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WEDNESDAY, FEB. 14, 2018 Your community. Your stories.
TRI-CITY
NEWS
THE BEES [PAGE 9] & THE BIRDS [PAGE 3]
MIN. WAGE
Biz is mostly behind wage hikes Diane StranDBerg The Tri-CiTy News
DIANE STRANDBERG/THE TRI-CITY NEWS
Patrick Zhao (left) and Jason Liao of the Pollinator Project get ready to plant their first pollination garden. Together with other School District 43 students, they fundraised, researched and connected with groups to start their first garden at UBC. For more on the Tri-City teens’ efforts, see story on page 9.
TAKE YOUR BRAIN TO BOOT CAMP Coquitlam therapist one of the people behind online mental health boot camp: story, page 5
The Tri-Cities Chamber of Commerce is cautiously supportive of the new B.C. plan that will hike the hourly minimum wage to $15.20 by June 2021. The local business organization shares an outlook similar to that of the BC Chamber of Commerce, which in a press release last week acknowledged the importance of a four-year timeline to help businesses plan and incorporate the increase. “I do support that it’s not done all at once. that could be quite dangerous — shocks to the economy are always bad, “ said Randy Webster, who is chair of the Tri-Cities Chamber’s policy committee. Webster said the attempt to close the poverty gap is a laudable goal, given international trends in which the hollowing out of the middle class has resulted in a dangerous mix of populism and nationalism. “I think it’s gotten out of control, this whole ultrawealthy/ultra-poor situation leads to problems,” said Webster. see CHAMBER WARNS, page 6
CONTaCT ThE TRI-CITY NEWS: newsroom@tricitynews.com / sales@tricitynews.com / circulation@tricitynews.com / 604-472-3040
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A2 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
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TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A3
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NATURE & CLIMATE CHANGE
Count birds in your backyard to help paint a global environmental picture International event runs Friday through Sunday
BIrD EDuCaTIoN
To learn more about observing birds and to get a chance to count birds with other people, Bird Studies Canada is teaming up with the Burke Mountain Naturalists and the Port Moody Ecological Society to hold a counting event on Feb. 18 from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Participants will get an introduction to identifying bird species and then a chance to head out along the Shoreline Trail to put their new knowledge and observation skills to the test. To register, go to bsc_gbbc. eventbrite.ca.
Mario Bartel
The Tri-CiTy News
That little green hummingbird with the fuchsia neck feathers that’s been hanging out at your feeder may just be a sign of climate change. But scientists won’t know that unless they learn Anna’s hummingbirds are hanging out farther north than they used to during the winter. And you can help them. From Feb. 16 to 19, Tri-City residents can join birding enthusiasts from around the world in the 21st annual Great Backyard Bird Count. The global event is a chance for people with a keen eye or just an interest in the birds around them to contribute their observations into a massive database that allows scientists to note odd migration patterns, or where specific species are alighting, that might be an indicator of changes to the climate. And you don’t have to be a dedicated birder, said Karen Devitt, the program co-ordinator at Bird Studies Canada. Participants just need a pair of binoculars, a sharp ear and about 15 minutes to observe the birds around them wherever they may be at the time: on a walk in the woods, at school, in a park or on the deck in their backyard. “The beauty of this is birds are everywhere, and you can do this anywhere there are birds,” Devitt told The Tri-City News. Observers record their findings using a checklist they can download and enter at birdcount.org. Last year an estimated 240,418 people from more than 100 countries submitted checklists. They reported spotting 6,259 species — that’s more than half the known bird species in the world. The data is added to observations recorded daily by avid bird watchers, as well as from seasonal events like the annual Audubon Christmas Bird Count. “When it’s combined with other data, we can get a big-picture look at what is happening,” Devitt said, adding that by holding the count at this time of year,
PMES MEETING
ABOVE: DIANE MCALLISTER PHOTO; BELOW: MARIO BARTEL/THE TRI-CITY NEWS
Below: Dave Bennie of the Port Moody Ecological Society keeps an eye out for birds (like this owl, above) along the Shoreline Trail overlooking Burrard Inlet. The society is hosting a community bird-watching event Sunday at Noons Creek Hatchery in conjunction with Burke Mountain Naturalists and Bird Studies Canada as part of the Great Backyard Bird Count, which runs from Feb. 16 to 19.
as winter begins its slow transition to spring, it provides scientists an idea of sustained behavioural or territorial changes.
“It tells us a lot about the distribution and abundance of birds at a specific time,” Devitt said.
And that can tip scientists off about changing trends in weather patterns or temperature, said Gary Langham, the vice-
president and chief scientist for the National Audubon Society. “No other program allows volunteers to take an instanta-
Anuradha Rao and Tasha Faye Evans will talk about their First Nations-related projects next week at a Port Moody Ecological Society (PMES) meeting. Rao, a registered professional biologist, will speak at the Feb. 21 event about the Burrard inlet Water Quality Roundtable, which is working with the TsleilWaututh First Nation on water quality while Evans will discus the Welcome Post Project at PMES’ Noons Creek Hatchery. The annual general meeting takes place at 7 p.m. in the PoMo recreation complex (300 Ioco Rd.) in the upstairs multi-purpose room. Call 604-469-9106 or visit noonscreek.org for more information. neous snapshot of global bird populations that can contribute to our understanding of how a changing climate is affecting birds,” he said in a press release. But more importantly, Devitt said, it’s just a nice reason to get outside and become more attuned to your surroundings. “Just be a little more aware of what is around you,” Devitt said. “Start with little observations that make sense to you and help you remember what that bird sounded like or looked like. They’re not hard to pick out.” mbartel@tricitynews.com
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A4 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
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CRIME
One injury in B&E that was interrupted
RYAN STELTING PHOTO
Police were called to a house in the 600-block of Poirier Street in Coquitlam Saturday evening after residents interrupted a break-in involving three men, who fled after assaulting one of the people inside.
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have canvassed the neighbourhood and spoken with multiple witnesses in the immediate area, they are encouraging anyone who has not already spoken with police and has more information to contact the investigation support team.” Anyone with information about the crime is asked to call 604-945-1550 and quote file number 2018-4300. Those who wish to report their information anonymously can do so by calling Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS or by going to www.solvecrime.ca.
Offers available from February 1, 2018 – February 28, 2018. *Offer open only to residents of Canada who have reached the legal age of majority at the time of participation. Complete a test drive of the 2018 Nissan Rogue at any participating Nissan dealer in Canada between February 1, 2018 and February 28, 2018 to be eligible to receive one (1) $50 CAD gas card. Limit of one (1) gas card per person/household. See your participating Nissan dealer for complete details. Conditions apply. ∞$2,200/$2,200/$3,000/$2,200 No Charge All-Wheel Drive upgrade is available on new 2018 Rogue (excluding FWD models)/2018 Murano (excluding FWD model)/2018 Pathfinder (excluding 4x2
Two people sustained minor injuries Friday evening after interrupting a break-and-enter at their home in the 600-block of Poirier Street in Coquitlam. Mounties said in a statement that three men allegedly broke into the home shortly before 8:30 p.m. but were stopped by the residents inside. A witness said that one of the residents was taken to hospital after being assaulted and the three suspects fled in a waiting vehicle. “While the investigation is still in the early stages, at this point, investigators do not believe the incident was targeted,” police said. “And while officers
TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A5
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MENTAL HEALTH
Take your mental health to boot camp Locals develop online mental health exercises Gary McKenna
The Tri-CiTy News
Fitness boot camps have become a popular with people looking to shed a few pounds and get into shape. Now, Chris Boyd, a registered clinical counsellor in Coquitlam, is looking at applying the same concept to mental health. Boyd — along with sister Joanna Boyd, also a therapist, Dr. Brooke Lewis and American psychologist and writer Ryan Howes — have launched their Mental Health Boot Camp online, offering 25day therapeutic programs. “Boot-camp culture is so popular right now,” Boyd told The Tri-City News in an interview at his Austin Avenue office. “I am always impressed by how dedicated people are to this… It is kind of interesting to have that approach to mental health.” According to Boyd, one in five people is diagnosed with a mental disorder each year. And even those who are not formally diagnosed often deal with stress, motivation problems and communication issues in their relationships, and may not be able to seek
GARY MCKENNA/thE tRi-CitY NEwS
Chris Boyd (left) and Joanna Boyd — siblings as well as therapists — along with two other partners have developed mentalhealthcamp.com, an online set of exercises. professional help from a psychotherapist. Clients have 30 days to complete the program, which is offered online at www. mentalhealthbootcamp.com at a cost of $39 U.S. Each day, a new challenge comes available, consisting of four to five activities ranging from reading
or writing exercises to meditations or going for a walk. “It touches on a range of different topics,” Boyd said. “We talk about anxiety, depression, resiliency — there’s all sorts of areas we explore.” So far, between 60 and 70 people have tried the online boot camp and Boyd and the
other creators are keeping track of their stats to see how they can improve the features. He noted all of the information posted to the site is kept confidential and even the creators are blocked from seeing what has been written, although participants are able to reach out if they have questions.
“Therapists often work individually,” he said. “It is great to find other avenues to get this information across to people.” • To learn more about the program go to www.mentalhealthbootcamp.com.
The challenges allow people who may not be comfortable seeing a psychiatrist to work at their own speed in the privacy of their home, Boyd said. It could also be a gateway for someone to consider getting professional therapy.
gmckenna@tricitynews.com
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A6 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
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MINIMUM WAGE
Chamber warns of possible downsides continued from front page
But the chamber spokesperson, who is also the chief operating officer for MedRay Imaging, said there may be some unintended consequences of imposing higher wages on businesses, such as cutbacks in employee hours and a speedier introduction of technology to replace workers. “[An increased minimum wage] hasn’t been the panacea I think people wished it would be,” he told The Tri-City News. In the short term, workers will have more money in their pocket, which is good for reducing poverty. And it won’t be just employees making less than $15 an hour who will benefit, Webster said, because of the pressure to increase wages for workers who are already earning $15 an hour or slightly more. “Once you get to $18 an hour, those benefits will disappear. And I do think there will be a benefit, people will make more money,” Webster said. But unintended consequences could result in more expensive living costs, when employers such as Walmart pass on the increase to customers, making it even more difficult for low-wage workers to keep up, especially if their hours are cut to keep costs down. Webster said he believes raising the minimum wage is
HOW THE MINIMUM WAGE WILL RISE The schedule of schedule of increases to the minimum hourly wage is as follows:
• June 1, 2018: $12.65 ($1.30 increase) • June 1, 2019: $13.85 ($1.20 increase) • June 1, 2020: $14.60 ($0.75 increase) • June 1, 2021: $15.20 ($0.60 increase)
SpEAk Have an opinion on a Tri-City News story? Leave a comment on our Facebook page.
ISTOCK PHOTO
The hikes in British Columbia’s minimum wage over the next few years will affect many in the service sector. Ontario has already increased its minimum wage.
a bet officials make that the good will outweigh the bad, but experiences in other jurisdictions, including Seattle and Ontario, which are increasing the minimum wage to $15 an hour sooner than B.C. shows there are downsides, he said. “If you shed hours, are you better off? Statistics show they are not.” he said. Webster said another way to reduce the poverty rate with less impact on employers would be to top up the incomes of people living below the poverty line through a tax credit or similar means. “It gives them an opportu-
nity to get to the living wage and government has more control — rather than taking it to the businesses and hoping they don’t adjust fast enough.” Other groups have differing views. The BC Federation of Labour said the four-year timeline to get to $15.20 by 2021 is too slow while the BC Federation of Students said the incremental increases will reduce financial difficulties for students who are facing high costs for housing and tuition. The wage increases proposed by the Fair Wages Commission and endorsed by the B.C. government, would see wages rising to $12.65 by June 1 in 2018; $13.85 by June 1, 2019; $14.60 by June 1, 2020; and $15.20 by June 1, 2021. The BC Chamber is recommending that the minimum wage be tied to the Consumer Price Index, a recommendation also supported by the TriCities Chamber of Commerce. dstrandberg@tricitynews.com @dstrandbergTC
TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A7
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PROVINCIAL POLITICS
High cost of living a throne speech target Janis CleugH The Tri-CiTy News
Evoking the memory of the late premier Dave Barrett — a former Tri-City MLA — and Alfred Wong, the murdered Coquitlam secondary student, B.C.’s lieutenant governor opened a new session of the legislature yesterday with the throne speech. Judith Guichon started the government’s speech by remembering British Columbians lost over the past term — including those who died of drug overdoses, a health issue that hit Coquitlam hard last year — and by earmarking the “People First” initiatives that the joint NDP government plans to tackle over the next year in Victoria. Without releasing specifics of the government’s calls to action — but poking the past BC Liberal governments for their “inaction” — the speech noted how rising costs have made B.C. unaffordable. And the speech made clear the NDP’s promises to keep bills down for the main campaign planks of affordable housing and childcare. With the low vacancy rate in nearly every community, Guichon read, homeowners and renters feel trapped: Young
SPeAk Have an opinion on a Tri-City News story? Leave a comment on our Facebook page. families can’t afford to buy a home to raise their children and workers often turn away the chance to be employed in B.C. because they can’t pay the high housing costs, which often leaves employers struggling to find labour. “Too many British Columbians are working paycheque to paycheque…. They’re anxious and uncertain about the future.” Guichon also noted the government’s pledge to address the volatile real estate market — spurred by domestic and international speculators, she said — and its commitment to crackdown on tax evasion and tax fraud as well as money laundering. She also touched on stronger protections for renters facing eviction and for those living in manufactured homes, where sites face the bulldoze
to build highrises. The government, she said, will “make the largest investment in B.C. history” by working with municipalities to build more affordable homes near transit corridors as part of a new partnership with BC Housing, and by retrofitting various social housing units. Guichon also spoke of the government’s recent efforts to keep ICBC premium hikes down, freeze BC Hydro rates, halve MSP bills and eliminate bridge tolls. As well, she spoke of the need to provide more affordable childcare in B.C. Too many families are working extra shifts to pay for childcare or driving far from their homes to find a space, she said, adding the government’s plans to work with more providers to open more spaces around B.C. and to offer further training for staff. B.C.’s new childcare plan got a $153-million boost from the federal government to create new spaces focusing on infant and toddlers from low-income and vulnerable families. That cash allows B.C. to start cutting the cost of childcare spaces this year, for children up to three years old in families earning less than $51,000 annually.
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Nominate a special volunteer by Mar 6! 2018 VOLUNTEER RECOGNITION AWARDS Arts, Heritage & Cultural Awareness
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Deadline to Apply - March 1st
DEADLINE TO APPLY - MARCH 1st
The Theatre Society Legacy Fund announces the Performing Arts Grants and Bursary Applications are now being Accepted for 2018!
Theatre Society Legacy Fund - Performing Arts Grant The Theatre Society Legacy Fund Performing Arts - Based Community Grant awards up to $10,000 annually to Performance Arts Organizations that support and encourage the development, enhancement, innovation and mentorship of a diverse variety of inclusive Performing Arts in Port Coquitlam, Coquitlam, Port Moody, Belcarra and Anmore.
Theatre Society Legacy Fund – Performing Arts Bursary Port Coquitlam Community Foundation Announces Granting Applications are now being Accepted for 2018! .
Projects are encouraged in, but not restricted to the following areas: Arts & Culture Health & Wellness Education
Sports & Recreation Environment Social Services
Two bursaries of $2,000 each are available for post-secondary students who have graduated from secondary school in Port Coquitlam, Coquitlam, Port Moody, Belcarra and Anmore and are enrolled in an accredited post-secondary institution (2nd year or higher) in a formal Performing Arts Program anywhere in the world.
Submit your application by midnight, March 1st, 2018.
Submit your application by midnight, March 1st, 2018.
For further information, please check out our website at www.pocofoundation.com
To learn more or to apply, please visit our website at: theatresocietylegacy.com
A8 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
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A fire on the weekend at Reed Point Marina in Port Moody resulted in two boats being damaged and sinking. Fire officials are waiting for the crafts to be recovered before determining the fire’s cause.
FIRE
Cause of fire at PoMo marina is not known Gary MCKenna The Tri-CiTy News
Investigators are still trying to determine what caused a fire that sank two boats and damaged several others shortly after midnight Saturday at Port Moody’s Reed Point Marina. Port Moody Fire Chief Ron Coulson told The Tri-City News that because the boats sank in the blaze, officials will have to wait until the vessels
can be recovered to get a better understanding of what happened. “We will have to wait until the marina raises those boats… and we will get a further look at them,” he said Tuesday. “We have no indication to suspect anything suspicious at this time.” While two boats sunk in the blaze, Coulson said two others suffered significant damage and a number of others sus-
tained moderate damage. He credited marina staff with quickly cordoning off the area to ensure that any fuel and contaminants spilled were contained. Coulson said the Canadian Coast Guard and the Port of Vancouver were notified of the incident. The Port Moody Police Department also assisted.
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Laugh, move, imagine and groove to this year’s lineup of theatre, dance and music!
MAY 5, 2018
February 18,2018- 2pm
Kim Sato & Project Soul presents THE ROUTES Terry Fox Theatre
presented by
PORT COQUITLAM
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RECREATION
Mar 4, 2pm • Second Storey Theatre (Improv) Mar 18, 2pm • 5 on a String (Bluegrass) 604.927.PLAY | portcoquitlam.ca/coffeeconcerts
TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A9
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THE ENVIRONMENT
no joke: teens are working for the bees SD43 students fundraise & plant to attract bees
POLLEN POWER To help people get started, the teens have put together a web page with information, including tips about beeloving plants and facts about bee health (www. thepollinatorproject. info). The Facebook page is available at www.facebook.com/ ThePollinatorProjectBC.
Diane StranDberg The Tri-CiTy News
It’s not a joke that pollinators are dying and, with them, the health of the planet and our food supply. But a project to raise awareness about their plight did start out with a laugh. Fortunately, a group of School District 43 teens decided the issue was so serious, they just had to do something about it — and now their first pollinating garden is about to be complete. “We wanted to start a conversation about bees. People don’t think a lot about them but they are a huge link in the food chain,” said Jason Liao, a Coquitlam resident and one of the founders of the Pollinator Project. It was at a Saturday night hangout over a year ago when Liao, Victor Song, Brandon Miao and Patrick Zhao, who all go to different SD43 high schools, were at loose ends when the topic came up. “What was originally said as a joke happened to intrigue the rest of us and, wanting to make a genuine difference in the world, we ran with the idea and made a vow to see it through,” Liao said. Their idea to build pollination gardens in Greater Vancouver area caught fire among the teens but getting their project underway took some work. First, they had to fundraise and that proved more of a challenge than they thought. A bake sale resulted in a measly $5
dstrandberg@tricitynews.com @dstrandbergTC
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profit, selling t-shirts and candy to neighbours took a lot of work but raised little more and they spent more on pizza than they raised in profits during a video game tournament. Fortunately, the teens persevered, selling Krispy Kreme doughnuts and starting a GoFundMe page that netted them enough funds to buy plants and other materials for their first garden at a daycare at UBC. In March, they’ll be planting bee-attracting species such as huchera, Californian lilac, stonecrop, fleabane daisy and more. “All I have to do is leave them out there and make sure they don’t dry out,” said Liao, who admitted he’s not exactly a green thumb. His friend Zhao would like to see other youths get involved and start clubs at their schools. “We want to get more kids involved because we had a lot of fun with it.” Adults are encouraged to create their own pollination gardens, too. Saving bees is an issue everyone should be concerned about the teens say, and that’s no joke.
NEED A MODE R
604 - 472-3021
Patrick Zhao (left) and Jason Liao of the Pollinator Project get ready to plant their first pollination garden. Together with other School District 43, students they fundraised, researched and connected with groups to start their first garden at UBC. “We wanted to start a conversation about bees,” Liao said. “People don’t think a lot about them but they are a huge link in the food chain.”
There are better ways to find new customers The Tri-City News is here to help you choose the advertising medium that will work best for your business. Our team are experts in social media, print advertising, web design and Google optimization. Contact us for a complimentary marketing plan specific to your business. 604-472-3020 | byamaura@tricitynews.com
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Henderson Place Mall | 1163 Pinetree Way | 604.552.6130 Organizer & Event Management: Henderson Place Mall & Henderson Development (Canada) Ltd.
A10 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
City of Coquitlam
Notice of Public Hearing Notice is hereby given that the City of Coquitlam will be holding a Public Hearing to receive representations from all persons who deem it in their interest to address Council regarding the following proposed bylaws. This meeting will be held on:
Date:
Monday, February 26, 2018
Time:
7:00 p.m.
Location:
City Hall Council Chambers, 3000 Guildford Way, Coquitlam, BC V3B 7N2
Immediately following the adjournment of the Public Hearing, Council will convene a Regular Council Meeting during which it will give consideration to the items on the Public Hearing agenda.
Item 1 tri-city newS FiLe PHOtO
The intent of Bylaw 4828, 2018 is to amend City of Coquitlam Zoning Bylaw No. 3000, 1996 by implementing text amendments and replacing the existing Schedule G with an updated version depicting the designated floodplain of the Brunette, Coquitlam, Fraser and Pitt Rivers in order to update the flood protection requirements for development located within these designated floodplain areas. If approved, the proposed zoning amendments would amend Part 5 General Regulations, Section 519 Flood Protection and Slope Control Measures and would establish an appropriate flood construction level for affected development sites as specified in the Provincial Flood Hazard Area Land Use Management Guidelines. The proposed flood plain protection requirements would require that a specific level rise of 1.0 metres for year 2100 and 2.0 metres for year 2200 will be taken into account for development occurring within designated floodplain areas.
Coquitlam Express take on Prince George Saturday evening and fans taking in the game can support the I Am Someone Society.
FIGHTING BULLYING
Enjoy hockey, help PoCo’s I Am Someone help youths You can watch some great hockey and support the I Am Someone Society Saturday by attending the Coquitlam Express home game versus Prince George. The Port Coquitlam-based organization tasked with the job of promoting Text 211 to get help for vulnerable youth is the designated charity for the hockey game, which starts at 7 p.m. at the Poirier Sport and Leisure Complex.
There will be Pink Shirt Day buttons for $2 each, poster signing, spin the wheel for prizes and a Frisbee toss with funds going to the local organization. Tickets can be picked up at Hair We Are, 1528 Prairie Ave., PoCo or online at tickets.myexpresstickets.com. For more information, email andrea@ iamsomeone.ca. dstrandberg@tricitynews.com @dstrandbergTC
Coffee+
Connect
WITH JUDITH LUCAS
Ever wonder how joining the Tri-Cities Chamber of Commerce can assist your business? Call Judith at 604.464.2716 or email Judith@tricitieschamber.com for a complimentary sit-down and coffee on us!
Strong business. Strong communities. www.tricitieschamber.com | 604.464.2716
Text Amendment to Address Flood Protection Measures
Item 2
Text Amendment to Permit Backyard Suites in the RS-1 and RS-3 One-Family Residential Zones (Housing Choices Phase 1 Expansion) The intent of Bylaw 4807, 2018 is to amend City of Coquitlam Zoning Bylaw No. 3000, 1996 in order to permit ‘backyard suites’ (garden cottages and carriages houses) in the RS-1 and RS-3 One-Family Residential zones across Southwest Coquitlam, as part of the proposed Phase 1 expansion of the Housing Choices Program. If approved, the proposed amendments will allow homeowners to have: • Either a secondary suite within the main dwelling or a ‘backyard suite’ on lots with areas less than 740m2 (7965 sq. ft.); and • Both a secondary suite within the main dwelling and a ‘backyard suite’ on lots with areas 740m2 (7965 sq. ft.) or greater. Any person wishing further information or clarification with regard to the proposed amendments should contact Chris McBeath, Planning and Development Department, at 604-927-3436.
How do I find out more information? Additional information, copies of the bylaws, supporting staff reports, and any relevant background documentation may be inspected from February 14 to 26, 2018 in person at the Planning and Development Department, Coquitlam City Hall, 3000 Guildford Way, Coquitlam during the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. from Monday to Friday excluding statutory holidays. You may also obtain further information with regard to the bylaws mentioned above on the City’s website at www.coquitlam.ca/publichearing and by phone at 604-927-3430. How do I provide input? Verbal submissions may only be made in person at the Public Hearing. The City Clerk’s Office will compile a Speakers List for each item. To have your name added to the Speakers List please call 604-927-3010. Everyone will be permitted to speak at the Public Hearing but those who have registered in advance will be given first opportunity. Please also be advised that video recordings of Public Hearings are streamed live and archived on the City’s website at www.coquitlam.ca/webcasts. Prior to the Public Hearing written comments may be submitted to the City Clerk’s Office in one of the following ways: Email: clerks@coquitlam.ca; Regular mail: 3000 Guildford Way, Coquitlam, BC, V3B 7N2; In person: City Clerk’s Office, 2nd Floor, 3000 Guildford Way, Coquitlam, BC, V3B 7N2; Fax: to the City Clerk’s Office at 604-927-3015. To afford Council an opportunity to review your submission, please ensure that you forward it to the City Clerk’s Office prior to noon on the day of the hearing. Written submissions provided in response to this consultation will become part of the public record which includes the submissions being made available for public inspection at Coquitlam City Hall and on our website at www.coquitlam.ca/agendas. If you require more information regarding this process please call the City Clerk’s Office at 604-927-3010. Please note that Council may not receive further submissions from the public or interested parties concerning any of the bylaws described above after the conclusion of the Public Hearing. Jay Gilbert, City Clerk
TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A11
COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
PORT MOODY
Summer shuttle bus is recommended If OK’d, bus would do 8-km loop, including Rocky Pt.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC CONSULTATION The City has received an application to amend the Citywide Official Community Plan (CWOCP) relating to the property located at 1990 Como Lake Avenue, as shown on the attached map. The application proposes a redesignation of the subject site from CS-1 Service Commercial to C-2 General Commercial to facilitate the development of a proposed one-storey commercial development and associated parking lot.
Mario Bartel
You are now being invited to provide input to Council with respect to the above-noted application.
The Tri-CiTy News
Port Moody staff are recommending the city proceed with a pilot program this summer for a local transit service along an 8-km loop that will link Inlet Centre with Rocky Point Park and Moody Centre. The shuttle buses would run every 20 to 30 minutes, depending on traffic. The service would operate on Fridays from 4 p.m. to midnight, and from 2 p.m. to midnight on Saturdays and Sundays for 10 weeks from June to August. Stops being considered include: • Port Moody Public Library; • Inlet Park field; • Rocky Point Park/Brewers Row; • St. Johns Street and Clarke Street in Moody Centre; • Moody Centre and Inlet Centre SkyTrain stations; • Newport Village/Eagle Ridge Hospital; • and Suter Brook Village/ Klahanie. In his report to council, Port Moody’s manager of
City of Coquitlam
stock photo
A private shuttle bus, funded by city of Port Moody gas tax reserves, would be operate for 10 weekends from June through August. infrastructure engineering services, Stephen Judd, said the preferred option of contracting an independent operator to provide and drive the shuttle buses that can hold 20 to 24 passengers — or 10-16 passengers plus two to four wheelchairs for an accessible bus — would cost about $50,000 for the duration of the program. Some of that money would go towards the cost of installing signs and shuttle stops. Judd noted there are two local providers available to operate the shuttle but all trolley bus operators are already booked. The pilot program could be funded from the city’s gas tax reserve. The report noted there is no money available from TransLink for such inde-
pendent services. While most of the proposed route for the shuttle can be duplicated using existing transit services, Judd said that would require at least four transfers of buses and it wouldn’t be as frequent as a dedicated shuttle, especially on weekends. “TransLink does not achieve a service level as high as that being proposed by the pilot program,” said the report. Council was scheduled to consider the proposal at its meeting last night (after The Tri-City News’ print deadline). If approved, the shuttle service would then have to get the assent of TransLink’s board at its meeting March 29. mbartel@tricitynews.com @mbartelTC
The City of Coquitlam will be receiving the input requested herein up to Tuesday, February 20, 2018. Written correspondence can be provided in one of the following ways: •
By email to clerks@coquitlam.ca
•
Fax: 604-927-3015
•
Mail: City Clerk’s Office, City Hall, 3000 Guildford Way, Coquitlam, BC, V3B 7N2
•
In person at City Hall, 3000 Guildford Way at the City Clerk’s Office during the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. from Tuesday, January 30, 2018 to Tuesday, February 20, 2018 excluding statutory holidays
To obtain more information on this application you may: •
Visit the Planning and Development Department at 3000 Guildford Way, Coquitlam, BC, during the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. from Monday to Friday excluding statutory holidays
•
Calling Kim Davelaar, Planning and Development Department, at 604-927-3432; or
•
Emailing Kim Davelaar, Planning and Development Department, at KDavelaar@coquitlam.ca
All written submissions provided in response to this consultation will become part of the public record which includes the submissions being made available for public inspection at Coquitlam City Hall (at the Planning and Development counter) and potentially on our website as part of a future agenda package at www.coquitlam.ca/agendas. Should Council grant first reading to the proposed CWOCP amendment, a Public Hearing will be held with notification to be provided in accordance with the Local Government Act. 1953
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19
1940
19
19
815
79
60
1991
NORTHVIEW PL
1987
1950
1983
1930
1926
75
811
1943
CUSTER CRT
1933 1953
809
1933
805
1927
2141 2055
1967 - 1969
1953
2065
2101
2121
2131
COMO LAKE AVE
1990
2100
2110
2120
2130
2140
2150
753
757
1960
From "Service Commercial" to "General Commercial"
2111
2100
2110
1945
1955
1965
1975
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28
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2121
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735
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1930
2141 2161 R
REGAN AVE MARS ST
2
1935
21
MONTROSE ST
742
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2120
River Rock Show Theatre presents
25
LYONS CRT 2070
march
21
2127
2121 2101
Application No.: 17 138685 OC
Subject Property (1990 Como Lake Avenue) NOT TO SCALE
BUY YOUR TICKETS NOW!
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A12 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
TC opinionS
CONTACT
email: newsroom@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3030 www.tricitynews.com/opinion
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 READERS SPEAK ONLINE COMMENTS FROM THE TRI-CITY NEWS’ FACEBOOK PAGE
“Thank you for your dedication and compassionate work. Everyone needs to hear about these horrific examples and help guard our young people from these predators.” LOUISE GRANT COMMENTS ON A STORY ABOUT CHILDREN OF THE STREET SOCIETY AND SENTENCING OF CONVICTED PIMP WHO TARGETED YOUNG PEOPLE
“Actually, I think the area can be retained as city property but in a strata owner capacity. There would be something above it, though. Would like to see proposals but 3 highrises would be too much. Suspect a highrise at works yard and something much smaller at fire hall site.” MITCH WILLIAMS COMMENTS ON A STORY ABOUT PLANS FOR THE OLD PORT MOODY FIRE HALL SITE
THE TRI-CITY NEWS’ OPINION
Shelter is needed – and so is civic oversight of the facility T
he challenge of operating a low-barrier shelter for homeless people in Coquitlam near businesses and not too far away from a Port Coquitlam park is evident with concerns about drug use and needles in the area. That’s why it makes sense for the cities of Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam to work with the operators of the shelter at 3030 Gordon ave. to make sure that programs are in place to ensure the facility is being a good neighbour. We’re not saying the shelter is a problem. The community needs this facility and we supNEWSROOM 604-472-3030 DELIVERY 604-472-3040 DISPLAY ADS 604-472-3020 cLASSIfIED ADS 604-444-3056 n
port providing shelter for people who have nowhere else to go. but at the same time, it’s good to have some assurances, and the recently appointed task force to work with 3030 Gordon operators, RainCity Housing and bC Housing, is a good move. RainCity has done a reasonably good job of working with cities, police and local businesses. It already has a committee to deal with issues and staff conduct regular needle sweeps of the neighbourhood. It’s not the shelter’s fault if there is outdoor drug use in the city and its staff can’t be everywhere at all times.
TC
SPEAK
Have an opinion on a Tri-City News story? Leave a comment on our Facebook page.
at the same time, the cities need to know that the shelter, built on city land and funded by provincial taxpayers, is not worsening the problem. for example, policies must be in place to make the shelter safe for
people who don’t do drugs. While it’s reasonable to expect shelter operators to run the facility without the community breathing down their necks, it’s also helpful that local councillors form a task force to look into matter and ensure that programs are working well. We look forward to a public report of programs, challenges and successes at the end of the year, when the task force is expected to have concluded its work. It’s sensible to provide some political and civic oversight to ensure a good relationship and any problems are dealt with.
tri-city newS FiLe PHOtO
The permanent homeless shelter at 3030 Gordon Ave. in Coquitlam opened in December 2016 and its operation since has not been without issues, so the city of Coquitlam is setting up a committee to work with shelter operators.
Shannon Mitchell publisher
TRI-CITY
NEWS
118-1680 Broadway St., Port Coquitlam, B.C. V3C 2M8 audited circulation: 52,692
Richard Dal Monte
Bentley Yamaura
editor
director of advertising
Kim Yorston
production manager
circulation manager
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.
Connor Beaty
Matt Blair
inside sales manager
n CONCERNS The Tri-City News is a member of the National Newsmedia Council, which is an independent orga-
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.
TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A13
COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
TC LETTERS
CONTACT
email: newsroom@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3030 www.tricitynews.com/opinion/letters
TRANS MOUNTAIN PIPELINE
Wine is renewable, bitumen isn’t, so feds, provinces must act accordingly The Editor, Re. Ingrid Rice editorial cartoon, The Tri-City News, Feb. 9. Ingrid Rice’s cartoon showed why the Trans Mountain pipeline must not be expanded. It showed a barrel of B.C. wine beside a drum of Alberta bitumen. Wine produced from grapes is a renewable resource that may be produced for millennia (as practised in Greece and Italy). On the other hand, bitumen is a non-renewable resource. If the pipeline is expanded then tar sands extraction and processing will grow to fill the pipeline. This mining of fossil energy may continue for a few decades until the deposit is exhausted — then the pipeline will run dry. In the meantime, increasing tar sands processing will spew more and more greenhouse gases into a warming atmosphere. The result will be more wildfires, intense heat waves and droughts, invasive species and diseases, and permanent population displacement from
ocean flooding. Ms. Rice’s insightful cartoon explains exactly why the federal and provincial governments must put the interests of renewable, sustainable resources ahead of the interests of the non-renewable, outdated industries. D.B. Wilson, Port Moody
‘act of terrorism’
The Editor, Alberta Premier Rachel Notley’s incendiary speech calling for Alberta residents to boycott all B.C. wines is an act of terrorism. She accused B.C. of “holding Alberta families hostage” after the B.C.’s minister of environment ask for proper scientific study on the shipment of bitumen through the proposed pipeline route. If this request really is unconstitutional, she can challenge it in court. Hurting innocent wine makers who have nothing to do with the issue is not fair. She should be ashamed of herself. Sammy Liang, Coquitlam
Letter writer D.B. Wilson of Port moody applauds editorial cartoonist ingrid rice’s contribution on the opinion page of last friday’s tri-city News and says the federal and provincial governments “must put the interests of renewable, sustainable resources ahead of the interests of the non-renewable, outdated industries.”
LEGAL POT
Will weed make biz sense for province?
The Editor, Re. “Farnworth lays out B.C. bud regulations” (The Tri-City News, Feb. 7). I fail to understand why the provincial government is investing taxpayers’ money by leasing premises, purchasing equipment and hiring staff for the retailing of cannabis before there is any proof that it will even be a break-even proposition. If it turns out that the undertaking will actually lose money, we, the taxpayers, will be stuck subsidizing the enterprise as there will be no way to close it down. Better to avoid the gamble by letting the private sector take the risks, which are substantial at this point. The government should simply set the rules and police the retailers, as is the current case with medical cannabis dispensaries. Bob Elliott, Port Coquitlam
Ready, Set, Learn
Free Event for Families & their 3-5 year olds
AND
MARCH 10
MOLSON CANADIAN THEATRE AT THE HARD ROCK CASINO VANCOUVER
THANK YOU CTV VANCOUVER We welcome CTV back again this year as the TV Media Sponsor of SHARE’s IMAGINE 2018. Thank you for your support and for promotion of IMAGINE to all of your CTV viewers.
DANCE THROUGH THE DECADES WITH THE TIMEBENDERS. BITES BY LOCAL RESTAURANTS. LIVE AND DIGITAL SILENT AUCTIONS. YOU COULD WIN A TRIP TO LAS VEGAS. MEET LEGENDARY MUSICAL ICONS.
IMAGINE 2018 IS PRESENTED BY
TICKETS & INFO AT
SHARESOCIETY.CA/IMAGINE
Children will participate in a variety of play-based learning activities, listen to stories and receive a gift for attending. Parents will be able to learn and play with their child as well as meet with early childhood education experts and local community agencies. Additionally, children’s entertainer, Will Stroet, will be joining us at each event to perform one of his award-winning shows to add even more fun to the festivities! Monday, March 5 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. James Park Elementary
Tuesday, March 6 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Seaview Elementary
12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Roy Stibbs Elementary
12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Walton Elementary
Monday, March 12 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Leigh Elementary
Tuesday, March 13 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Central Elementary 12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Rochester Elementary
Drop into any one of these events. It’s all free! The Ready, Set, Learn initiative, sponsored by the B.C. Ministry of Education, provides families with an opportunity to make positive connections with the school system and local community agencies.
Learn more here: www.sd43.bc.ca/Programs/earlylearning
A14 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
legal marijuana
4/20 doubles risks of fatal accidents, says a UBC study Researchers use U.S. accident data to issue warning to legislators
STOCK PHOTO
UBC researchers say the government should pay attention to issues around use of marijuana and driving after their study of U.S. road data showed higher risks of fatal crashes on 4/20. Staples and Redelmeier examined 25 years of National Highway Traffic Safety Administration data on all fatal traffic crashes in the United States. They compared the number of drivers involved in fatal crashes after 4:20 p.m. on April 20 with the number of drivers involved in fatal crashes during the same time intervals on control days one week earlier and one week later. The researchers didn’t know how many drivers drive while high. A 2011 study of U.S. College freshman found 44% of U.S. college freshmen had driven after consuming marijuana. Half of the cannabis users who responded to the 2017 Canadian Cannabis Survey thought that cannabis use did not affect their driving. Staples and Redelmeier hope that authorities will
respond to these results by encouraging safer 4/20 travel options, including public transit, ride-hailing services, taxis and designated drivers. The investigators also note that cannabis retailers and 4/20 event organizers have an opportunity to serve their customers and save lives by warning users not to drive while high. As Canada moves toward legalization, Staples says it’s also important to employ multiple strategies to reduce driving under the influence of drugs throughout the year. “Driving is a potentially dangerous activity,” Staples said. “Improving road safety requires both policymakers and drivers to make smart decisions. If you’re going to get behind the wheel, buckle up, put the phone away, don’t speed, stay sober and don’t drive high.”
Classical Coffee Classical Concerts Coffee Concerts with The Bergmann Piano Duo Elizabeth and Marcel Bergmann
with The Bergmann Piano Duo Elizabeth and Marcel Bergmann Join us for coffee or tea and treats 30 minutes prior to the Concert.
Thursday, March 8, 2018 Concert at 10:30am
At the Movies Elizabeth and Marcel Bergmann take us on a journey with music from the big screen, performed on two pianos. Ennio Morricone’s music from The Mission and Jerome Morass’s music from the classic western film, The Big Country, are the featured pieces. A guest narrator will join the duo for this program.
Late arrivals may be required to wait for seating.
SERIES SPONSOR
theactmapleridge.org mapleridgeact
NOTICE OF PUBLIC CONSULTATION The City has received an application for a Temporary Use Permit (TUP) for the property located at 103-1655 Como Lake Avenue. The applicant, Doppio Zero Pizza, is requesting a temporary use permit to allow for a restaurant use which permits the sale of alcohol. This TUP would expire on February 19, 2021. You are invited to provide input to Council relative to this application. Additional information related to this application, including a copy of the permit, may be inspected from Friday, February 2, 2018 to Monday, February 19, 2018 at the City’s Planning and Development Department, 3000 Guildford Way, Coquitlam, during the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. from Monday to Friday excluding statutory holidays. You may also obtain more information on this application by calling Karen Wong, Planning and Development Department, at 604-927-3476 or emailing Karen at karen.wong@coquitlam.ca.
VancoUVeR coURieR
As legislators draft Canada’s laws to legalize marijuana, a UBC researcher is encouraging them to pay special attention to the rules around consuming marijuana and driving. John Staples, a clinical assistant professor of medicine and scientist at UBC’s Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences, was lead researcher on a study that indicates drivers in the United States are more likely to be in a fatal traffic crash on 4/20 — a day marked in many cities by the consumption of marijuana. “Assuming fewer than 10% of Americans drive while high on April 20, our results suggest that drug use at 4/20 celebrations more than doubles the risk of a fatal crash,” said fellow researcher, University of Toronto professor Donald Redelmeier. The study found that April 20 was associated with a 12% increase in the risk of a fatal traffic crash. Among drivers younger than 21 years of age, the risk was 38% higher than on control days. The overall increase amounted to 142 additional deaths over the 25-year study period.
City of Coquitlam
@mapleridgeact
mapleridgeact
The ACT Arts Centre 11944 Haney Place Maple Ridge, BC V2X 6G1 604.476.2787
This application will be considered by Council at their Regular Meeting on Monday, February 19, 2018. The Council Meeting starts at 7:00 p.m. and is held in the Council Chambers of City Hall located at 3000 Guildford Way, Coquitlam, BC, V3B 7N2. If you wish to speak at the Council Meeting please call the City Clerk’s Office at 604-927-3010. If you call the City Clerk’s Office to register, your name will be placed on the Speakers List. Everyone who wishes to speak at the meeting will be given an opportunity, but those who have registered in advance will be allowed to speak prior to the floor being opened to all other speakers. If you wish to provide input in writing please submit your comments to the City Clerk’s Office in one of the following ways: • By email to clerks@coquitlam.ca; • In person at the City Clerk’s Office which is located on the 2nd floor of City Hall at 3000 Guildford Way; • By fax at 604-927-3015. Written submissions provided in response to this consultation will become part of the public record which includes the submissions being made available for public inspection at Coquitlam City Hall and potentially on our website as part of a future agenda package at www.coquitlam/agendas
TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A15
COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
PORT COQUITLAM
PoCo Fire switches radios to reg. network Port Coquitlam Fire and Emergency Services is switching to the E-Comm Wide-Area Radio Network, a move the department says will allow for better communication with other emergency officials in the Tri-Cities. According to a press release, it will be the first time Port
Coquitlam has been on the same system as Coquitlam and Port Moody, and the network links seamlessly with police and ambulance services. “By joining the wide-area radio network, we are increasing inter-operability between all emergency service agencies, which ultimately means
a safer working environment for first responders,” said Port Coquitlam Fire Chief Nick Delmonico. Last year, agencies using E-Comm’s radio system began moving to a new state-of-theart network in a planned technology upgrade. According to a press release, PoCo’s fire
department will now join more than 30 agencies operating on the new network, providing first responders with enhanced audio clarity, increased coverage and better security. “There are 61,000 residents of Port Coquitlam who rely on firefighters to keep them safe and to protect their property,”
PoCo Mayor Greg Moore said in the release. “Our residents can take comfort in knowing that their firefighters have the right technology at their sides.” The E-Comm Wide-Area Radio Network is the largest multi-jurisdictional emergency radio system in British Columbia and is used by
CITY OF P RT COQUITLAM
police, fire and ambulance personnel within Metro Vancouver and parts of the Fraser Valley. In 2017, firefighters, police and paramedics broadcast radio messages approximately 130 million times. gmckenna@tricitynews.com @gmckennaTC
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un-T House un-Tun Hon’s ............................(604) 468-0871 Hon’sWun-Tun Wun-Tun House......................... 604-468-0871 Furniture. itur ........................... iture. 945-5975 Jysk Linen ‘N‘N Furniture............................ JYSK Linen Furniture ......................(604) 604-945-5975 KennedyHearing Hearing Centre .................... 604-942-4080 Kennedy Centre........................(604) 942-4080 Legend Cuts ......................................... 604-942-4476 Legend Cuts.............................................(604) 942-4476 M&M Shops................................ 604-945-6634 M & M Meat Meat Shops.................................(604) 945-6634 Matoi Sushi Japanese Restaurant....... 604-464-2778 Matoi Sushi Japanese Restaurant..........(604) 464-2778 Money Mart......................................... 778-216-1432 Money Mart .............................................(778) 216-1432 Moores Clothing For Men................... 604-464-3113 Moores oor ClothingDental oores For Men......................(604) 464-3113 Mountainview Centre............. 604-945-5222 Mountainview Dental Centre Centr . ................(604) .................(604) 945-5222 Optics International ........................... 604-468-1371 ............................ Optics International (604) 468-1371 Pak Mail .................................... 604-472-MAIL(6245) Pearl Fever Tea House ......................... 604-552-6997 Pak Mail .........................................(604) 472-MAIL(6245) Pet Food More ................................ 604-474-1886 Pearl Fever‘N Tea House ............................(604) 552-6997 PhoFood Hoa‘N Restaurant ............................ 604-945-9285 Pet More ...................................(604) 474-1886
Pho Hoa Restaurant ................................(604) 945-9285 Pizza Hut.............................................. 604-945-3663 PizzaOne Hut...................................................(604) 945-3663 Pro Uniforms................................ 604-468-9903 Roo’s Liquor Store ............................... 604-945-6626 Pr One Pro Uniforms....................................(604) 468-9903 Robson Barbers.................................... 778-941-9570 Roo’ Liquor Liquor Store....................................(604) Store tor ....................................(604) tore Roo’s 945-6626 Safeway................................................ 604-941-8212 Safeway ....................................................(604) 941-8212 Shoppers Drug Mart............................ 604-468-8814 Shoppers Drug Mart ...............................(604) 468-8814 Sunwood Cleaners............................... 604-942-8557 Sunwood Cleaners..................................(604) 942-8557 Sunwood Veterinary Hospital............. 604-944-4442 d Veterinary V Sunwood Hospital.................(604) 944-4442 The Co-Operators Insurance Service .. 604-464-6112 Co-Operators o-Operators o-Operator I nsurance The Insurance Service ....(604) 464-6112 Tim Hortons ......................................... 604-941-3634 Tim Hortons .............................................(604) 941-3634 Westminster Savings Credit Union..... 604-517-0100 White Spot........................................... 604-942-9224 W Credi r t Union ........(604) redi Westminster Savings Credit 517-0100 White Spot ...............................................(604) 942-9224
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A16 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A17
west coast auto group WEST COAST NISSAN’S
WEST COAST
FEBRUARY
SALE
HOME OF THE GOOD GUYS
UT653671
2017 NISSAN TITAN PLATINUM RESERVE
2017 NISSAN PATHFINDER SL
INTERNET SALES PRICE
INTERNET SALES PRICE
Bluetooth, Navigation, Sat Radio, All Around Cameras
47,988
$11,995
MANUAL, HATCHBACK, FWD, 1.5L, 47,658 KMS, UC005017
2016 TOYOTA RAV 4 LE
2016 MAZDA 3 GX
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2011 FORD EDGE SPORT
2016 MAZDA MX-5 GT
2017 KIA SEDONA LX Minivan, FWD, 3.3L, 6 Spd Auto, 35,838kms, UT257548
UC258363
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INTERNET SALES PRICE
INTERNET SALES PRICE
31,979
$
Sedan, FWD, 1.8L, 67,605 kms, UC072552
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12,900
$
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26,900
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2014 KIA FORTE 1.8L LX++
2016 NISSAN MICRA SV
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2015 MAZDA CX5 GT
2016 KIA SOUL EX+
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$23,995
$24,995
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2016 NISSAN ROGUE SV AWD
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14,500
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$
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26,900
$
2015 FORD EDGE TITANIUM
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$
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$
2013 JEEP WRANGLER UNLIMITED
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$
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SALE PRICE
11,900
$
2015 FORD F150 LARIAT
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$
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Prices listed are plus documentation ($399) and taxes.
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SALE PRICE
$
PRICE
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24,299
$
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TOYOTA WARRANTY & SPECIAL FINANCING (OAC)
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$
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A18 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
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Ewa Jagla PHOTO
Lean
There were many special events on Family Day — from skates and swims to a get-together in the Port Moody Station Museum’s 1920s rail car — but many families opted to get out in the sunshine like these did in Port Coquitlam, as captured in a photo by Tri-City News reader Ewa Jagla.
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1
$ 39
/100 g
COQUITLAM 604.474.2038
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TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A19
COMWWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
TC COMMUNITY
CONTACT
email: newsroom@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3030 www.tricitynews.com/community
Blake Burgess says he felt like he was 16 again when he got his driver’s licence just before last Christmas. He’s been driving for the better part of 50 years, but in 2011 he was paralyzed in a work place accident and he had to relearn his driving skills for an adapted vehicle with specialized instruction from the Columbia Driver Training Centre in Port Coquitlam. MARIO BARTEL THE TRI-CITY NEWS
ON THE ROAD AGAIN
Driving ‘when all the rules change’ Mario Bartel The Tri-CiTy News
B
lake Burgess has been driving for the better part of 50 years but when he got his licence just before Christmas, he was like a kid again. Burgess was injured in a workplace accident in 2011. He lost the use of his legs and the life he had known for so long was turned upside down. Activities he enjoyed, abilities he’d taken for granted, were ripped away from him. One of those was driving. After seven months in hospi-
tal and a couple of years adapting to his new life, Burgess began to long for his independence. Relying on specialized transit or cab services to get around was cumbersome and time-consuming, especially in the suburbs. He decided he needed to get behind the wheel again. But when you haven’t got the use of your legs, just jumping back into a car isn’t possible. Burgess said he spent months researching an appropriate vehicle he could afford and the modifications it would need to accommodate his mo-
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torized wheelchair and his disability. Then he’d have to rewire his brain and muscle memory to learn how to drive it. “It was like starting all over again,” Burgess said. Peter Faminoff has been modifying vehicles for people with physical limitations, and then teaching them to drive them, since 1991. His Columbia Driver Training Centre in Port Coquitlam offers specialized instruction for people with disabilities, which, he said, comprises about a third of his business. Faminoff said the first hurdle to overcome is convincing his
disabled clients they can drive. “The client has been programmed [to believe] they’ll never drive again,” Faminoff said. “We have to get them to believe they can do it.” Faminoff said he has taught drivers with various degrees of paralysis from strokes or accidents, and even ones with missing limbs. All take a degree of patience and understanding about what they’re going through. “You have to learn new habits, not just new ways,” he said. For Burgess, that meant always remembering to put one hand on the control knob on
the steering wheel of his modified van and the other on the hand-operated accelerator and brake control because if he rests both hands on the wheel, his muscle memory reverts to his legs, which, of course, no longer work. “You have to imprint it,” he said. “When an emergency situation comes up, you don’t want to think about it.” Burgess has had about a half dozen training sessions in his vehicle. And when his driving assessment officer was smiling at the end of his test, “it felt like I was 16 again. It was like a new
chapter in my life was about to start.” A chapter that now includes being able to drive himself to the grocery store, social gatherings and even concerts at Rogers Arena. “You take transportation and routine chores as a matter of habit when you’re ablebodied,” Burgess said. “When you’re disabled, all the rules change.” • To find out more about driver training for people with disabilities, go to https://www. cdtcdevelopmentcentre.com. mbartel@tricitynews.com @mbartelTC
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A20 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
WWW.TRICITYNEWS.COM
LIBRARIES & LITERACY
There’s love in the titles, love between the covers A GOOD READ
lieutenant, find themselves in a whirlwind romance that quickly leads to marriage. Soon after their marriage, they are on the front lines of Europe battling for their lives and those around them. For months, their only form of communication are letters. Will there be a marriage to return to if they survive this seemingly never-ending war? A touching story that balances the perils of war with the commitment of love. Author Gurjinder Basran brings us a heartfelt story of love and loss in her second novel, Someone You Love Is
CAROLINE WANDELL
O
n this Valentine’s Day, people finds themselves reflecting on that all-important word: love. The theme of love has been a recurrent one in the history of literature. In early days, authors such as William Shakespeare, Leo Tolstoy and Jane Austen all explored the subject of love in their writings. Love is unique in that it is a constant. It goes on through different decades and different centuries, yet the elements always stay the same. Here are a few books with love in the title and love between the pages. Written by Per J. Andersson, The Amazing Story of the Man Who Cycled from India to Europe for Love is a true testament of the power of love. It begins with an impoverished young man who was born in a small village in eastern India. P.K. received a palm leaf at the time of his birth bearing an astrologer’s prophecy that stated: “You will marry a girl who is not from the village, not even from the country; she will be musical, own a jungle and be born under
Gone. Having just lost her mother to a lengthy illness, Simran finds herself not being able to cope with the incredible void left in her life. The previous couple of years were devoted to caring for her mother but, suddenly, her mother does not exist anymore. Told through alternating times, the present and the past, the author is able to cross continents and generations while supplying the reader with various forms of Indian culture and customs. Praise for Basran for writing a realistic and emotional exploration of grief.
Award-winning author Sherman Alexie has written a beautiful memoir in You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me. Family relationships are never simple and the author’s bond with his mother, Lillian, was definitely more complex than most. Lillian threw her family into a life of chaos with her drinking but later shed this addiction when she risked losing everything. Having survived a violent past, she selflessly cared for others, except perhaps the children that so desperately wanted her time and affection. With her passing, Sherman
struggles with the ghosts of the past. Writing this memoir was his way of reconciling the complicated relationship the two of them shared. This is a stunning memoir filled with love, anger, laughter, and harrowing childhood memories that few can imagine, much less survive. These and other books about the power of love are available at the Terry Fox Library. A Good Read is a column by TriCity librarians that is published on Wednesdays. Caroline Wandell works at Terry Fox Library in Port Coquitlam.
the sign of the ox.” Incredibly, it was a prophecy that would come true but only after one remarkable bicycle journey that would take P.K. from the jungles of eastern India to the forests of Sweden. Part memoir, part travel log, this true love story is a must read. With Love, Wherever You Are is a beautifully written work of fiction by author Dandi Daley Mackall. Based on the true-life events involving the author’s parents, this is a love story of a couple who met, married and served in Europe during the Second World War. Helen, an army nurse, and Frank, an army
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TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A21
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In a nutshell, diversification means you don’t have all your eggs in one investing basket, which may help protect you if any part of your portfolio falters. Here is an example, if you invest in just one company and the stock goes bust, then your portfolio will go bust. This is ‘individual business risk’ which is added to the market risk represented by the daily ups and downs of the market. If you instead own 100 individual businesses and one goes bankrupt your portfolio won’t go bust. I would rather see my clients own a small part of many businesses than 100% of one company. Being diversified also applies to the industries and asset classes you invest in. It’s important to consider not only being invested in different sectors of the economy, but also investing in a mix of stocks and bonds. Index funds are one way you might further diversify your portfolio because they can track both stock and bond indexes. Bottom line: The broader your portfolio is, the likelier you are to weather a market storm.
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Once the trustee is certain the debtor is not going to honour his obligations the trustee can and should proceed to seek his own discharge from the bankruptcy. At this point the Stay of Proceedings is lifted and creditors are revived. So, all creditors can pursue the bankrupt for debt collection just as though he was never in bankruptcy.
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When a person goes into bankruptcy a Stay of Proceedings is issued. The Stay of Proceedings protects the debtor from any collection activity by his unsecured creditors. When the debtor receives their discharged, all his unsecured debts with a few exceptions, are erased. You can pursue an undischarged bankrupt once the trustee is discharged. The key word being undischarged. In rare cases a debtor is not discharged, usually because he fails to meet the obligations imposed on him by the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, namely duties, or payments pursuant to a mediation agreement or conditional order of Discharge.
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Exclusive content, not available through other sources is the primary reason people continue to engage with their local printed community newspaper and why it makes so much sense to place your valuable advertising dollars there. Print ads, particularly weekly newspapers, have a much longer shelf life than other media. They are kept, shared and referred to in ways that other media aren’t. Community newspapers serve refined geographic areas and are tailored specifically for their audiences. The Tri-City News delivers over 51,000 papers to our readers throughout the region. The local printed community newspaper is still the favourite source for accessing local news and information, especially in smaller communities and reader engagement with local content is unparalleled and advertising is far more likely to be viewed positively as a result.
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A22 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
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TC CALENDAR THURSDAY, FEB. 15
• Burke Mountain’s community group, North East Coquitlam Ratepayers Association, meets, 7 p.m., Victoria Hall, 3435 Victoria Dr., to discuss concerns of residents of the area. Speaker: Michael Fox, a Coquitlam recreational supervisor, will speak on potential programming for Smiling Creek elementary and Victoria Hall. All Burke Mountain residents welcome to attend. Info: 604970-2579. • Coquitlam Needlearts Guild meets, noon-9:30 p.m., Canadian Royal Legion Branch 263, 1025 Ridgeway Ave., Coquitlam. Info: 604-937-0836.
FRIDAY, FEB. 23
• Crossroads Hospice Coffeehouse presents Second Wind, The Gathering Place, 1100-2253 Leigh Sq., PoCo, doors open at 7 p.m.; admission: $5 at the door. Info: 604945-0606 or info@crossroadshospice.org. Second Wind is a Vancouver duo whose eclectic repertoire incorporates folk, pop, rock, acoustic, alternative, R&B and country.
MONDAY, FEB. 26
• Tri-City Photo Club meets in the Drama Room at Port Moody secondary school, 300 Albert St., 7:30 p.m. – guests are always welcome. Feature: Ian MacDonald on street photography; this night will be followed by a field trip and street assignment. Info: www.tricityphotoclub. ca.
THURSDAY, FEB. 22
• Community Closet and Food for Families, Broadway Church, 1932 Cameron Ave., Port Coquitlam, 3 to 5 p.m. A used clothing sale where anyone can fill a bag of clothing of their choice for $3 for one bag or $5 for two. For info: email craigs@cityreach.org or call 604254-2489.
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 28
• Tri-City Centennial Stamp Club hosts a a “stamp game” – visitors welcome; swap and shop at 7 p.m., game after 8 p.m. (stamp prizes), Burke Mountain Fire Hall meeting room, 3501 David Ave., Coquitlam. Info: www.stampclub.ca or 604-941-9306.
ONGOING
• PoCo Heritage Museum and Archives, 150-2248 McAllister Ave., is open Monday-Friday, 9:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m., and Saturday, 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Staff is available Tuesday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; volunteers may be on-site at other times. Info: 604-927-8403 or www.pocoheritage.org. • Bingo at Dogwood Pavilion, 12:45 p.m., every Friday (except holidays and in July and August). Info: 604-927-6098. • SPARC radio museum on Riverview Hospital grounds is open most Sundays, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., with tours given by volunteers; large collection of antique consumer, military, marine, amateur radios and broadcast studio equipment. Located in the old pharmaceutical warehouse on Kerria Drive at the top of the hill. Info: 604-777-1885 or sparcradio.ca. • 754 Phoenix Squadron, Royal Canadian Air Cadets is active from September to June and meets Wednesdays, 6:309:30 p.m., at Moody elementary school. Girls and boys 12-18 welcome. Due to increased interest in the cadet program, a second squadron has been added that meets Tuesdays at Maillard middle school. Info: 754aircadets.ca.
ADULT CARRIERS NEEDED
FEB. 16: SINGLES SOCIAL CLUB • Tri-City Singles Social Club, which offers an opportunity for 50+ singles to get together and enjoy a variety of fun activities such as dining, dancing, theatre, travel, movies and more, meets at 7 p.m. at the Legion Manor, 2909 Hope St., Port Moody (street parking only). New members welcome. Directions & info: Darline, 604-466-0017. • Burquitlam Community Association holds its monthly meeting on the first Thursday of each month, 7-9 p.m., in the library at Miller Park elementary school, Coquitlam. • Are you a new immigrant? Do you have questions, concerns and/or need help? Call RCCG Trinity Chapel at 604-4743131 on Tuesdays and Fridays, 10 a.m.-1 p.m., or call outside those times and leave a message and someone will call you back. Trinity will help or direct you to places where you could receive help. • Saturday hikes leave from Rocky Point at 9:30 a.m. Info: pocomohiking@hotmail.com. • Eagle Ridge Hospital Auxiliary Saturday coffee program runs Saturdays, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., in the ERH lobby, 475 Guildford Way, Port Moody. Sales of beverages and baked goods raise funds for the purchase of hospital equipment and patient comfort items. • Royal Canadian Legion Branch 133, 2675 Shaughnessy St., PoCo: meat draws Tuesdays, 4 p.m.; Fridays, 4:30 p.m.; Saturdays, 3:30 p.m. • Glenayre Scottish country dancers meet Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m., at Burquest Jewish Community Centre, 2860 Dewdney Trunk Rd., Coquitlam. New members welcome, all levels beginner to advanced, singles and couples. • St. John Ambulance volunteer medical first responders meetings held every Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Tri-Cities branch, 2338 Clarke St., Port Moody. New members welcome to attend. Info: 604-931-3426 or www.sja.ca/bc. • St. John Ambulance volunteer youth cadets meetings, for people ages 6 to 21, held every Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the TriCities branch, 2338 Clarke St., Port Moody. New members welcome to attend. Info: 604-9313426 or www.sja.ca/bc. • Weekly thrift sales, Wednesday, noon-9 p.m.; Thursdays, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Trinity United church, corner of Shaughnessy Street and Prairie Avenue, PoCo. Info: 604-9420022. • Sea Cadets for youth aged 12 to 18 years old meets at the Old Mill Boathouse at Rocky Point Park (Port Moody) on Wednesdays, from 6:30 to 9:15 p.m. For information visit www. regions.cadets.forces.gc.ca/ pac/201sea/ or contact Lt(N) Shannon McGee at co.201sea@ cadets.net or call 604-9390301. • Tri-City Transitions offers free ongoing counselling services on weekdays for women who have experienced abuse/ violence in their relationships or childhood abuse, sexual assault or childhood sexual abuse. Info: 604-941-7111, Ext. 103. Call 604-941-7111 ext. 112. • Como Lake United church (535 Marmont, Coquitlam) thrift and furniture shop open Tuesdays, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., Saturdays, 9 a.m.-noon, Thursdays (thrift shop), 6:308:30 p.m. • Free ESL classes for new immigrants are on Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10:30 a.m.-noon, provided as a free community service project by missionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, 3345 Robson Dr., Coquitlam. Info: in Korean, 604-552-2305; Chinese, 604944-7245; other, 604-468-8938; also: www.english4free.net. • RCSCC Grilse Sea Cadets, for boys and girls 12 to 18. Info: www.cadets.ca or 604-9390301.
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TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A23
CONTACT
email: jcleugh@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3034 www.tricitynews.com/entertainment
perfOrmiNg ArTs fesTivAl
A new home for CDMF JAnis Cleugh The Tri-CiTy News
The congregation cheered. Last September, when Rev. David Cathcart told his flock at Trinity United Church that the Council of Elders had given permission to the Coquitlam and District Music Festival (CDMF) to use their Port Coquitlam venue for its performing arts competition, there was a round of applause. Cathcart, a supporter of the arts and culture, had heard the festival was in dire need of a home after the facility it had been using for a decade, the Hyde Creek community church, was bought last year by an Abbotsford congregation. Festival organizers had been storing their computer, files and more than 100 trophies there, and had hosted its threeweek long competition in the sanctuary. Knowing that one of his parishioners, Jo-Ann Dahms, was the CDMF recording secretary and co-chair of the Trinity United Church board, Cathcart suggested their site for the 66th annual gathering in 2018. After all, it had more parking space available for out-of-town guests (some 600 young pianists and thespians are entered this year), was along a bus route and was in a more visible location than the Hyde Creek community church. “It couldn’t have been a better fit,” said Thelka Wright, CDMF co-ordinator for the vocal and speech arts portions of the competition, “and, to tell you the truth, moving here has given us an extra impetus. We are really looking forward to this year’s event.” The move to Trinity United also gave CDMF organizers a boost to their volunteer roster as many congregation and choir members — or their chil-
MARTIN MAYER
piaNisT is a Celeb iN ChiNa JAnis Cleugh
The Tri-CiTy News
janis cleugh/the tri-city news
Jo-Ann Dahms, secretary for the CDMF Performing Arts Festival and co-chair of the Trinity United Church board, and CDMF president (and former Port Coquitlam city councillor) Michael Wright with the festival’s official piano tuner Matthijs Pieter Eterman. The festival site moved last summer from the city’s south side, at Hyde Creek community church, to Trinity United Church, on the north side. dren — had performed in past CDMF festivals, Dahms said. CDMF president Michael Wright, a former PoCo city councillor, said the festival’s official piano tuner, Matthijs Pieter Eterman, was brought in to assess the sound quality in the Trinity sanctuary; last week, he tuned the Yamaha grand piano and an upright to perfect the timbre before the piano contest began Monday. Wright also tapped Rob Perryman and PrimeAcoustic to bring in moveable panels to absorb the noise to ensure the church’s other users (Kiddies Korner preschool, Share food bank, etc.) weren’t disrupted. As well, a schedule was cre-
ated to accommodate Trinity’s other church bookings. “We have been very mindful that we will not be the only ones here,” Michael Wright said. In the meantime, Wright’s been busy cataloging the numerous trophies hauled from the Hyde Creek community church and placed into storage. CDMF organizers have whittled down the hardware to about two dozen trophies; the surplus will be returned to the donors, if possible, he said. As a result of the downsizing, the first place CDMF winners will now receive a medal while the Top 3 will get a certificate from the adjudicators: Sonia Lee (piano); Allison Arends
(musical theatre and classical voice); and Nitasha Rajoo (speech arts). The best will showcase their talents at the Honours Concert on April 8 — with a chance to win a trophy and a nod to Performing Arts BC, to be held May 29 to June 2 in Victoria. Thelka Wright said when many CDMF entrants arrive to play, “some of them are in their gowns and tuxedos and there’s a lot of pressure on them to do well. But there’s so much more than that. Our philosophy is that this is a competition, yes, but we really hope that the educational aspect of the festival comes through, too, and that the kids have fun with their
CAN YoU HElP?
The executive of the CDMF Performing Arts Festival seeks new members for its board, which meets monthly in Port Coquitlam. To apply, go online to cdmffestival and click on Contact. performances.” • The CDMF Performing Arts Festival runs until March 4 at Trinity United Church (2211 Prairie Ave., PoCo). Admission is free; however, donations are accepted. Visit cdmffestival.ca. jcleugh@tricitynews.com
Martin Mayer is quite happy to call Port Moody his home. In the Tri-City community, where he’s lived for the past two years, he can shop at the local grocery store and walk down the street virtually unnoticed. In China, though, Mayer gets little privacy unless he’s dressed in a ball cap and sunglasses. There, nearly two decades after he broke out as a performing artist — selling out 20,000-seat theatres in large cities for his piano acts — he’s a celebrity. “It’s sort of this massive head trip for me,” he told The Tri-City News by phone last Friday. “In Canada, I’m just a regular guy and it smacks me in the face when I get off a plane. It’s surreal.” Mayer, who will be at Coquitlam’s Evergreen Cultural Centre on Saturday for a “homecoming” concert and to preview his next tour in China this spring, gained his fame at 19 after he spent $35,000 to produce high-quality show with a 20-piece orchestra. see it’s so surreal, page 24
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A24 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
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musical theatre
RENT for Riverside
Pick of the Fringe, Victoria Fringe Festival
JaNis ClEugh The Tri-CiTy News
For all but one year, Tyler Cristiano and Ben Kwok watched their high school shows from behind a piece of theatre equipment. Cristiano was the head sound technician at Port Coquitlam’s Riverside secondary while Kwok, also 17, took on the job of lighting productions and assemblies from his brother, Richard, after he graduated. For their final year, though, the teens wanted to try something different: Last fall, rather than returning to the sound board and hot lights, they auditioned for roles in the next musical, RENT: The School Edition. And though they had no previous experience singing, dancing or acting on stage, director Nicole Roberge doublecast the pair in a lead part. This and next month, Cristiano and Kwok will share the role of Mark, the narrator who, as an aspiring filmmaker, tries to capture the crazy — and often lonely — bohemian world around him in the East Village. Based on the Puccini opera of La Boheme, the rock musical follows the lives of Mark’s creative yet impoverished friends in New York City for a year as they struggle to cope with such heavy topics as mental and physical illness (especially HIV/AIDS), relationships and gender identity. Roberge saw the show on Broadway in 1998 “and it kind of blew my mind,” she said during a rehearsal at the school last Friday. “I’ve been waiting for the right group at Riverside to do it, and this is an incredibly unique and diverse group of 51 personalities who care about each other.”
JOIN US F FOR OR A VALENTINE’S VALENTINE’S DATE NIGHT! DATE janis cleugh/the tri-city news
The lead actors in RENT: School Edition, a musical theatre production at Riverside secondary that features a double cast including (at right) narrators Ben Kwok and Tyler Cristiano, both Grade 12. Riverside is the first Tri-City school to tackle RENT: School Edition, a toned-down version of the original that came out a decade ago. Roberge, who is also responsible for the choreography and costumes, said her cast and crew have honoured the show’s creator, Jonathan Larson, who died suddenly the night before the Off-Broadway premiere in 1996. Last Thursday, they broke bread at a Peasants’ Feast to pay tribute to the legacy of
February 15, 2018 | 8pm
the playwright because “we wanted his spirit to be here as we go forward with this wonderful musical at Riverside,” she said. • Tickets for RENT: School Edition, with musical direction by Glenda Ottens and Krista Wallace, are $12/$10 at the door on show nights: Feb. 22 to 24, Feb. 28 and March 1 and 2. The curtain rises at 7:30 p.m. Call the school (2215 Reeve St.) at 604-941-6053 or visit brownpapertickets.com. jcleugh@tricitynews.com
Sunday, MAY 6th Port Moody
piano
It’s so surreal: Mayer continued from page 23
The live recording caught the eye of a talent agency in China, which invited him to play 16 cities across the country. Media and music fans waited for him as he and his fellow musicians stepped off the airplane and as they arrived at concert halls. Still, being around the spotlight isn’t anything new for Mayer. His mother was an entertainment reporter in Prague in the 1960s, who Mayer said interviewed the likes of Duke Ellington and Ella Fitzgerald, while his father was a famous folk singer, with a sound comparable to John Denver. Mayer, who immigrated to Canada with his parents in the 1989, said he still hears his dad’s songs on the radio when he returns to the Czech
Get tickets at evergreenculturalcentre.ca or 604-927-6555
Michael j.P. hall
Martin Mayer tickles the ivories at the Evergreen Cultural Centre in Coquitlam Saturday. Republic. They have attention in Europe and in Asia, but in Canada, there’s only peace and quiet, he said with a laugh. On Feb. 17, Martin promises to deliver on his aptly titled “Grande Piano Show,” with such songs from the Phantom of the Opera, Les Miserables and Pirates of the Caribbean. He’ll have two special guests to help perform his original music — including from his
latest album Unbreakable, which Mayer released last month and will have for sale at his Evergreen concert — as well as Chinese, Latin, Irish and rock tunes, among other genres. “It’s definitely not your standard show,” he said. “It’s not a piano recital.” Mayer added, “I’ve been to a lot of shows over the years and I know what the audience likes and doesn’t like. You need to be energetic and you need to entertain. It can’t just be technical…. I really have a Grande Piano Show because there’s so much going on and there’s something for everyone to enjoy.” • Martin Mayer: The Grande Piano Show is part of the TD Music Series at the Evergreen Cultural Centre (1205 Pinetree Way). For tickets at $29/$15, call the box office at 604-927-6555 or visit evergreenculturalcentre.ca.
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TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A25
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visual arts Some 50 art pieces by SD43 students — including Café Duo by Sophia Guan and Janelle Feng’s War and Roses — are up for grabs at the Gallery Bistro (2411 Clarke St., Port Moody) until Sunday. The silent auction is organized by the Gleneagle secondary Youth Art Auction Team, made up of eight TALONS students involved in a leadership project. Proceeds will go to a Port Moody Arts Centre bursary fund for a deserving arts student. The closing reception — with music from jazz pianist Ben Sigerson — is on Feb. 18 from 2 to 4 p.m., with the winning bids announced at 3:30 p.m. Visit Facebook.com/ sd43youthartauction.
gleneagle Youth art auction
arts notes
Romance, schmomance from comedy duo Two comedy writers with CBC Radio’s The Irrelevant Show are in Coquitlam tomorrow (Thursday) to poke fun at love and courtship following Valentine’s Day. Tom Hill and Devin Mackenzie — aka Hip.Bang!, a Vancouver-based duo that was nominated for a Canadian Comedy Award for Best Improv Troupe — perform their show The History of Romance as part of the Evergreen Cultural Centre’s new Variety Series this season.
Tickets at $33/$28/$15 are available through the box office (1205 Pinetree Way, Coquitlam) at 604-927-6555 or via evergreenculturalcentre.ca.
SPEEDBUMP
Tri-City actors Cindy Peterson and Breann Grainger play lead roles in The Past, a Speedbump Theatre world premiere that opens next Wednesday in Vancouver. Peterson, a Port Coquitlam resident, plays the retired teacher Lynne Ladouceur
while Port Moody’s Grainger is the social worker Rose Mourinho in the show that won last year’s Theatre BC Canadian Play competition. Written by Arthur Holden, the production at Studio 1398 (1398 Cartwright St.) ends March 3. For tickets at $20, visit brownpapertickets.com.
JAZZ GALA
Music teacher Ed Trovato will oversee the 10th annual Gleneagle Jazz Gala Dinner and Silent Auction on Feb.
24, featuring tunes from the school’s jazz ensembles and guests. Doors open at 6 p.m. Tickets at $45 are available from the school (1195 Lansdowne Dr.) or via gleneaglesecondary.org.
METRO MEET
Tri-City artists and arts leaders can learn about the regional arts and culture scene at a Metro Vancouver morning talk next month. The agency’s Sustainability Community Breakfast — to
be held at the Port Moody recreation complex on March 21 — will hear from four arts representatives: Brenda Leadlay, executive director of BC Alliance for Arts + Culture; Rhiannon Herbert, outreach and database co-ordinator for BC Alliance for Arts + Culture; Judy Robertson, outreach coordinator in Metro Vancouver’s external relations department; and Nancy Cottingham Powell, executive director of the North Vancouver Community Arts Council. The presentations,
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which run from 7:30 to 9 a.m., will include information about MAXguide and SpaceFinderBC, Metro’s regional projects grants program and the North Shore Cultural Mapping Project, an initiative led by the North Vancouver Community Arts Council that was recently won $421,000 from the Strategic Initiatives component of the Canada Cultural Investment Fund. To register, visit metrovancouver.org/events/community-breakfasts.
A26 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
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TC SPORTS
CONTACT
email: sports@tricitynews.com phone: 604-472-3032 www.tricitynews.com/sports
COLLEGE SPORTS
PoCo volleyballer bounces back after beach California trip helps Riverside grad’s comeback from surgery MARIO BARTEL
THE TRI-CITY NEWS
A trip to the beach can be good for the soul. For Amanda Matsui, it was good for her knee. The Port Coquitlam volleyball player was at the tail end of a year-long rehabilitation from knee surgery that had already cost her a chance to play at Vancouver Island University (VIU) and sapped her confidence she’d ever be a top competitive player again, when her coach at the University of the Fraser Valley, Mike Gilray, took Matsui and seven other players from his program to play in the sand at Redondo Beach, Calif. Literally. Matsui said 12 days of workouts and scrimmages on the beach last summer, where volleyball courts stretched along the ocean for as far as she could see, tested her reconstructed joint and restored her faith that it could withstand the rigours of leaping at the net for spikes, diving across the floor for digs, jumping for blocks. “That’s where I felt confident again,” Matsui said. “Diving in the sand — if I can do that there, then I can do it in the gym.” Gilray, who’s also coached provincial beach volleyball teams for the Canada Games, said it was important to give the players the physical and mental challenge of learning a new game. “It practises all the skills,” Gilray said. “It’s the challenge of learning through failing.” Since Matsui returned to the floor, there hasn’t been much failing. In what is essentially her
DAN KINVIG PHOTO
Riverside grad Amanda Matsui goes up for a spike at a recent University of the Fraser Valley women’s volleyball game. The redshirt sophomore is back at the top of her game after missing her freshman season to recover from a torn ACL. rookie season after she was redshirted for her freshman year as she rehabbed her knee, Matsui is one of only three players in the PACWEST conference to rank in the top 10 in total offence, aces, kills and digs. Recently Matsui’s 16 kills and 20 digs led the seventhranked Cascades to a four-set
victory over third-ranked VIU and helped earn her recognition as the PACWEST female volleyball player of the week. And her spiking ability from the left side will be key when UFV host the PACWEST championships for the first time Feb. 22 to 24. Not bad considering Matsui almost quit the sport entirely.
A three-time athlete of the year at Riverside secondary, and two-time all-star at AAAA provincials when she led the Rapids to a silver medal in 2014 and a bronze the following year, 6’1” Matsui was being actively recruited by several postsecondary programs when she blew out her knee playing her other beloved sport, bas-
ketball. At first, she said, the injury didn’t feel serious, just “uncomfortable.” It was initially diagnosed as a strain, but when the swelling subsided her doctor delivered the bad news: a torn ACL that would require surgery and then rehab for an additional nine to 12 months. Matsui was devastated. A
deal to play volleyball and study at VIU fell through. “It was hard,” she said. “I didn’t know if I was going to play again.” Matsui pondered registering at Douglas College, just to study. But some heartfelt conversations with her high school and club coaches, including a pivotal one with Bryan Gee, convinced Matsui to put in the hard work to get back on the volleyball court. “He told me you’ve come this far, you’ve done so good, there’s no point in giving up now,” she said. So she didn’t, and a meeting with Gilray brought her to UFV, where she’s studying social work. Gilray said he never had a doubt, even though bringing Matsui to his team meant sacrificing a roster spot for the season. “It was an easy recruiting situation for me,” he said. “Knowing what she was going through, how she was dealing with it and how she wanted to get back,” Sitting out her freshman season wasn’t easy, Matsui said. Still, she participated in all the team activities, attended practices, compiled stats during games. She also put in time at the gym, stretching her injured knee, bending it, balancing on it, squatting, lifting weights and getting more physically fit. “That’s what that year off really offers them, to allow them to come back stronger,” Gilray said. Even another knee injury scare midway through this season hasn’t deterred Matsui, who wears a brace around her reconstructed joint. After all, she’d already been to the bottom. “It was something I can use to make myself better,” Matsui said of her battle back to the top. mbartel@tricitynews.com
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TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A27
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HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
LACROSSE
Adanacs pluck PoCo for WLA draft picks Team looks to bolster offence MARIO BARTEL
THE TRI-CITY NEWS
The Coquitlam Adanacs went down the hill for their first selection in last Wednesday’s Western Lacrosse Association graduating junior player draft held at the Langley Events Centre. The Adanacs picked Sam DeGroot, of the Port Coquitlam Saints, in hopes his offence will help them climb the WLA standings. He was selected second overall, after the Langley Thunder plucked New Westminster Junior Salmonbellies’ star Connor Robinson. But Adanacs’ general manager Mike Petrie said DeGroot was hardly a consolation prize. “We feel Sam is and was the best overall two-way player available,” said Petrie, praising the left-handed shooter for his “fierce competitiveness, and versatility.” DeGroot scored 25 goals and 26 assists in 17 games with the Junior A Saints last season. He also had four points in three playoff games and was awarded the BC Junior A Lacrosse League’s Al Boles memorial trophy as its most inspirational player. Last September, he was drafted by the Vancouver Stealth of the National Lacrosse League in the third round of their draft. The Adanacs also looked towards Port Coquitlam for
their second pick in the first round —sixth overall – when they selected Saints’ goalie Andrew Gallant. The former intermediate Adanac whose rights were traded by the Junior Adanacs to the Saints in 2013 for snipers Matt Delmonico and Tyler Pace as well as Mitch Milani, had 18 wins, 19 losses and a 8.90 goals agains average in 44 games over three seasons with Port Coquitlam. Petrie said Gallant has all the tools of game composure, work ethic and attitude to become a top goalie in the WLA “within a couple of years or sooner.” With Coquitlam scheduled to make another two picks in the second round, Petrie elected to swing a deal for the team’s ninth selection overall, sending it to the Victoria Shamrocks in exchange for Evan Messenger Jr. Petrie said the Delta native, who also plays for the Vancouver Stealth of the National Lacrosse League, will bolster the Adanacs’ anemic offence, which managed only 133 goals last season, just two more than last place Langley. “Evan is going to fit in very nicely on the left side offence,” Petrie said of Messenger, who scored five goals in seven games for the Shamrocks last season but missed two weeks with an injury. “(He) is a true, natural goal scorer.” The Adanacs then picked Jeremy Bosher of the Jr. Salmonbellies later in the
second round. Petrie said he was surprised the right-handed forward was still available for the 14th pick overall. “We felt he should have been drafted between eighth and tenth,” Petrie said. Bosher had 224 points, including 105 goals, in 59 career games with the Jr. ‘Bellies. He’s a senior attending the University of Denver on a field lacrosse scholarship where he plays the midfield. He was also named to Canada’s national field lacrosse team last October for a series of exhibition games against his university team as preparation for the 2018 men’s world lacrosse championships that will be played in Netanya, Israel, in July. It wasn’t until the third round the Adanacs looked towards the hometown junior team when they selected Mac Dailly 16th overall. The 6’ defender had 24 points in 41 games over two seasons with the Jr. Adanacs. But he had no points in 23 playoff games, eight of them in the 2016 Minto Cup that was won by Coquitlam. Other players selected by the Adanacs in the draft’s eight rounds included Jayden Campbell, Trevor Chernoff, Mickey Fitzpatrick and Jesse Gastaldo. The team had no selection in the seventh round. • The Adanacs will open their 2018 WLA schedule at home May 26 against the Nanaimo Timbermen. mbartel@tricitynews.com @mbartelTC
ROBERT MCDONALD PHOTO
Dr. Charles Best Blue Devils forward Geoffrey Noris has nowhere to go against Heritage Woods Kodiaks defenders Zach Hamed and Cameron Aarbo in the Fraser North division AAAA boys basketball final, last Thursday at Pinetree secondary school. Heritage Woods won the game, 56-53, and will go into the Fraser Valley regional finals as the seventh seed. The rest of the Fraser North teams advancing to regionals will have to play elimination round games today (Wednesday). The tenth-seeded Blue Devils will have to face #23 Johnston Heights tonight at 8:15 p.m. at Semiahmoo secondary school. If they win, they would play a rematch against Heritage Woods on Friday at 6:30 p.m., also at Semiahmoo. The Terry Fox Ravens, who defeated Pinetree, 73-63, to finish third in Fraser North and earn the 11th seed in regionals, will play #22 North Surrey tonight at 8:15 p.m. at Walnut Grove secondary school in Langley. The Timberwolves will play #21 Mission at 8:15 p.m. at Holy Cross regional secondary school in Surrey. The 13th-seeded Riverside Rapids will play the earlier game there at 6:15 p.m., against #20 Sullivan Heights, while 15th-ranked Centennial will go up against #18 South Delta in the 6:15 p.m. game at Semiahmoo. The regional playdown tournament concludes Feb. 25 at the Langley Events Centre (LEC), and the top seven teams will go on to the provincial finals to be held March 7-10, also at the LEC.
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A28 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
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B.C.’s ‘dual agency’ ban throwing real estate agents into disarray A new B.C. “dual agency” rule banning real estate agents from working with both the buyer and seller of a property are so complex and onerous it will result in frustrated consumers and a blizzard of paperwork when it comes into force March 15, according to agents. The Office of the Superintendent of Real Estate announced B.C.’s new real estate consumer protection rules last November, but agents say there has not been enough time to understand the shifting regulations or how they will be interpreted. Damian Stathonikos, director of communications and public affairs at the BC Real Estate Association (BCREA), said interpretations of the new regulations have been “tweaked” at least three times by the council since they were introduced. The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver supports higher standards that protect the public, said president Jill Oudil. “We’re concerned, however, about the compressed timing for implementation and the potentially negative impacts these rules could have on consumers, the way they’re currently being interpreted.” “Everyone is so confused,” said Matt Kerr, a veteran real estate agent with Re/Max Real Estate Services in Vancouver. One major concern is that listing agents will be prohibited from selling a home to a buyer with whom they have had dealings in the past. The council warns agents, “Your obligation to protect confidential information continues even after you have stopped providing services to your client.” It defines this as “double recusal” meaning the agent could have confidential information about the buyer and the seller. In such cases, according to the regulations, the buyer would be required to work with a different agent or agree not to be represented.
“I have also heard that there has to be a physical wall in the office between you and any agent you recommend to a former client,” added Kerr. “It is bizarre.” But Michelle Yu, a top-producing West Side real estate agent, said she has no problems with the new regulations. “If my mother wanted to buy a home through me, I would tell her to use someone else,” Yu said. BCREA’s Stathonikos said that after March 15, all B.C. real estate agents will likely attempt to tightly follow the letter of the new law. “A $250,000 fine? That is a career-ending penalty.”
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TRI-CITY NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, A29
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NOW SELLING 57 SPACIOUS TOWNHOMES 2, 3 & 4 BEDROOMS OVER 2000 SQ. FT.
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A30 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2018, TRI-CITY NEWS
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General employment RILEY, Pamela Susan 1956 - 2018
JOB
Pamela passed away peacefully at Ridge Meadows Hospital on January 28th, 2018. She is Lovingly remembered by her daughter Nikki Gleave (Bryan Gleave) and Grandson William Gleave as well as her siblings; Gerald McCagherty, Patsy Birmingham, Shelley Basaraba, Laurie Baker, Merrill McCagherty, Linda Vanichuk, Edward McCagherty and Michael McCagherty.
FAIR FEB 12-18
A Celebration of Pamela’s Life will be held on February 17, 2018, at 1:00pm at First Memorial Burkeview 1340 Dominion Avenue, Port Coquitlam. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to Red Cross.
HOME CARE NEEDED HOME SUPPORT WANTED P/T. Stretch, Lift, Clean. Will train. John • 604-944-0926 AUJLAS’ FARMS LTD
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Mike 604-961-1280 Gutter/roof CleaninG Yard CleaninG Snow removal Call Simon: 604-230-0627
Boarding & Taping, Good Rates! Reliable, Free Est. Reno’s & Small Jobs Welcome! Call Gurprit 604-710-7769
Electrical Installations www.nrgelectric.ca
604-520-9922
ASSISTED LIVING RENTAL 2BR/2BA Privately owned. $4,250. 2266 Atkins Avenue, PoCo − One standing shower and one bath tub − At least 10 nutritious meals prepared by Professional Chef! − 24hr emergency response system within each suite, monitored on site by qualified staff including nurse − Afternoon snacks & coffee/tea service throughout the day − Weekly light housekeeping and flat linen laundry service − 24hr concierge and plenty security features − All in−suite utilities (heat, hot water, and hydro), and cable − Full access to all amenities: Theatres, private dining rooms, fitness centres, libraries, patios, pools, spas, gardens, etc. − Daily social events and many entertainment activities 604−727−1024 assistedlivingrentals@gmail.com
RENT OUT YOUR EXTRA SPACE
YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call. Lic#89402. Fast same day service. Insured. Guar’d. We love small jobs. 604-568-1899
Excavating Pedro’s ContraCting & drainage Landscaping, water lines, and cement work.
604.468.2919
SPECIAL WINTER PAINTING DISCOuNT INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Residential & Commercial
35%OFF
17 years exp. Free Estimates
A. RIGHTWAY PAINTING Ltd.
778-984-0666 Patios
If I Can’t Do It, It Can’t Be Done!
Call Robert Affordability
INTERIORS: Baths (reno’s/ repairs) specializing in drywall, doors, flooring, tiling, plumbing, painting, miscellaneous, etc. VERSATILE! EXPERIENCED IN OVER 30 LINES OF WORK! *Exterior deck, fence and landscaping ties installation and repairs
For positive results Call Robert
SERVICE CALLS WELCOME
Call to advertise in
Home Services 604.630.3300
A-1 Contracting. Bsmt, bath, kitchen cabinets, tiling, painting & decks. Dhillon, 604-782-1936 CONCRETE FORMING framing, siding crew available 604.218.3064
Residential & Commercial “Award Winning Renovations”
37 Years of Experience
604-728-3009
info@jkbconstruction.com www.jkbconstruction.com
Roofing RCABC MEMBER FULL SERVICE ROOFING AND WATERPROOFING SEE:
• Aluminum Patio Covers • Sunrooms and Windows • Aluminum Railings, Vinyl Decking
604.460.1322
Auto Depot 604-727-3111
2017 Honda HR-V AWD 10Km! 2014 VW Jetta $10888 auto 37K ‘08 M-Benz B-200 hatch $8888 2006 Volvo S-40 Sport 6-speed 2005 Honda Civic SI auto s/roof
Auto Depot 604-727-3111
Scrap car removal
THE SCRAPPER SCRAP CAR & TRUCK REMOVAL
CASH FOR ALL VEHICLES
604-790-3900 OUR SERVIC 2H
E
established 1952
GROOVY
Free Est. 604-521-2688
Plumbing
GL Roofing & Repairs. New Roof, Clean Gutters $80. info@ glroofing.ca • 604-240-5362
778 PLUMBING AND HEATING Comm, res, repairs and installs, gas fitting, renos. drain cleaning. Fully ins’d and ticketed. Reas rates. Prompt.
778-834-6966 BRING HOME IMPROVEMENTS
TO THE NEXT LEVEL
Roofing Expert 778-230-5717 Repairs/re-roof/new roofs. All work guaranteed. Frank
Rubbish Removal
Your Clunker is someone’s Classic.
JUNK REMOVAL By EARTH FRIENDLY JUNK REMOVAL
REFER TO THE HOME SERVICES SECTION FOR ALL YOUR HOME IMPROVEMENT NEEDS
Furniture • Appliances • Electronics Junk/Rubbish • Construction Debris • Drywall • Yard Waste Concrete • Everything Else! **Estate Clean-up Specialists** PIANOS & HOT TUBS NO PROBLEM
604.587.5865
www.recycleitcanada.ca
BC GARDENING
Gardening & Landscaping
Winter Clean-up
Lawn Care & Maintenance Trim/Prune. Clean-up. Disposal Wilma • 604-618-8017
2015 VOLVO AWD 41Km XC60 2014 JETTA sedan $10,888 VW 2014 Toyota RAV4 ELECTRIC 2012 FIAT 500 Lounge $8888 2008 Honda FIT Hatch $6880
www.PatioCoverVancouver.com
Lawn & Garden
A Gardener & A Gentleman Lawn, Garden, Trees. Prune. Clean-up. Junk.604-319-5302
Auto Depot 604-727-3111
handymanconnection.com
for All services
Done Quick. Licenced. Done Right. Bonded. Guaranteed. Insured.
2001 Durango 4x4 Plus $3950 2003 Accent Hatch auto $2950 2005 Ford Focus SE auto $2950 1998 Honda Accord EXL $2950 2001 Volvo V70 wagon $3950
604-878-5232
TOTEM ROOFING
•Aerate •Power Rake •Lime Chaefer Beetle Repair New Lawn; Plant & Install • Prune •Hedges •Trimming •POWER WASH •GUTTERS •Concrete & Repairs; Walls Sidewalk, Driveway, Patios WCB & Fully insured. All Work Guar. Free Est.
Donny 604-600-6049
Get Your Lawn Looking Amazing Again With BC Instant Lawns Lawn Maintenance Programs / Sod Rolls & Soils New Lawn Installations / Fertilizer and Seed Packs Do it yourself with a custom fertilizer and seed pack or let us do the work.
Call 604-630-3300 to book your ad
Done Quick. Licenced. Done Right. Bonded. Guaranteed. Insured.
604 -230 -3539 778-322-2378 604-339-1989
All Electrical, Low Cost. Licensed. Res/Com. Small job expert. Renos, Panel changes. (604)374-0062
HOME REPAIRS RENOVATIONS INSTALLATIONS
totemroofing.ca
604-941-1618 or 604-844-4222
ElEctrical
3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour (Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint. NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring & Maid Services.
Handyperson
HOME REPAIRS RENOVATIONS INSTALLATIONS
SportS & ImportS
ABE MOVING & Delivery & Rubbish Removal $30/HR per Person• 24/7. 604-999-6020
Gutters
handymanconnection.com
Renos & Repairs. BBB Member.
APARTMENTS/CONDOS FOR RENT
Drainage, Video
604-878-5232
To advertise call
604.630.3300
.
#1 Backhoes & Excavators Trenchless Waterlines Bobcats & Dump Truck & All Material Deliveries
Renos & Home ImpRovement
Moving
HERFORT CONCRETE
SuiteS For rent 2 bedroom 1 bath $1600 Newly updated, large patio. Blue Mountain Area. Available March 1st. Call James or Anita @ 604-655-8458
Excavating
POCO APPLIANCE MART 604 942-4999 • Servicing ALL Makes of Appliances & Refrigeration. Work Guar’teed
Cleaning
AUTOMOTIVE
Pricing & order online:
www.bcinstantlawns.com • 604-454-4954
Always Reddy Rubbish Removal WINTER CLEAN-UP
Residential / Commercial • Respectful • Responsible • Reliable • Affordable Rates All Rubbish, Junk & Recycling needs. Johnson • 778-999-2803 reddyrubbishremoval.com
Any project,
BIG
or small...
Find all the help you need in the Home Services section
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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.
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