Coquitlam
COQUITLAM
Why no curling in Coq.?
The Editor, I was sitting in a Princeton restaurant gazing out the window and across the Hope-Princeton Highway at a building with a sign reading Princeton Curling Club. I was wondering why it is that a metropolis like Princeton, B.C. (population: 2,724) can afford to have its own curling building and club while I, who live in — and vote and pay taxes in — Coquitlam (population: 144,000) have been told by city council that if I want to continue curling (at age 71), I will have to join another municipality’s club because the current beautiful and quite new Coquitlam curling venue is going to be changed to something else. Question to the next pollsters who phone: “How did your candidate vote on the 2016 Coquitlam curling issue?” R. Miller, Coquitlam
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TRI-CITY BUSINESS
Easy Daysies still hot after Dragons’ touch Coquitlam mom’s biz has boomed, is back on TV SARAH PAYNE
The Tri-CiTy News
A Coquitlam woman who successfully took on the fearsome Dragons’ Den panel in 2011 will be back on TV next week for an update about the success of her product, Easy Daysies. Elaine Comeau launched the magnetic schedules for kids from her kitchen table in 2008 and saw the business grow quickly through word of mouth. It was at a Toronto trade show that a retailer suggested Comeau appeal to the Dragons for help, and with her kitchen overtaken with products and shipping materials, Comeau took the leap. “I was extremely nervous,” Comeau said of the day she entered the studio with her husband and three children. But the Dragons were both impressed and delighted by Comeau’s pitch (it’s listed in the show’s Top 10 most heartwarming pitches) and fell into a rare bidding war for a piece of Easy Daysies. A former elementary school teacher, Comeau was inspired to create Easy Daysies after making similar visual schedules for parents for nearly a decade. She had a hunch that the parents’ demand must mean there was a market for the product — and she was right. “Children intrinsically want to know what’s happening next,” Comeau said, and having a visual schedule allows even preschool-aged children to prepare for the upcoming transition to the next activity with less anxiety, fewer tantrums and a lot more co-operation. As well, the process of moving each magnet from the “To Do” list over to the “Done” side gives children the same gratifying lift adults feel when they cross items off to-do lists. Kids learn the confidence-boosting rewards of accomplishing their responsibilities, as opposed to being bribed with a candy or toy to complete a task. “My goal is to make kids love learning,” Comeau said. “It’s teaching children a life skill.” Easy Daysies schedules are designed to hold up to about six to eight task magnets — any more would be too overwhelming for most children, Comeau said. The light blue colour of the magnets was chosen after Comeau researched scientific studies showing it was the most calming colour for youngsters. And while the starter kit includes most of the magnets a family would need — covering everything from morning routines to setting the dinner table — add-on kits are available for help with potty training, after-school sports and other activities.
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RON COMEAU PHOTOS
Elaine Comeau (above) tapes an interview for a follow-up segment on Dragon’s Den about the success of the product she created for parents, Easy Daysies.
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website design to build the Easy Daysies site, and said despite a few ups and downs over the past several years, it all comes down to staying honest and authentic — even if it means cancelling a long-awaited introductory call with Staples because it conflicted with her son’s Grade 1 concert. And the feedback from parents that means the world to her. “What keeps me going is the emails, from a mom of three kids with autism under the age of seven who said, ‘I am so thankful, I don’t have to talk, talk, talk,’” Comeau said through tears; from the foster parents who said Easy Daysies brought a new sense of calm to their household: and from the mother of a non-verbal child who uses the magnets as her words. “It’s a lot of work and a lot of learning as we go,” Comeau said, adding with a laugh, “and I haven’t slept in about five years.” • The latest update on Easy Daysies airs on CBC’s Dragons’ Den on Feb. 1 at 8 p.m. Visit www.cbc.ca/dragonsden or www.easydaysies.com for more info. spayne@tricitynews.com @spayneTC
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A16 FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS
WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
a wedding guide
DIANE STRANDBERG/THE TRI-CITY NEWS
A replacement for Coquitlam’s Banting middle school is one step closer after the School Board awarded the contract this week to Yellowridge Construction Ltd.
SCHOOL DISTRICT 43
$18.8M work on new Banting to start soon Construction will start soon on rebuilding Banting middle school, after School District 43 awarded the $18.8-million project to Yellowridge Construction Ltd. The replacement school will meet LEED (Leadership in Environmental Design) Gold standards for water management and efficiency, energy efficiency, reuse of building materials and natural light and ventilation. A video rendering shows a two-storey building with a large open hallway at the front entrance.
In addition, there will be 19 general instruction classrooms plus additional classrooms for music and healthy living, plus a technical education shop, a gym, combined library and computer space, a multi-purpose room, and special education spaces. It is being built for 550 students. The cost of the seismic replacement project is $22.5 million and will include a Neighbourhood Learning Centre. After construction is complete, the original school, built in 1963, will be torn down.
As well, SD43 has agreed to negotiate with the city of Coquitlam for a deal to hand over a strip of land along the south and east sides of Leigh elementary school. The city needs the land to make road, sidewalk and lighting improvements on Victoria Drive, considered a benefit by members of the public who provided feedback. Hazardous trees will also be removed and replaced with healthy trees to make the school play area safer. dstrandberg@tricitynews.com @dstrandbergTC
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Happy Lunar New Year! Gong Xi Fa Cai!
靈猴騰躍辭舊歲 金雞報曉迎新春
Selina Robinson, MLA Coquitlam - Maillardville selina.robinson.mla@leg.bc.ca www.selinarobinson.ca
Mike Farnworth, MLA
Jodie Wickens, MLA
Fin Donnelly, MP
Port Coquitlam mike.farnworth.mla@leg.bc.ca www.mikefarnworthmla.ca
Coquitlam - Burke Mountain jodie.wickens.mla@leg.bc.ca www.jodiewickens.ca
fin.donnelly@parl.gc.ca www.FinDonnelly.ca
Port Moody - Coquitlam
TRI-CITY NEWS FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, A17
COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
Soy Sauce Chicken Leg
HAPPY CHINESE NEW YEAR
(3 pcs)
New Pacific Supermarket
豉油皇大雞腿 (三隻)
$
Effective from Jan. 27-30, 2017
Live Dungeness Crab Large (2LB and up)
Headless 26/30
芥蘭苗
特大蜜柚
士多啤梨(草莓) - 兩磅裝
/EA. /EA.
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Honey Pomelo
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5.99
冰鮮去頭老虎蝦 26/30
生猛游水大肉蟹 (每隻兩磅或以上)
綠葉生菜 (唐生菜)
Knorr Chicken Broth Mix 150g
李錦記特級鮮味生抽
家樂牌雞粉
$
/BAG
Fei Ying Fried Dace w/salted Black Bean 184g 飛鷹牌豆豉鯪魚 $
3.59
2 for$3.99 Searay Red Big Eye Fish 海威大眼雞魚(去肚)
3.99
$
/LB.
2.19
$
/EA.
Danisa Butter Cookies 丹麥皇冠牛油曲奇罐裝
$
5.29 -$10.99 /EA.
/EA.
Superior 5 Spice Flav Pressed Tofu 350g
頂好五香豆乾
2.39
$
/EA.
Searay Clam Meat 300g 海威靚蜆肉
2.99
$
/EA.
$
4.59 /LB.
Aming Shanghai Bean Sauce (Red) 500g 阿民上海南乳
3.29 /EA.
Mandar Mandarin in Egg T Tofu ofu T Tube ube 245g 中華玉子豆腐
2 for$2.99
1.59 /EA.
Superior Stew Style Deep Fried Tofu Searay Cuttlefish Whole (Cleaned) 海威大墨魚
350g
頂好紅燒豆腐
5.69
2.59
$
$
/EA.
Premium Boneless Beef Short Rib-Whole 特級雪花肥牛-原塊
6.99
$
/LB.
/LB.
Pork Chop 豬扒
2.99
$
Lar Largest gest Selection of Locally Gr Grown own Vegetables From Our Own Farm! 604.552.6108
$
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375g-908g
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1.99
5.99
/LB.
Glen Dr
Northern Ave COQUITLAM CENTRE
Unit 1056, 1163 Pinetree Way, Coquitlam
(Located in Henderson Mall)
Offers valid from Jan. 27-30, 2017. Quantities and /or selection of items may be limited and may not be available in store, no rain check or substitution. Advertised prices and product selection may vary by store, New Pacific Supermarket reserves the right to limit quantities, descriptions take precedence over photos. We reserve the right to correct any unintentional errors that may occur in the copy or illustrations.
An
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11.99
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LKK Premium Soy Sauce - 500ml
北大荒東北珍珠米
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/LB.
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Pork Baby Back Ribs
Beef Shank Silver Meat
ay
1.99
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$
Pin e
6.8KG
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上海白菜苗
$
2 for$5.00
2.99
Green Leaf Lettuce
/LB.
Beidahuang Short Grain Rice
$
/LB.
Shanghai Bok Choy Sprout
8.88
$
8.88
The High St
$
A18 FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS
TC WEEKEND
WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
CONTACT
email: spayne@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3032 www.tricitynews.com/community
THINGS-TO-DO GUIDE: JAN. 27 – 29
From the New Year to Burns’ day, there’s much to celebrate SARAH PAYNE
THE TRI-CITY NEWS
Enjoy some fun festivities — ring in the Chinese Year of the Rooster and bring out your inner Scot for a Robbie Burns party — or take it easy with some great music performances.
Friday, Jan. 27 COFFEEHOUSE SHOW
Enjoy an evening of indie/roots music at the Crossroads Hospice Coffeehouse concert when John Hough and Willy Blizzard perform at the Gathering Place at Leigh Square in PoCo. The trio has been touring across Canada with a slate of original music, and will be paying tribute to Hough’s friend and Crossroads volunteer Doug Rolling at the 7 p.m. show.
HOME ICE
The Coquitlam Express are at the Poirier Sport & Leisure Complex tonight for a home game against the Chilliwack Chiefs. It’s also BC Lions night, where fans can enjoy a meet and greet with BC Lions alumni and current players as well. Puck drop is at 7 p.m.; visit www.coquitlamexpress.ca for more information.
MAIL ON STAGE
The Arts Club Theatre Company’s The (Post) Mistress is a quirky one-woman show about a small-town postal worker. The charismatic figure knows everyone’s business and revels in a chance to share her intel with others, but the kick comes when her own story is revealed in a surprising twist. Shows are at the Evergreen Cultural Centre tonight at 8 p.m. and Saturday at 3 and 8 p.m. Tickets are $42/$34/$15 at www.evergreenculturalcentre.ca or 604-927-6555.
Saturday, Jan. 28
The renowned Canadian Guitar Quartet plays at the Evergreen Cultural Centre Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
HAPPY NEW YEAR
concert at Place des Arts. The Scottish-inspired supper begins at 6 p.m., which should whet your appetite for a performance by Rosie Carver and the Celtic band Blackthorn, with a special focus on Burns’ songs, at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $41 (dinner and concert) or $21/$16 for the concert only, at www.brownpapertickets.com.
ART AND THE GREAT WAR
Sunday, Jan. 29
Welcome the Year of the Rooster, and celebrate Chinese New Year, at Henderson Place Mall in Coquitlam from noon to 4 p.m. The celebration includes hourly lucky draws, a kids’ corner, performances and exhibit booths. Join speaker Markus Fahrner for a discussion on the role of art during the Great War at the Port Moody Station Museum. Reserve a seat for the free event at 1 p.m. by contacting the museum at 604-939-1648 or info@portmoodymuseum.org
HAGGIS, SCOTCH & BAGPIPES
Celebrate the legend that is Robbie Burns with a dinner and
604-419-8888 gffg.com/RRSP
Investment and saving specials on now
GOLDEN MOMENTS
The Port Moody Art Association celebrates its 50th anniversary with an exhibit that chronicles the history and growth of the club, featuring works from more than half the club’s 100 members at the Golden Moments show at the PoMo Arts Centre to Feb. 23.
SUBMITTED P HOTO
GUITAR GREATS
The Canadian Guitar Quartet has played prestigious gigs across the country and around the world, and tonight they’ll be strumming at the Evergreen Cultural Centre. Audiences have been wowed by this foursome’s mix of original and classical masterpieces, so don’t miss this chance to hear some epic guitar. Tickets are $37/$32/$16 at evergreenculturalcentre.ca or 604-927-6555.
YOUR EVENT
Please send your Things-To-Do Guide events to spayne@tricitynews.com.
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TRI-CITY NEWS FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, A19
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TRI-CITY NEWS FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, A21
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TC SPOTLIGHT
FOR YOUR LEGAL NEEDS, DBM HAS YOU COVERED
Please send your information and photos for inclusion on our TC Spotlight page to jcleugh@tricitynews.com
GOOD ADVICE, GOOD LAW, GOOD PEOPLE.
dbmlaw.ca
EQUITY ON BOARD
Staff at the Poirier branch of the Coquitlam Public Library opened a new reading lounge last week, a 675 sq. ft. space that includes a digital newspaper station. The branch also has a new remote printing site and self-checkout.
FULL BARREL FROTHS A FIRST AT FESTIVAL
SHHHH.... QUIET IN THE NEW READING ROOM
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Port Moody Rotarians Trudy Gallant, Michael Poznanski and Patty Klassen gave $10,000 to Eagle Ridge Manor this month to care for the elderly residents at the Port Moody extended care, which is on the Eagle Ridge Hospital site.
ROTARY GIVES $ FOR ERH MANOR CARE
Full Barrel Homebrew Club clinched Best Amateur Beer at the Tri-Cities Cask Festival Winter 2017 Pro-Am Sunday. Hundreds of hopheads were in Coquitlam where Fuggles and Warlock Craftworks took Best Pro and Best of Show.
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Markus Masaites won the national gold medal for having the highest mark in Canada on his ARCT diploma exam last year. Now, the Grade 12 student at Coquitlam’s Dr. Charles Best secondary is preparing for a round of recitals to showcase his talent, including a concert on March 5 at the Shadbolt Centre for the Arts in Burnaby. A piano student of Jean Brown of the Jean Lyons School of Music, Masaites was a CDMF Performing Arts Festival rep in 2015 where he placed first in the intermediate division. That summer, he studied under John Perry, Stéphan Lemelin and David Moroz at the Morningside Music Bridge. Last year, Masaites also placed first as a CDMF rep in the senior division and was in the Courtenay Youth Music Confederation summer program where he was taught by Corey Hamm, a soloist and chamber musician. Masaites also was a Coquitlam Registered Music Teachers’ rep at the BC Provincial Piano Competition, which qualified him to compete in the Canadian Federation of Music Teachers Association national piano competition this March in Baltimore; the contest is being judged by Leon Fleisher. “Markus is diligent and dedicated in his objective to further develop his musical abilities,” Brown wrote in an email to The Tri-City News. “This will help him pursue a career in both piano performance and teaching.” Tickets for his March 5 show at 3 p.m. are $15/$10 by calling 604-291-6864.
Coquitlam-Port Coquitlam Liberal MP Ron McKinnon handed members of the 4th Port Coquitlam Scout group with the Scouts Canada new Commemorative Canada 150th badge. Youth leader Brandon Hodge was at the event.
A NEW CANADA 150 BADGE FOR TC SCOUTS
NICK NICHOLSON PHOTOGRAPHY
PIANO MAN
CRAIG HODGE
Kareem Allam was this month named to the board of directors for Fraser Health, which serves the Tri-Cities. Allam the vice president of corporate development at Monark Group, a private equity firm based in Surrey. Previously, he was the director of strategic initiatives for Civeo, an NYSE-listed workforce logistics and construction company serving the resource sector in Canada, the United States and Australia. Before joining Civeo, Allam supported public policy development and public engagement with communities, government and First Nations on large capital projects for TransCanada Pipelines, Britco, the Vancouver Board of Trade and FortisBC. “Kareem’s extensive background in collaborating with multiple stakeholders to deliver results will be of tremendous benefit to him in his new role on the Fraser Health board of directors as they continue their pursuit of sustainable, cost-effective and quality patient care,” said BC Health Minister Terry Lake, who appointed Allam, in a news release.
NEW BOOK
GRADE 12 TALENT
Nearly 100 people were at the Art Gallery at Evergreen on Sunday to mark the 20th year of Emerging Talent, the School District 43 showcase of Grade 12 artwork. The new exhibit features paintings, drawings, digital renderings, photography and sculptures from some 70 young artists — many of whom are now applying to attend art schools in September. Among the guests in attendance were Jon-Paul Walden, executive director of the Evergreen Cultural Centre, and Melanie Stokes, a visual arts teacher at Gleneagle secondary. Please email Spotlight press releases and photos to jcleugh@tricitynews.com
Coquitlam RCMP staff — including Supt. Sean Maloney (left) — sent a message via Twitter on Wednesday as part of Bell’s Let’s Talk Day social media campaign to help end the stigma surrounding mental illness.
RCMP MESSAGES ABOUT MENTAL HEALTH
Port Coquitlam Mayor — and Metro Vancouver board of directors’ chair — Greg Moore welcomed Gunn Kim, consul general of the Republic of Korea, at his office at PoCo city hall this week.
CONSUL GENERAL OF KOREA VISITS POCO
YOUR TRI-CITIES
WILLS, ESTATES AND TRUSTS TEAM Lewis Nguyen
Don A. Drysdale
Richard Rainey
Michele Y. Chow
CITY OF PORT COQUITLAM
COQUITLAM RCMP
A Port Coquitlam author will sign copies of her new book next month at Leigh Square Community Arts Village. Yabome Gilpin-Jackson recently published a short story collection titled identities, which is available at Chapters Coquitlam and via amazon.ca. The reading and book signing takes place at the Gathering Place (beside PoCo city hall) on Feb. 11 from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. with entertainment by Yvonne Kushe and Adeyemi Taylor-Lewis. Gilpin-Jackson will also be at Chapters (2991 Lougheed Hwy., Coquitlam) on Feb. 18 from 1 to 3 p.m.
A22 FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS
WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
TRI-CITY LIBRARIES
Writing, culture & 3D BOOKS PLUS Books Plus runs in The TriCity News each Friday to highlight programs and happenings in the Tri-Cities’ three libraries: Coquitlam Public Library, Port Moody Public Library and Terry Fox Library in Port Coquitlam. • Bad Writing Workshop: Calling all writers. Create some truly awful writing with author Mark David Smith. On Saturday, Jan. 28 from 2 to 4 p.m., youths 11 to 16 years old can join him in the ParkLane Room and learn all the worst techniques and how to avoid them. Call 604-469-4577 to register. • Book party: Meet Clifford the Big Red Dog and all of your favourite storybook characters on Saturday, Jan. 28 from 2 to 4 p.m. at PMPL. Celebrate Family Literacy Day by reading, playing, crafting and having fun together. Travel to Paris with Madeline, let the Pigeon drive the bus, dress Pete the Cat, and more! All ages welcome at this drop-in program. • Tech Café: Get free, oneon-one help with your basic computer questions. Drop in to the ParkLane Room on Fridays between 4:30 and 6 p.m. or book at appointment
COQUITLAM
• Book a Librarian: Librarians can help answer your computer and technology questions. Book an appointment to ask about internet searches, email, eBooks, tablets, social media, etc., or get help practising your skills. If you have questions about your tablet or eReader, bring the device with you. To book an appointment, call 604-9374141 or email askalibrarian@ coqlibrary.ca. When emailing, indicate at least two times you are available and whether you would like to have the session at Poirier or City Centre branch. • Innovation Hub at City Centre: Head to the City Centre branch (1169 Pinetree Way) and use the 3D printers, scanners and high-powered creative software to bring your innovative ideas to life. Open houses are being held on
Thursdays, 2 to 4 p.m. To make an appointment, call 604-5547323 or email askalibrarian@ coqlibrary.ca. Children under 14 years old must be accompanied by an adult. For more information about any of these programs, visit www.coqlibrary.ca. The City Centre branch is located at 1169 Pinetree Way and the Poirier branch at 575 Poirier St.
TERRY FOX
• Learn About Series: Canadian Culture & You: Are you a newcomer who wants to learn more about Canadian culture? Join librarians for a series of programs presented by the Adult Literacy and ESL Working Group. “Social Events and Gift Giving” is the latest topic in this series. It’s set for Tuesday, Feb. 7, 7 to 8:30 p.m. at Fox, and covers parties and celebrations, which are fun but can be stressful. Learn about weddings and funerals, birthday parties and gifts. RSVP to the tricitiesliteracy@ gmail.com so we there are enough coffee and cookies for everyone. Registration is required. For more information, visit www.fvrl.bc.ca or the Fraser Valley Regional Library Facebook page. Terry Fox Library is located 2470 Mary Hill Rd. in PoCo. Phone 604927-7999.
ÉDITION
MARCH
3,4 5 ET
201 2017 7
PORT MOODY
to guarantee a spot by calling 604-469-4577. Friendly and knowledgeable teen volunteers can help you with a variety of technology basics such as email, smartphones, texting, Microsoft Office and more. For more information, visit library.portmoody.ca or call 604-469-4577. Port Moody Public Library is located at 100 Newport Dr., in the city hall complex.
Maillardville’s Maillardville’s Music Festival Festival 28e
MARS
PARC PARC MACKIN COQUITLAM COQUITLAM GET YOUR FRENCH CANADIAN ON ! or RAIN
#QUÉBÉCOIS-CELTIC-WORLD-FOLK-MUSIC
SHINE!
www.festivaldubois.ca IKEA Coquitlam
7th Annual
HOSTED BY SOROPTIMIST INTERNATIONAL OF THE TRI-CITIES
Saturday, February 18th, 2017 Westwood Plateau Golf & Country Club 3251 Plateau Blvd, Coquitlam, BC Cocktail Reception 6:15 pm Awards Presentation 7:00 pm Tickets $65 if purchased by Jan 28th, $70 after Web: soroptimisttricities.org Email: sitricities@soroptimist.net
HIGHLIGHTS • Silent Auction - Live Auction • Entertainment - Hot Club of PoCo • Raffle - Two tickets to anywhere WestJet flies BC Gaming License #90213
PRESENTATION OF ANNUAL AWARDS TO WOMEN IN THE COMMUNITY • Live Your Dream Award • Give Her Wings Award • Bea Kelly Volunteer Award • Ruby Award
PLATINUM SPONSORS:
RUBY SPONSORS:
GOLD AND SILVER SPONSORS: Wilson Pharmacy • Hard Rock Casino • Woody’s Pub • Westwood Honda • Raise the Funds • Valley Laser Eye Centre • Nufloors • Canadian Tire • MNP
Media Sponsor:
TRI-CITY NEWS FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, A23
COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
TC Good, sustainable community SUSTAINABILITY
CALENDAR
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 1
LIVING GREEN
MELISSA CHAUN
W
hen I studied in SFU’s certificate program in sustainable community development, I quickly learned that I couldn’t advocate for environmental sustainability on its own. Without a vibrant local economy and healthy sociocultural infrastructure, true sustainability cannot exist. Social sustainability is generally defined as the ability of a social system (for example, a country or region) to function at a defined level of social well-being (quality of life) indefinitely. The challenge is agreeing to what that quality of life should entail. Without venturing into a debate, I believe most would agree that social well-being depends on healthy relationships. Life is enhanced by community. A couple of years ago, I was introduced to works by pastor/teacher James Bryan
Smith. The final book in his trilogy, The Good and Beautiful Community, addresses our collective need for social connectedness. Smith writes that the good and beautiful community creates an ethos in which people are encouraged to undertake specific activities on a regular basis in order to become the people we were created to be. Ideally, each of us engages in growth-producing activities — from time alone (in meditation/prayer) to making friends with people outside our comfort zone, to meeting regularly with an encouragement/accountability partner. There is joy in connecting deeply with and serving others. To live with intention can bring fulfilment, and by encouraging one another, we can flourish as compassionate productive beings. We need encouraging when we lose sight or strength to keep fighting the good fight. We need others who can see our gifts more clearly, who can remind us that we are loved and are making a difference. I am blessed to have caring and wise “elders” in my community who have given me guidance, shared knowledge, challenged my assumptions and, most of all, been beautiful models of selfless service.
Moving beyond our comfort zone (e.g., the workplace) can bring about personal as well as professional growth in unexpected and astonishing ways. Some examples: • Building community: For those with young children, there’s no time like the present. Families can get involved with environmental activities, soup kitchens and fundraisers for those in need. The younger we are exposed to community service, the more likely we will continue to be involved when we’re older. • Turning a personal tragedy/challenge into a life calling: A well-respected community leader has been dedicating his time and talents to hospice over the years. Having lost a loved one too early in life, he recognized the need for a place of comfort and respite to be accessible to all. Another friend, confronted by disabilities that could have kept her housebound, has used her personal triumphs to empower others who face similar challenges. Using her voice and garnered wisdom, she spreads both awareness and positive change in her community. • Sharing our skills and unique gifts: Another retired friend of mine with the gift of teaching has gone from helping new immigrants learn
English to helping a Serbian teenager — and her dedication to helping this young refugee inspires me. • Supporting the vulnerable: Social connectedness is paramount for those in our community struggling with poverty, foster care, aging, mobility issues, mental health, substance addictions, incarceration, homelessness, declining industries, transient (often resource-based) work and long commutes. CBC Radio recently aired a program featuring individuals who endure exhausting commutes, often to jobs with minimal wages. If we’re serious about breaking the cycle of poverty, the argument to build complete, inclusive (walkable) communities that offer meaningful work and a liveable wage is powerful. As we embrace this new year, let’s encourage one another to build community through active loving service. It’s not only good for our soul; it’s essential to healthy sustainable living. Melissa Chaun of Port Moody is an ecologist with a passion for all things sustainable. She is events co-ordinator with the Rivershed Society of BC, volunteers on various city committees and coordinates the monthly meetings for Tri-City Greendrinks. Her column runs monthly.
• Hyde Creek Watershed Society monthly meeting, 7:15 p.m., 3636 Coast Meridian Rd., PoCo. The public is invited to attend, tour the facility and see what projects society members are undertaking. As well, the society is looking for volunteers interested in helping occasionally with education school tours, and to assist with day-to-day operations. Info: www.hydecreek.org or email at hcws.info@gmail.com.
THURSDAY, FEB. 2 • Terry Fox secondary (1260 Riverwood Gate, PoCo) is hosting a nationwide Innovation150 science tour, Power of Ideas, spearheaded by The Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics; it is a public open house, 4-9 p.m., with free admission. Info: www.csukainnovation.com.
SATURDAY, FEB. 4 • Tri-City Wordsmiths meeting, 2-4:30 p.m., Terry Fox Library, PoCo. Topic: “The Sound of Poetry: Have You Found Your Iambic Footing Yet?” will be presented by Christopher Levenson, an award-winning poet, critic, translator and editor who will show how the use of rhythm, verse movement, cadence and line length can underline and intensify a poem’s meaning. The meeting is free but library registration is required: 604927-7999. Info: pandorabee1@ gmail.com.
TUESDAY, FEB. 7 • Have you considered becoming a foster family? There are children and youth in the TriCities who require skilled, caring foster parents. To learn more,
the Ministry of Children and Family Development invites you to attend an information session, 6:30-8:30 p.m., 200-906 Roderick Ave., Coquitlam. Info: call North Fraser Recruitment Team, 604-764-8098. • Coquitlam prostate cancer support and awareness group monthly meeting, 7 p.m., Wilson Centre, PoCo. Speaker: Marcy Dayan, a physiotherapist, who will discuss how to handle incontinence caused by prostate cancer treatments. All those affected by prostate problems are urged to attend and share their concerns and experiences in a strictly confidential atmosphere. There is no charge but donations are welcome. Info: Craig, 604-928-9220 or Ken, 604-936-2998. • Coquitlam Needlearts Guild meets, noon-3 p.m., Come Lake United Church, 535 Marmont St., Coquitlam. Info: 604-5199997.
THURSDAY, FEB. 16 • Coquitlam Needlearts Guild meets, 7-9:30 p.m., Come Lake United Church, 535 Marmont St., Coquitlam. Info: 604-519-9997.
ONGOING • Crossroads Hospice Society meat draw is held Fridays, 3-6 p.m., Arms Pub, 3261 Coast Meridian Rd., PoCo. Info: 604945-0606 or info@crossroadshospice.org. • PoCo Heritage Museum and Archives, 150-2248 McAllister Ave., is open Monday-Thursday, 10 a.m.-6:30 p.m.; Friday. 9:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m.; and Saturday, 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Staff is available Tuesday-Saturday, noon-4 p.m.; volunteers may be on-site at other times. Info: 604-9278403 or www.pocoheritage.org.
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A24 FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS
WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
NEW HOME CONSTRUCTION
N
Vancouver Sets Record Year for New Housing Starts in 2016: CMHC
ew home construction starts saw a seasonal decline in December, but 2016 overall was a record year for housing starts, according to figures released by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) earlier this month. Housing starts in the Vancouver Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) were trending at 25,980 units in December compared with 27,455 units in November, said the CMHC. The trend is a sixmonth moving average of the monthly seasonally adjusted annual rates (SAAR) of housing starts. “Total housing starts trended lower in December, but were in line with the monthly average for 2016,” said Robyn Adamache, CMHC’s principal market analyst for Vancouver. “Starts in 2016 set a new record for the region that was bolstered by strong rental construction in the cities of Vancouver, New Westminster and Surrey.” Housing starts in the Abbotsford-Mission CMA in December were trending at 889 units, down from 970 units in November. The CMHC noted that this downward trend was spread evenly across
all home types. Nationwide, the housing starts trend measure across Canada was 198,053 units in December, slightly down from 200,105 units in November, reported the CMHC. The housing agency noted that Canada still counted more home starts in 2016 than 2015, with increased demand for single-family homes more than offsetting a national decline in multi-unit construction – “a decline that’s in response to efforts to manage current inventories,” added the report. CMHC uses six-month moving averages to account for considerable swings in monthly estimates and obtain a more complete picture of the state of the housing market. In some situations, said the CMHC, analyzing only the monthly seasonally adjusted data can be misleading in some markets, as they can be variable from one month to the next. Building Permits Metro Vancouver’s building permit values
bucked the national trend by surging ahead in November, according to Statistics Canada data, also released in mid-January. The Vancouver CMA issued $709 million worth of new home construction permits in November, said the federal statistics agency – a jump of nearly 40 per cent over an already-strong October, and more than 30 per cent higher than November 2015. The month-over-month rise was led by another slew of permits issued for new condo-apartment buildings, for which there were more than $503 million of permits issued in November, a 71 per cent leap over October’s values and up 41 per cent compared with the same month the previous year. The condo permit value was more than three times that of detached-house permits issued in November, which stood at $146 million. This was still a rise of nearly 12 per cent year over year and 20.3 per cent month over month. However, Vancouver’s townhouse and row home permit values saw a weaker month after a strong showing in October, dropping nearly 39 per
cent in November to $52.2 million. This was still a slight year-over-year rise of 1.1 per cent. Values of new duplex construction permits, which are highly fluctuating as they are a much smaller segment of the market, increased again in November to $3.4 million, up 49.3 per cent year over year and 28.6 per cent since September. The same trend was reflected across the province as a whole, with $962.7 million of home building permits issued in November. This is a rise of 34.2 per cent from the same month last year and 21.4 per cent compared with October. Across the country, however, building permit values slid in November after a record-breaking October, with the $4.4 billion total value a drop of 23.1 per cent month over month. The gains seen in BC and Quebec were not enough to offset monthly declines in nine provinces and territories, including Ontario (-12.1 per cent) and Alberta (-74 per cent). Despite this, the national total for November was still a 33 per cent rise over the value of permits issued in November 2015, with only Alberta reporting a year-over-year decline.
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A26 FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS
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TRI-CITY NEWS FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, A27
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PJHL
Panthers claw Surrey Knights in overtime But Cats can’t defeat Sockeyes on the road GARY MCKENNA
The Tri-CiTy News
ROBERT MCDONALD PHOTO
Port Moody Panthers forward Brayden Szabados carries the puck during a 3-2 win win over the Surrey Knights in overtime Saturday night. The Panthers will head to Mission this weekend before returning home for a bout against the Abbotsford Pilots at home on Feb. 4.
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The Port Moody Panthers clawed their way back from a 2-0 deficit to defeat the Surrey Knights in overtime at home Saturday night. After surrendering two power play goals in the second period — both scored by Surrey’s Kevin Kutasi — the Cats’ Stefano Centanni cut the vistior’s lead down to one with a goal before the second intermission. In the third period, Maximilian Corazza found the equalizer, forcing overtime where Chong Min Lee setup Corazza for the game winner. Corazza earned first star honours for his two-goal performance, while Chong Min Lee, who had two assists, was named third star of the game. Panthers goalie Laszlo Demeter turned away 27 of the 29 shots he faced, while Port Moody managed 56 shots in the game. Two nights earlier, the Cats struggled in a contest against the Richmond Sockeyes. After a scoreless first period, Richmond struck first early in the second with a goal from Arjun Badh, assisted by Austin Cook.
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MAXIMILIAN CORAZZA However, the Panthers quickly managed to equalize things with a marker from Christian Bettiol and the game was knotted at one goal each. Jeeven Sidhu broke the tie for the Sockeyes when he buried a pass from Brendan Marfleet before Lucas Stratford found the insurance marker before the end of the middle frame. Neither team managed a goal in the third period. With just fives games until the end of the regular season, the Port Moody Panthers currently find themselves in last place in the Tom Shaw Conference standings with a 15-23 record. The club will play Mission on the road this Saturday before retuning home next week for a meeting with the Abbotsford Pilots at the Port Moody Arena. For more information go to www.portmoodypanthers. com. sports@tricitynews.com
A28 FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS
WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
CURLING
Sanderson takes silver with Team Gushulak at Scotties curlers could not best Team Mallett, made up of skip Marla Mallett and sisters Brette Richards of Kelowna and Blaine DeJager of Prince George, the top seeded team in round-robin play who won a bye to the finals. Gushulak briefly held a 2-1 lead after the fourth end but the contest started slipping away in the sixth. After the final end was played, Mallett led 6-3. Mallett and Gushulak had been teammates in the 1990s, when they won the 1995 and 1997 B.C. titles.
ROBERT MCDONALD PHOTO
The Terry Fox Ravens defeated fellow Port Coquitlam high school the Riverside Rapids 78-52 last Friday in AAAA high school basketball.
AAAA BASKETBALL
T-wolves start with 4-0 record Pinetree squad takes down PoCo’s Terry Fox 75-59 GARY MCKENNA
The Tri-CiTy News
The new year has been good to the Pinetree secondary AAAA high school basketball team. The Timberwolves have jumped out to a strong 4-0 start in the regular season and are currently leading the Fraser Valley North division standings with a point differential of +60. Pinetree’s record puts them in elite company in the league, however most of the wins have come by beating up divisional opponents. The latest win came last week when the Coquitlam team easily overcame the Terry Fox Ravens in a 75-59
contest, upsetting the PoCo club’s perfect record. But the toughest win for the Timberwolves came at the hands of Port Moody’s Heritage Woods Kodiaks, which forced overtime in a match that Pinetree eventually won 99-97. The club also defeated Centennial 72-58 on Jan. 17 and Port Moody 86-58 on Jan. 10. PoCo’s Terry Fox managed to notch their first win at the expense fellow PoCo club the Riverside Rapids, which the Ravens defeated 78-52 during a road game. Fox is currently in second place with a 1-1 record. Centennial rounds out the top three of the Fraser Valley North division standings with a 1-1 record, while Port Moody is fourth with a 101 record but a smaller points-for total. sports@tricitynews.com @TriCityNews
PLEASE READ THE FINE PRINT: Offers valid until January 31, 2017. See toyota.ca for complete details. In the event of any discrepancy or inconsistency between Toyota prices, rates and/or other information contained on www.getyourtoyota.ca and that contained on toyota.ca, the latter shall prevail. Errors and omissions excepted. 1. Lease example: 2017 Corolla CE Automatic BURCEM-A MSRP is $18,005 and includes $1,615 freight/PDI and fees leased at 0.99% over 60 months with $525 down payment (after application of the $1,000 customer incentive), equals 260 weekly payments of $38 with a total lease obligation of $10,377 (after application of the $1,000 customer incentive). Applicable taxes are extra. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.07. 2. $1,000 customer incentives available on select 2017 Corolla models and can be combined with advertised lease rate. 3. Lease example: 2017 RAV4 LE FWD Automatic ZFREVT-B with a vehicle price of $29,330 includes $1,885 freight/ PDI and fees leased at 2.49% over 60 months with $1,550 down payment (after application of the $1,000 customer incentive), equals 260 weekly payments of $65 with a total lease obligation of $18,414 (after application of the $1,000 customer incentive). Applicable taxes are extra. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.10. 4. $1,000 incentive for cash customers is available on select 2017 RAV4 models and cannot be combined with advertised lease offer. 5. Lease example: 2017 Tundra 4x4 Double Cab SR 4.6L Automatic UM5F1T-A MSRP is $40,390 and includes $1,885 freight/PDI and fees leased at 2.49% / 60 months with $0 down payment, equals 260 weekly payments of $107 with a total lease obligation of $27,738. Applicable taxes are extra. Lease 60 mos. Based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $0.15. 6. Up to $2,000 incentive for cash customers is available on select 2017 Tundra models. 7. Customer incentives on 2017 Corolla and RAV4 models are valid until January 31, 2017. Incentives for cash customers on 2017 Corolla, RAV4 and Tundra models are valid until January 31, 2017 and may not be combined with Toyota Financial Services (TFS) lease or finance rates. If you would like to lease or finance at standard TFS rates (not the above special rates), then you may be able to take advantage of cash incentive offers by January 31, 2017. Cash incentives include taxes and are applied after taxes have been charged on the full amount of the negotiated price. See toyota.ca for complete details on all cash incentive offers. 8. Weekly lease offers available through Toyota Financial Services (TFS) on approved credit to qualified retail lease customers of new and demonstrator Toyota vehicles. Down payment and first weekly payment due at lease inception and next weekly payment due approximately 7 days later and weekly thereafter throughout the term. 9. ®Aeroplan miles: Earn 5000 Aeroplan miles. Miles offer valid on vehicles purchased/leased, registered and delivered between January 1 and January 31, 2017. Customers must be an Aeroplan Member prior to the completion of the transaction. Offer subject to change without notice. Some conditions apply. See Toyota.ca/aeroplan or your Dealer for details. ®Aeroplan and the Aeroplan logo are registered trademarks of Aimia Canada Inc. Visit your Toyota Dealer or www.getyourtoyota.ca for more details. Some conditions apply; offers are time limited and may change without notice. Dealer may lease/sell for less. Each specific model may not be available at each dealer at all times; factory order or dealer trade may be necessary.
Coquitlam curler Jessie Sanderson brought home a silver medal with Team Gushulak during the 2017 Scotties BC Women’s Curling Championship in Duncan, B.C., last weekend. The rink, made up of Royal City Curling Club members Diane Gushulak along with third Grace MacInnes of Langley and Sandra Comadina of Vancouver, made it to the finals after battling through a tiebreaker in the semifinals against Team Hudyma, who finished the tournament in third place. However, the Royal City
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Diane Gushulak gets ready to move the rock during the 2017 Scotties BC Women’s Curling Championship last weekend.
sports@tricitynews.com
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Brian Peter Beck
July 1, 1957 – January 30, 2008
We who loved you sadly miss you, As it dawns another year; In our lonely hours of thinking Thoughts of you are ever near. Miss you and love you lots, your sister Darlene & Tom
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MOHR, Paul Douglas It is with great sorrow that Paul’s family announces his sudden passing on January 3, 2017. Paul will be dearly missed by his beloved parents Don and Phyllis; brothers David and Peter (Susan); nieces and nephews Tammy, Barb, Christopher, Phillip, Kimberly, Kyle, and Ken; and several greatnieces and nephews. Also grieving his loss will be his extended family of uncles, aunts, cousins, and dear friends in B.C., Alberta, Ontario, and the USA. Friends and family are invited to come together to celebrate Paul’s life at the POCO Inn & Suites, 1545 Lougheed Highway, Port Coquitlam on Sunday, February 5 from 1-3 pm. In lieu of flowers, those wishing to do so may make a donation, in Paul’s name, to the charity of their choice.
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ADVERTISING POLICIES All advertising published in this newspaper is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services offered are accurately described and willingly sold to buyers at the advertised prices. Advertisers are aware of these conditions. Advertising that does not conform to these standards or that is deceptive or misleading, is never knowingly accepted. If any reader encounters non-compliance with these standards we ask that you inform the Publisher of this newspaper and The Advertising Standards Council of B.C. OMISSION AND ERROR: The publishers do not guarantee the insertion of a particular advertisement on a specified date, or at all, although every effort will be made to meet the wishes of the advertisers. Further, the publishers do not accept liability for any loss of damage caused by an error or inaccuracy in the printing of an advertisement beyond the amount paid for the space actually occupied by the portion of the advertisement in which the error occurred. Any corrections of changes will be made in the next available issue. The Tri-CityNews will be responsible for only one incorrect insertion with liability limited to that portion of the advertisement affected by the error. Request for adjustments or corrections on charges must be made within 30 days of the ad’s expiration. For best results please check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Refunds made only after 7 business days notice!
AUCTIONS
As you share the stories and the memories of how they lived their lives and how very much they meant, may you find comfort...
Technical Support/Help Desk Provide support to clients on our security key management systems. Troubleshoot problems in networked systems. Configure and test equipment. Knowledge of basic hand tools. Post Secondary education in technology field an as− set. Previous experience in a customer service/support en− vironment preferred. Full time/competitive salary/benefits
February 2nd, 2017 at 7:00 PM OBITUARIES
SPROTTSHAW.COM
EMPLOYMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
IN MEMORIAM
EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION
RESTAURAnT EQUIPmEnT AUCTIOn
Plus Contents of Pub / Bar Restaurant, 3 Bakeries & more
THURSDAY - FEBRUARY 2nD @ 11 Am Viewing Times: Wed - 9 am - 4:30 pm -and- Thurs. 9 am ‘til Auction Time
careers@timeaccessinc.com www.timeaccessinc.com
GENERAL EMPLOYMENT HIRING FOOD PRODUCT SAMPLERS!
Miss talking to PEOPLE? Need to get out of the HOUSE? NEED EXTRA MONEY?
BC’s largest demo company is hiring Product Samplers for 8-10 days a month throughout the Lower Mainland.
YOU ARE: • A reliable mature adult, senior or retiree, man or woman • A go-getter who loves people • Able to work on your own • Good at simple cooking • Bondable • Able to carry 20 lb. demo booth & supplies (provided) • Able to stand unaided 6-7 hrs. YOU CAN WORK: • Friday & Saturday or Saturday & Sunday (must be available each day), 11am – 6pm YOU HAVE: • English reading & writing • A car (a must) to carry supplies • Good grooming: no visible tats, studs or facial hair (men) • Food Safe (must be obtained) Training: in our Burnaby Office Pay: up to $12.50/hour
Call JMP Marketing 604-294-3424 or toll-free 1-800-991-1989, then press extension 21 HOME CARE HOME SUPPORT WANTED P/T. Stretching, Lifting, Clean. Call John • 604-944-0926
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GENERAL EMPLOYMENT
Is Seeking
FLAG PERSONS & LANE CLOSURE TECHS
• Must have reliable vehicle • Must be certified • $18.21 per hour for TCP $22.89 per hour for LCT • Full union benefits including Medical. VALLEY TRAFFIC SYSTEMS Apply in Person 9770-199A St, Langley or Email resume: jobapplication@valleytraffic.ca The Tri City News is looking for a Driver to deliver bundles to carriers in the Coquitlam area. Wednesdays and Fridays. Must have reliable van or the like. Please call 604-472-3040.
TRUTH IN ''EMPLOYMENT'' ADVERTISING Glacier Media Group makes every effort to ensure you are responding to a reputable and legitimate job opportunity. If you suspect that an ad to which you have responded is misleading, here are some hints to remember. Legitimate employers do not ask for money as part of the application process; do not send money; do not give any credit card information; or call a 900 number in order to respond to an employment ad. Job opportunity ads are salary based and do not require an investment. If you have responded to an ad which you believe to be misleading please call the Better Business Bureau at 604-682-2711, Monday to Friday, 9am - 3pm or email inquiries@bbbvan.org and they will investigate.
CARRIERS NEEDED
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The following routes are now available to deliver the News in the Tri City area.
LOVE’S AUCTIONEERS & APPRAISERS LTD. 2720 #5 Road, Richmond, B.C. 604-244-9350 For More Details & photos: www.lovesauctions.com
Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes
legacy.com/obituaries/tricitynews
Hot Spot For Sale
604.630.3300
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1221-1286 Gateway Pl, 2309-2438 Kensington Cres, 1215-1266 Kensington Pl, 1217-1265 Knights Crt, 2306-2378 Nottingham Pl. 9207 3220-3590 Cedar Dr (even), 3313-3422 Fir St, 819-899 Hemlock Cres, 3351-3398 Hemlock Cres, 3464 Inverness St, 781-881 Pinemont Ave, 771-879 Wright Ave. 8753 3451-3458 Burke Village Prom 6001 100-170 Brookside Dr. 9001 1258-1314 Bradshaw St., 1804-1939 Jacana Ave., 1261-1341 Pitt River Rd. (odd), 1812-1956 Yukon Ave 6009 122-220 Douglas St, 115-165 Elgin St, 2304-2336 Henry Street, 220-2350 Hope Street, 2201-2339 St.George Street, 2201-2331 St.Johns Street. 9896 1486 Johnson Street 9025 910-983 Fort Fraser Rise If you are interested in delivering the papers, please call Circulation 604-472-3040 Other routes not listed may be available, please contact our office
A30 FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS
WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM BUSINESS SERVICES
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GENERAL EMPLOYMENT NOW HIRING MULTIPLE POSITIONS Construction Labourers $13+ • Skilled Labourers $17 Cleaners/Janitors $12+ • Carpenters $22-30 OFA $20 • CS0 $22+ • TCP $17 JOBS LOCATED ALL OVER METRO VANCOUVER
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RENTALS
Safeway extra Burquitlam 580 CLARKE ROAD, COQUITLAM, BC
2.4 Acres Urban Reserve Thornehill • Maple Ridge 1.289m Future single family subdivision. Close to development. 2 story 4 BR home. BY OWNER Byron • (604) 761-6935
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PORT COQUITLAM 2 bdrm corner suite $1,050 Includes heat/hot water - 1.5 blks to bus stops - 2 blks to Safeway/medical - City park across street - Gated parking & elevator - Adult oriented building - References required * SORRY NO DOGS * Call for appointment 604-464-3550
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ALL SMALL BREED PUPS Local, Non-Shedding and Vet Checked. 604-590-3727 www.puppiesfishcritters.com
Seaview Montessori We’re growing! A second preschool class is now open from 9AM − 12PM. Located at 1215 Cecile Drive, Port Moody. 604−765−4022 seaviewmontessori@shaw.ca
Hi-Rise Apartment with River View & Indoor Pool. 1 BR & 2 BR Available. Rent includes heat & hot water. Remodeled Building and Common area. Gated underground parking available. References required.
CALL 604 525-2122
BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES
TODAY'S PUZZLE ANSWERS
TOWNHOUSES FOR RENT
VILLA MARGARETA
320-9th St, New West Suites Available. All suites have balconies, Underground parking avail. Refs. req. Small Pet OK. CALL 604-715-7764 BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES
POCO Lrg 2 BR ste, newly reno’d, sh’d laundry. $1100 incls utls. NS/NP. Avail now. 604-945-4212, 778-874-9172
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604.492.0717
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sq ft, ground floor commercial area. Facing onto city park. 2 blocks from Lougheed/ Shaughnessy intersection. Call 604.464.3550
HOME SERVICES
APPLIANCE REPAIRS POCO APPLIANCE MART 604 942-4999 • Servicing ALL Makes of Appliances & Refrigeration. Work Guar’teed
CONCRETE HERFORT CONCRETE
NO JOB TOO small! Serving Lower Mainland 26 Yrs! •Prepare •Form •Place •Finish •Granite/Interlock Block Walls & Bricks •Driveways •Stairs •Exposed Aggregate •Stamped Concrete •Sod Placement Excellent Refs•WCB Insured 604-657-2375/604-462-8620 DALL’ANTONIA CONCRETE Seniors discount. Friendly, family business, 40+ yrs. 604-240-3408
.
Call Mark at
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www.disposalking.com
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604 720 0931 BrothersMoving.ca
604 720 0931 ABE MOVING & Delivery & Rubbish Removal $30/HR per Person• 24/7. 604-999-6020
PAINTING/ WALLPAPER PAY-LESS Pro Painting WINTER Interior SPECIAL LOOK for our YARD SIGNS Free estimates. Licensed BBB A+ Rating for 37yrs. Power Washing. Insured. Call 24Hrs/7 Days Scott 604-891-9967 paylesspropainting.com .
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Call 604-240-7594 Craig 604-942-5591
D&M PAINTING
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HANDYMAN 7 days a week $45 per hour. 604-401-8794 www.differenthandyman.ca HANDYMAN. Renos. in Tri City area Free est. Mike 604-710-1871
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PAINTSPECIAL.COM
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SPECIAL WINTER PAINTING DISCOuNT INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Residential & Commercial
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17 years exp. Free Estimates
ELECTRICAL
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604-358-6133
.
Electrical Installations Renos & Repairs. BBB Member.
www.nrgelectric.ca
SUITES FOR RENT
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10576
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HOME SERVICES
RENTALS
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Can-Pro Paint and Drywall Over 30 years of quality service
THE REAL DEAL
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Give us a Call.We’reTough to Beat!
Insured • Free Estimates COMPETITIVE WATER DAMAGE EXTERIOR PRICING SOLUTIONS
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TRI-CITY NEWS FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, A31
COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
SUDOKU
HOME SERVICES PATIOS
RENOS & HOME IMPROVEMENT
RUBBISH REMOVAL
TREE SERVICES
Always Reddy Rubbish Removal • Respectful • Reliable & • Responsible. All Rubbish, Junk & Recycling. Winter Clean-up. Affordable. Johnson• 778-999-2803 .
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www.PatioCoverVancouver.com
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NORM 604-841-1855
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treebrotherspecialists.ca
TREE SERVICES
DISPOSAL BINS starting at $229 plus dump fees. Call Disposal King 604-306-8599
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ROOFING
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TREE BROTHERS
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PLUMBING
GREEN TREE
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Call to advertise in
“Your Complete Sundeck Specialists”
Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a Sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes.
Home Services 604.630.3300
PUZZLE ANSWERS ON SEPARATE PAGE
AUTOMOTIVE
• Vinyl Waterproofing • Deck Rebuilds • Custom Built Railings • Patio Covers
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
778.285.2107
SCRAP CAR & TRUCK REMOVAL
THE SCRAPPER CASH FOR ALL VEHICLES
604-790-3900 OUR SERVIC 2H
E
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Call Jag at:
778-892-1530
All Season Roofing
Re-Roofing & Repairs Specialists 20 Year Labour Warranty Available
604-591-3500
GL Roofing & Repairs. New Roof, Clean Gutters $80. info@ glroofing.ca • 604-240-5362
New Year, New Look Refer to the Home Services section for all your home improvement, decorating, and design needs.
handymanconnection.com
TOTAL RENOVATION Repair, Replace, Remodel, Kitchen, Bath, Basement Suites, Drywall, Paint, Texture, Patches, Flooring, Moulding’s & more.
778-837-0771 Dan
ACROSS
Roofing Expert 778-230-5717 Repairs/re-roof/new roofs. All work guaranteed. Frank
tricitynews.adperfect.com
1. Newts 5. Taxis 9. Ski down these 11. Solace 13. Thieves of the sea 15. Diacritical mark 16. Frost 17. Enmities 19. Furnace for baking 21. Founder of female institute 22. Eight 23. Earl Grey and chamomile are two
DOWN
1. Call forth 2. Front legs 3. Third-party access 4. Hairlike structure 5. Ghanaian money 6. Settled down 7. Ill-natured 8. Choose 9. Mountain in the Slovenian Alps 10. Samsung laptops 11. Inquire into 12. Not slow 14. Thailand
25. Messenger ribonucleic acid 26. Dull, unproductive pattern of behavior 27. A large and hurried swallow 29. Large nests 31. A way to choose 33. Grocery store 34. Drains 36. Hawaiian wreath 38. Where fish live 39. Get rid of 41. Beyond, transcending
43. Uncastrated male sheep 44. Asserts 46. Snoopy and Rin Tin Tin are two 48. Windy City footballer 52. Green veggie 53. Director 54. Conditioning 56. Spoke foolishly 57. Legislative body 58. Square measures 59. Cheek
15. Front of the eye 18. Kentucky town 41549 20. Extreme disgust 24. Not fast 26. Smelled bad 28. Portended 30. Leader 32. Comedian Noah 34. Course 35. Sloven 37. Perfect places 38. A vast desert in N. Africa
40. Monetary unit of Angola 42. Clerks 43. Canadian law enforcers 45. Without (French) 47. Having wisdom that comes with age 49. Delicacy (archaic) 50. Grows older 51. Bitterly regrets 55. It’s present in all living cells (abbr.)
A32 FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2017, TRI-CITY NEWS
0* O
TR PR N SA A OV O N IN V $1 E SFE CIA 3, UP R TA L 00 T X
WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
NEW SINGLE-FAMILY HOMES NOW $698,980 Visit our designer decorated showhome today. Ask about our new Legal Basement Suite option! For more information call 604-477-2959 or go to montgomeryacres.com *We have a limited number of homes that qualify for the transfer tax savings. There are terms and conditions that may apply.
240 STREET AKA
KAN
PA S
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UG
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MAPLE
112 AVE
Showhome open daily, noon to 6pm. 24358 112B Ave, Maple Ridge
244 ST
232 STREET BY
246 ST
DEWDNEY TRUNK RD.
Epic Homes (2012) is a joint venture with Masa Properties Ltd., Branley M.R. Holdings Ltd., Bristar M.R. Holdings Ltd. & Dale M.R. Holdings Ltd.Pricing and availability may change without prior notice. Prices exclude GST. E&OE