NV Outlook December 22, 2011

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A six week series on the Spirit of Giving

I’ll be home for Christmas... only in my dreams For many North Shore emergency workers, Dec. 25th shifts are just part of the job

» SLEEPLESS IN NORTH VAN

FADE TO BLACK

Instead of hibernating, black bears are prowling local neighbourhoods for food

North Van independent video shop Schlockbuster Alternative Flicks closing its doors Jan. 1

» PAGE 6

Pages 10-12

NORTH SHORE

» PAGE 13

Real Estate

Weekly » INSIDE

STARTS ON PAGE 25


2 Thursday, December 22, 2011

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4 Thursday, December 22, 2011

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Looking West After working to establish a dedicated mosque in North Vancouver, the first of its kind on the North Shore, Farouk Elesseily says he’s now going to turn his attention to West Vancouver SEAN KOLENKO

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est Vancouver’s Farouk Elesseily’s been working to build mosques in B.C. for more than half his life. And with the B.C. Muslim Association, the organization he helped found in his living room in the 1960s, he’s been successful in doing so. Communities from Prince George to Nanaimo have seen mosques built with the help of Elesseily and his associates, but he vows there’s more work to do. “I’m still working to build more mosques for the people to pray,” says Elesseily. “All my life, until I die.” Until recently, the focus of the B.C Muslim Association was establishing the first dedicated mosque on the North Shore — there have been numerous temporary rooms used for prayer, called mussalla, in the area for years — at the former St. Richard’s Anglican Church site on 15th Street in North Vancouver. The building was recently sold and is in the process of being converted into a mosque but not by the B.C. Muslim Association. The new tenants are another group called the North Vancouver Islamic Association. Elesseily praised the construction work City of North Vancouver crews completed around the property before the required on-site renovations begin as the building’s interior needs a significant facelift, he says. According to designs on North Vancouver Islamic Association’s website, the exterior will also receive a renovation to resemble a traditional mosque. Ellesseily believes the North Vancouver Islamic community will be wellserved by the new mosque, so his organization has closed its mussalla at the corner of Pemberton Avenue and 1st Street and will begin looking at a potential new location in West Van. At first, Elesseily says, it will be another temporary location, planned for the West Vancouver Community Centre, because “that’s how we move.” The key to determining whether or not West Vancouver, and the Squamish area he adds, requires a dedicated mosque is research and connection with the community. “It’s a mussalla first then we look for something permanent,” he says. “With time it comes, we always have hope. If God says it will be. Mosques are community centres that grow with the area. And we’re Canadians too, working for Canada and working for our children.” In addition to his continuous work helping erect mosques, Elesseily, 74, is also a lifelong student. At 65, Elesseilly completed two securities courses at Simon Fraser University after a successful career as an engineer. His studies in that field took him from his native Egypt to Switzerland before eventually arriving in Canada. Now, he’s preparing to embark on a three-month trip that will take him to Mecca and Medina, the two holiest cities in Saudi Arabia, the Turkish capital of Istanbul and finally Cairo, the Egyptian capital. He’s been to those areas before but Elesseily says he’s excited to return and again study the cultures of other countries — a pursuit and challenge he relishes. “At my age, I don’t know as much as I would expect I would by this point,” he says. “But my way is to investigate things my way.” skolenko@northshoreoutlook.com

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6 Thursday, December 22, 2011

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Bears still roaming N. Shore neighbourhoods Educating residents on bear-proofing key to preventing conflicts, says wildlife advocate AU TO M OT I V E Service you can Trust

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inter snowfall hasn’t coaxed all North Shore black bears into hibernation. There are still some restless bears roaming neighbourhoods in search of food. And in some cases, it isn’t hard to find. Outdoor freezers, bird feeders and mismanaged garbage are the main bear attractants this time of the year, according to Tony Webb, chair of the North Shore Black Bear Network. Weekly black bear sightings have been reported by local residents since midNovember. In one incident, a distressed 19-lb. cub was spotted in the Upper Lonsdale area. The cub was captured but succumbed to over-sedation, hypothermia and injuries suffered from a fall out of a tree, Webb said. Another local bear made North American headlines after hitching a ride on a garbage truck from North Vancouver to downtown Vancouver. That bear was tranquilized by conservation officers in front of Queen Elizabeth Theatre and relocated to the Squamish Valley. “A black bear will not go into hibernation if there is food available — it’s as simple as that,” said Webb. “We still have people who don’t know how to make their home non-attractive to bears.” He estimated there is an 80 per cent compliance rate to wildlife bylaws in the District of North Vancouver, but added it

only takes a few instances of non-compliance to attract a bear. Under West Vancouver’s solid waste bylaw, inadvertently attracting wildlife to a property by, for example, putting garbage bins on the curb prior to 5 a.m. on pickup day could result in a $300 fine. The DNV’s solid waste bylaw is slightly more relaxed: 5:30 a.m. is the earliest residents can put out their garbage and non-compliance may result in a $100 fine. Paul Reece, West Van’s bylaw officer specializing in animal control and compliance, said the department’s main focus is educating the public about cohabiting with bears. No wildlife-related fines have been handed out this year in the DWV. “[Fining] is not something we like to do,” said Reece, adding the education doesn’t just cover conflicts with bears. “It’s all wildlife. Nobody wants a whole bunch of skunks in their backyard.” Bylaw officers were called Tony Webb out three times this year to West Vancouver neighbourhoods where wildlife attractants were reported. Another 11 bylaw calls pertained to garbage containers being put out early or brought in too late. A couple of these cases involved new residents who are accustomed to living in more urban areas where wildlife does not exist, he said. In another instance, it turned out to be an elderly person who was not aware of the bylaw. But there is hope on the horizon, added Webb. Tougher amendments made to the BC Wildlife Act in late November state: “A person must not leave or place an attractant in, on or about any land or

premises where there are or where they are likely to be people, in a manner in which the attractant could a) attract dangerous wildlife to the land or premises, and b) be accessible to dangerous wildlife.” Reece said the DWV solid waste bylaw mirrors those amendments. In the Seato-Sky corridor, the Resort Municipality of Whistler and the District of Squamish have taken further steps to prevent human conflicts with bears and now each municipality has attained ‘Bear Smart’ status from the province. Squamish bylaws now require all residents to use bear-resistant garbage containers for curbside pickup. This year the municipality’s bear deaths were much lower compared to previous years, said Webb. Whistler has a different system in operation. They no longer offer a curbside garbage pickup and instead offer bear-proof dumpsters placed at various locations. “The lack of adequate bylaws is the main holdback for [the North Shore] from Bear Smart status,” said Webb. “We in the DNV appear to have more bears that had to be killed this year when compared to other municipalities in the Lower Mainland.” The Black Bear Network is reporting 12 bears killed in DNV in 2011 and none in West Vancouver. Reece said the numbers are not a representation of one municipality working harder to avoid conflicts with wildlife. “There are so many different factors at play,” said Reece. “There are berry crops in different areas. It might be [the DNV’s] year to have bear conflicts.” reporter@northshoreoutlook.com

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www.northshoreoutlook.com

Thursday, December 22, 2011 7

The six o’clock storyteller

Best

Mike McCardell’s two-minute TV tales about everyday life inspire and entertain

Wishes!

F

All the

Here’s wishing you and your family a wonderful holiday season and a happy, healthy and prosperous new year.

best for 2012

Ralph Sultan, MLA West Vancouver–Capilano

604-981-0050 www.ralphsultanmla.ca

FRIENDS FAMILY FLOWERS AND

ive days a week, he tells stories for a living. His short vignettes about everyday life — often quirky, sometimes inspirational and heartfelt, occasionally just cute — appear on Global TV’s six o’clock news hour. Tales about the tow truck-driving “Junkyard Granny” or “Parking Lot Santa,” an immigrant parking lot attendant who decorates his booth with a pile of Christmas decorations every season. Now 67, Mike McCardell, an ex-NYC crime reporter, has been telling these 2-minute tales for more than three decades. He does, on average, 221 stories a year. But he’s never worried about running out of material. Everybody has a story. And if they don’t, McCardell blames himself for not being able to coax it out. None of his stories are pre-planned. Every morning he hops into a TV van with his brownSTORIED CAREER - North Van’s Mike bag lunch, often a ham sandwich and hardMcCardell has been a fixture on the TV newsboiled egg, and drives around with a cameraman hour for the past three decades. Nick Didlick photo trolling for interesting stories. “Hey, look at the kids in the park,” the camera case. guy might say to him. “I see something that’s interesting and it’s got a “I did cute kids last night.” human in it — but not always.” So they keep driving. Sometimes there are stories about worms or His story-hunting mantra is simple: If you slugs. believe it will happen, it will happen. “The good stuff is people like the stories,” he That simple belief doesn’t come courtesy of says. some self-help, new age lit. McCardell’s storytelling apprenticeship started He started believing in the power of positive early on, in part thanks to his delinquent childthinking a decade ago when he met an autishood. tic boy fishing with a tree-branch pole at Trout Growing up in Brooklyn, N.Y., he spent a lot Lake. of time in school detention, which gave him After getting permission from the boy’s foster plenty of time to read. But he wasn’t turning the parent, he asked the young fisherman: pages of the classics. He preferred the local tabCatch anything? loid papers and sat captivated as he read about Not yet. the exploits of colourful criminals like “Three Any nibbles? Finger Louie.” Nope. After graduating from high school he told his Then the boy told him: You can have anything mother he was going to become a journalists; you want if you really believe it — but you have she gave him a subway token to go downtown to to really believe it. apply. He landed a job at the Daily News, where McCardell has been a believer ever since. he started in the mailroom and worked his way “Just say it,” says McCardell, sipping a black to reporter. His first byline was a feature piece: coffee at the mall. about a 100-year-old man who still had a pen“Today’s good and I’m going to find story. It’s chant for booze and chasing ladies. “I still have easy; you can’t lose. that clipping.” “I believe.” Later he moved to the crime beat. In the early The power of positivity has worked in all 1970s, as the streets of New York increasingly aspects of his life, he says: health, marriage, fambecame strewn with shell casings and crimeily — everything. And ever since meeting the scene tape, he decided to move his family to young fisherman, McCardell has never failed to B.C. After a stint at the Vancouver Sun, he began land a story for his six o’clock slot. telling short stories durThat’s nearly 1,500 stories and ing the news-hour in the counting. COFFEE mid-1970s, something he’s And while McCardell believes done ever since. in believing, his camera operators WITH He’s also become a proare more superstitious, carrying Justin Beddall lific author. His seventh around things like “good luck” editor@northshore book, entitled Here’s Mike, rocks in the van just in case. And outlook.com was published earlier this occasionally they need a buzzermonth. beater to make the news hour. In the book’s foreword, A few weeks back, after investMcCardell writes that he ing most of the day on a hot-dog hadn’t planned on writing another book. truck story that tanked, it was starting to get Then he met the store cashier who told him dark and McCardell looked over at his camerathat her mother, who was battling breast cancer man. So where do we go? As they drove across at the time, loved reading his books. He asked the the wooden bridge at the entrance to Granville woman her mom’s name. Her name was June. Island, the cameraman said “look at that.” McCardell, told the cashier he’d dedicate a All McCardell saw was a group of vagrants. book to her. And he did. “No, the kids feeding the pigeons.” There are plenty of good tales in his new book Turns out a group of schools kids from from his TV work and others collected off-camChamplain Heights had seen a play at Granville Island and were supposed to go holiday shopping era — all about ordinary people and things. “Every moment is plain old fun,” he says about afterwards but the class agreed that was a “boring” idea and instead wanted to feed the pigeons, telling stories, “looking around at kids, old folks and flowers.” the teacher told him. Say that again, McCardell said to the teacher, —Partial proceeds from the sale of Here’s Mike a grin forming on his face. He knew he’d found will be donated to Variety — The Children’s another good six o’clock story. Charity. For more book info, visit harbourpubMcCardell’s pieces are often described as lishing.com “human interest” stories but it’s not always the

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8 Thursday, December 22, 2011

www.northshoreoutlook.com Published & Printed by Black Press Ltd. at 104-980 West 1st St., N. Van., B.C., V7P 3N4

viewpoint Published every Thursday by Black Press Group Ltd. 104-980 West 1st Street North Vancouver, BC V7P 3N4 P 604.903.1000 F 604.903.1001 Classifieds: 604.575.5555 Publisher/Advertising Manager Greg Laviolette 604.903.1013 publisher@northshoreoutlook.com Editor Justin Beddall 604.903.1005 editor@northshoreoutlook.com Circulation Manager Tania Nesterenko 604.903.1011 circulation@northshoreoutlook.com Staff Reporters Sean Kolenko 604.903.1021 skolenko@northshoreoutlook.com Todd Coyne 604.903.1008 tcoyne@northshoreoutlook.com Regular Contributors Catherine Barr, Len Corben, Rob Newell, Maria Spitale-Leisk

— EDITOR I A L —

Truth in airfares Imagine going to a restaurant for a $5 steak dinner, but when you get there you discover being seated at a table will cost you five dollars, a surcharge of seven dollars for the plate and utensils and another four dollars for the server to take your order. Add on the tip and HST and suddenly your cheap meal has become an expensive night out. That’s exactly how Canada’s airlines have been allowed to operate for years. It’s a stroke of marketing genius; advertise only the base cost of the ticket but don’t reveal the full price of that ticket, including all its various surcharges, fees and taxes until the purchaser is ready to commit. That’s how we get airfares of $99 to London that end up sucking $1,200 out of your bank account. It’s disingenuous at best, deceptive at worst. And consumer advocates have been complaining about it for years. In fact, the federal government did do something about it, adding the “all-in-one” airfare advertising clause to the Canadian Transportation Act in June 2007. But effective lobbying by the airlines, which complained the new pricing policy would put them at a disadvantage to foreign airlines who could continue to advertise only their base fares on their own websites, has prevented its implementation for years. That’s about to change. European airlines have been required to advertise the complete cost of a ticket since 2008. In January, American airlines will also fall in line with all-in airfares. The competitive disadvantage argument no longer exists. So why will Canadian consumers have to wait another 12 months for a five-year-old law to finally be enforced? While it’s likely only the most naive traveler who believes they could actually travel to England for $99, forcing the airlines to be up front when advertising their fares will empower consumers to make the best choice for their travel spending. –Black Press

Display Advertising Nick Bellamy, Hollee Brown, Dianne Hathaway, Shelby Lewis, Tracey Wait Ad Control 604.903.1000 Creative Services Doug Aylsworth, Maryann Erlam, Tannis Hendriks

VERIFIED CIRCULATION

Editorial submissions are welcome, however unsolicited works will not be returned. Submissions may be edited for brevity, legality and taste at the Editor's discretion. Copyright and property rights subsist in all display advertising and other material appearing in The Outlook. If, in the Publisher's opinion, an error is made that materially affects the value of the ad to the advertiser, a corrected advertisement will be inserted upon demand without further charge. Make good insertions are not granted on minor errors which do not lessen the value of the advertisement. Notice of error is required before second insertion. Opinions expressed in columns and letters to the Editor are not necessarily shared by the Publisher.

THAT’S A WRAP - Ann Dickinson, Jessica Kirejczyk and Angela Han take a break from their jobs at LexisNexis Canada to volunteer for the Starlight Childrens Foundation’s gift wrapping service at Park Royal South. Rob Newell photo

— LET TER OF T HE W EEK— Post secondary students need more help Editor, The Occupy Movement at SFU, and presumably at the other campuses, has touched upon an important issue regarding the state of our post-secondary education system. While Canadian post-secondary education is far cheaper than in many other jurisdictions, including the United States, there continues to be a cost barrier preventing otherwise qualified stu-

dents from getting the education they need to climb the social ladder. One thing not noted is that while Canadians enjoy a lower base tuition, we lack many of the awards and grants the U.S. has which lower the cost of tuition to manageable rates. Student loans also continue to be a financial burden on students, as students in B.C. are burdened with the highest loan interest rates in the country. There are two very simple things the province can do right away to ease this financial pain. First, reduce the interest rate on student loans to the Canadian

average or below. Asking students to pay back more than they received when they’re least able to pay is cruel, and forces new graduates to take out other forms of debt to accomplish their repayment schedules. This would save hundreds of dollars per student. Second, create a system of student grants similar in style to the American Pell Grants. These grants provide eligible students with thousands of dollars that can be used towards their education that does not need to be paid back.

— QU E S T ION — OF THE WEEK

Do you think North Shore municipalities need to toughen their wildlife bylaws? Vote online: www.

northshoreoutlook.com

Trevor Ritchie, Burnaby

Who’s using your prescription drugs? In a recent study,* 20% of teens said they had taken a prescription drug in the past year to get high. Three quarters said they stole it from home. This can be dangerous and possibly deadly. For the tools you need to prevent this and to learn how to talk

PDFC

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Partnership for a Drug Free Canada

*Source: CAMH Drug Use Among Ontario Students 2009 study


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video online

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northshoreoutlook.com

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ometimes you’re lucky enough to work in a really special place. Such is the case here at The Outlook. The dedicated people behind the scenes here are more like family than co-workers and their determination to be the best shows in every issue. From the sales staff to distribution and editorial, everyone takes responsibility for putting out a quality newspaper every week. This month, staff celebrated the season and toasted the year at Le Bistro Chez Michel in North Vancouver. It was a great annual get-together complete with fabulous food and friends. And as Christmas approaches, I’d like to take this chance to dedicate this column to the hard working folk you don’t get to see, but who mean everything to our continued success. Thank you and happy holidays...

CAT’S

EYE

Cat Barr cbarr@westvancouver.com

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6 B Aaron Van Pykstra, Former Outlook publisher, passed the torch to Greg Laviolette who celebrated another milestone this year: the birth of his daughter Lauren with partner Caralyn Clark. C Outlook sports columnist Len Corben and his wife Mavis enjoy the festive evening. D Sales rep Tracey Wait and husband/local actor extraordinaire Marcus Hondro mug for the camera. E Ad control gal Jeanette Duey spreads the Christmas cheer. F Paginating queen Maryann Erlam and her husband Paul enjoyed a well-deserved vacation in Paris and Venice this past fall. GCirculation manager Tania Nesterenko and fiance Dwain Berlin, pictured here with zone manager Emeric De Traversay, and his beautiful wife Raquel, are hearing wedding bells. H Outlook reporter Maria Spitale and husband Andy Leisk also spent some time in Europe this year. IGlamorous-looking ladies and Outlook ad reps Hollee Brown and Dianne Hathaway bring some sparkle to the evening. J ‘Creative’ Tannis Hendriks cozies up to hubby Martin.

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CAT CALLS To send event information to Cat visit her website www. catherinebarr.com or fax 604-903-1001. Follow Cat on Twitter: @catherinebarr

Thursday, December 22, 2011 9


10 Thursday, December 22, 2011

www.northshoreoutlook.com

I'll be home for Christmas... For many North Shore emergency workers Dec. 25th shifts are just part of the job By Todd Coyne

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1745 West 4th Ave. Vancouver 604-734-7669 / Lonsdale: 2057 Lonsdale Ave. N.Vancouver 604-985-9669 Clearance Stores: 1717 West 4th Ave. Vancouver 604-742-0032 / 2077 Lonsdale Ave. N.Vancouver 604-985-1313 www.boardroomshop.com

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s t o ri e

HR

or some it’s a matter of time constraints, for others it’s distance and for still more it’s the demands of a job. For emergency workers like North Vancouver city firefighters, whether or not they get to be home for the holidays is all luck of the draw. Fire Capt. Bruce Allen can’t count how many Christmas Days he’s put in at the city fire hall but he does know one thing for sure: This will be his last. A six week series on Capt. Allen will retire from the the Spirit of Giving fire service in January. But first he’s got an 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. shift on Christmas Day. “You hope for it to be quiet but you never know,” Allen said, recalling a massive deliberately-set house fire he attended on Christmas Day in the mid1990s. “But for the most part it’s usually pretty quiet.” Because his teenage daughters are nearly grown up, Capt. Allen said working Christmas Day isn’t as difficult as it once was. “We will open presents at night instead of that morning,” he said. “The kids will probably be doing something with their boyfriends and that kind of thing for Christmas anyway.” Oftentimes veterans like Capt. Allen will try to trade for Christmas Day shifts so firefighters with young kids can be at home. Firefighters like sevenyear veteran Tyler Lentsch. “A lot of the guys with no kids or the guys whose kids are 15, 16, 17 — a lot of those guys will work for guys if they can to let those guys go home that


www.northshoreoutlook.com

Thursday, December 22, 2011 11

if only in my dreams have the younger kids,” said Lentsch, 30. “Especially the single guys, they’re always asking guys if anyone’s looking for it off.” Lentsch has worked the Christmas Day shift before. But this year, with an 18-month-old son at home, he’ll work the Christmas Eve graveyard shift from 6 p.m. to 8 a.m. and should make it home in time to see his son reap Santa’s spoils. Christmas Day is a shift like any other, Lentsch said, although occasionally with a more relaxed training routine. Sometimes with a little ball hockey. “It depends on the captain. It depends on who’s in charge as an officer that day. Some guys like to do it, some guys don’t,” Lentsch said. When Capt. Allen’s in charge, it’s game on. “We’ll move the trucks around and make some room on the apparatus floor and play floor hockey. We’ve done that in the past to kill a few hours here and there. Anything for our cardio exercise.” And since the 10 to 12 city firefighters staffing the hall at all hours can’t be home for Christmas, their families are allowed to visit and bring Christmas to them. “The captain’s actually allowing our families to come on the 24th night to

the fire hall and visit,” Lentsch said, “He’s allowing everyone to come down and say hi and sit for a bit, but obviously if we get a call we have to go.” Last year, the chef from the Pinnacle Hotel at the Pier brought a whole turkey dinner to the station, replete with gravy, seasonal vegetables, stuffing, cranberry sauce, cheesecake and enough mayo and sliced bread for turkey sandwich leftovers.

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ertainly firefighters aren’t the only one’s keeping watch over the community for the holidays. First responders of all stripes have duties to fulfill that don’t stop when the calendar winds down to year’s end. But unlike full-time first responders, the all-volunteer North Shore Rescue squad doesn’t know their schedule in advance. In fact, they only work on days off from their 9-to-5s and for their selfless dedication and hard work, they are not compensated. North Shore Rescue leader Tim Jones has been on “many, many” dangerous rescues out in the mountains above the North Shore on Christmas continued, PAGE 12

ON CALL - Firefighter Sandy Garden responds to the 100 block of East 2nd. At left: Fire Captain Bruce Allen. Rob Newell photos

CityView

Find the City on Facebook | www.cnv.org/Facebook

Season’s Greetings from the City of North Vancouver

Are You Snow Ready?

The City of North Vancouver extends holiday greetings to its residents, businesses and visitors. Please note, City Hall will be closed from noon on December 23 - January 2, 2012. If you have an emergency regarding sewer, water drainage, snow or roads during this time, contact the Operations Emergency Line at 604-988-2212. Visit www.cnv.org/CelebrateTheSeason for information about winter safety, green holidays and festivities around the City. Enjoy a safe and happy holiday season!

Snow season is here. Significant snowfall and cold temperatures are anticipated. The City monitors conditions throughout the winter months and dispatches crews when snow and icy conditions are forecast.

2012 Recycling and Garbage Schedule The 2012 Recycling and Garbage Calendars are being delivered to all single-family homes between December 8 and December 23. This year, the collection schedule has a new, shorter format that makes it easier to find the information you need. Copies and maps are available online at www.cnv.org or by contacting the North Shore Recycling Program at 604-984-9730.

Let's Talk About Our Future The City has successfully completed the first stage of ‘CityShaping’ - an outreach initiative aimed at involving the community in updating the City’s Official Community Plan. Since launching in June 2011, more than 1,200 City residents, businesses and property owners have provided input and feedback. Participants identified key issues including housing affordability, transportation, public safety, financial sustainability and economic development. The next stage of community engagement will include focus groups, topic-based workshops and self-directed workbooks to explore solutions to complex issues in the City. Learn more and get involved at www.cnv.org/CityShaping.

141 West 14th Street, North Vancouver BC V7M 1H9 | Tel: 604.985.7761 | Fax: 604.985.9417 | info@cnv.org

HOW WE PLOW Municipal crews salt and plow roads in the following order of priority: 1. Major arterial streets, transit routes and access to emergency services 2. Collector streets, routes leading to isolated neighbourhoods and schools 3. Local streets Local streets are cleared only after snow and ice conditions on arterial and collector streets have stabilized. Lanes and alleys are not plowed during a snow event. YOUR ROLE AS A RESIDENT OR BUSINESS Clear snow or ice around your property as soon as possible after it snows. Ensure gutters and storm drains in front of your home are clear of leaves and other debris. Details at www.cnv.org/snowready.


12 Thursday, December 22, 2011

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continued from, PAGE 11 Eve, Christmas Day, New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day, he told The Outlook. Overzealous revellers fall from cliffs, hikers get hung up in tree wells and backcountry skiers and snowshoers tend to find avalanches. Jones recalled a 2007 Christmas Day rescue in which a couple went out backcountry skiing Christmas Eve in the Mount Seymour area but quickly found themselves in severe avalanche terrain above Theta Lake. “They survived an avalanche that night and the next morning were able to descend into a gully and get one cellphone call out saying they were trapped somewhere east of the Indian Arm,” Jones said. “Then a marine fog system came in and totally blanketed everything with heavy fog and we had to revert to a land-based response.” That meant rousing nine members of the North Shore Rescue team from their warm beds in the wee hours of Christmas morning, strapping on skis and retracing the potentially fatal missteps the couple had taken through avalancheprone terrain. In all, 15 members of the rescue squad would miss all the holiday festivities, from opening presents with their families to Christmas dinner, while the difficult mountain rescue dragged on from early morning on the 25th until well after midnight. And while Jones admits it was a highly frustrating situation for the rescuers involved, the rescue turned out much better than anyone could have expected when on their way out, rescuers actu-

ally came across another stranded skier, who Jones said would not have survived much longer in the elements. “No one knew he was out and he didn’t know what he was doing, just flailing away in chestdeep snow,” Jones said. “It was just by luck that we even came across him in the middle of nowhere because he would have been a popsicle stick soon. Believe me, this was his Christmas present.” For young North Shore Rescue newcomers like Mike Sample and Simon Jackson, who’ve both been volunteering with the team for just over two years, it’s tough to leave their young families at home whenever they go out on a call, but especially around the holidays. Both men will be on call this Christmas, as will any NSR member who’s not traveling for the holidays, and both said that the most important thing when leaving their families for a call is making up the time with them later. “We both did a lot of outdoor stuff before,” said Jackson, who has a wife and a one-year-old son. “But the difference is this is not planned and you obviously can’t take your family with you.” “It has a big social cost too,” Sample said, adding that it’s not just family but friends who suffer around the holidays too. “Our families have been extremely forgiving,” Jones said, getting the last word. “Essentially for a lot of us, we’re treated like the big kid of the family. The big kid that’s sometimes there and sometimes not.” tcoyne@northshoreoutlook.com twitter.com/toddcoyne

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Thursday, December 22, 2011 13

Dash away!

YOUR LAST MINUTE GIFT GUIDE Schlockbuster Alternative Flicks owner Randy Tarangul. File photo

Spot It!

Development killed the video star Independent video shop Schlockbuster Alternative Flicks to close Jan.1 SEAN KOLENKO S TA F F R E P O RT E R

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he only shop in North Vancouver with an entire shelf dedicated to criticallyacclaimed, yet controversial Danish filmmaker Lars von Trier is going out of business. And with the extinction of the von Trier catalogue goes the only rentable foreign, classic and western film collections in North Vancouver. These are the final days for Lower Lonsdale’s Schlockbuster Alternative Flicks, located at 228 Lonsdale Ave. As of Jan 1., North Shore cinephiles will have to cross a bridge if they want to rent something off the beaten, mainstream-Hollywood path. The Vancouver area has seen its share of independent movie stores close this year — Kitsilano landmark Videomatica included — but the end of Schlockbuster Video illustrates a different story than the typical declining-customer-base-because-of-cheaper-digital-alternatives tale so common amongst disappearing video shops. According to Schlockbuster owner Randy Tarangul, his customer base was growing. The reason he’s closing is because of a looming condo redevelopment of the entire 200-block of Lonsdale. Tarangul said his store was on a month-to-month lease for years so when he received an eviction notice from building owners Intracorp Development on Dec. 1 that said he had to be out in a month’s time, he began hunting for a new spot. Unfortunately for Tarangul, he ran out of time. “We searched frantically with realtors, family and friends. We

were trying desperately. But in the time frame we needed, places were asking double what we could afford for smaller units,” said Tarangul, noting he needed 1,000-1,500 square feet of space to hold his stock and could afford to pay $2,800-$3,000 per month. “It was horrible. We just ran out of time. As the mid-month mark hit we had to pull the plug.” David Jacobsen, development manager with Intracorp, said he was sympathetic to Tarangul’s plight but said his company must move ahead with a demolition of the current building by mid-January. Crews, added Jacobsen, have prep work to do before the building is demolished and need time to do so. “Wiring has to be disconnected and things like dry wall have to be taken out in a sequential way,” said Jacobsen. “And this is the site of a project that went through public process last year. There was a public hearing last February, final adoption from city council in March and pre-sales in May. In June tenants got a demolition notice clause as per their lease agreements and this particular owner was given notice within their lease agreement which was 30 days prior to eviction.” Until Jan. 1, Tarangul and his staff are selling everything in the shop, from the videos to the assorted movie props that adorn the walls. Tarangul told The Outlook the shop be open from 10 a.m.–10 p.m. until Jan.1. All movies will be $5 per copy. Those interested can bid on movie props and pictures. “Come out and support us one last time or else I’m going to have the world’s biggest personal collection,” he said. “We had 12,000 titles and I think we’ve got about 10,000 left. Please come out and buy what you can.” skolenko@northshoreoutlook.com

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all them the chummier complement to the department of foreign affairs. So-called interparliamentary or “friendship” groups are a big part of Canadian diplomacy and the North Shore’s two members of parliament were picked last month to head up some of the country’s most important friendship portfolios. John Weston, MP for West VancouverSunshine Coast-Sea to Sky Country, was tapped to lead the Canada-Mexico Friendship Group. North Vancouver MP Andrew Saxton will once again chair both the Canada-Malaysia and CanadaHong Kong groups, as well as vice-chair the Canada-China interparliamentary group for the third year running. Both politicians credit their histories in those countries for their selection by fellow MPs and senators. Saxton lived and worked for eight years in Asia — three in Hong Kong, five in Singapore — and Weston recently worked to gain freedom for Pavel Kulisek, a North Vancouver man held for more than three years in a Mexican jail without charge on the misplaced suspicion he was involved in drug trafficking. It’s stories like his, Weston said, that “prey on the minds” of the 1.6 million

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Canadians who visit Mexico annually, agenda when it comes to policy.” and especially on the minds of those “And they bring up issues that may be who, for reasons like Kulisek’s, decide irritants as well,” he added. not to. The December 2009 granting of “It’s in the interests of the Canada’s “approved destinaMexicans for the world to tion status” for Chinese travelbelieve that Mexico does lers is something Saxton said the have a fair criminal justice Canada-China friendship group system,” Weston told The had been working on “for some Outlook. “Canada has investtime” and its eventual success is ed over $1 million in judicial proof the friendship groups have and police reform recently so real influence. I want to examine how that Saxton said he hopes to expand John Weston money has been spent.” Canada’s global friendship-group There are currently 17 portfolio and said he recently had Canadians incarcerated in the some success to that end while Mexican penal system, Weston on a November trip to Malaysia, said, and protecting their Vietnam and Singapore with rights is a chief priority among Governor General David Johnston. the Canadian delegation to the Saxton said he secured promfriendship group. Also high on ises from Vietnamese officials to their list of priorities is proenter a friendship group agreemoting Mexican tourism to ment with Canada, as well as Canada by relaxing travel visa with Malaysian officials to set strictures and protecting the up a Malaysian-based CanadaAndrew Saxton 2,500 or so Canadian compaMalaysia group to complement nies now doing business within the Canadian-based group he curMexico. rently chairs. In the same vein, Saxton said tourism, “They’ve given me the commitment trade and business are all top of mind and I’d expect they’d be set up next year for the Malaysia, Hong Kong and China — within the coming months,” he said. friendship groups, while harmonizing On Jan. 9, Weston will host a roundsocial and economic practices between table discussion about the Canada-Mexico the participating countries is often a group at 7 p.m. at the West Vancouver desired by-product of the talks. Memorial Library. Discussion will focus “We don’t have significant power but on how North Shore residents and busiwe do have influence,” Saxton told The nesses can benefit from better relations Outlook. “Whenever there’s an issue between the two countries prior to the we think can be approved in the other next meeting of the Canada-Mexico group country then we can bring it up and in Mexico mid-month. mention it to them, but it’s on a peer-topeer basis and it’s up to the department tcoyne@northshoreoutlook.com of foreign affairs to really push Canada’s twitter.com/toddcoyne

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UN-FARE - North Vancouver RCMP are looking for this alleged suspect in an Oct. 15 attempted robbery of a taxi driver. The incident happened at the corner of Westview Drive and Larson Road before the suspect fled on foot. RCMP photo

TODD COYNE S TA F F R E P O RT E R

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orth Vancouver Mounties are asking for the public’s help identifying a man who allegedly tried to rob a taxi driver at knifepoint. At about 3:15 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 15, Mounties said they received a distressed call from a North Vancouver cab driver who said a customer had just pulled a knife and tried to rob him. The driver had picked up the lone man on Westview Drive and proceeded to Larson Road where the man allegedly ordered the driver to pull over. The man then pulled out the knife and demanded all of the driver’s money, according to police. The driver didn’t comply but jumped out of the vehicle and the suspect took off running south on Larson Road. RCMP patrols were unsuccessful in locating the suspect. Police are looking for a Caucasian man between 20 and 25 years old, approximately 6 feet tall with a slim build and short light-brown hair. “The suspect needs to be identified so that criminal charges can be laid,” said Cpl. Richard De Jong, spokesperson for the North Vancouver RCMP, in a press release Monday. “Fortunately the taxi driver was not injured nor had he lost any money.” Anyone who recognizes the alleged suspect is asked to contact Const. Kildaw at 604-985-1311 or report anonymously to Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.

N

orth Vancouver RCMP are searching for the driver of a truck that struck a pedestrian in Edgemont Village last month. The white pickup truck was turning left onto Edgemont Boulevard RCMP looking for white truck. from Highland Road when it struck a RCMP photo 46-year-old woman at about 2:15 p.m. on Nov. 21. The truck driver stopped momentarily and spoke with the victim before assuming she was not seriously hurt and leaving the scene. It has since been determined that the woman suffered a broken foot, North Van Mounties said in a release Monday. Investigators are now looking for the truck which they described from photos taken near the scene as a white Ford with a black steel box. The police are asking the driver to come forward and provide his name and details of the incident. The Mounties are asking anyone who can identify the suspect vehicle or who witnessed this incident to call Const. Tyler Wickware at 604985-1311. Those who want to remain anonymous can call Crime Stoppers at 1-800222-8477 or leave a tip online at bccrimestoppers.com. Crime Stoppers will pay a reward of up to $2000 for information that leads to an arrest and conviction. tcoyne@northshoreoutlook.com

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The North Vancouver-founded band Black Powder Toys have a large following in Poland. Submitted photo

Poland,” the keyboardist said. They also saw a spike in song sales on iTunes and Amazon.com. Asked why his music seems to resonate so strongly in the streets of Warsaw, Krakow and Gdansk — where the band also has dates — Ryznar is at a loss. “I guess just because the songs are catchy,” he said, touting pop music’s universal appeal. “It’s radio-friendly music. It’s catchy hooks, edgy guitars, yet it’s very melodic.” Taking their moniker from a 1914 federal government document outlawing “black powder toys” such as firecrackers and toy cannons, the band’s name, album title and current popularity conjures an international riddle: What’s Made in China, banned in Canada and big in Poland? This band in Canada: Black Powder Toys. tcoyne@northshoreoutlook.com

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hey’re not the first rock-and-roll band to find an audience overseas before finding one at home. Nor are they the first plotters of world domination to pick Poland as their launch pad. But they might be the first to do both. The Black Powder Toys came together in North Vancouver in 2006, but band co-founder and keyboard player Pete Ryznar has been playing in North Van bands with singer Clayton Blancard ever since, well, he can’t remember. But none of those bands ever played for 80,000 fans in the centre of Warsaw. That’s about to change when the Toys embark next month on a seven-date Polish tour, kicking off with a Jan. 8 gig in the capital as part of the 20th anniversary concert for the Great Orchestra of Christmas Charity. “Between rehearsals, coordinating hotels, passports, flights, van and equipment rentals and our day jobs, we really haven’t had time to think about being nervous,” Ryznar told The Outlook. “I’m sure the nerves will set in as we’re sitting on our 13-hour flight.” Long as that flight will feel, the band’s long, strange trip to Warsaw was already underway last spring with the release of their debut disc Made in China. As Ryznar tells it, the Toys were playing a Harvest Project benefit show at Centennial Theatre on April 1, when the director of a Polish-language radio program on 93.1 Red FM approached the band. “After the show he said, ‘Can you guys give us five signed copies [of Made in China]?’ and we said, ‘Yeah sure,’” Ryznar said. “He was going to Poland in the weeks after the show and so he went there and he handed them out to a number of radio stations over in Poland.” Warsaw’s Radio 3 picked up on two tracks, “Push Pull” and “Stones Throw.” Another station spun the album in its entirety, Ryznar said. All that despite the band’s lack of any real ancestral link to their newly adoptive country. “We started to see increased sales on our website of the CD and started mailing copies pretty well weekly to purchasers in

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Kettle crunch time Holiday donations to Salvation Army dropping as demand for services increases SEAN KOLENKO S TA F F R E P O RT E R

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he Salvation Army’s iconic red kettles are only out for a few weeks each year, and they fund 80 per cent of the mission’s yearround programs. But this year donations are falling about 30 per cent short of the North Shore Salvation Army’s $300,000 goal, Capt. Glyndon Cross told The Outlook. “The community always comes through in the clutch and what we strive to do is always be creative,” said Cross. “We will make due with what we get, however, if we receive our budget we will fulfill the need for what we see out there.”

Feeling the donation pinch during the holiday season isn’t new to the Salvation Army. In 2010, the North Shore chapter came up $70,000 short. Each year, however, they see about a 30 per cent increase in need for their wide-ranging services. Those interested in donating to the Salvation Army this Christmas can do so in person at kettle locations and the Salvation Army building at 105 W. 12th St., at the till in both WalMart and London Drugs, as well as online at northshoresalvationarmy. com. Cross said the online donations will continue to be available for a few weeks after Christmas. Some of the programs supported by the annual kettle drive are kids’ camps, back-to-school programs and the food bank. A complete list is available at the aforementioned website. skolenko@northshoreoutlook.com twitter.com/seankolenko

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18 Thursday, December 22, 2011

www.northshoreoutlook.com

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THANKS RALPH - Ralph Hall wrote Hallerings, the North Shore’s longest-running sports column. Len Corben photo

I

t’s that time of year to give a big Merry Christmas and huge Thank You to those who helped significantly or even in a small way with one or more Instant Replay stories during 2011. Research is one of the hallmarks of this column and – while this entails hours on the Internet and in libraries and archives on the North Shore, in Vancouver, Victoria and sometimes as far away as places like Calgary as I search through old city directories and microfilm of long-ago newspapers – a critical component to the research is the assistance of many individuals. This ranges from the people featured in the stories (or their relatives, neighbours, classmates and teammates if they are no longer living), to librarians, archivists, teachers, coach-

es, media relations people and other researchers; actually anyone who has a connection or a memory that can lead to the key pieces of information.

INSTANT REPLAY Len Corben lencorben@yahoo.ca

Thanks to research, we find that Ralph Hall (the North Shore’s longest-serving sports columnist) began his weekly Hallerings column in the North Shore Review on April 18, 1947, following earlier columns under the short-lived banners of From the Sidelines (January 1946) and The Lowdown (1946-47). When the Review was

bought by Hal Straight in 1958 and became The North Shore Citizen, Hallerings continued there until Nov. 5, 1969. In his Hallerings at either Christmas or New Year’s, Ralph would wish the best of the season to his sports connections. Last year, I took up the idea as a way of saying Thank You to those who helped with my Instant Replay stories and the little Captain’s Corner features that ran for 30 weeks between Oct. 14, 2010, and May 19, 2011. But it’s also a way of giving a tribute to Ralph Hall who gave me my first sportswriting job. So – pretty much in random order (a neat trick of Ralph’s so you have to read all the names and can’t just look for someone alphabetically) – here are the ‘Hall’ of Fame thank yous to almost 300 people, those who continued, PAGE 24

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DNV utilities on the rise Majority of nine-per-cent increase coming from sewer and water fees, Coun. Alan Nixon cites regional charges as the driving force

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20 Thursday, December 22, 2011

www.northshoreoutlook.com

A lesson in ethic

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first realized the brilliance of Christopher Hitchens twoand-a-half years ago thanks to my Outlook colleague Todd Coyne and a piece written by Hitchens from the mid-90s called “It Happened on Sunset.” Coyne and I were in journalism school then and, as part of our feature writing class, everyone in the program was tasked with dissecting a lengthy magazine feature each Friday. Coyne chose Hitchens. I remember reading the story TWO the night before CENTS and having my embryonic Sean Kolenko understanding of skolenko@northshore this craft ripped outlook.com to pieces. Up to that point, I figured the job of a reporter was restricted to objectively writing about the goings-on of a country, city or community. I wasn’t wrong in my thinking; the pages of this very newspaper are filled with examples of such reporting. But could a dreamy, almost surreal story about one man’s trip to Los Angeles and its most infamous street, Sunset Boulevard, also be considered journalism?

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Were we as writers allowed to discuss what we felt, saw and believed about a topic, even if it was, to quote the man himself, about the street “where the United States came to stop”? As it turns out, we are and it was Hitchens that set the modern-day benchmark for that kind of focused, personal and pointed writing. When not at his keyboard, he passionately debated anyone willing to oppose his views. Hitchens’ numerous appearances on HBO’s Real Time With Bill Maher, where he battled the likes of hip hop artist Mos Def on the intentions of al-Qaida and the audience over the potential for war with Iran (that exchange ended with Hitchens extending the middle finger to all in attendance), have become YouTube favourites of mine. Not everything he said and wrote fell in line with my beliefs. continued, PAGE 21

Thank you! The Lower Lonsdale Business Association wishes to thank the Partners and Sponsors for their support of the July Party-at-the-Pier, September Fall Festival and December Christmas Festival. Without you it would not be possible to offer these FREE community-building events.

Approximately 20,000 people enjoyed the Lower Lonsdale Business Association’s 2011 Festival Series at Shipbuilders’ Square at the foot of Lonsdale Avenue.


skolenko@northshoreoutlook.com twitter.com/seankolenko

North Van hospital scam

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he BC Children’s Hospital Foundation is warning North Shore residents after a pair of scam artists were found fraudulently soliciting donations for the hospital. The two men have allegedly been selling Stabucks coffee door-todoor at the reduced cost of a donation. The men allegedly encouraged North Vancouver residents to pay by debit card and then, in at least one case, later withdrew money from the victim’s account.

The BC Children’s Hospital Foundation said in a release Tuesday that they are not currently fundraising and any door-to-door solicitors the hospital does employ are easily identifiable by their foundation badges. The hospital does not accept cash at the door and does not take debit or credit card donations. Anyone who receives a suspicious hospital solicitor can call the hospital to confirm their identity at 604-875-2444.

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were actually shackled to my own corpse.” Many, to be sure, have endured such pain. Hitchens, however, wrote about it. Minutes after the news of his death broke, writers from around the world took to Twitter, offering their thoughts on the legacy he left behind. For a brief period, Hitchens was one of the top trending topics in Canada. Of all the thoughts, grievings and memories shared that night, it was Andrew Coyne, National Post columnist, that got it right when he wrote: “Can we all just vow to write with less indirection, less throat-clearing, less of the exquisite, and more blood, meat, wine, astringents?” Because that’s what Hitchens did. He was devoted to capturing the truth as he saw it, in as blunt a fashion as can be penned. And that is a lesson we all, writer or not, should learn.

Thursday, December 22, 2011 21

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continued from, PAGE 20 There are issues he supported — namely the fruitless, expensive war in Iraq and the stature of icons such as Mother Teresa, whom he dubbed “a fraud” — that I simply could not agree with. But it was that contrarian stance, vehement in ethic and steadfast in predictability, that made him great. In the final year of his life, as esophageal cancer ate away at his body, Hitchens produced lengthy pieces for Vanity Fair ranging from the political future of Egypt, to a study of journalist Joan Didion to essays on the blindingly painful affects his cancer inflicted on his body. Renowned for his smoking and drinking, the roots of the disease that would eventually take his life, Hitchens remarked that he had “more than once in my time woken up feeling like death” but that nothing could prepare him for the morning “when I came to consciousness feeling as if I

CHANEL RALPH LAUREN ANNE KLEIN PRADA FENDI COACH LULULEMON CHANEL RALPH LAUREN

www.northshoreoutlook.com


22 Thursday, y December 22, 2011

www.northshoreoutlook.com

St. Stephen’s Church CHRISTMAS SERVICES AND EVENTS DECEMBER 24TH

CHRISTMAS EVE SERVICES: 4:30 pm Family service 11:00 pm Midnight service starts

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ADVENT & CHRISTMAS AT St. Francis in-the-Wood and St. Monica’s, Horseshoe Bay

Christmas Eve at 7:00 in the evening A predictable service: candles, music, carols – a child-friendly celebration of Christmas. Joining the organ and piano is a guest Àute player.

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Christmas Eve at 10:00 in the evening

4773 South Piccadilly Road, West Vancouver 604 922 3531 • stfrancis@telus.net

This is a service for those who are searching and those who recognize that they are secular folk. The beautiful children’s story by Joy Kogawa, Naomi’s Tree, will be read by Terry David Mulligan. It’s a narrative of a young Japanese Canadian who is sent to the interior during World War 2, and the healing of that wound in later years. Some copies of the book will be available for last minute presents. Communion is for all those who need and can use this spiritual experience. Choir and instruments will help with our musical rejoicing.

Sunday, Dec 18th 7pm Nine Lessons and Carols by Candlelight Saturday, Dec 24th 4pm Family Communion Around the Crib 9pm Community Carols at St Francis 11pm Midnight Mass Saturday, Dec 25th 10am Family Eucharist

ST. MONICA’S, HORSESHOE BAY 6404 Wellington Street, Horseshoe Bay 604 921 9112 • stmonica@uniserve.com

Christmas Day at 10:30 in the morning A home-like worship service.

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Binning House gets fed funding Historic West Van residence built by artist Bertram Charles (B.C.) Binning a post-and-beam masterpiece MARIA SPITALE-LEISK CONTRIBUTOR

I

t was four years ago that the North Shore Heritage Preservation Society tagged the Binning House on Mathers Avenue as second on a list of endangered local heritage sites. It now seems the rest of the country agrees. On Monday, the federal government announced it was contributing $11,426 in funding to help create a conservation plan for the Binning Residence national historic site. The Binning House. Built by renowned DWV photo artist Bertram Charles (B.C.) Binning in 1941, the home is regarded as a leading example of West Coast post-and-beam style. Its bungalow design paired with seamless integration of art and architecture — Binning’s murals figure prominently outside the entrance and on several interior walls — make it a historical treasure for West Vancouver. “The Binning Residence heralded a new form of architecture on the Coast and continues to attract tourists and architectural enthusiasts to West Vancouver,” said John Weston, MP for West Vancouver — Sunshine Coast — Sea to Sky Country, in a statement. “It is exciting to picture how today’s investment in this leading example of early modern architecture will continue to awe and enlighten Canadians.” Designed and constructed during the Second World War, the Binning House was an early example of sustainable construction practices, with many local materials being used. It was designated a national historic site in 1997, and since 2008 the site has been owned and managed by The Land Conservancy of British Columbia. “We are very pleased that we are able to move forward with a heritage conservation plan for this unique national historic site,” said TLCBC Lower Mainland manager Tamsin Baker, in the same release. “Once completed, the plan will provide an invaluable roadmap to ensure that the house will be effectively managed in the longterm. It will also ensure that the site will continue to inspire future generations of visiting artists and architects.” Funding for the Binning House conservancy plan will be paid for through Parks Canada’s National Historic Sites Cost-Sharing Program. reporter@northshoreoutlook.com

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www.northshoreoutlook.com

Magic Carpet life opens on Mount Seymour North Vancouver ski resort home to one of only two covered ski escalators in Western Canada

Thursday, December 22, 2011 23

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rossing ski tips, losing your balance and tumbling to the snow is part of the learningto-ski experience. When you eventually reach the bottom of the bunny hill and collect yourself, then comes the next daunting challenge: grasping the bouncing rope tow that hastily propels you back up the slope. For novices, this means expending a lot of extra energy just trying stay balanced in the track as the rope sways and lurches. Now imagine a realm where bumbling skiers and snowboarders can simply shuffle up to a “covered snow escalator,” hop on and enjoy the smooth ride to the top. Mount Seymour Resort is one of only two mountains in Western Canada to offer such an experience for its novice snow revellers. Mount Seymour ski and snowboard school manager Jonathan Mosley recently gave The Outlook a tour of the Goldie Magic Carpet — which opened to the public on Nov. 26 — and explained the work that went into bringing the innovative lift to the ski hill. “We did quite a lot of research because it was a pretty large purchase, a significant investment for [Mount Seymour],” said Mosley. Mount Seymour made the purchase from a company called Magic Carpet Lifts based in Denver, Co., earlier this year. Preparations began in April to accommodate the 134-metre tunnel. “We recontoured some of the [Goldie] slope to make it a more consistent pitch,” said Mosley. In removing the old double rope tow, the beginners run has been opened up and allows skiers and snowboards more space to navigate turns, he added. Mount Seymour millwrights worked on the project throughout the summer and into the fall. Installation of the Goldie Magic Carpet was completed just in time for Seymour’s opening day. “We think it’s a huge improvement to the service we can provide as far as comfort level and

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getting into the sport that much easier, especially for smaller children,” said Mosley. “It just makes a world of difference.” If you can stand up, you can ride the magic carpet, added Mosley. At the end of the two-anda-half-minute journey the large conveyor belt gently slides users towards the snow. There is also a lot of space on the inside of the magic carpet to maneuver around. “It’s a 100 per cent success rate getting to the top unlike the rope tow we had before,” said Mosley. Now, what about that soft, fresh powder that makes falling almost enjoyable? Mosley is hoping weather conditions this season will mirror last year’s bountiful snowfall. “The Farmers’ Almanac said it will be similar,” he said. reporter@northshoreoutlook.com

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24 Thursday, December 22, 2011

www.northshoreoutlook.com

Partners in Parenting

continued from, PAGE 18

! !

Your Partners in Parenting Eleanor Elton & Johanna Simmons wish you and your family a happy holiday season.

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Please join us for our parenting classes Wednesdays Feb. 1 - 29, 2012 7pm - 9pm Register online or call: 604-240-0592 604-626-8523

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contributed in 2011 along with a few whose help for upcoming stories is also acknowledged. To begin, here are some who not only helped several times in the past 12 months but also have been great resources for a number of years: Fred Hume, Daien Ide, Janet Turner, Dick Lazenby, Larry Reda, Gerry Karvelis, Ralph Bower, Jason Beck, Jay Prepchuk, Ian McDonald, Larry Donohoe, Neil Salkus, Blair Shier and Julie Clements. There’s also editor Justin Beddall who does a superb job with the Instant Replay page layout. I’m listing him up front because he’s a busy guy and last year he had to read the whole column to find his name at the very end. Of course there’s Mayvis Corben. I can’t miss naming my wife, especially since she’s just brought me a cup of hot chocolate as I’m typing this. I’m not going to mention John Crowley this year because I discovered that last year’s thankyou column listed him twice. Okay, let’s get to Valerie Jerome, Paul Winn, Konrad Tittler, Phil Maloney, Norm Fitzsimmons, Aaron Van Pykstra, Greg Laviolette, Doug Alysworth, Brad Thornhill, Matt Hilder, Christie Geiss, Geoff Russell, Nikki Downie, Dan Dempsey, Vern Porter, Angela Aydon, Joe Galat, Tom Scott, Cath Dimmock and Ashley Kristen. Also Tom Larscheid, Jane Kozniuk, Margi Spooner, Casey Guerin, Paul Winstanley, Julie Bauman, Kristyn Harrington, Kristen Shier, Emily Kozniuk, Hash Kanjee, Richard Lam, John Quackenbos, Jo-Ann Harrington, Lisa Evans and Ashleigh Gold. Plus Carman Overholt, Diane Beck, Willem Thoma, Carolyn Weekes, Lynne Beecroft, Autumn Scraper, Sabrina Trotter, Dustin Semonavick, Jennifer Taylor, Leonie Plunkett, Diana Mattia, Jenny John, Ralf Shaw, Cam Kerr, Pete Ewens, Olive Gilmour, Allison Ross, Deretta Bowles, Noralie Hooper, Ali McGillvray, Catherine Newlands, Bridgitte Anderson, Carey Summerfelt, Jessica Doherty, Andree Janyk, Joe Iacobellis, Milt Williams, Janice Duncan, Mo Williams, Brandon Hesketh, Wade Bartok, Jane Richards, Chloe Brebner, Digby Leigh, Steph Bell, Jim Day and Wes Dekleer. What about Janet Kemper, Thelma Moebes, Lynn Spencer, Kam and Lalitha Srikameswaran, Bob Anslow, John and Mary Vlahac, Barbara White, Anna Franco, Henny Bohlen, Freda Pahlke, Lil Rodman, Betty Duncan, Raimonda Accili, Dolores Escudero, Rosa Olynyk, Peter Huang, Chris Pedersen, Christina Hartigan and Natasha Heavyside. Mustn’t miss Al Rose, Matt Herron, Katherine Hume, Leon Denenfeld, Ben Schach, Tony Rossetti, Ken Leavoy, David Eskenazi, Paul Yates, Larry Luongo, Glennis Lee, John Buis, Allison McNeill, Sheila Strike Smith, Glenn Johnston, Nicky Soulsby, Kirsten Odegaard and Chris Fan. Add Elaine Wick, Liz Bell, Greg Hockley, Lisa Ottenbreit, Jim Harrison, Nicky Carroll,

Len Slade, Gary Bergdal, Bill Bowles, Deretta Bowles, Tom Gutteridge, Phil Langley, Marlene Loader, Steve Martin, Linda Melville, Joe Miller, Dave Pearce, Keith Sandercock, Sam Scorda, Gordie Simpson, Tracy Light, Ernie Oei, Allison Ross, Rebecca Aldous, Greg Hoekstra, Sean Kolenko and Maria Spitale-Leisk. Oh yes, Ian Dixon, Colin Dixon, Vicki Thomas, Doc Younker, Bob Mason, Paul Chiarenza, Jessica Franz, Damion Dorn, Teagan Casper, Richard Loney, Marion Loney, Pete Ewens, Stephanie Maniago, Jen Rollins, Bruce Hawkshaw, Dave Hawkshaw, Buzz Zuehlke, Randal Ius, Bill Zuehlke, Marie Zuehlke, Steve Roberts and Sean Foley. Then there’s the Pickell family, Stephen and Shelley Pickell and sons Blake, Nic, Paul and Cooper; Bob Mackin, Nathan Vanstone, Felix Wong, Joyce Wong, Brandon Kaye, Kelly Kaye, Rob Fai, Denis Crockett, Linda and Ian Graham and their daughters Nicky and Michelle Graham. How about Briar Ballou, Joe Bell, Shirley Fraser, Sam Scorda, Glen Walters, Dave Rice, Randy Storey, Bill Bowles, Michel Leveille, Bob Vosburgh, Fred McMurray, Steve White, John Buchanan, Leslie Buchanan, Joe Flores, Cathy Pearce, Dave Pearce, Tom Kirk, Lori Zuk, John Rutherford, Tim Bannister, Laura Ellwood, Nick Trenkel, Jenny Madill, Mark Rowan, Cam Hair, Susan Stone, Rob Straight, Chris Atkinson, Brenda Craven, Dave Morin, Grant Harris and Liam Robinson. Must not forget Norm Fieldgate, Lefty Hendrickson, Nicole Miller, Jacqueline Blackwell, Barrie McWha, Jim Rutledge, Bruce Bourdon, Jon Lee or Lea, Rick Harrison, Sharon Proctor, John Coleman, Janet MacQuarrie-Kent, Marie Allouche, George Smith, George Lea Sr. and Jr., Court Brousson, Ann Brousson, Ernie Kershaw, Audrey Kershaw, Jim Carabetta, Dick Acaster, Anna Tickell, Sean Kelso, Janette Ahrens, Jennifer Tieche and Dariya Bagnall. In addition there’s Greig Bjarnason, Jack Keast, Joanne Gauthier, Vickie Petronio, Ingrid Torrance, Scott Bennett, John Bennett, Randy Storey, Rusty Corben, Jason Farris, Bob Lenarduzzi, Jim Taylor, Jesse Hills, Greg Douglas, Will Trythall, Jim Hemphill, Josh Evans and Dan Elliott. There’s more: Martha Perkins, Louise Biggar, Joe Tan, Julie Backer, Jan Keeton, Barry Callaghan, Barry Pegg, Elaine Miller, Maurice Jones, Sandi Huff, Andrew Martin, Lynn Johnston, Jennifer Devine, Daryl Slade and the SOB (Some Old Boys) Club members, not already mentioned, who meet at Cheers for lunch on the last Friday of the month, all of whom have great stories Now, to those who enjoy reading Instant Replay, have a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. This is episode 445 from Len Corben’s treasure chest of stories – the great events and the quirky – that bring to life the North Shore’s rich sports history.


www.northshoreoutlook.com

Real EstateWeekly NORTH SHORE

Thursday, December 22, 2011 25

Serving the North Shore for over 35 years

www.northshore-rew.com // 604.903.1017

Wishing you a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year Call Roger

Jung & Lucille Zdunich (604) 729-8024

206 Lonsdale Avenue | North Vancouver, BC V7M 2G1 | 604-960-1100

4967 CHALET PLACE, N.V. Food or money b benefi fit the h H Harvest P Project this Christmas season. Lights on until January 2, 2012

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Ext.222 604.831.8428

Ext.225 1.604.848.8882

Ext.226 778.996.3694

Serving Borrowers and Investors Since 1978

604.985.951124hrs. RV@WeMortgageCanada.ca Each VERICO Broker is an independent owner operator


26 Thursday, December 22, 2011

www.northshoreoutlook.com

BUYING OR SELLING?

CALL US TODAY NORTHSHORE

Happy Holidays NORTHSHORE

Karin Morris 604.338.8778

Kathy Suffel 778.989.5570

Chris Wong 604.789.1807

Irene Mandzuk 778.836.4648

Nora Valdez 604.351.0625

Chloe Kopman 604.833.6932

Alphonse Quenneville 604.328.2554

www.royallepage.ca

F:604.926.9199

820 KEITH RD., WEST VANCOUVER LP:$1,189,000

RARELY AVAILABLE

VIEWS!!! SOUTH AND WEST FACING BALCONY!!

BE THE BOSS!

Business located in Ambleside requires a Licence as Denturist but potential to employ one. Lots of potential here!! Price of $115,000 includes a long equipment list and enough inventory to keep you going for a while!!

Huge Top Floor 1 BR condo with great views of Burrard Inlet and Lions Gate bridge from wrap around patio. Rentals/Pets ok. All offers presented! Call now!

And get to take holidays to the “shows” in Vegas and back east. Approx. 1200 sq. ft. shoe store Asking $140,000 plus stock of about $130,000, in busy Mall Kingsway at Broadway. Average around $1/2 Million Gross sales for past several years.

MARINE DRIVE WEST VANCOUVER $115,000

607-137 WEST 17TH ST, NORTH VANCOUVER $338,900

NORA 604-351-0625 AND VERA 604-318-0024

Nora Valdez

Vera Holman 604-318-0024

604-351-0625

Royal LePage Northshore

Erna

604-926-6011

Sussex Realty West Vancouver

MAKI

604.323.3762

www.ernamaki.ca • ernamaki@shaw.ca

Carl

PARKER 604.619.1281

www.carl-parker.com • 604.925.2911

G

KIN

000

AS

West Bay Catchment!

“We will be out of here in a minute !!”

Pristine condition and major updating with the ultimate family layout on one of West Vancouver’s most prestigious C-D-Cs. 4000 Sf. includes 4 bedrooms up and one down. 3.5 bathrooms, Nanny suite down with separate entrance and rec room.

REAL ESTATE BOARD

4314 Erwin Drive, West Van

#702-1785 ESQUIMALT AVE. - LP: $263,000

JUST SOLD

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CA

Building/investment opportunity. Solid 2 level home located on a gently sloping 54’ x 150’ EFF south facing lot with harbour, city, and Lions Gate views. Currently rented at $2,700 per month. Ideal building lot, or hold and assemble opportunity for possible higher density zoning adjacent to the Evelyn development. MLS# V913617

there’s more online

TOP FLOOR move-in ready SPACIOUS studio apartment. At the end of a quiet cul de sac the well maintained building has a beautiful creek side garden & visitor parking. HEAT, HOT WATER & CABLE included in $229.58 Strata fee. No pets/rentals. Walk to Ambleside Beach and more! MLS# V896494

Season’s Greetings & Happy Holidays

Shakun Jhangiani 604.725.9179

NORTHSHORE

2407 Marine Dr., West Vancouver, V7V 1L3 • B: 604 926 6011 F: 604 926 9199 C: 604 725 9179

Comment online. Add to the story or read what your neighbour thinks. Be a part of your community paper.

Shirley Norton 604-760-3175 Sutton Group - West Coast Realty An Independent Member Broker

To all of my clients, colleagues and friends. Thank you for all your support during the past year.

98,

2 $2,

LOWEST PRICED APARTMENT IN WEST VAN.

»

Merry Christmas and

py New Year! p a H a

Stella Chang 604.603.0223

P:604.926.6011

www.northshoreoutlook.com

Vera Holman 604.318.0024

CERTIFIED! Seniors Real Estate Specialist

I wish you a very Merry Christmas and a healthy and prosperous New Year.


www.northshoreoutlook.com

Thursday, December 22, 2011 27

y r r e M ! s a m t s i Chr Warm wishes to you & yours this Holiday Season.

Linda Findlay

Michael Alexander

Kelly Brommeland

Mortgage Specialist

Mortgage Specialist

Mortgage Specialist

604-786-1421

604-961-6457

604-551-7706

linda.findlay@rbc.com

michael.alexander@rbc.com

kelly.brommeland@rbc.com

Happy Holidays Back row, l to r: Todd Coyne, Nick Bellamy, Doug Aylsworth, Justin Beddall, Len Corben. Middle row, l to r: Tannis Hendriks, Sean Kolenko, Tania Nesterenko, Hollee Brown, Jeanette Duey, Greg Laviolette. Front row, l to r: Maria Spitale-Leisk, Tracey Wait, Shelby Lewis, Maryann Erlam, Dianne Hathaway.

Thank you for your support... we are proud to serve the North Shore!

#104 - 980 West 1st Street North Vancouver BC V7P 3N4 604-903-1000 northshoreoutlook.com

Missing from photo: Emeric Detraversay, Janice McCormack, Oksana Sidorenko, Rob Newell and Catherine Barr.

Photo by Martin Hendriks


28 Thursday, December 22, 2011

www.northshoreoutlook.com

TransLink finding less gas tax to guzzle Eight per cent drop in revenue stream problematic JEFF NAGEL BLACK PRESS

A

big drop in TransLink’s gas tax revenue may be because of the difficult economy, more efficient cars or more motorists driving out of town for cheaper fill-ups. The latest estimates suggest the transportation authority will end 2011 earning almost $26 million less than it expected from the current 15-cent-per-litre fuel tax it charges within North Vancouver District Metro Vancouver. The eight per cent differential – $298.5 million for the Mayor, Council and staff full year compared to the $324.3 million budgeted – casts wish you a doubt on the future reliability of the gas tax, according to a TransLink third-quarter financial report. Merry Christmas The shortfall is particularly troubling because TransLink has just won approval from Metro Vancouver mayors and the proand vincial government to raise the gas tax another two cents next Best Wishes for a April to generate an estimated $44 million needed to help fund the Evergreen Line and other transit upgrades. Happy and Healthy At the current rate, more than half the new money would be eaten up making up for the shortfall – assuming the twoNew Year. cent increase generates as much as it’s supposed to. Spokesman Ken Hardie said fuel sales are down generally in B.C., but added work is underway to “drill further into the phenomenon.” TransLink has asked federal agencies to look at the revenue capture and reporting systems. One aim, Hardie said, is to determine whether large numbers of drivers are heading to areas free of the TransLink gas tax, like the Fraser Valley or Washington State, where gas is even cheaper. Please read this notice and visit www.bcct.ca immediately “If we saw lower sales here but remarkably higher sales in the Fraser Valley, that would speak to With the passage of the Teachers’ Act, all teacher certification in BC will be handled by the issue of leakage as people go the new Teacher Regulation Branch of the Ministry of Education. If you have changed out of their way to get cheaper gas,” your contact information since the certificate renewal process in 2008, it is essential he said. “We’re also working with that you update your contact information before January 6, 2012 in order to ensure you’re included in the electoral process for the new BC Teachers Council as well as other important communications regarding your certification.

Independent School Certificate Holder?

This transition for independent school certificate holders is being managed by the BC College of Teachers before its transition into the Teacher Regulation Branch. Your revised info can be emailed to membership@bcct.ca or at 1-800-555-3684 x11.

For more information visit our website at www.bcct.ca

Washington State to check on gas sales near the border.” Vehicles have become steadily more efficient – both by manufacturer design and consumer choice. “If electric vehicles take off, that is very clearly also going to be a factor,” Hardie said. “All of the indications are pointing to people using less fuel. Which is a good thing.” Another factor in the drop in gas sales, Hardie said, appears to be that more motorists are switching to transit. Transit ridership for the first nine months of 2011 is on a record pace, running five per cent ahead of the same period in 2010, when a huge number of visitors rode the system during the Olympics. Although new riders mean more fare revenue, TransLink also normally has to pay for more service, which means a net loss once the lost gas tax is factored in. There was no significant service boost this year, although TransLink did succeed in reconfiguring routes to more efficiently carry riders and generate two per cent more from the farebox with the existing bus fleet. Hardie said the gas tax problem underscores the need to find new and more diversified revenue sources for TransLink – the subject of negotiations next year between mayors and the province. Possible options include an annual vehicle levy or road pricing, he added. TransLink statistics also show complaints from riders are up sharply. Bus passengers are most frequently complaining about overcrowded buses, full buses that pass them without stopping as well as buses that arrive earlier or later than scheduled. “There is more crowding, there are more pass-ups – certainly more than we want to see,” Hardie said. He said TransLink’s increased use of social media like Twitter has also opened more avenues for the public to lodge complaints. Tweeted complaints are welcomed, Hardie added, because they give transit managers real-time insight into trouble spots, where they may be able to react quickly and throw on more service.


www.northshoreoutlook.com

Thursday, December 22, 2011 29

BC HYDRO VEGETATION MAINTENANCE - PADMOUNTED TRANSFORMERS To assure continued safety and system reliability, BC Hydro is removing vegetation around all BC Hydro padmounted transformers to clearance standards. Vegetation management work in North Vancouver, West Vancouver and on Bowen Island will continue until March 31, 2012. BC Hydro requires the area around its electrical equipment to remain clear for the following reasons: ã ã ã

for the safety of our employees operating the equipment, to prevent overheating of the equipment, and to facilitate emergency repairs or replacement of the equipment.

The clearances around the transformers are: ã ã

2.5m from any and all doors 0.9m from all other sides

2866

Prior to BC Hydro removing the vegetation, customers may prune or maintain vegetation around transformers on their property to these clearances. If not, vegetation removal will be completed by BC Hydro crews.

CREATE M

For more information about safely planting near BC Hydro equipment and clearance standards, visit bchydro.com/safety

EMO

For 50 years, BC Hydro has been providing clean, reliable electricity to you. Today we are planning for the next 50 years by investing in new projects, upgrading existing facilities and working with you to conserve energy through Power Smart.

Make it a very Merr y Christmas

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30 Thursday, December 22, 2011

INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS . . . . . . . . . 1-8 COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS . . . . 9-57 TRAVEL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61-76 CHILDREN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80-98 EMPLOYMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102-198 BUSINESS SERVICES . . . . . . . . . . 203-387 PETS & LIVESTOCK . . . . . . . . . . . 453-483 MERCHANDISE FOR SALE . . . . . . 503-587 REAL ESTATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 603-696 RENTALS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 703-757 AUTOMOTIVE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 804-862 MARINE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 903-920

AGREEMENT It is agreed by any Display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. bcclassified.com cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition. bcclassified.com reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisment and to retain any answers directed to the bcclassified.com Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisment and box rental.

DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATION Advertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justified by a bona fide requirement for the work involved.

COPYRIGHT Copyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassified.com. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatsoever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse in law.

Advertise across Advertise across the the Advertise across the Lower Mainland Mainland in Lower in lower mainland in the 18 best-read the 18 best-read thecommunity 17 best-read community community newspapers and newspapers and newspapers. dailies. 53 dailies. ON THE WEB: ON THE WEB:

www.northshoreoutlook.com

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 21

COMING EVENTS

TRAVEL 75

TRAVEL

Bring the family! Sizzling Specials at Florida’s Best Beach! New Smyrna Beach, FL. See it all at: www.nsbfla.com/bonjour or call 1-800-214-0166

MANAGER WorkBC Employment Services Centres Abbotsford Abbotsford Community Services is looking for an experienced manager for its new Employment Program.The successful candidate will draw together the significant skills and expertise of six partnering agencies to provide comprehensive employment services to the unemployed in the community. The position starts on Feb 1st, 2012 in order to have the services operational on April 2nd 2012. The Manager will have a proven ability to develop, implement, and administer employment services/programs and have a sound working knowledge of employment services strategies, labour markets and programs. This individual will also demonstrate knowledge of performance based contracts and service components and unit management in relation to revenue generation A full job posting and instructions for qualified applicants can be found on our website at: www. abbotsforcommunityservices.com

Closing Date: January 12, 2012

33

INFORMATION

DIAL-A-LAW: access free information on BC law. 604-687-4680; 1.800.565.5297; www.dialalaw.org (audio available). LAWYER REFERRAL SERVICE: need a lawyer? Learn more by calling 604-6873221; 1.800.663.1919.

041

PERSONALS

DATING SERVICE. LongTerm/Short-Term Relationships, Free to Try!!! 1-877-297-9883. Live intimate conversation, Call: #4011 or 1-888-534-6984. Live adult 1on1 Call: 1-866-311-9640 or #4010. Meet Local Single Ladies. 1-877804-5381. (18+).

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE. NO Risk Program. STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Free Consultation. Call Us Now. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 106

AUTOMOTIVE

EXPERIENCED PARTS PERSON required for progressive auto/industrial supplier. Hired applicant will receive top wages, full benefits and RRSP bonuses plus moving allowances. Our 26,000ft Store is located 2.5 hours N.E. of Edmonton, Alberta. See our community at LacLaBicheRegion.com. Send Resumes to: Sapphire Auto, Box 306, Lac La Biche, AB, T0A 2C0. Email: hr@sapphireinc.net

108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS to Every Hunter in BC! Advertise in The BC Hunting Regulations Synopsis 2012-2014 publication. Increased circulation 250,000 copies! Tremendous Reach, Two Year Edition! Contact Annemarie at 1 800 661 6335 or hunt@blackpress.ca

114

COMPANY DRIVER & O/O req’d for Gillson Trucking. Full Time. 42¢/mile. Run U.S. 604-853-2227

115

Become a Psychiatric Nursetrain locally via distance education, local and/or regional clinical placebcclassified.com ments and some regional classroom delivery. Wages start at $30.79/hr to $40.42/hr. This 23 month program is recognized by the CRPNBC. Gov’t funding may be available. Toll-free 1-87-STENBERG www.stenbergcollege.com DOG LOVERS! Enjoy a healthy, profitable career as a professional dog trainer. Government accredited program - student loans and grants. Ben Kersen & the Wonderdogs. www.wonderdogs.bc.ca/careers/ or 1-800-961-6616. INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. Locations in Alberta & BC. Hands on real world training. Full sized equipment. Job placement assistance. Funding available. www.iheschool.com 1-866-399-3853 TRAIN TO BE AN Apartment/Condominium Manager at home! We have jobs across Canada. Thousands of graduates working. 31 years of success! Government certified. www.RMTI.ca or 1-800-6658339, 604-681-5456.

130

HELP WANTED DRYWALL INSTALLERS

Moghari Trading and Marketing World Inc. is hiring Drywall Installers $22.86/hr., 40hrs/ week. Mail 54004 - 1562 Lonsdale Ave. North Vancouver, BC V7M 2J3. Email mtmworld@hotmail.com

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

All CDL Drivers Wanted: Excellent mileage pay + bonuses. Require valid passport. Deliver new & used vehicles long haul in U.S. & Canada. Piggyback training available. Toll-Free 1-855-781-3787.

EDUCATION

AIRLINES ARE HIRING- Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified- Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (877)818-0783

HOME BASED BUSINESS We need serious and motivated people for expanding health & wellness industry. High speed internet and phone essential. Free online training. www.project4wellness.com

114

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

.

Holbrook Dyson Logging Ltd Has vacancies in the following job: Heavy Duty Mechanic. Details can be seen at http://hdlogging.com/ Fax resume to 250-287-9259

LEMARE GROUP is seeking a certified heavy duty mechanic and an experienced off-highway logging truck driver for the North Vancouver Island area. Full time union wages. Send resume by fax to 250-956-4888 or by email to office@lemare.ca.

✷ Christmas Rush ✷ Filling 10 F/T Positions Paid Weekly - Up to $20 an hour, no comm., benefits available. Positive, outgoing, team oriented a must!

Call Now, Start Tomorrow! Erica 604-777-2195

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 130

HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 160

SURVEYORS

MANUFACTURING & WAREHOUSING $17.00/hr to work in Langley lubricants plant doing mfg., warehouse work & shipping/receiving. Must be capable of physical labour, computer usage, & be meticulous & reliable. Experience in manufacturing and warehousing preferred. A minimum of 5 years work experience with references req’d. We offer a longterm career with a financially successful co. + benefits + RRSP plan. Send resume to:

TRADES, TECHNICAL Civil & Road Constructors

Seeks Surveyors for project in Surrey. Must have own vehicle. Must know Total Station Fax resume to 604-507-4711 or Email: Paulo@wilco.ca www.wilcocivil.ca

dwoo@fuchs.com or Fax to 604-888-1145. Starts Immediately.

HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES FOOD SERVICE SUPERVISORS

PH Restaurants Ltd. dba Pizza Hut requires Food Service Supervisors for their locations in Chilliwack & North Vancouver. Wages $13.21/hr + benefits 40 hrs/week. Fax resume: 888-4137782.

160

TRADES, TECHNICAL

CRUDE ENERGY SERVICES is an industrial contractor providing services to the oil and gas industry in Alberta, accepting resumes for Pipefitters, QA/QC Personnel, Foreman, Lead Hands, NCSO Safety Advisors, Pipefitting Apprentices, Welder Apprentices, Crane Operators, Welder Helpers, General Labour, Office Administrators. H2S Alive and CSTS are required. Fax 1-866-843-2118. Email: careers@crude-energy.ca www.crude-energy.ca

Shipwright For yacht repairs - Perm, F/T (1 vacancy) with at least 5 years of experience in the following: high-end joinerwork with exotic woods, including steam-bending, bent laminations, and vacuumveneering; marine plumbing; installation of all types of marine electronics; all aspects of fiberglass repairs; spray finishing (gel coat, epoxies, urethanes); and general mechanical work. TIG welding on SS & Al and CADD experience also assets. Written and hands-on tests may be required. $23.55 per hr, CPP. Email: daniventerprises@ hotmail.ca

182

FINANCIAL SERVICES

NEED CASH TODAY? ✓ Do you Own a Car? ✓ Borrow up to $20000.00 ✓ No Credit Checks! ✓ Cash same day, local office www.REALCARCASH.com

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PAWN SHOP ONLINE: GET CASH FAST! Sell or Get a Loan for your Watch, Jewelry, Gold, Diamonds, Art or Collectibles - From Home! ONLINE: www.PAWNUP.com or Toll-Free: 1-888-435-7870.

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES PERSONAL SERVICES

134

PERSONAL SERVICES

182

245

CONTRACTORS

257

DRYWALL

FINANCIAL SERVICES

$10 MILLION AVAILABLE for Land Purchase/Development and Joint Ventures. Management Consulting and Business Plan services. Call 1-866-402-6464. AVOID BANKRUPTCY - SAVE UP TO 70% Of Your Debt. One affordable monthly payment, interest free. For debt restructuring on YOUR terms, not your creditors. Call 1-866-690-3328 or see web site: www.4pillars.ca DROWNING IN DEBTS? Helping Canadians 25 years. Lower payments by 30%, or cut debts 70% thru Settlements. AVOID BANKRUPTCY! Free consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1 877-556-3500 MONEYPROVIDER.COM. $500 Loan and +. No Credit Refused. Fast, Easy, 100% Secure. 1-877776-1660.

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

DRYWALL services and painting. Framing, boarding, taping, insulation and patches.Call 778-552-0270 or 604-807-3076

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

Advertising Sales Consultant The Award-Winning Outlook newspaper has an outstanding opportunity for a full-time sales person. The successful candidate must have the ability to build relationships with clients and offer superior customer service. The winning candidate will be a team player and will be called upon to grow an existing account list with an aggressive cold calling mandate. The ability to work in an extremely fast-paced environment with a positive attitude is a must. The candidate will have two years of sales experience, preferably in the advertising industry. The position offers a great work environment with a competitive salary, commission plan and strong benefits package. The Outlook is part of Black Press, Canada’s largest independent print media company with more than 170 community, daily and urban newspapers across Canada and the United States. Please submit your resume with cover letter by Friday, January 20, 2012. To: Publisher, The Outlook publisher@northshoreoutlook.com fax: 604 903-1001 #104 – 980 West 1st Street North Vancouver, BC V7P 3N4


.

Thursday, December 22, 2011 31

www.northshoreoutlook.com HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 281

GARDENING

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 320

MOVING & STORAGE

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 356

RUBBISH REMOVAL

PETS 477

PETS

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE 548

FURNITURE

TRANSPORTATION 810

TRANSPORTATION

AUTO FINANCING

845

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

The Scrapper

WEED FREE Mushroom Manure 13 yards - $180 or Well Rotted 10 yds - $200. 604-856-8877

287

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Real Professionals, Reasonable. Rates. Different From the Rest. 604-721-4555.

AFFORDABLE MOVING

bradsjunkremoval.com

Haul Anything... But Dead Bodies!!

Local & Long Distance

$45/Hr

From 1, 3, 5, 7,10 Ton Trucks Licenced ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 Men Free estimate/Seniors discount Residential~Commercial~Pianos

604-537-4140

604.

220.JUNK(5865)

Serving The Lower Mainland Since 1988

372

SUNDECKS

Multi Poo Pup 14 wks old M., white, 2nd shot dewormed micro chipped good home $795. 604-715-2431

Running this ad for 7yrs

PAINT SPECIAL 3 rooms for $269, 2 coats any colour

NEED A GOOD HOME for a good dog or a good dog for a good home? We adopt dogs! Call 604856-3647 or www.856-dogs.com

(Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint. NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring & Maid Services. www.paintspecial.com

NORWEGIAN ELKHOUND pups. Registered, micro chipped, 1st shots. Ready now. 604-823-2259 mitzvig@hotmail.ca

Rottweiler pups lrg German working stock exc temp healthy 8 wks. parents to view. $650. 604-799-8225.

10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fitter. Aman: 778-895-2005

374

TREE SERVICES

JUNK REMOVAL Recycled Earth Friendly • Electronics • Appliances • Old Furniture • Construction • Yard Waste • Concrete • Drywall • Junk • Rubbish • Mattresses

Tree removal done RIGHT! • Tree & Stump Removal • Certified Arborists • 20 yrs exp. • 60’ Bucket Truck • Crown Reduction • Spiral Pruning • Land Clearing • Selective Logging ~ Fully Insured • Best Rates ~

604-787-5915, 604-291-7778 Info: www.treeworksonline.ca info@treeworksonline.ca 10% OFF with this AD

www.recycleitcanada.ca CHEAP LOADS Fast Reliable Service. All loads recycled. Minibins service avail. 604-922-5101

MISC. FOR SALE

Can’t Get Up Your Stairs? Acorn Stairlifts can help. Call Acorn Stairlifts now! Mention this ad and get 10% off your new Stairlift! Call 1866-981-5991 CAN’T GET UP your stairs? Acorn Stairlifts can help! No obligation consultation. Comprehensive warranty. Can be installed in less than 1 hour. Call now 1-866-981-6591.

Autos • Trucks • Equipment Removal

REAL ESTATE 627

HOMES WANTED

WE BUY HOMES Damaged House! Older House! Difficulty Selling! Behind on Payments! Need to Sell Now? NO FEES! NO RISK! QUICK CASH! Call us First! 604.657.9422

WANT A VEHICLE BUT STRESSED ABOUT YOUR CREDIT? Treat yourself this Christmas to $500 cash back. We fund your future not your past. All credit situations accepted. www.creditdrivers.ca 1-888-593-6095.

660 LANGLEY/ALDERGROVE

818

HOMES FOR SALE-SUPER BUYS

2000 FORD FOCUS, standard trans., blue, 4 dr. sedan, CD, Air Cared. $1995 obo (604)826-0519

www.dannyevans.ca

Homelife Benchmark Realty Corp. Langley

TRANSPORTATION 810

AUTO FINANCING

SHIHTZU X LASO APSO pups, 3 M, mostly white, view parents, nonshed, $400/ea. (604)701-9006

CARS - DOMESTIC

2002 CHRYSLER INTREPID 105K kms, great shape/condition, Air/care 2013, no accident, fully loaded, $2500 obo 604-441-7685 2005 CHRYSLER SEBRING convertible, silver, 84 k’s. auto. Mags. $6795/obo. (604)826-0519 2006 FORD FUSION, 4 dr, 39,000 kms, V6, all options, $7,950 obo. Phone 604-780-8404

821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS 518

PETS 477

PETS

Blood Hound pups, CKC Reg health ✔, 1st vac., micro chipped, 1 male, 6 fem. Liver & tan, ready to go 604-574-5788

BUILDING SUPPLIES

1997 MERCEDES E420, all options, mint, garage kept. 118,00 kms. $7200 obo. 604-805-4545.

STEEL BUILDINGS END OF SEASON DEALS! Overstock must go make an offer! FREE DELIVERY to most areas. CALL TO CHECK INVENTORY and FREE BROCHURE - 1-800-668-5111 ext. 170.

545

On Time, As Promised, Service Guaranteed!

604.587.5865

560

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

RUBBISH REMOVAL

RECYCLE-IT!

Auto Financing 1.800.910.6402

• Twins • Fulls • Queens • Kings 100’s in stock! www.Direct Liquidation.ca (604)294-2331

PRESA CANARIO pups 11/wks. 1st shots & dewormed. Well socialized with kids. $600/obo. 604-466-8211.

PLUMBING

ACKER’S RUBBISH REMOVAL. Quick. 7 days. Fast/reliable. Call Spencer 604-924-1511.

COCK A POO PUPPIES Family raised (2) Female, (2) male. $500. Ready to Go! (604)467-6643

MIN. SCHNAUZER PUPS 7-F 4-M tails docked, dewormed, 1st shots. Starting at $800. 778-834-1469

A-TECH Services 604-230-3539

356

CHOCOLATE LAB PUPS. Vet checked. 1st shots. Parents both registered. $550. 604-309-2390.

MATTRESSES staring at $99

MALTESE pup, 1 male, 1st shots, vet ✔, dewormed. Family raised. 604-464-5077.

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

GREAT RATES! Local lic’d plumber Big & small jobs. Plumbing, heating, plugged drains, call 604-325-6722

CATS OF ALL DESCRIPTION in need of caring homes! All cats are Spayed, neutered, vaccinated and dewormed. Visit us at fraservalleyhumanesociety.com or call 1 (604)820-2977

GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES $550: Born Sept. 26th. 1 Male, 1 Female. 604-836-6861

SPARTAN Moving Ltd. Fast & Reliable. Insured Competitive rates. Wknd Specials. Call Frank: (604) 435-8240

338

CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866

FUEL

BEST FIREWOOD 32nd Season & 37,000 Cust Deliv. Fully Seas. Maple, Birch, Alder 604-582-7095

2002 DODGE NEON R/T standard trans., white, sunroof, used eng., new timing belt & clutch. CD stacker $3295 obo. (604)826-0519

DreamCatcher Auto Loans “0” Down, Bankruptcy OK Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals

1-800-910-6402

www.PreApproval.cc INSTANT AUTO CREDIT We can finance your auto loan in minutes, you Drive Home Now, or we can deliver to you. www.DriveHomeNow.com. 877-758-7311 or 250-7515205.

2003 VOLVO V40, S/W, Blue, loaded 155,000 kms. auto. new tires. $5500 firm. Phone 604-538-9257.

828 COMMERCIAL VEHICLES 2003 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA highway truck, 450HP, 13 spd, Eaton Fuller trans, recent work done, brand new tires, fresh MVI. Make over $10,000/mo gross with job. Asking $22,500 Info 604-830-1700.

FREE TOWING 7 days/wk. We pay Up To $500 CA$H Rick Goodchild 604.551.9022 #1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME 604.683.2200

SCRAP BATTERIES WANTED We buy scrap batteries from cars, trucks & heavy equip. $4.00 each. Free pickup anywhere in BC, Min. 10. Toll Free Call:1.877.334.2288

AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673

847 SPORT UTILITY VEHICLES

1999 CHEVY BLAZER, black, mags 2” lift 4x4, Air Cared, std. new clutch $4795 obo 604-826-0519 2000 BUICK LASABRE with heated seats, low km’s, H.U.D. Private. $6900/obo. 778-565-4230 2004 JEEP GRAND Cherokee Ltd. 4x4, auto, red, 160K, $8500 firm. Call 604-538-9257

851

TRUCKS & VANS

1994 Saab 900-S. 6cyl, 2.5 l engine. 4dr, sunroof, 5spd, green, like new. $1950. 604-541-0344 2000 Dodge diesel 2500 series 4x4 ext cab 133,000k. 8x10 custom alum deck $12,500. 604-839-5700. 2004 F350 LARIAT CREW CAB, 4X4, long box, 180K, full load $16,000 obo. 604-812-1278 2004 GRAND CARAVAN, 36,000 KMS, v6, loaded, seats 7, $7950 obo. 604-780-8404


32 Thursday, December 22, 2011

www.northshoreoutlook.com

ATA RUG GALLERY

AFTER 30 YEARS IS CLOSING THE DOOR TO RETIRE Compare s our price er with oth ay Boxing D Sales.

NOW is the time to find your new rug!

SPECIAL PRICING FOR ONE WEEK ONLY! Modern 8x10 Modern 6x9 Modern 5x8 Tufted 9x12 Tufted 5x8 Persian Naeen 6.7x10 Persian Naeen 6.5x6.5 Persian Hamedan 7x10 Persian Kashan 8x10

$2900.00 $1800.00 $1400.00 $2800.00 $1200.00 $3750.00 $1125.00 $3100.00 $3100.00

NOW $399.00 NOW $299.00 NOW $199.00 NOW $399.00 NOW $199.00 NOW $1125.00 NOW $499.00 NOW $999.00 NOW $999.00

ATA Rug Gallery

Over 400 hand-knotted Persian & Oriental rugs to choose from. We guarantee you’ll find yours.

1478 Marine Drive | North Vancouver | 604.984.7887 Gallery Hours: Mon. - Sat. 10am to 6pm | Sun. 12pm - 5 pm


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