North Shore News June 16 2013

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Sunday, June 16, 2013

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NV donations save Filipina barista’s life

Temporary worker sent back to Philippines gets kidney transplant after NV fundraising Jane Seyd jseyd@nsnews.com

FOR Janette Camba, coffee turned out to be very, very good for her health.

The former North Vancouver barista can thank that morning cup of java — or more precisely, those of her former customers at the Queen’s Road Tim Hortons — for playing a significant part in saving her life. Camba, who was a familiar face at the coffee shop for more than three years, is now back in her home country of the Philippines, recovering from a life-saving kidney transplant, paid for by almost $30,000 in donations raised in North Vancouver. “The story has a happy ending,” said Robert Naughton, Camba’s former boss and owner of three Tim Hortons coffee shops in North Vancouver. “I feel very thankful for that.” That wasn’t always the way Camba’s saga was heading. When Camba arrived in Canada in July 2008, she was in good health, having passed the medical exam required as part of her visa application. She went to work right away at Tim Hortons, which had sponsored her temporary foreign worker visa. But within six months, Camba’s health deteriorated and she was diagnosed with rapidly progressing kidney disease, with her organs quickly losing function. She was soon undergoing hemodialysis at St. Paul’s Hospital three times a week. Although Camba could no longer work throughout the ordeal, Naughton continued to apply for permit extensions, knowing that if Camba were forced See Younger page 5

Playground shelters a nice-to-have: school board Brent Richter brichter@nsnews.com

IF North Vancouver students are to be kept out of the winter rains during their outside play time, it’s not going to be the school board or the province paying for it. That’s the result of a policy adopted by the school district in late May that groups sheltered areas in schoolyards in with interactive playgrounds, outdoor classrooms and learning gardens as “enhanced features.” When building or planning for new schools, the board “will consider” such features, according to the policy, but the board acknowledges those costs can be over and above the approved capital budget for the school. “In these instances, additional sources of funding, such as parent fundraising See Annual page 11

Symbolic strength

NEWS photo Cindy Goodman

SQUAMISH native Wes Nahanee leads a parade at Norgate elementary Wednesday. The students each carry a stone that bears their name and a “strength” word. The event was part of the school’s Aboriginal Day Celebration. Scan with Layar for more photos.

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A2 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013


Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A3

SUNDAY FOCUS

NEWS photos Paul McGrath

WEST Vancouver Victim Services co-ordinator Bunny Brown stands proud with the latest cohort of volunteers, (l to r) Karen, Melina, Nicole, Homa, Lida, Danielle and Lydia. Volunteers are only ever identified by a first name. When someone’s life has been affected by tragedy, a victim services volunteer will be there to offer comfort and practical help to get a victim’s life back on track. Scan these photos with the Layar app for photos and video from the volunteer graduation ceremony.

WEST VANCOUVER VICTIM SERVICES

Brent Richter brichter@nsnews.com

Comfort in crisis

WHEN a West Vancouver police officer knocks on a front door to deliver news that will shatter a person’s life, it’s the volunteers in the Victim Services unit that are there to immediately start picking up the pieces. The little-known corps of 31 volunteers, headed up by coordinator Bunny Brown, is now in its 18th year of reaching out, literally and figuratively, to those who have been traumatized by violence, the sudden death of a loved or another great loss — even those who were simply witnesses to an awful event. Two Victim Services volunteers are on call for 12-hour shifts, 24 hours a day ready to be dispatched to a crime scene or the home of a victim. Last year, police called on their services 88 times. “One of my beliefs is I’d rather be called and not needed than to be needed and not called. It’s OK with us if they call us at 3 a.m. and, all of a sudden, they don’t need us,” Brown said. “My favourite slogan is ‘Be there when being there is all that’s needed.” When Brown or one of the volunteers makes contact with a client, the first task is offering emotional support, which largely entails validating their emotions — anger, sadness, confusion — and letting them know they have a right to feel that way. “It sounds like it’s not that crucial but it really is. That short-term emotional support is just as vital as someone in a car accident getting immediate medical support because if you don’t have someone there to validate what you’re going through you can sometimes feel like you’re losing your mind,” Brown said. Indeed, a person struck by the sudden shock of grief may become forgetful, even of extremely important things, while processing the loss. Years ago, Brown accompanied a constable to do a death notification for a woman whose husband had been killed in a car accident. “We were informing the wife of her husband’s passing, and I know they had children and pets, and I said to her ‘What time do the children get out of school?’ and she panicked and said ‘Oh my god, I have to pick the kids up from school,’” Brown said. “She wasn’t focusing on her regular day-to-day things because there was something else that had taken place.” VS volunteers stick by their clients in the early hours after an event to help with the practical things, making sure they’re taking their medication, helping them contact family and friends for ongoing emotional support and helping them get their footing for the next steps. Having a VS member present helps more than the client, it’s often critical for the officer on the scene. As a former beat cop and member of the Integrated First Nations unit, WVPD spokesman Const. Jeff Palmer has been tasked with death notifications

several times. Not only is it hard to be the bearer of the worst news possible, the officer must also take care of police business, which is not the same as offering comfort, Palmer said. “It’s very, very difficult. The best way to describe it is this: You can’t make it better for the person, but if you handle it in the best way possible and with the support of a Victim Services person there, you can prevent it from becoming a lot worse,” he said. “Obviously we feel the human need for these people to be supported, but we have specific investigative needs that we have to deal with so this allows us as officers to focus on the investigative side while having the comfort of knowing the human side is taken care of.” Once the immediacy of the crisis is over, the Victim Services folks stay in contact to help with the challenges that lie ahead. If someone has been the victim of a crime, a volunteer will assist them as the case winds through the court process, which can often feel like being victimized again. They help the victims understand each step, which can be baffling to an outsider. Volunteers also attend funerals in the name of “being there” which clients often find comforting. Because of the harrowing nature of loss and victimhood, the relationship can go on for a year or more. “You end up sometimes being like a lifeline and you don’t want to sever that lifeline until you know that they’re OK and moving forward,” said Judy, a West Vancouver VS member. Volunteers are only ever addressed by their first names. Regardless of training or life experience, there is no way to predict how someone in trauma will react and any number of things influence that. Culture is a big one. Diane, another longtime VS volunteer, was once tasked with trying to placate and restrain a Chinese-Canadian woman who came home to discover her husband was dead. The woman desperately wanted to throw herself onto her husband’s body, which is not permitted while police are awaiting the B.C. Coroners Service to arrive and investigate. “It wasn’t until later on in the week when I spoke to her daughter that I found out the reason why she was so distraught. In that culture, the spirit is still with the body and you should be there. We weren’t aware of that. A lot of things come into play,” Diane said. Today, the unit has volunteers fluent in Farsi, Cantonese, Korean, Polish, German and Dutch. Once VS has made contact, they often find they’re only scratching the surface when much deeper help is needed, Brown said “There are always other things involved. Nobody has this idyllic, perfect life and all of a sudden, whoops, this one thing happens to them,” she said. Officers once called Brown to the scene of a break-and-enter, which was strange as VS workers are rarely dispatched for minor property crimes. When she arrived, the victim was sitting on the couch, nearly catatonic. Brown spent the next three hours, gently

encouraging her to speak. “She finally started talking to me. The first thing she saw when she walked in and opened her bedroom door was that all of her underwear had been taken out of the drawer and thrown around her room. This woman had been sexually assaulted when she was in university and it just brought it all back,” Brown said. “The more we talked, the more we realized she never got a lot of support or a lot of counselling following that sexual assault. It was kind of just left there. She was carrying that around with her.” The group also ends up being the first to help when emergency services are dealing with at-risk youth, seniors with dementia, or people with mental illness. While they aren’t counsellors, VS volunteers can get their clients linked up with a myriad of services, depending on their needs and what is available. But resources are limited, government programs lose funding and disappear and sometimes, for all their efforts, there just isn’t the right kind of help available, especially when the victim or traumatized person suffers from mental illness or poverty. “There are people who are living on $212 a month and can’t pay their bills and can’t buy groceries,” Brown said. “We have those frustrating situations where there’s not enough resources in some areas.” “And this on the North Shore. This is in West Van,” Diane added. To a layperson, this is a staggering task — attempting to console the inconsolable and putting one’s self in a stranger’s nightmare. But for the special kinds of people that are called to do the job, it comes with great satisfaction. “It’s extremely rewarding work. It really is. . . . It is a privilege to be with people when they’re going through probably the worst time of their life. You feel very honoured to be there at that time,” Brown said. “But until you’ve experienced that, you don’t realize that.” Once, while comforting a distraught woman whose husband’s dead body lay just few feet away, Diane felt something most would call counterintuitive. “I sat with her on the floor with her husband and just held her hand, stroked her back, talked with her about her husband and I came away thinking, what a privilege that was for me to have been, at that time, with her when nobody else was there.” But sometimes there is a price to pay. The VS team, for all their composure in the face of distress, can’t help but take the hurt home with them in some cases. After taking a particularly difficult phone call from a client while at the West Vancouver police headquarters, Diane put the phone down as a constable walked by and saw her in tears. “She looked at me and said ‘Victim Services need Victims Services sometimes too, don’t they?’ I said ‘Yeah, that’s why we See Unpaid page 9


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Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A5

Younger sister donates kidney From page 1

out of the country, she could die. But eventually, Camba’s illness prompted the Canadian government to cancel her visa, forcing her to return to the Philippines. “I got a phone call from hospital,” recalled Naughton. “They said, ‘You realize if Janette goes home, if she doesn’t receive treatment within 10 days she will die.’” Naughton knew that Camba had no medical coverage and no way to pay for a transplant or hemodialysis. With the date of Camba’s departure looming, Naughton sought the permission of Tim Hortons and launched a desperate last-ditch fundraising effort to save her life. The response, he said, was overwhelming. “She was very well-liked and quite loved actually,” he said. “People were very generous.”

The campaign managed to raise $29,000 in about six weeks last fall. Camba, however, wasn’t out of the woods yet. While her brother had volunteered to donate one of his kidneys, tests revealed he wasn’t a good match. New tests were ordered for Camba’s younger sister, who also volunteered to donate a kidney. This time, the match was perfect. “Everything was lined up for her to have the operation and she got a bad infection,” said Naughton. That delayed the procedure again. In the meantime, the money raised for the operation was going to pay for the hemodialysis needed to keep Camba alive. “I got nervous at the end,” said Naughton, as the funds began to dwindle. “We just made it.” In January of this year, however, the transplant operation finally went ahead,

paid for by the North Vancouver fundraiser. It was a success, said Naughton, and Camba is recovering well. Cambahaskeptintouchwith her old friends and colleagues from North Vancouver. “She was emailing us from the hospital,” he said. Another Tim Hortons employee recently went back to the Philippines for a visit, and stopped in to see Camba while he was there. “He came back and told us she looked great and was doing well,” said Naughton. Naughton added while he’d love to bring Camba back to Canada, realistically that’s unlikely with her medical needs. “She has to take medication for the rest of her life,” he said. Camba still struggles to pay for the anti-rejection drugs she must take, he said. If not for the money raised here, she definitely could not

have paid for the operation or for continued hemodialysis, he said — and there are no other options in her country. Alvin Koh Relleve, a North Vancouver resident and leader in the local Filipino community, said sadly, Camba’s situation is common to those without private health insurance in the Philippines. While those who can pay — including increasing numbers of western “medical tourists” — have access to topquality care in his home country, those who don’t have the cash are usually out of luck. As part of his work in the Filipino community, Relleve has been promoting a health care insurance program available to Filipino foreign workers both in Canada and around the globe. For about $20 a month — paid by the worker in Canada — the company provides health care benefits to dependent family members back home in the Philippines.

Council debates 1300-blk Monday Jeremy Shepherd jshepherd@nsnews.com

WEST Vancouverites with an Ambleside opinion have at least one more chance to be heard this Monday as council considers pushing the Grosvenor proposal one step closer to reality.

After approximately 15 months of design and debate, the international development group has settled on two terraced mid-rises peaking at 79 and 68 feet, respectively, in the 1300-block of Marine Drive. The buildings would be joined by a galleria and comprise approximately 100 apartments with an average of 1,771 square feet. Council is slated to vote on advancing the

project to the formal development consideration process, leaving district staff to iron out the finer details with Grosvenor. Architectural refinements set to be worked out include modifying building heights, making each tower architecturally distinct, and possibly using part of the second floor for office space. The project has been hailed as Ambleside’s saviour and assailed as being out of step with the neighbourhood’s village character. Mayor Michael Smith has championed the project, calling on detractors to find another way to add $40 million to the district’s coffers, thus funding the public safety building. If approved, the proposal will likely return to council July 22. Final approval of the $37-million project would formalize Grosvenor ownership of the block currently occupied by the police station.

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A6 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

VIEWPOINT Published by North Shore News a division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership, 100-126 East 15th Street, North Vancouver, B.C. V7L 2P9. Doug Foot, publisher. Canadian publications mail sales product agreement No. 40010186.

Pass the pork S

INCE the election, Premier Christy Clark has been talking a lot about restraint. She’s opined on the need to contain costs and preached the gospel of fiscal discipline. Don’t ask the government for money, is the message being sent. Because the answers will be “No, no and no.” Turns out, however, that while all animals are equal, some are more equal than others — particularly Clark’s loyal party insiders. No sooner had the premier finished telling everyone they’d need to tighten their belts and suck it up, than it was revealed she’d wasted little time cushioning the blows for some favoured bureaucrats. Some of her political staff will see their salary caps jump to $230,000. Raises range from 18 per cent to 60

per cent for the elite, who helped Clark pull off her stunning election victory. Ministerial assistants will also see their maximum salaries go up to $105,000 — a raise of 11 per cent. Politically, it’s undoubtedly smart to make such a cynical move as early as possible. The increases will soon be eclipsed by the budget, which itself will soon fall prey to the summer break and general political amnesia. But the pay hikes are no less offensive. At a time when a “core review” threatens civil service cuts and seniors in extended care homes are being charged for wheelchairs, it behooves those at the top to set an example. Instead, Clark has made it clear just who will be experiencing restraint and who will be practising business as usual.

You said it

Mailbox

LV density opponents meet Tuesday Dear Editor: Many Lynn Valley residents are extremely upset about the high density the District of North Vancouver plans to impose on our community and the manipulative methods being used to make it happen. Mayor and council appear to be promoting development instead of representing the people who elected them and who pay their salaries. To stop this short-sighted plan and ensure reasonable growth that preserves our beautiful community environment, we need the voices of as many residents as possible. Please show your support and join other concerned residents at our upcoming meeting at the Lynn Valley recreation centre (Frederick and Mountain Highway) on Tuesday, June 18 at 8 p.m. Margit Lieder North Vancouver

Put Valley plans to referendum Centre, really? One can only imagine the traffic congestion! It’s busy enough already on the two main arteries, and we currently have plenty of single family homes being redeveloped into townhomes/apartments and densifying the neighbourhood. I suggest a more modest proposal, redevelop the mall, put in several midsize towers, say five-six storeys max, enough to house 1,000-1,500 people. Anything

else will destroy the character of our neighbourhood. Does anybody in this company (Bosa) or any of the district planners even live in Lynn Valley? How about we have a referendum on this proposal for everybody living north of the highway and west to Williams Road? Let the people of Lynn Valley decide. Peter Lovegrove North Vancouver

Lynn Valley’s road system and transit is already inadequate

Black raspberries lost

Dear Editor: As a long time resident of Lynn Valley I went along to see the open house on the development of Lynn Valley’s centre. The developers and council propose four options — all of which include 4,9005,300 people. I suggest another option — how about none of the above? Five thousand people in Lynn Valley

Dear Editor: The “proposed” redevelopment of Lynn Valley is not in alignment with the Regional Growth Strategy — which we are not required to follow, in any case — to encourage density along major transit lines. Lynn Valley is not on a major traffic corridor — quite the opposite. There is no transit service on Sundays after 6:30 p.m. Nobody drives through Lynn Valley by car unless they want this to be their destination. Developing this area to the extent

CONTACT US

Bosa and Safeway are proposing is not in keeping with what we Lynn Valleyites hold so dear. We want to keep the character of our community. We are the voters and the citizens who live here now and our voices need to be heard. The people of Lynn Valley do not want highrises and we do not want thousands more people coming in and out of our community on an already congested road system with inadequate public transportation. Wendy Qureshi North Vancouver

Dear Editor: Letter writer Richard Kuehnel makes a well-founded point in his June 7 letter, Save Wild Edibles; ‘Adopt a Patch,’. Halfway down our street in the late ’80s, I discovered a small black raspberry patch. I was thrilled to make such a discovery here in the “urban wilderness.” I thoroughly enjoyed picking a small bowlful on weekend mornings to augment my morning cereal. Unfortunately, someone, either a neighbour or district staff, cut the bushes down and eradicated them a year or so after that. They have never returned, and as Kuehnel points out, we are all much poorer for the loss. Scott Hoffman North Vancouver

“We were able to really shine a light on the fact that these animals are being killed just for the crime of eating fish.” Sea Shepherd Ashley Lenton lashes out at the killing of California sea lions, an animal she says has been scapegoated for the decline of wild salmon (from a June 9 Sunday Focus story). ••• “It depends on what cop you get and how that cop’s feeling about marijuana that day.” Uneven enforcement is one reason British Columbians should force a referendum to decriminalize pot, according to activist Dana Larsen (from a June 12 news story). ••• “There was never a time we sat down as a committee and said ‘Our first choice is to send our colleagues away from this institution.’ That was never our first choice.” Capilano University business instructor Tammy Towill discusses the senate’s endorsement of cutting a swath of programs to shore up the school’s $1.3-million shortfall (from a June 14 news story).

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Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A7

Time to arrest the usual suspects

SOMEBODY broke into my car while I was walking my dog at Lynn Headwaters the other day, smashing the passenger seat window and grabbing my purse and a freshly purchased bottle of Diet Coke.

I blame Rob Ford. The fingerprints of the Mayor of Toronto were all over the crime — not literally, but that’s neither here nor there. He probably wore gloves, maybe even opera gloves, so he wouldn’t cut his arm on all the broken glass. In any case, there was no sign of blood or hair so DNA evidence isn’t available. More importantly, Ford looks like he drinks Coke, and it’s not beyond the realm of possibility that he might sometimes choose the diet brand. While he’s often in Toronto, he’s had good reason in recent weeks to seek the calming forests of North Vancouver. He’s probably a little worried about money, too, given the uncertainty regarding his job. A stealing spree might have been just what the doctor ordered. You’re aware that Ford was videotaped smoking crack

Going Coastal

Kate Zimmerman cocaine in the company of known drug dealers. Some people like to say he was “allegedly” videotaped, but most dispense with the term because Ford is a noted jackass, and jackasses and crack pipes go together like Diet Coke and bacon-loaded cheeseburgers. Three people have seen this video, but nobody can produce it, however hard they try. Nevertheless, much of the public has deemed Ford guilty, because he’s a jerk and his brother dealt hashish 30 years ago. Again, I could use the term “allegedly,” but I have a firm word count for this column and in these halcyon days of democratic journalism, having to prove things is a waste of time.

Here’s how I’m pretty sure the theft went down. I got out of the car with my dog, her leash, and her ball one afternoon last week, and ambled down the stairs to the Varley Trail. It was at that point that Ford and whatever nefarious companion he’d picked up on the way into town from the airport on the SkyTrain hopped off their stolen bicycles wearing backpacks. While his companion smoked crack, ate hash brownies, and drank from a gigantic vat of pop in blatant disregard of local custom, Ford peered into my car to scope out the booty. The fact that I had cleverly heaped grocery bags over my purse was no deterrent to his shrewd mind and base criminal impulses. Between crack puffs, Ford’s friend took a hammer out of his backpack and handed it to the mayor, who had just finished putting on his mother’s velvet opera gloves. “Here ya go, Yer Worship,” said the local gangsta. In one sharp motion, Ford smashed the window. Brushing aside the glass, he reached inside and grabbed the branded grocery bags.

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The measurements of 74, 117, and 169 feet in the June 14 story referred to the grade elevation in the tower areas, and not the towers themselves. We regret the error.

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Jacquie Kelly – Paralegal

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to Vancouver and a peaceful walk at Lynn Headwaters, where, on her way back to her limousine, she caught a glimpse of my purse under the grocery bags. “I must have it. I’m Pamela Wallin!” she indubitably shouted. She asked the limo driver to give the window a quick kick and then she demurely reached in and took the purse, also lifting the Diet Coke to present to her driver as a gift. Duffy’s my last suspect. His scuttling about in the face of numerous accusations of fudged expense claims, false home occupancies and a weird bailout from Nigel Wright have been unbecoming, even to a former reporter. While I can’t vouch for the likelihood of him walking anywhere, much less Lynn Headwaters, he may have stopped at End of the Line General Store for a latte and needed somewhere private to drink it. I see him parking his SUV beside my car in the overflow lot, looking down into my Honda and spotting the promising grocery bags. “Mmm, a free lunch,” he likely said, drooling. Gentlefolk of the jury, I rest my case. kate@katezimmerman.ca

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“What’s Fresh Market?” he asked. “No idea, dude.” Ford tossed the empty bags into the back seat. His eyes lit up. “Bingo! A purse!” he cried. “It’s obviously not real leather,” his partner in crime pointed out unnecessarily. “Shaddap,” said Toronto’s mayor. “There’s a wallet in it — that’s good enough for me. No money, but loads of cards. Can you use credit cards for crack in Vancouver?” “No, but you can use ’em to get money to buy crack,” replied his friend in a reasonable tone. Ford tossed the purse into his pal’s backpack. Then, with some effort, he clambered onto his bike and the pair pedalled down the road, cackling. If it wasn’t Ford who done the dirty deed, it must have been senators Mike Duffy or Pamela Wallin. She probably did it for my lipstick red purse, which any self-respecting fashion maven would find irresistible. Wallin currently has to keep her purchases modest due to some controversy regarding her Senate expenses, which is hard cheese. I see her seeking solace from her worries with a trip

Correction

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A8 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

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Off er(s) available on select new 2014 models through participating dealers to qualifi ed customers who take delivery by July 2, 2013. Dealers may sell or lease for less. Some conditions apply. See dealer for complete details. All off ers are subject to change without notice. Vehicles shown may include optional accessories and upgrades available at extra cost. All pricing includes delivery and destination fees up to $1,665, other fees and certain levies (including tire levies) and $100 A/C charge (where applicable) and excludes licensing, registration, insurance, other taxes and variable dealer administration fees (up to $699). Other dealer charges may be required at the time of purchase. Other lease and fi nancing options also available. “Don’t Pay For 60 Days” off er is a 60-day payment deferral and applies to purchase fi nancing off ers on all 2014 models. No interest will accrue during the fi rst 30 days of the fi nance contract. After this period interest starts to accrue and the purchaser will repay principal and interest monthly over the term of the contract. See your Kia dealer for full details. Some conditions apply and on approved credit. **0% purchase fi nancing is available on select new 2014 Kia models O.A.C. Terms vary by model and trim, see dealer for complete details. Purchase fi nancing example based on new 2014 Rondo LX MT (RN551E) with a selling price of $23,482, fi nanced at 0% APR corresponds to a bi-weekly payment of $129 for 60 months, amortized over 84 months with a down payment/ equivalent trade of $0. Some conditions apply and on approved credit. Bi-weekly fi nance payment O.A.C. for new 2014 Sorento 2.4L LX AT FWD (SR75BE)/2014 Forte Sedan LX MT (FO541E)/2014 Rondo LX MT (RN551E) based on a selling price of $28,482/$17,502/$23,482 is $156/$96/$129 with an APR of 0% for 60/84/84 months, amortized over 84 months. Estimated remaining principal balance of $8,138/$0/$0 plus applicable taxes due at end of 60-month period. Retailer may sell for less. See dealer for full details. Model shown Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price for 2014 Sorento EX V6 AWD (SR75HE)/2014 Forte SX (FO748E)/2014 Rondo EX Luxury (RN756E) is 34,195/$26,195/$32,195 and includes delivery and destination fees of $1,665/$1,485/$1,665, and A/C charge ($100, where applicable). Licence, insurance, applicable taxes, other fees and certain levies (including tire levies), variable dealer administration fees (up to $699) and registration fees are extra. Retailer may sell for less. Available at participating dealers. See ealer for full details. Highway/city fuel consumption is based on the 2014 Sorento LX 2.4L GDI 4-cyl (A/T)/2014 Forte 1.8L MPI 4-cyl (M/T)/2014 Rondo 2.0L GDI 4-cyl (M/T). These updated estimates are based on the Government of Canada’s approved criteria and testing methods. Refer to the EnerGuide Fuel Consumption Guide. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on driving habits and other factors. °The Bluetooth® wordmark and logo are registered trademarks and are owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc. Information in this advertisement is believed to be accurate at the time of printing. For more information on our 5-year warranty coverage, visit kia.ca or call us at 1-877-542-2886. Kia is a trademark of Kia Motors Corporation.


Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A9

Unpaid volunteers complete 60 hours training From page 3

have one another,” Diane said. There’s also Trauma Bear, a giant teddy bear donning a police cap in the Victim Services office, who’s always available for a hug, which even officers have been known to take him up on. Brown and the rest of the team welcomed the newest members to Victim Services at a graduation ceremony on Wednesday night. To make the cut, the volunteers were screened based on their readiness for the task and the skills they could bring. They then had to complete 60 hours of classroom training covering a range of topics including property crime, sudden death, suicides, the court system, mental health, and cross-cultural training. Once the class work is done, the volunteers start shadowing other more experienced volunteers and do a ridealong with a police officer

before they’re ready to start as a back-up VS volunteer in the field. The type of people the program attracts is as diverse as the calls they respond to, Brown said. Some are young folks looking to get experience that will help them into a career in policing or social work. Others have had first-hand experience dealing with VS after a tragedy in their own life and want to pass along the favour to someone else. “But the largest percentage are people who want to go to a volunteer job where they feel they are actually helping,” Brown said. “I think a lot of people in the program are chronic volunteers. Some of them have two or three different volunteer positions that they do, but this one seems to be one people really relate to and feel they’re contributing with.” The province and the District of West Vancouver cover the team’s budget, which covers one full-time staff position, one

part-time assistant and the team’s training and resources. They do accept donations via the West Vancouver Foundation but only to cover registration fees at training events. But sadly, or perhaps appropriately, most people have never heard of Victim Services or the work they do until there’s the police officer knocking on their door, Brown said. Without the humanitarian desire to give of one’s self when a stranger in the community is in need, the program would not be possible. “Remember, these are volunteers. People who do this on their own, not because they get a paycheque,” Brown said. That fact is still baffling to the police who rely on them. “We never stop being amazed,” said Palmer. “It’s like, ‘Oh my god, you could be relaxing at home, and you’re volunteering to come out and provide this.’ It’s kind of boggling that people are willing to do that and it’s an amazing resource.

Bear wrecks car, avoids riot charges IT wasn’t a bait car, but a West Vancouver sedan is missing some trim and covered in bear paw scratches after a curious bruin tried get in sometime Wednesday night,

The incident happened on the 500-block of Craigmohr Road. Damage included the side mirrors torn off, dents in the doors and roof, extensive paw and claw marks, and both driver and passenger doors bent and pulled partly open. There was apparently nothing to attract the bear to the vehicle, police say. While police, the car’s owner and possibly ICBC may never know about what led the bear to try to open the car like a tuna can, Tony Webb, chairman of the North Shore Black Bear Society has some ideas. Curiosity over a smell will motivate a bear to go to great effort. If the car’s owner was wearing citronella bug repellent, perfume or had recently fuelled the car up and spilled some gasoline, that would be enough, Webb said. “If there’s a bear around, he’ll pick that up half a mile away or more,” he said. There’s even some chance it was “new car smell,” which may confuse the bear’s senses. They are known to bite into hot tub covers, which have a scent bears perceive as similar to smell of ant hills. The one smell they don’t care for? Us.

Walk with the North Shore Schizophrenia Society

“Bears are aware of us because we’ve been so awful to bears over the centuries,” Webb said. While we are well into bear season on the North Shore, it’s important to do our best to put away anything that may draw bears in, for their safety as well as ours. There are about three bear-related injuries reported each year in B.C. “Considering there are thousands of encounters in British Columbia with bears every year, I think that’s very, very low,” said Webb. — Brent Richter

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Sunday, June 23 Meet at John Lawson Park at 9:45 a.m., (foot of 17th Street in West Vancouver), where special guest Dr. Cindy Holdsworth will officially start the Walk along the Seawalk to Dundarave Pier and back. Dr. Holdsworth is the recipient of the first NSSS Responsiveness to Families Award.

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A10 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

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Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A11

Annual precipitation data misses funding mark From page 1

and/or corporate and government grants may be required to address the initial and ongoing costs of these enhancements,” the policy states. “The board deems schools responsible for the initiation and development of proposed site enhancements and any related costs.” The unanimous school board decision comes as a disappointment to members of the Cover our Kids campaign, a group of parents lobbying to see that all North Vancouver schools are built with the sheltered play areas commonly included in older North Van schools. “The whole question we were trying to get across in the beginning was ‘Why is this now not a priority?’ All the old North Van schools had covered areas,” said Erin MacNair, Cover our Kids member and a Highlands elementary

mom. That school was recently rebuilt without a covered area. “By lumping it in with the outdoor spaces, I do think the issue is diluted and probably will not get the focus we were looking for,” MacNair said. The Ministry of Education will provide funding for sheltered areas if the board can demonstrate it has 2,000 millimetres in annual precipitation, which the North Shore has and then some, according to data MacNair pulled from Environment Canada. However, the board used data from the National Research Council that showed North Vancouver precipitation just below that mark. Putting the onus on parent advisory committees to raise cash — about $150,000 for a proposed shelter at Highlands, is unfair said MacNair, as the PACs are already putting

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in overtime to raise money for other school equipment. “There’s something wrong with this. Why are the parents expected to come up with all of this money when the parents are trying to tell the people who are building the schools, they were always built this way for a reason. Don’t take them away,” MacNair said. But the board has many “wants” to contend with and setting the policy is meant to give the board the tools it needs to deal with all of them fairly, according to board chairwoman Franci Stratton. “The intention of the policy was to further

support and guide the board’s process for addressing the competing demands placed on us in terms of funding, particularly in regards to site enhancements, which would include playground installations, teaching gardens and covered play areas,” Stratton said. “The board appreciates the work the Highland parents group has done. It’s all about the kids and they’re passionate about their position. “We’re not always going to come to the same conclusions but they have to know we’re all working towards the same goals and that is our students.”

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YOU’RE INVITED ROGERS WIRELESS INSTALLATION OPEN HOUSE To address wireless network deficiencies, ensure reliable service and meet growing demand, Rogers is proposing to install three new architecturally designed 36 metre telecommunications towers in the District of West Vancouver at three locations along the Upper Levels Highway: Taylor Way, 15th Street and 26th Street. The towers will be used by Rogers and other wireless service providers. Rogers is hosting an Open House to share information on the proposals and obtain feedback from residents. There are a number of ways for you to learn more about it and provide comments. OPEN HOUSE When: Tuesday, June 18 from 5:00pm – 7:30pm Where: St. David’s Church, 1525 Taylor Way On-line:View information at PlaceSpeak (https://www.placespeak.com/westvan), a free, public consultation site under “North Shore Corridor Telecommunications Plan”. Forwarding your comments electronically in this community forum requires registration at no cost to you. View information at the District of West Vancouver (http://westvancouver.ca/celltowers) E-mail: You may also forward your questions or comments to: commentsbc@rci.rogers.com and/or celltowers@westvancouver.ca PROPOSED LOCATIONS / TELECOMMUNICATIONS CORRIDOR:

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A12 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

BRIGHT LIGHTS

Force Field book launch

by Cindy Goodman

Featured poet Daniela Elza

Rochelle Quarry and Alice Moore

Featured poet Miranda Pearson

Featured poet and event MC Fran Bourassa

Featured poet Shauna Paull A launch event was held for new anthology, Force Field: 77 Women Poets of British Columbia, May 19 at Deep Cove’s Seymour Art Gallery. Edited by Susan Musgrave and published by Mother Tongue, the book is intended to be a record of local women poets and writers and to solidify their historical signiďŹ cance. At the launch event, featured poets read their works, as well as offered insight into their personal stories and inspiration. For more information on the book, visit mothertonguepublishing.com.

Tina Schliessler and featured poet Heather Haley

Featured poets Susan McCaslin and Cathy Stonehouse

Jamie Reid, featured poet Susan Cormier and Bryant Ross

Helen Slinger, acclaimed writer Anosh Irani, featured poet Aislinn and Glenn Hunter

Please direct requests for event coverage to: emcphee@nsnews.com. For more Bright Lights photos go to: nsnews.com/galleries.


LIVE

Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A13

YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to ACTIVE LIVING

LIONS GATE HOSPITAL FOUNDATION RAISES $3.5M IN SUPPORT OF NEW SUITE

Endoscopy unit opens its doors

Erin McPhee emcphee@nsnews.com

THANKS to the generosity of local supporters, Lions Gate Hospital is home to a new endoscopy suite, viewed as a major step forward for cancer screening on the North Shore.

HEALTH NOTES page 15

The three-room unit, having been relocated, renovated and equipped with new and state of the art equipment, was made possible through a successful fundraising campaign undertaken by the Lions Gate Hospital Foundation over the last two years, raising $3.5 million from more than 4,200 donors. “The goal for this was to establish a new three-room unit where we do endoscopy, by the general surgeons, by the gastroenterologists, by the bronchoscopists — these are people who do lung examinations — and pediatric gastroenterology as well. So it’s a multi-functional unit,” says Dr. Michael Hahn, director of endoscopy and head of the division of gastroenterology at Lions Gate Hospital. The foundation supports a variety of aspects of medical care, from one specialty to another. “I think they chose this because of need,” says Hahn, explaining Lions Gate Hospital already had a suite dedicated to endoscopy, however it was “very ancient.” “There are safety issues about patients, and assurance of cleansing of equipment. As we go on and on, we were becoming a little concerned that our place, currently, was a bit aged and needed an uplift and at the same time, needed an enhanced delivery of how we provide care to the patients,” he says. The new unit is hoped to provide increased access for patients, allowing more people to be served, as well as to get their required examinations done in a more timely manner, thereby

NEWS photos Kevin Hill

TOP photo: Dr. Michael Hahn, director of endoscopy, holds a colonoscope during an event to celebrate the opening of a new endoscopy unit at Lions Gate Hospital June 8. At left, the new unit will offer patients improved access, safety and privacy. At right, community members tour the new three-room unit. decreasing wait times. Lions Gate currently performs approximately 45 endoscopic procedures per day and they’re hoping to be able to increase that by 12-15 per day

with the new unit. Other intended advantages of the new unit include enhanced safety, privacy and an overall better quality of care and experience for patients in their

encounters with the health care team. “The advantage of the new unit is they will come into their own private cubicle, they’ll have their own place to change,

they’ll have their own place to discuss in private with their admitting nurse. From that point of view it’s a much better way of See June page 14

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A14 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

LIVE

June 23 walk to unite local Persian and Canadian communities From page 13 delivering, I think, personalized care to patients in a more private setting,” says Hahn. The unit comes on the heels of a new provincial Colon Screening Program (screeningbc.ca) promoting early detection and prevention of colon cancer (the second deadliest cancer in B.C.) launched in April. The program follows a successful pilot trial, Colon Check, launched in 2009. As part of the new program, doctors will refer B.C. residents between the ages of 50 and 74 to complete a FIT (fecal immunochemical test), which can be completed in the comfort of their own home, every two years, according to the B.C. Cancer Agency. “By doing what we’ve done to change the way that endoscopy is going to be done, it just means an increased efficiency in being able to attend to all these extra needs of the higher load of patients,” says Hahn. Currently, Lions Gate performs approximately 6,700 colonoscopies a year. With the new unit, they hope to be able to complete an additional 2,600. “Without the foundation we would never be able to do any of these things. Without the people who support the foundation we wouldn’t be able to do these things either. We’re very fortunate to have a very strong foundation that are very committed to enhancing the care and delivery of health care to our regional citizens,” he says. An opening event was held June 8, with more than 100 guests in attendance. The new unit will begin serving patients June 24. One of the North Shore residents who supported the foundation’s endoscopy campaign was North Vancouver resident and notary public Katy Roohani. She did so in honour of her husband, Soheil, a well-known North Shore Realtor, who passed away July 2, 2012, at age 67, following a diagnosis with lung cancer. Soheil received his diagnosis in 2006, underwent surgery and was believed to be cancer-free. “About a month or so before it came to the five-year period, it came back and unfortunately, he fought very hard, but they couldn’t

NEWS photo Cindy Goodman

FOLLOWING the death of her husband, Soheil, last year, Katy Roohani raised $30,000 in support of a new endoscopy unit at Lions Gate Hospital, and is presenting the inaugural Persian and Canadian Walk for Cancer in his memory, Sunday, June 23, ending at Mahon Park, with proceeds benefitting the hospital foundation’s oncology fund. save him,” says Katy, 52. “He was the love of my life. We were married for 30 years. He wasn’t only the love of my life, every single person that he came in contact with loved him. (No one) has one bad word to say about him. He was the most considerate, nice, loving, kind person that you can imagine,” she says. As Soheil had been a patient at Lions Gate and out of an interest in honouring the kindness and generosity he’d shown to others,

NO

W

SEL

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Katy rallied she and Soheil’s friends, colleagues and family members and raised more than $30,000 in support of the new endoscopy unit. In gratitude, a patient admitting space has been named in honour of Soheil. “This way his memory is going to be there and anybody who goes to the hospital will see that because of him, something good was done,” she says. See Event page 17

THANK YOU! Family Services of the North Shore Youth Leadership Advisory Board

We are so proud of the work our YouthLAB volunteers have done over the past year! The Youth Leadership Advisory Board (Youth LAB), launched in September 2012, recruited 10 exceptional youth from across the North Shore to work with Family Services of the North Shore staff to find creative ways to reach at risk youth who are struggling with mental health issues (anxiety, depression, sexual abuse, eating disorders and bullying). They created a very powerful video presentation (check it out on our You Tube channel), spoke with over 180 youth, and used social media to create awareness about the issues. Their work also included a communications strategy that reduces stigma and encourages youth to get the help they need. WELCOME HOME TO THE HAYWOOD – an exclusive, boutique collection of nine luxurious 1, 2 and 3 bedroom homes steps from the Village and waterfront. This is your chance to enjoy the relaxed, luxury lifestyle you’ve been waiting for

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Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A15

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Ride Don’t Hide STEFAN Decosse (left), Catherine Wyse, Jamie Fay and Valerie MacDonald are among the community members gearing up to participate in Ride Don’t Hide, a community bike ride hosted by the Canadian Mental Health Association, Sunday, June 23 at Burnaby’s Swangard Stadium in support of mental health for women and families. Wyse and her team are supporting the North and West Vancouver branch of the association. Riders have the option of a 10-, 20- or 60-kilometre course. Info: ridedonthide.com.

health notes Alateen Meeting: A group for ages 10-18 where alcohol is a problem in the family meets every Monday at 7:15 p.m. at John Braithwaite Community Centre, 145 West First St., North Vancouver. Info: 604688-1716. The B.C. Balance and Dizziness Disorders Society Support Group will meet the fourth Thursday of every month at 2 p.m. at The Summerhill, 135

West 15th St., North Vancouver. There will be the occasional guest speaker. Free. RSVP: 604878-8383. The Art of Healthy Living: A series of workshops with Vancouver’s top health and wellness professionals will run until June 23 in West Vancouver at the Ferry Building Gallery, 1414 Argyle Ave., Ambleside Youth Centre in Ambleside Park and Lawson Creek Studio, 1756 Argyle Ave. Info: ferrybuildinggallery.com. Registration: 604925-7270.

Living Well Talks: Lions Gate Cardiac Rehab and Cardiometabolic Clinic will offer a series of free seminars on heart health Mondays from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. in the Cardiac Rehab office, 200-101 West 16th St., North Vancouver. Topics: June 17, cardiac risk factors and exercise and heart health; July 8, heart physiology and heart disease and exercise and heart health. Info: vancouverhearthealth.com. Paddle Sport Race Series: See more page 16

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2012 Annual Report information now available The District’s 2012 annual municipal report is available online at www.dnv.org/annualreport2012. Here you will find the 2012 consolidated financial statements, permissive tax exemptions, and reporting on corporate objectives, achievements and activities. Also included are messages from the Mayor, Chief Administrative Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and more. Printed copies of the report are also available for review at District Hall or any District Library. District Council will consider the annual municipal report at the Council Meeting on Monday, June 24 at 7:00 pm, at District Hall, 355 West Queens Road, North Vancouver. This meeting is your opportunity to ask questions or make submissions on any aspect of the report. Scan this ad with

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A16 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

LIVE health notes From page 15 Competitive and noncompetitive, novice to experienced paddlers are invited to paddle any type of craft Tuesdays at 7 p.m. Check-in begins at 6 p.m. with a warm-up at 6:30 p.m. Schedule: June 18, Woodlands Criterium Buoy Race; and June 25, Conquer the Cove. Race entry fee: $5. Registration: 604-929-2268 or tuesdaynightracing.com. Engage Your Brain, Enrich Your Life: Learn fun and effective brain exercises Wednesday, June 19, 7 p.m. at John Braithwaite Community Centre, 145 West First St., North Vancouver. Presented by the Canadian Mental Health Association. Admission by donation. Info: 604-987-6959 or northwestvancouver.cmha.bc.ca.

Getting to Know Dementia: Join the Alzheimer Society of B.C. for an introductory session on Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias and the challenges of receiving a diagnosis Thursday, June 20 from 10 a.m. to noon at the Alzheimer Society Resource Centre, 148 East Second St., North Vancouver. Participants will learn about the different types of support available and how to begin planning for the future. Free, donations are welcome. Registration required: 604-984-8348. Blood Donor Clinics will take place Saturday, June 22, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. and Wednesday, June 26, 1-8 p.m. at North Lonsdale United Church, 3380 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. Future appointments can be made at blood.ca or 1-888236-6283. Whistler Water One Climb: Wear blue and climb the Grouse Grind to raise money to bring clean

water to more than 10,000 people in Kenya Saturday, June 22, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. There will be a preclimb rally at 8 a.m. at the base and an after party at noon at the top with inspirational speaker Spencer West. Fee: Suggested that participants raise a minimum of $25. Registration: oneclimb.ca. Walk the World for Schizophrenia: Everyone is welcome to participate in a 3.6-kilometre walk from John Lawson Park to Dundarave Pier along the West Vancouver Seawalk and help raise awareness and de-stigmatize serious mental illnesses Sunday, June 23 at 10 a.m. Info: 604-926-0856 or northshoreschizophrenia.org. Authors in Our Community: Van Clayton Powel, author of You Are NOT What You Eat, will talk about his new book and take a look at better digestion through seven simple steps Wednesday, June 26, 7:30-9 p.m. at the West Vancouver Memorial

Library, 1950 Marine Dr. Info: westvanlibrary.ca. People in Pain Network: A monthly support group for individuals who live with chronic pain and their families, meets the fourth Wednesday of each month, 6-8 p.m. at Lynn Valley library, 1277 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver. Dr. Rigobert Kefferputz, a naturopathic doctor, will be the guest speaker at the June 26 meeting. RSVP: heather@ pipn.com. Info: 778-227-8047 or pipain.com. Mood Disorders: The West Vancouver MDA support group meets the first and third Tuesday of every month, 7:30-9:30 p.m. in Room 305 at West Vancouver United Church, 2062 Esquimalt Ave. Free. Info and registration: 604-988-4327, 604-873-0103 or info@mdabc.net. — compiled by Debbie Caldwell Email information for your non-profit, by donation or nominal fee event to listings@nsnews.com.

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND...

Gold & Jewellery Buying Service A gold and jewellery buying service to our valued clientele June 20, 21 & 22. Please call for an appointment with Mitchell Forest of North Shore Gold Now is the perfect time to take advantage of all time high metal prices and a demand for diamonds. Bring in those pieces of jewellery that have been sitting unworn in a drawer or bank box or were inherited and are not your taste. Even broken pieces or scrap gold and platinum left over from redesigns have value. Bring your unwanted diamonds, precious stone items, silverware and coins, too.

Dive in

NEWS photo Cindy Goodman

NIK Marshall, head lifeguard at the North Shore Winter Club, invites community members to the World’s Largest Swim Lesson, an internationally run event aimed at raising awareness about drowning prevention and water safety, being held at the North Vancouver club Tuesday, June 18 at 8 a.m., followed by fun and games, and a barbecue. Free. Info: 604-985-4135, ext. 222.

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Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A17

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REGISTERED nurse Melanie Tenisci (left), chef David Shaw and care aid Erin Dunn invite community members to the third annual fundraising Strawberry Tea at the North Shore Hospice, Saturday, June 22 from 1 to 3 p.m. Guests will enjoy homemade scones with strawberries and cream, a quilt raffle as well as entertainment by the North Shore Celtic Ensemble. Cost: $5.

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From page 14

Interested in continuing to honour her husband’s memory, Katy has organized the inaugural Persian and Canadian Walk for Cancer, Sunday, June 23, with proceeds benefitting Lions Gate Hospital Foundation’s oncology fund. “I’m hoping this will bring the Persian and Canadian community more together,” she says. “Cancer knows no boundaries. It affects all of us. All of us have been touched by the loss of a loved one. So if you want to be part of the fight to end it, join us,” she adds. The Persian and Canadian Walk for Cancer will start at the Centennial Theatre parking lot at 10 a.m. and participants will proceed to Mahon Park. Registration ($25, however community residents are encouraged to attend whether they pay or not) will begin at 9:30 a.m. Live music and other festivities will follow. For more information, contact Katy Roohani at 604-988-5556. For more information on or to make a donation to the Lions Gate Hospital Foundation, visit lghfoundation.com.

OFFERS END JULY 2ND! www.morreyauto.com

morrey mazda

NORTHSHORE AUTO MALL 604.984.9211

"With the purchase, finance or lease of a new 2014 Mazda6, a $500 sales rebate is available to those who own or trade in one of the following competitive models: Honda Civic & Accord, Toyota Corolla, Matrix & Camry, Nissan Sentra & Altima, or Volkswagen Jetta & Passat. Offer only applies to the owner of the competitive make, proof of ownership required, and is not transferable. $500 rebate will be applied after taxes as a credit to the sales contract. Offer valid June 1 – July 2, 2013.†0% APR purchase financing for up to 84 months available on all new 2013 Mazda3 vehicles. Other terms available and vary by model. Using a finance price of $17,690 for 2013 Mazda3 GX (D4XS53AA00)/$24,890 for 2014 CX-5 GX (NVXK64AA00)/$26,190 for 2014 Mazda6 GX (G4XL64AA00) at a rate of 0%/2.99%/3.99% APR, the cost of borrowing for an 84-month term is $0/$2,726/$3,871, bi-weekly payment is $97/$152/$165, total finance obligation is $17,690/$27,616/$30,061. Taxes are extra and required at the time of purchase. **Lease offers available on approved credit on 2013 Mazda3 GX (D4XS53AA00)/2014 Mazda6 GX (G4XL64AA00)/2014 CX-5 GX (NVXK64AA00). At 0%/1.99%/1.99% lease APR the monthly payment is $89/$199/$199 per month for 36 months with $4,415/$5,815/$5,030 down payment. PPSA and first monthly payment due at lease inception. Total lease obligation equals $7,632/$12,994/$12,208. 20,000 km lease allowance per year, if exceeded, additional 8¢/km applies. 25,000 km leases available. Taxes extra and required at the time of purchase. *The advertised price of $14,690/$24,990/$26,290 for 2013 Mazda3 GX (D4XS53AA00)/2014 CX-5 GX (NVXK64AA00)/2014 Mazda6 GX (G4XL64AA00) includes freight & PDI, plus a cash discount of $3,000/$0/$0. The selling price adjustment applies to the purchase and is deducted from the negotiated pre-tax price and cannot be combined with subsidized purchase financing or leasing rates. Cash discounts vary by model/trim level. All prices include freight & PDI for Mazda3, Mazda6/CX-5 of $1,695/$1,895. PPSA, licence, insurance, taxes, down payment and other dealer charges are extra and may be required at the time of purchase. Dealer may sell/lease for less. Dealer trade may be necessary on certain vehicles. Lease and Finance on approved credit for qualified customers only. Offers valid June 1 – July 2, 2013 while supplies last. Prices and rates subject to change without notice. Visit mazda.ca or see your dealer for complete details. ‡Based on ENERGUIDE Fuel Consumption Ratings. 5.1 L/100 km (55 MPG) Highway/7.6 L/100 km (37 MPG) City for the 2014 Mazda6 with automatic transmission. 5.7 L/100 km (50 MPG) Highway/7.8 L/100 km (36 MPG) City for the 2014 CX-5 with 6-speed manual transmission. 4.9 L/100 km (58 MPG) Highway/7.1 L/100 km (40 MPG) City for the 2013 Mazda3 GS-SKY sedan with 6-speed automatic transmission. These estimates are based on Government of Canada approved criteria and testing methods. Actual fuel consumption may vary. MPG is listed in Imperial gallons. #Based on Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

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A18 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

options for volunteers RAT C L I F F & COM P AN Y

Brenda McLuhan

Employment & Labour Law

Daryl Collier

Business & Estates

LLP

Lawyers

In the heart of our Community Clients often remark that we are a different kind of law firm.

One-on-One Volunteer — Better at Home Project: The volunteer will help frail, elderly seniors to leave their home, accompany them aboard the NSNH bus to a central location to socialize with others or accompany them on a short walk for recreation or to a medical appointment.

We think so too. The difference is in our expertise and approchability. You’ll be relaxed and comfortable with us.

Kevin Lee

Dispute Resolution

Kerry Somerville Family Law

Board Members: Marineview Housing Society seeks board members passionate about providing mental health housing. Duties might require accounting skills, grant writing, raising funds and minute taking. Experience serving on a B.C. nonprofit society board an asset, but not required. Peter Bonny

Brian Hanson

Real Estate & Relocation

Charles Piercey

Real Estate & Business

David von der Porten

THE FOLLOWING is a selection of volunteer opportunities with community organizations, made available through Volunteer North Shore, a service of North Shore Community Resources Society.

Wills, Estates & Trusts

Real Estate & Business

We are not just lawyers. We are trusted advisors. Suite 500 East Tower | 221 West Esplanade | North Vancouver, BC V7M 3J3 | t 604.988.5201 | f 604.988.1452 | ratcliff.com

Veronica Singer Business Law

Special Event Volunteer: The annual Ride Don’t Hide oneday bike event is June 23 and the Canadian Mental Health Association is seeking volunteers for route marshals, registration and food service positions. If you are interested in these or other possible volunteer opportunities, call 604-985-7138. The society is a partner agency of the United Way.


Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A19

SENIORS

North Van lawyer shares her expertise Memory Lane

Laura Anderson “IS my will valid if it is not registered?”

NEWS photo Paul McGrath

FOLLOWING her retirement from the law, North Vancouver’s Jackie Morris established the North Shore Seniors’ Legal Advice and Referral Clinic.

To answer such questions, Jackie Morris established the North Shore Seniors’ Legal Advice and Referral Clinic. Ten years ago, Jackie had retired from the law. She was ready to return to work within a couple of years, this time on her terms. No more commuting, the practice would be on the North Shore. It would specialize in Jackie’s areas of interest: wills and estate planning. There would be time for gardening and fitness and travel. All the boxes appeared to be ticked but something was missing. Jackie was looking for a way to give back. She found it at an aquacize class. One of Jackie’s water mates posed, “a question I’ve

been wanting to ask: ‘Is my will valid if it is not registered?’” “‘The short answer,’ I said, ‘is yes.’” Jackie goes on, “I realized there was a need for a place where these types of questions could be addressed.” The need was there. Few of us, including seniors, require regular legal counsel. “That’s as it should be,” she says, “Legal advice is the kind of thing you need when you need it. People are reluctant to call a lawyer when often all they need is a simple answer to a simple question.” In 2005, the clinic opened at Silver Harbour Seniors’ Activity Centre, which provides space and whose staff is the first contact. North Shore lawyers volunteer their time every Thursday by appointment and without charge. “People come in prepared,” says Jackie. “Their questions are in order and their documents are organized. That really helps us help them.” Questions about estate planning, finances and consumer issues are most frequently asked at the free weekly clinics. Specialized or complex issues get referred to community agencies, lawyers and mediators, accountants and other professionals practising on the North Shore. The volunteers do not anticipate a spike in queries

resulting from Elder Abuse Awareness Day, marked June 15. “The clinic is a good place to start, however,” says Jackie. “We can discuss options and connect people with services. All visits are confidential, of course.” Originally from the United States, Jackie and her husband, Jim, moved to Victoria

where she taught math. They relocated to Vancouver in the 1980s and Jackie graduated from law at the University of British Columbia. By 1989, the family, now including two children, were living in North Vancouver, first Norgate and then Upper Lonsdale.

See Gardening page 24

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OW N E D

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Call or stop by for details to participate or attend. Refreshments served.

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A20 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

DENTURE WEARERS! COME IN AND RECEIVE A COMPLIMENTARY CONSULTATION AND DENTURE CARE PACKAGE FREE!

Why Go Far?

Support your local Denturist on the North Shore Brent Der R.D.

SENIORS what’s going on for seniors Calling all Harmonica Players: Looking for seniors with some experience to start a weekly group Tuesdays, 1-3 p.m. at Mollie Nye House, 940 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver. Info: Ellis, 604-988-8679. Meditation Classes: Seniors drop-in classes on chairs led by members of North Shore Zendo Thursdays, 9:10-10 a.m. until June 20 at Mollie Nye House, 940 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver. Fee: Suggested donation of $2. Hearing and Blood Pressure Checks:EverythirdWednesday of the month starting June 19 from 11 a.m. to noon at The Summerhill Retirement Residence, 135 West 15th St., North Vancouver. Free. Info: 604-980-6525.

NORTH VANCOUVER DENTURE CLINIC 604-986-8515

Oral Health Solutions for Older Adults: A free presentation on common oral health challenges and treatments Thursday, June 20, 7-8 p.m. at John Braithwaite Community Centre, 145 West First St., North Vancouver. Info: 778-340-1114 or northshorewellnessadvisors@ gmail.com. — compiled by Debbie Caldwell

Home and Institutional Care Available

Email information for your nonprofit, by donation or nominal fee event to listings@nsnews.com.

231 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver

An Afternoon with Historian Dan Lemieux Enjoy the captivating story of Schooner St. Roch Sail back in time with renowned historian, former North Shore News columnist & retired RCMP Staff Sergeant, Dan Lemieux, as he recounts the voyage of The RCMP Schooner St Roch—Workhorse of the North, and the %rst vessel to circumnavigate North !merica# Dan’s entertaining stories paint a unique picture of Canadian history, while addressing the plight of the polar bear, global warming, Canadian sovereignty and thehardships of Inuit living in months of darkness and "$ below temperatures# Don’t miss this popular event!

Wednesday, June 19 | 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm RSVP by Monday, June 17 Refreshments in the Bistro and Tours of our professionally decorated display suites

604 986 3633 3633 Mt. Seymour Parkway North Vancouver | 604.986.3633 info@cedarspringsresidence.ca cedarspringsresidence.ca

Pacific Arbour

retirement communities

NEWS photo Cindy Goodman

Patriotic picnic MARGARET Sparrow (left), Jim Elphinstone, Sheila Weir and Beverly Biggs invite community members to the annual North Shore Seniors’ Picnic, Thursday, June 27 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the lawn at the West Vancouver Community Centre. There will be entertainment, a hat contest and a free lunch. Guests are encouraged to wear red and white for Canada Day.


Next50!

Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A21

The Three Pillars of Successful Home Support QUALITY STAFF • EXCEPTIONAL SERVICE • COMPETITIVE RATES

Without any doubt, competent, caring and reliable workers are the single most important aspect of home support. At Royalty Home Care we are highly-selective in our hiring practices. Our staff is our greatest asset.We only hire the type of people clients look forward to have come into their homes. Royalty’s staff are empowered to be truly client-focused, they promote independence, maintain quality of life, personalize the needed care and maximize the freedom our clients can enjoy. At Royalty we strive to create a work environment where everyone is a valued part of a team dedicated to promoting the best interest of their clients.

includes follow through and follow up on issues big and small. It includes a knowledgeable office staff that is available seven days a week and provides open communication with family members and other concerned parties while respecting privacy concerns. It means accurate billing and documentation. It means reliable service with continuity of workers. Most importantly it means listening to client concerns and acting upon them. We provide assistance with • Shopping and errands • Driving and appointments • General housekeeping • Cooking and meal planning • Personal care • Mobility issues • Exercise routines • Mental wellness and socialization • Dementia care • Medication monitoring • Post-surgical recovery • Palliative Care

EXCEPTIONAL SERVICE Exceptional service is more than making sure our employees are well-matched and experienced for their client’s specific needs. It’s also more than ensuring adequate backup for unforeseen circumstances and seamless transitions for sudden changes in needs. Exceptional service

Or anything else that enables our clients to maintain independence and quality of life

Royalty Homecare has some of the most competitive rates in the industry.... COMPETITIVE RATES Royalty Homecare has some of the most competitive rates in this industry while still paying above average wages. We know that home support costs can quickly add up and that some clients live on a fixed income.We customize our care plans to ensures maximum value from every service hour delivered. Home care can be a viable and cost-effective solution when compared to other options that may include leaving the family home Our commitment is to provide the most cost-effective solution without sacrificing quality care and personal attention to each and every client. These three interconnected concepts of Quality staff, Exceptional service and Competitive rates are far from original but they are as effective today as in the past.

at home •

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Staff that are well treated and valued provide better service and reliability which lowers costs and thus increases client satisfaction. For more information on Royalty Homecare call at 604-986-6796 or check them out online at www.royaltyhomecare.ca

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A22 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

June 16, 2013

Summer Update Open House: New William Griffin Community Recreation Centre

Behind the Scenes is back at Maplewood Farm

Drop in and check out what progress has been made on the New William Griffin Community Recreation Centre. We’ll have schematic designs on display and project team members will be on hand to answer your questions.

How interesting would it be if you could be a farmer for an hour? Maplewood Farm’s most popular event, “Behind the Scenes”, offers you and your children a wonderful experience being a farmer at Maplewood Farm. Activities include egg collection and washing, animal grooming, setting up feed, and exploring “Staff Only” areas. Sessions last for about one hour, but the memories will last all summer long. Summer sessions run at 11:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. on June 18 and 22, July 23 and 27, and August 20 and 24. For more information, including cost and registration info, visit www.maplewoodfarm.bc.ca or call 604-929-5610.

When: Thursday, June 27, 5:00p.m. - 8:00p.m., Where: William Griffin Community Recreation Centre (Edgemont Room), 851 West Queens Rd. For more information visit our project website at www.dnv.org/newwgcrc.

Edgemont Village Upcoming Community Workshops

Stay up-to-date on District News We make it easy for you to get all the information you need on what’s happening at the District. Whether your preference is Facebook or Twitter, or if you like to receive news directly in your inbox, we’ve got you covered. You can like us on Facebook (facebook.com/NVanDistrict), follow us on Twitter (@NVanDistrict) or sign up to receive e-Dialogue, our monthly electronic newsletter at www.dnv.org/enews. Get connected and stay informed. And District news is also availble by visiting our website at www.dnv.org.

Paving season is here! The District’s Construction Department is coordinating the 2013 Road Rehabilitation Program. If you encounter paving or road rehabilitation crews while driving or walking, please follow all signs and directions of the traffic control personnel. For more information and a complete listing of District paving projects, visit www.dnv.org.

Following three successful ‘Ideas Forums’ held in February, the second phase of the public process to refresh design guidelines and plans for Edgemont Village is set to begin. Be sure to attend ‘Directions Forums’, scheduled for June 18, 22 and 24. District planning staff will present a Foundation Report outlining the findings of Phase 1 events and will ask the community if we are on the right track. Help confirm the directions for the village! Please note participants need only attend one date. For more information and to pre-register for this event please visit identity.dnv.org.

Garbage, green can and recycling collection reminder Garbage, green can and recycling must be at the curb by 7:30 a.m. on your regular pick up day. Routes sometimes change and pick up can occur any time between 7:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. If Yard Trimmings aren’t there when the crew picks up your garbage, they may not be back to that street to collect them later in the day. For more information on garbage, yard trimmings and recycling collection please visit www.dnv.org.

District of North Vancouver 355 West Queens Road, North Vancouver, BC V7N 4N5 Main Line 604-990-2311

www.dnv.org facebook.com/NVanDistrict

@NVanDistrict


Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A23

June 16, 2013

Summer Update Help Shape the 20 year plan for Lynn Valley Town Centre

We want to hear from you! Have your say on the future of Lynn Valley Town Centre. Simply visit www.identity.dnv.org to:

1. Read key background information and view four options currently being explored for a 20 year implementation plan for Lynn Valley Town Centre. 2. Check out the display boards for background and detailed information about the options, including infrastructure improvements and community amenities. 3. View the 3D models to get a better sense of potential building forms.

Stay safe this pool season. Summer weather is here and residents are

reminded to exercise caution around pools. For important information on backyard pools, including links to pool safety tips, visit www.dnv.org/swimmingpools.

4. Give us your feedback by July 5th, 2013 (online or you can print off a feedback form and mail it to us). 5. We will consider all feedback and use it to prepare a preferred option for further consultation with the community.

Grant Connell Tennis Centre Expansion Project Update Most of the exterior siding and roofing is now on the tennis court building and a polycarbonate wall system is being installed, which will allow the facility to save electricity by letting natural light into the tennis courts. As well, the link building which houses the mezzanine viewing area, changing rooms, and a practice court is also taking shape. The expanded facility is due to open in September. For more information on this project, including regular updates, please visit www.dnv.org/gctennis.

Thank you and stay tuned for further updates!

Find Property Taxes confusing? Don’t worry, you’re not alone! Property taxes can be confusing for many homeowners. That’s why we’ve created “My Property Tax Breakdown Calculator”. This unique and easy-to-use feature allows you to view information specific to your residential property and determine how your change in assessed value and property tax compares to the District averages. Simply visit www.dnv.org/propertytax to learn more. On this web page, you’ll also find a video from Mayor Richard Walton, useful links to payment options and provincial tax programs, and more! Working together to make taxes more understandable.

A reminder that property taxes are due by Tuesday, July 2, 2013.

Council Agendas and Meetings The 2013 Council meeting schedule, as well as agendas for upcoming meetings and minutes of past meetings are all available online at www.dnv.org/ agenda. You can also have Council Agendas emailed directly to your inbox. Visit www.dnv.org/agendanotice for more info. The Council Agenda is also available for viewing at all District libraries and on the District’s website, or you can call 604-990-2315 for a recorded listing of agenda items. Regular Council meetings are open to the public and are held in the Council Chamber at District Hall, 355 West Queens Rd., and start at 7:00p.m.

District of North Vancouver 355 West Queens Road, North Vancouver, BC V7N 4N5 Main Line 604-990-2311

www.dnv.org facebook.com/NVanDistrict

@NVanDistrict


A24 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

SENIORS

Gardening a strong passion From page 19

The family lives on Tempe Crescent, a former “skid row” (in the logging sense of the term) used to move timber from the slopes of Grouse Mountain to the North Vancouver sawmills. Their 1920s home is lovingly restored on the inside, while the outside is a gardener’s dream, a testament to Jackie’s other passion. A blend of native plants, bee- and butterfly-attracting flowers, fruit trees, berries and vegetables, the garden surrounds the house and extends to a terraced pathway that links 28th Street with Tempe

Crescent. “We wanted to protect our garden from invasive plants,” says Jackie, “and the project grew from there.” With the approval of the City of North Vancouver in 2009, the plants were removed and the land laid fallow to ensure no stray seeds or roots would take hold. Two years ago, the garden began to take shape around the stairway of brick and stone that Jackie designed. The result is beautiful, functional and always changing. Neighbours, children especially, are encouraged to help themselves to the strawberries — producing currently — and to the veggies that will appear

throughout the season. “People come by when we’re working in the garden,” says Jackie. “They want to know about this plant or that and will it grow in their garden.” The neighbours may not be aware they’re getting advice from a master gardener and longtime member of the Lynn Valley Garden Club. The Morrises like to keep things low-key. With a free legal clinic for seniors and the gift of the Tempe Crescent garden path, Jackie Morris has given back to her community. However, she has done even more. The garden pathway encourages local participation and pride. Volunteers share their skills at the legal clinic. With the Morris method, everyone benefits. For information about the North Shore Seniors’ Legal Advice and Referral Clinic, call Silver Harbour at 604-9802474. Laura Anderson works with and for seniors on the North Shore. Contact her at 778-279-2275.

Top talent

Tuesday Night Paddle Sport Race Series Our 15th season offers competitive and non-competitive, novice to experienced paddlers an evening to come have some fun! Paddle any type of craft you like - Stand Up Paddleboard kayak, dugout, surf ski, canoe, outrigger, K1 or Dragon Boat. • Race Entry Fee - $5 • Rentals available thru Deep Cove Canoe & Kayak Centre • Reservations recommended • Apres Race Party at The Raven Pub

BARBARAAnnMartindale (left), David Baskerville, Alice Crestejo and Syd Nash will be among the local entertainers going head to head in the 2013 edition of Chartwell Retirement Residences’ Senior Star regional competition Thursday, June 20, from 1 to 3 p.m. at Capilano Mall. The top performers have a chance to compete at the national final in Niagara Falls, Ont., in November. Info: chartwell.com.

NEWS photo Cindy Goodman

View my video with

Watch the fun!

25yrs exp

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Races

Check in 6:00 pm • Warm-up 6:30 pm • Race start 7:00 pm June 18 Woodlands Criterium Buoy Race June 25 Conquer the Cove!! Kayak Swap Team Multi-Sport #1 July 2 Lone Rock – Racoon – Jug July 9 Maple Beach Paddle This community event is brought to you by Deep Cove Canoe & Kayak Centre

It’s worth a trip across the bridge! Wir sprechen Deutsch. NOW ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS

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Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A25

Are you looking for peace of mind in your decision to move or downsize? Join us and your local BMO Financial Planners, Investment & Retirement Planning, in this no obligation seminar to learn more about planning strategies, cash !ow analysis and investment options to help you make an educated decision on the right next step for you and your family.

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A26 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

WORK

Plan your retirement before gifting Gen Y THE offspring of the Baby Boomer generation have been making the headlines for all the wrong reasons lately. Although definitions vary, generally anyone born from the early 1980s up until the year 2000 are considered to fall into the millennial category, also known as Generation Y. They have a reputation for relying too heavily on the bank of Mom and Dad and they can be a real financial drain that significantly impacts their parents’ retirement plans. Like any generation that

Making Cents

Lori Pinkowski society has attempted to define in the past, millennials are said to display a number of

the national average, Baby Boomers find themselves supporting their children until a much later stage in life than previous generations. Many of our clients want to help their millennial children financially when they see their children struggling to get their “start” in life. Gifting money to your children early to buy real estate or fund further education can be a great idea and we often recommend this to clients. There can also be additional benefits such as tax savings and the satisfaction of seeing your kids enjoy their inheritance early.

common traits. They tend to spend more than they earn and live on credit, a reverse from the days when people had to save up before making a purchase. Generation Y grew up in the aftermath of 9/11 when many adopted an attitude of “living for today,” so immediate gratification became the norm. Reality TV shows and celebrity culture certainly don’t help this. They also tend to live at home longer than they should, due to high real estate costs and a weak job market. With youth unemployment as high as 14 per cent, twice that of

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While early gifting is often a great idea, there can be unintended consequences when you don’t receive qualified tax advice or have a detailed financial plan in place. We stress the “qualified” portion of that sentence as we have seen a situation for example, where inadequate advice from an accountant resulted in the parents paying $134,000 in extra taxes because things were not structured correctly from the beginning! It was disappointing as all of this extra tax could have been avoided had they had better advice at the start. Ideally in retirement, you want to have more money than you will spend in your lifetime. When planning, you should also include a cushion for the unknown such as an expensive retirement home, unforeseen medical situations as well as future economic changes such

as high inflation which could diminish your purchasing power. Your financial plan should provide a clear overview of your future financial situation so that you can make an informed decision before giving money to your millennial children and ensure that you have enough left over for a happy and stress-free retirement. Lori Pinkowski is a portfolio manager and senior vicepresident, private client group, at Raymond James Ltd., a member of the Canadian Investor Protection Fund. This article is for informational purposes only and does not necessarily reflect the opinions of Raymond James. Lori can answer any questions at 604915-LORI or lori.pinkowski@ raymondjames.ca. You can also listen to her every Friday on CKNW at 5:35 p.m.

business briefcase Business student wins scholarship Cameron York of North Vancouver has been named a recipient of the Export Development Canada 2013 International Business Scholarship Program. The University of Victoria student received one of 30 scholarships that EDC handed out last week to post-secondary business students across the country. EDC awards scholarships to outstanding students in the field of international business and outstanding students who have combined business and environmental studies. This year 337 students submitted eligible applications from 55 universities and 16 colleges across Canada. Heritage award for WV architect West Vancouver architect Karl Gustavson has won the City of Vancouver Heritage Award of Honour for the Hawkins Residence/Britannia Lodge Mental Health Facility. This award is in addition to the Heritage BC Award of Honour Gustavson received last year. He has also received a Fellowship from the College of Fellows, Royal Architectural Institute of Canada. NV student recognized for leadership Abby Muscutt from Argyle Secondary in North Vancouver, along with four other students, received Keg Spirit Foundation Next Generation Leaders Forum Awards. The awards are presented by Junior Achievement of British Columbia to students who have made significant progress in developing networking and communication skills. This award also includes attendance at the Next Generation Student Leaders’ Forum in Halifax this summer. — Compiled by Christine Lyon

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Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A27

TASTE

Good showing for B.C. wines at spring release

AS often as not wine and politics in B.C. intersect.

Philippine days

NEWS photos Kevin Hill

GIGI Border of G&J Flavours serves up some chicharon bulaklak at the Philippine Days Festival held at Waterfront Park June 8-9. Entertainment included performances by various groups, including members of Richmond’s Frequent Flow, seen in the photo below.

books

Some veggies are better ■ 50 Best Plants on the Planet, by Cathy Thomas, Chronicle Books, 352 pages, $34.95

THERE is no doubt that fruits and vegetables should be an important part of everyone’s diet but not all of them are created equal. Even with plant-based food selections there are better choices to be made for the best nutrient dense foods. Nutritionist Cathy Thomas has put together a top 50 list with detailed information on each of the food items selected. Every fruit and vegetable that

has been included is presented with its nutritional value, health benefits, tips on storage and preparation, and more. There are several recipes for each of the top 50 list and all are accompanied by colour photographs and cooking instructions. — Terry Peters

This past week, MLA Ben Stewart relinquished his convincingly decided Westside-Kelowna riding to give Premier Christy Clark a pretty solid chance at winning a seat. Stewart is also a founder and co-owner of Quails Gate Estate Winery, although he has dutifully distanced himself from its operation since being first elected in 2009. Once free from cabinet, however, he was quick to comment on the need to bring B.C.’s lagging liquor laws up to speed. They “need to be modernized so they’re easy to understand, easy to enforce compliance and we (can) streamline regulations,” Stewart told The Globe and Mail. All this was unfolding the day after the major B.C. VQA spring release (below). Aside from the main event, another highlight was a tasting organized by Rhys Pender, which showed how B.C. wines stack up beside comparable bottles from elsewhere in terms of quality and price. One of the first people, if not the first, to do that was the Stewart well over a decade ago when there were still many who needed to be convinced of the Okanagan’s ability to make “serious” wines. Even though my notes have long ago vanished, I recall they showed well. The following are some notables from last week’s international blind tasting that also held their own. ■ Quails Gate Family Reserve 2011 One of the best examples of an Okanagan Chardonnay with acid, fruit and oak in

symposio

greek taverna 1564 Lonsdale Avenue North Vancouver 604.980.1564 VIEW OUR DAILY SPECIALS ONLINE!

Notable Potables Tim Pawsey

perfect balance (90 pts, $35). ■ Mission Hill Perpetua 2011 Aromas of floral and mineral notes, with vibrant citrus and spice wrapped judicious oak with good length (90 points, $34.99). ■ Haywire “Raised in Concrete” Canyonview Pinot Noir 2011 Dark berries and cherry notes on top with a broad palate of plush fruit, some earthy notes and good length, firm tannins and balanced acidity (90 points $35), release shortly. ••• Last week’s major B.C. VQA spring rollout, one of the biggest yet, yielded a wealth of summer friendly wines, from good sippers to serious barbecue contenders. Here’s a few to help get the season started. ■ Bench 1775 Chill This winery on the Naramata Bench is the reincarnation of defunct Soaring Eagle, now under the ownership of Paradise Ranch. First tastes impress, and this easy-sipping, crisp citrus and stonefruit toned off-dry blend is no exception. This blend has good structure from the Pinot Gris that holds all the other elements together. Mainly Pinot Gris (46 per cent) with

Chardonnay (25 per cent), Sauvignon Blanc (11 per cent) plus Viognier, Pinot Blanc and Gewurz (all six per cent), it adds up to one refreshing drop. Great value (90 points, $15.99). ■ Desert Hills Cactus White 2011 Easy sipping, fruity blend of Viognier, Chardonnay, Gewurz and Pinot Gris from different mainly South Okanagan vineyards yields floral and citrus notes with a juicy finish (88 points, $15.90). ■ Volcanic Hills Gewurz. 2011 A little lighter style that still pushes all the right buttons with floral notes on top and a lychee, tropicaltoned palate with a clean end (89 points, $17.90). ■ Lang Vineyards Rosé 2011 (Naramata) Pale pink in the glass with floral and bright cut berry notes on top before a vibrant, juicy, mid-palate and clean close. Easy sipping or food friendly (89 points), excellent value at $14.99. Tim Pawsey covers food and wine for numerous publications and online as the Hired Belly at hiredbelly.com. Contact: rebelmouse.com/hiredbelly, on Twitter @hiredbelly or email info@hiredbelly.com.

photo Tim Pawsey

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A28 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

NEWS AROUND THE WORLD

LUCAS Okano, Jaedon Chase, Olivia Okano and Meghan Chase visit Waimanalo Beach in Oahu.

STEPHAN Deseau and Bev Parslow stop in Dien Bien Phu while cycling through Vietnam.

ELWIN Evans and Herb Jenkin visit a 78-foot-tall statue of Buddha in Nha Trang, Vietnam.

JOHN Fairchild, Harvey Jones, Andy Hurst, Sophie Jones and June Fairchild visit a royal palace in the town of Stockholm.

CHARLES and Spencer Mulder and Kala Patthar visit Nepal. Mount Everest is visible in the background. GARY Houden visits Lake Wakatipu in Queenstown, New Zealand. The TSS Earnslaw, a vintage steamship, is visible in the background.

FRAN and Doug Nelson stop on the bow of the ship they were travelling on through the Panama Canal.

PEE Funt, and Sawit, Sanchahnok and Yodsahpon Charette visit Padchong, Thailand.

HOWARD Weatherstone takes the News underwater at Bonaire, off the coast of Venezuela.

Going on a trip? Take the North Shore News with you and we’ll try to publish your high-resolution photo in our

News Around the World feature (there is no guarantee photos will be published). Due to the amount of photos received, it may take several weeks for your photo to appear in the paper. Take a photo of yourself outside (keep close to the camera but with the background still in view) in a location outside the province holding a copy of the News, with a background that distinguishes the location. Send it to us with the ďŹ rst and last name of everyone featured in the photo (left to right) and a description of where the photo was taken. Email is preferred: rduane@nsnews.com, or drop off a copy of the photo at the North Shore News: 100-126 East 15th St., North Vancouver.

SABRINA Fairbrother, Tanya Martin, Andrea Gervan, Jean McPherson, Kirsten Ridd and Shane Bain visit a restaurant in Napa, Calif.


TRAVEL

Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A29

YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to THE WORLD OUTSIDE

PLANTATION COURSE AT KAPALUA

PUKALANI GOLF CLUB

DUNES AT MAUI LANI

WAILEA GOLF CLUB Plantation Course at Kapalua Resort: The Plantation Course is unique among PGA Tour courses in several ways. It is the only course on the tour that plays to par 73; all others play to pars between 70 and 72. It is also the only course with seven holes of more than 500 yards, but at the same time is one of only two courses (Pebble Beach being the other) with six par-4s of less than 400 yards. The elevation changes on the course are starkly illustrated by looking at the 17th, 18th, and 1st holes as a set. The 17th starts atop a mountain, and the course slopes downward through the 18th, with the 1st completing the descent. These three holes play to a combined 1,691 yards for the tour professionals, with only the 18th (at 663 yards) being par-5. — Wikipedia

Image of bathymetry data courtesy soest.hawaii.edu/hmrg/multibeam/3d.php#maui

3D image of Maui from the Hawaii Mapping Research Group, School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology, University of Hawaii.

ON MAUI GOLFERS ARE SPOILED FOR CHOICE

The lei of the land Jim Sutherland Contributing Writer

MAUI, Hawaii: As a golfer I’m only too familiar with arbitrary dress restrictions, but the sign on the window is a new one, even to me. “No clothes,” it reads, “No service.”

photo Jim Sutherland/Meridian Writers’ Group

THE Kapalua Plantation course befuddles PGA Tour pros each January with its wicked winds and calamitous greens. Designed by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw, it’s one of the most exhilarating golf experiences in the New World.

Then again, we’re not on a golf course but strolling down a street in one of the little towns on Maui’s surfer-friendly windward shore. It’s the kind of fringe benefit (the side trip, not the dress code) that helps compensate for the island’s generally dear green fees. Maui is just big enough that where you stay will help determine the courses you play. Most of the grand resort affairs are clustered around either Ka’anapali in West Maui or Wailea in South Maui, and the two areas are well over an hour apart. Around the latter there’s a choice of three Wailea courses as well as Makena, which is the most scenic (and that’s saying something) but also the most challenging. Meanwhile, the universally strong Wailea courses — Gold, Emerald and Old Blue — are owned by the Golf BC Group, and Mulligans pub at Old Blue may well be the most Canadian of gathering spots on the most Canadian of un-Canadian islands, a place where it is never necessary to plead with the bartender to turn one of the TVs to hockey. Indeed, during most afternoon happy hours, dozens of Canucks staying at nearby resorts gather to cheer against each other’s teams. Over in West Maui, there are another four courses, two each at Ka’anapali and Kapalua. As at Wailea green fees are in the $200 range, except on Kapalua’s Plantation course, where they run closer to $300. It pains my Scottish sensibilities to say this, but just lay down your card and play the site of the PGA Tour’s annual season opener. The Coore-Crenshaw design revels in its wind-whipped site, offering up an experience that is in fact just like Scotland — well, except for the palm trees, carts and mountainside setting; Golf magazine and Golf Digest rank Kapalua, respectively, the 18th and 19th best public course in the U.S., and even those estimations seem a slight. There are two other golf must-dos on Maui. One is to check out some of See Lana’i page 30


A30 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

TRAVEL From page 29 the less-heralded tracks such as Dunes at Maui Lani, which has a links feel and lies conveniently between the two main tourist concentrations. Rack rate is around $125, but this course and others like it can usually be played for less using the various websites and coupon cards that cater to deal-seekers. In fact, it’s not impossible to play the mandatory Plantation course and still keep your average green-fee expenditure below three figures. By doing that you’ll be able to justify a day trip to Lana’i, the company town of an island just to Maui’s west. Its two courses, the Experience at Koele and the Challenge at Manele, are every inch the scenic wonders advertised. Equally significant, the ferry ride, together with the island’s stark beauty, transform the mere Maui vacation into something of a South Seas adventure, even if, here as elsewhere, clothes are sadly required. If you go: For more information on Maui visit the Maui section of the Hawaii Tourism Authority’s website atgohawaii.com/maui.

California, here we come

Mitchell Smyth Meridian Writers’ Group

SECOND GARROTE, California: The old oak tree is dead, but three metres of its trunk still stand, a stark reminder of the lawless days in California during the gold-rush era that began in 1849. It’s called the Hangman’s Tree and in its busiest period, in the 1850s, it was the scene of many an execution, some legal,

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some by lynch law. No wonder the community in which it stands was called — and is still called — Second Garrote. (Garrote is Spanish for death by choking or hanging; there was a strong Mexican presence here in those days. First Garrote, a few kilometres away, later changed its name to Groveland.) Bret Harte visited Second Garrote in its heyday, while wandering gold-rush country in the Sierra Nevada foothills west of Sacramento. Although Harte is little-read now, in the 19th century he and Mark Twain were both hugely popular authors. Harte in particular was known for his adventure tales of miners, gamblers and other colourful characters in America’s wild west. Harte’s stories were fiction, but often based on facts. While visiting Second Garrote, for example, he learned of two men, inseparable friends, who died within weeks of each other. Harte was intrigued by the tale, making it the basis for Tennessee’s Partner, a short story he published in 1868 about two lifelong buddies, one of whom — Tennessee — is strung up on the Hangman’s Tree. The execution was Harte’s embellishment; the real duo died natural deaths. Sixty kilometres from Second Garrote is a more conventional

photo Mitchell Smyth

STATUE of Mark Twain in Angels Camp, California.

writer’s memorial, this one for Mark Twain. The one-room cabin at the top of Jackass Hill, near the town of Angels Camp, is a reconstruction — though the fireplace and chimney are reportedly original — of the place where Samuel Clemens, who became Mark Twain, lived for one winter and where he penned his first short story after hearing a bar-room anecdote about a jumping frog. The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, published in 1865, launched his writing career. Hangman’s Tree and Jackass

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Lana’i features two courses

Hill are two stops on the Mark Twain-Bret Harte Trail, which pinpointssitesassociatedwiththe two authors who helped implant America’s first big gold rush on the world’s consciousness. Other stops, all marked by historical plaques, include: — Murphys Hotel in the town of Murphys, which features in Harte’s story A Night at Wingdam. The hotel register shows that Mark Twain lodged here, as did Black Bart, a notorious highwayman of the Sierras. — Angels Camp, which stages a jumping-frog festival every May. There’s a statue of Twain in the local park. Twain writes about his days in Angels Camp and Jackass Hill in his famous travel book, Roughing It. Angels Camp is also thought to be the setting for Harte’s Luck of Roaring Camp. — Copperopolis, a section of which used to be known as Poker Flat and is immortalized in Harte’s oft-filmed story The Outcasts of Poker Flat. If you go: For tourist information on the area, check the Gold Country Visitors’ Association website, calgold.org. For information on travel in California go to the Visit California website at visitcalifornia.com.

JUNE 21- JUNE 23

JUNE 28- JUNE 3o

AUGUST 7- august 11

SUN

august 21- AUGUST 26

INDEX

Penticton 598 Bermuda 584 Honolulu 570 Bahamas 504 Tahiti 453 Los Angeles 29 3 Rio 413

MAY - OCTOBER

JULY - AUGUST © PHA 2013. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED


Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A31

what’s going on

Info: Diana, 604-922-3414. North Shore Cric Crac Storytelling Evenings presented by the Vancouver Society of Storytelling take place the first Sunday of every month, 7-9 p.m. at the Silk Purse Arts Centre, 1570 Argyle Ave., West Vancouver. Each month features a different theme. Fee: $7/$5. Polynesian Dance Classes: Beginner classes for adults and children, Sundays and Mondays at John Braithwaite Community Centre, 145 West First St., North Vancouver. Info: 604-982-8311.

that performs a wide variety of music, is looking for motivated singers. Rehearsals take place Mondays, 7-9 p.m. at West Vancouver United Church, 2062 Esquimalt Ave. Singers should have basic music reading skills. Call 604-9222513 to set up an audition time. Friendship Toastmasters Club meets to improve communication and leadership skills every Monday, 7:15 9:15 p.m., at Silver Harbour Centre, 144 East 22nd St., See more page 32

Fancy footwork INTERMEDIATE dancers withtheDelbrookScottish Country Dance club perform at Capilano Mall as part of the mall’s 10th annual May is Art Month celebration. Scan photo with Layar to watch a video. NEWS photo Paul McGrath

Alateen Meeting: A group for ages 10-18 where alcohol is a problem in the family meets every Monday at 7:15 p.m. at John Braithwaite Community Centre, 145 West First St., North Vancouver. Info: 604688-1716.

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Bingo: Every Monday at 6:15 p.m., North Vancouver Legion, 123 West 15th St., North Vancouver. Info: 604988-3712. Canadian Federation of University Women — West Vancouver Branch: The CFUW is an organization committed to promoting education, improving women’s status and human rights as well as offering fellowship and professional contacts. Meetings are every third Monday, 7 p.m. at St. Stephen’s Anglican Church, 885 22nd St., West Vancouver. New members welcome. Info: 604-925-8445 or cfuwnvwv. vcn.bc.ca. Contract Bridge: Every Monday and Thursday, 12:303 p.m. in the Cedarview Room at Delbrook Community Centre, 600 West Queens Rd., North Vancouver. Drop-in fee: $1. Info: 604-987-7529.

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A32 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

Car Show: Italian and French cars and motorcycles will be on display Sunday, June 16, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. at Waterfront Park, North Vancouver. Parkgate Soapbox Derby: Watch local children who have designed their own soapbox cars

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Splash — Family Fishing Day: A free opportunity to learn how to fish from knowledgeable volunteers who know the tricks of the trade Sunday, June 16, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. at Rice Lake in the Lower Seymour Conservation Reserve, North Vancouver. There will also be exhibits, a salmon barbecue and hatchery tours. Info: 778452-4584 or volunteering@ seymoursalmon.com.

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Technology Class: Learn how to find your way around an iPad and try out some apps Thursday, June 20, beginners, 2-3 p.m. and intermediate, 3-4 p.m. at West Vancouver Memorial Library, 1950 Marine Dr. Bring your iPad if you have one. Registration: required: 604-925-7405. — compiled by Debbie Caldwell

Edgemont Village — Directions Forums: Community Workshops to refresh design guidelines and plans for Edgemont Village June 18, 6-9 p.m. or June 22, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. or June 24, 69 p.m. at Highlands United Church, 3255 Edgemont Blvd., North Vancouver. The same event format will be repeated on the three occasions and participants need only attend one date. Registration required: identity@dnv.org.

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Author Talk: Join Sharon MacGougan for a talk about her novel The Mayan Mysteries Thursday, June 20, 7-8:30 p.m. at Parkgate library, 3675 Banff Court, North Vancouver. Registration required: 604-9293727.

Columbia Photography and Media Arts Society are invited to Presentation House Gallery’s AGM Tuesday, June 18, 6 p.m. at 333 Chesterfield Ave., North Vancouver. The public is also welcome to attend, current members have the privilege to vote.

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TRISTAN Bracewell, 6, works on an art project at Capilano library during a recent Let’s Make Art event. Kids aged five to 10 collaborated on works of art based on top secret themes.

what’s going on From page 31 North Vancouver. Info: friendshiptoastmasters.com. Gleneagles Scottish Country Dance Club: Beginner and intermediate classes every Monday, 7:30-9:30 p.m. at Hollyburn elementary, 1329 Duchess Ave., West Vancouver. Info: Louise, 604-987-3792. Israeli Dance: Every Monday, beginners 6:15-7:15 p.m., intermediates and open dancing, 7:15-9:30 p.m. at Congregation Har El, 1305 Taylor Way, West Vancouver. Fee: $6 per class. Info: 604568-4771. Logos Toastmasters Club: Hone your public speaking skills in a fun learning and social environment. The club meets Monday at 7:30 p.m. at 659 Clyde Ave., West Vancouver. Info: logostoastmasters.org or 604-929-7957. Meals on Wheels needs volunteers on Monday, Wednesday or Friday mornings.Info:604-922-3414 or northshoremealsonwheels. org. Mount Seymour Lions’ Club meets on the first and third Monday of every month at 6:30 p.m. at 936 Bowron Court, North Vancouver. New members are welcome. Info: Dave Mair 604-929-4135. Musicians Wanted: The West Vancouver Concert Band, an adult band for brass, wind and percussion instruments

is looking for new members. The band performs a mix of classical, progressive and jazz music at community events. Practices take place Mondays (September to June), 8-9:45 p.m. at the West Vancouver Community Centre, 2121 Marine Dr. Info: westvanband.ca, Mike, 604-984-0115 or John 604-980-6857. North Shore Photographic Society: Learn the basics and refinements of photography at weekly meetings held on Mondays from September to June at St. Anthony’s Catholic Church, 2347 Inglewood Ave., West Vancouver. Info: nsps.ca. North Shore Stamp Club meets every other Monday, 7-9 p.m. at The Summerhill, 135 West 15th St., North Vancouver. Collectors of all levels are welcome and particularly beginners. Info: John Thomson, 604-9843360. North Shore Toastmasters: Learn through fun and friendship to get over your fear of public speaking or improve your leadership skills. Meetings are held Mondays from 7 to 9 p.m. at the West Vancouver United Church Community Centre, 2062 Esquimalt Ave. Info: 604-6571371, mikelduff@yahoo.com or toastmastersnorthshore. org. — compiled by Debbie Caldwell Email information for your non-profit, by donation or nominal fee event to listings@ nsnews.com. For our online listings, go to nsnews.com, scroll to Community Events and click on Add Your Event.


Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A33

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neutering and spaying can be detrimental to a dog’s longterm health is problematic for those who consider early spaying and neutering to be in the best interest of dogs and dog owners. I am required, by my contract with the adoption agency, to neuter Raider by six months of age. I will honour this, but I can’t ignore or deny what I could potentially be doing to his long-term health as a result. If he does develop any of the aforementioned conditions, the remorse I would feel knowing it could have been prevented by waiting a few more months would certainly affect me for the rest of his short life.

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year of age. So it’s not necessarily the fact that dogs are spayed and neutered that is problematic, it’s the fact that it is done so early. A recent study on golden retrievers done by the University of California Davis Veterinary School said that hip dysplasia occurred twice as often in dogs altered before the age of one. The study also linked CCL and ACL ligament tears and an increase in osteosarcoma (bone cancer) and many other cancers to early neutering. For the last 10 years there has been a trend towards early spaying and neutering with most veterinarians touting the benefits, both behavioral and medical. Early usually means under one year of age. But the control of unwanted pets was and is the major reason to spay and neuter so any evidence that early

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DANA Holtom and Lisa Valente of the West Vancouver SPCA bathe Scooter, an adoptable dog, in preparation for the shelter’s next dog wash fundraiser on Sunday, June 23 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Minimum $20 donation per wash. All proceeds go to help the animals. Enjoy complimentary coffee while you wait.

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All the dogs had their chosen spots in the yard. Piper had to be on a soft cushy dog bed, Zumi was lying in the shade of the birch tree and Raider was resting by my side with his head on my lap as I sat on the grass and read. I paused for reflection and the thought of Raider turning six months old came to mind. I looked up from the pages of my book and gazed into Raider’s eyes and realized how much I have come to adore him … then said, “It’s almost time to cut those knackers off.” Meaning it’s almost time for me to get him neutered. And as if he understood what I had just said, he rolled onto his back, legs splayed open in defiance, as he bathed his belly and knackers in the sun. Much like my little dog Raider, I have always been a bit defiant. Well, in all honesty, a lot defiant. When it comes to spaying and neutering our pets that defiance has played a part in my beliefs regarding the subject. When I was younger and had a bit more spring in my step I made decisions

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regarding my own pets about spaying and neutering that went against the grain of conventional thinking. But now, as I see my 50th birthday on the distant horizon, I am reconsidering my thoughts on the subject. Not because I am changing how I feel about the subject in general, but rather that my lifestyle and age no longer allow me the watchfulness and agility of mind and body to manage an un-neutered male dog for life. Having lived with unneutered males and unspayed females for almost 20 years, it is, without a doubt a challenge. When the majority of the dog population has been sexually altered the majority smells, well … neutral. As a result the altered dogs are unfamiliar with the scent of an intact dog — that scent being testosterone from the male and estrogen from the female. The altered dogs inevitably feel threatened by the scent of the intact dogs and conflict always arises, more often than not by the dogs who have been spayed or neutered. Having said that, spayed and neutered dogs do make better pets. Male dogs are less likely to wander, are more compliant and friendlier. Female dogs are less likely to show maternally related aggression and are more willing to be social. Healthwise there is a list of benefits. Males won’t get testicular cancer, and females won’t get ovarian and uterine cancer — obviously. But dogs who have been altered tend to have a challenge maintaining a healthy body weight, even with owners managing their diet, due to hypothyroidism, which triples when a dog is spayed or neutered before a

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A34 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to THE GAMES PEOPLE PLAY

field notes

Friesen lands first diving Grand Prix podium NORTH Vancouver diver Emma Friesen scored the first international medal of her career last month, winning silver at a FINA Grand Prix event held in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

photo San Jose Earthquakes

WEST Vancouver native Mark Watson (second from right) watches the action as an assistant coach with MLS’s San Jose Earthquakes. This weekend he’ll debut as the team’s head coach following the stunning departure of his longtime friend, teammate and coaching partner Frank Yallop (right).

Watson moves up a chair West Van native now MLS head coach in San Jose

Andy Prest aprest@nsnews.com

Scan this page with the Layar app to view video of Mark Watson’s famous goal in Canada’s 1-0 Gold Cup semifinal win over Trinidad and Tobago in 2000.

WHEN asked what coach had the most influence on him during his many years spent on soccer pitches around the world, West Vancouver native Mark Watson is quick with an answer: Frank Yallop.

There’ll be a lot of Frank Yallop — another Lower Mainland guy who played for many years with Watson on the Canadian national team — in Watson’s style when he stands on the sidelines as a professional soccer head coach for the first time ever this weekend, guiding the San Jose Earthquakes in an MLS matchup against the visiting Colorado Rapids. “He was very influential, he’s a great coach, he taught me a lot about dealing with the team, dealing with the players, getting the most out of the group,” Watson said about the man who brought him on as an assistant a couple of times, once with the Canadian national team and again with the Earthquakes. “You’re a product of all of your environments. You may take more out of certain coaches and I will take a lot out of Frank because he was very successful.” Yallop, in fact, put together such a strong season in 2012 that he was named the MLS coach of the year. That’s why it was such a shock when Yallop and the Earthquakes “mutually agreed” to part ways last week after San Jose started the 2013 season with a 3-6-6 record that put them near the bottom of the Western Conference. You can include Watson, who was promoted from his assistant coaching position to interim head coach, among the many shocked observers. “I think everyone was really surprised,” he said. “I know it hasn’t been the season we were hoping for to date but I think it came as a real shock to everyone.” When the North Shore News caught up with Watson on Wednesday the shock had subsided and the reality of the task at hand had settled in. “There’s two sides,” he said. “Obviously it was a tough situation initially. Frank had been here a long time, I’ve been his assistant for

photo Lyndsay Radnedge/Center Line Soccer

MARK Watson (facing camera) takes charge during a San Jose Earthquakes practice. a long time. It was a tough situation to see him go but it’s the nature of the business. I’ve been given the job, I’m thankful that they had the confidence in me to do that and I’m focused on the job at hand.” Watson talked about another influential coach in his life — his father Keith, who played for the University of British Columbia and was Mark’s first coach with the West Vancouver Soccer Club. “He was my coach for a long time with the West Van Spuraways,” said Watson. “A lot of great memories. I remember it being a big thing at the time. Youth soccer was really big, my team was my group of friends. We worked together twice a week for training and then games and tournaments. It was a great experience and I still have friendships from those days.” Watson graduated from Sentinel secondary and, according to his bio on the West Vancouver Soccer Club’s website, was actually more interested in basketball at the time — he went to Capilano College to play hoops. Still a soccer star as well though, Watson was picked for a B.C. provincial team that toured China. That stint See Watson page 36

Friesen scored 322.05 points in the final of the women’sthree-metre,finishing just 4.25 points behind winner Qu Lin of China. “It was incredible and it made all the hard work well worth it,” Friesen told the Canadian Press after the event. “The reverse dive was definitely a highlight, I really nailed it. I knew going into the last dive how well I was doing and while I could have done the take-off better I was pleased with my finish.” ••• West Vancouver’s Christa Bortignon was recently named the Canadian Masters Athletics 2012 Female Athlete of the Year for both track events and field events, the first athlete ever to claim both categories. In 2012 Bortignon set 10 world records and 19 Canadian records combined on the track and in the field. The super senior hasn’t slowed down in 2013 either, breaking the world record in the women’s 75+ heptathlon at the Stendaler-HanseCup meet held June 1-2 in Germany. Her heptathlon performance included an agegroup world record in the 200 m as she clocked a time of 33.86 seconds in the final event of the competition. West Vancouver’s Myrtle Acton also got into the recordsetting spirit in Kamloops, breaking four women’s 80+ Canadian records. Acton set new national marks in shot put at 7.43 m, discus at 17.70 m, hammer throw at 20.77 m and weight throw at 8.52 m. ••• Offensive lineman Troy Martel of Argyle secondary and Handsworth receiver Jacob Ghazizadeh were recently named to Football BC’s under-16 team that will represent the province at the Red River Cup scheduled for July 6-13 in Winnipeg. The tournament will also feature all-star teams from Northern Saskatchewan and Southern Saskatchewan as well as a pair of Winnipeg all-star teams. For more information visit redrivercup.com. — compiled by Andy Prest


Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A35

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A36 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

SPORT

Watson not worried about interim label From page 34

got him some national attention and he was selected for Canada’s under-23 national team, the beautiful game slowly boxing out basketball as his No. 1 sport. A professional soccer career followed with stops across the globe, including teams in England and Sweden as well as several squads in several leagues across the United States and Canada. Meanwhile Watson carved a permanent spot in the starting lineup of the national team, playing in 78 games as a defender. He is currently the third-most capped player in team history. While his playing career was winding down Watson began coaching with the Canadian Olympic (under-23) team and after retirement Watson became an assistant with the Charleston Battery before reuniting with Yallop in San Jose in 2010. Now for the first time in his career he’ll take the first chair as a head coach. The 42-year-old said he’s ready for it. “I’ve been involved in the game a long time, I’ve been coaching for quite a while now and I’ve been able to learn from a lot of great coaches. I’ve spent a lot of time on the training field dealing with players, preparing the team for games. I think I’m ready to go.” Watson for the time being is labeled the “interim” head coach so there are no guarantees beyond this season. That suits him just fine though, he said — all he’s thinking about is the next match. “My job is to get this club back on the right track. We have a good team, we had a fantastic season last year and we’ve got really the same group together. We’ve dealt with a lot of adversity this year, a lot of injuries and suspensions and different things, but my job is solely focused on helping the team prepare for primarily Saturday but then the rest of the season, getting some wins and getting into the playoffs.” While Watson’s future is full of both questions and promise, he still is able to take a moment to look back at the past and marvel at all that the game has given him up to this point. “It’s been incredible,” he said. “As a younger guy you maybe don’t think about it too much at the time but looking back now I had some incredible experiences, went to some great places, played in a lot of different countries both for Canada and professionally. I was very fortunate in that regard. I think the one thing that did catch me early on was just the passion of the game around the

newspaper

Let the tiger out

ATHLETES warm up with a furry friend before the start of the North Shore Special Olympics Walkathon held May 25 at Ambleside Park. Participants collected pledges for the five kilometre walk/run. All funds raised will be used to purchase uniforms and equipment and to pay travel and competition costs. world. The game is definitely passionate in North America but it’s still growing. I think some of the other cultures of the world you’re amazed at how important the game is to the people. It’s such a big part of their culture. To go to some of the stadiums and see the fans and speak to the people there and know just how much the

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NEWS photo Kevin Hill

game means to them was a real eye-opening experience.” ••• Watson and the Earthquakes will make one more appearance in Vancouver this season for an Aug. 10 game against the Whitecaps at BC Place.


Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A37

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Sales Centre Phone Hours: Mon. - Fri. 8:30am - 5:00pm Sales Centre Office Hours: Mon. - Fri. 9:00am - 5:00pm Email: classifieds@van.net

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ANNOUNCEMENTS 1165

All advertising published in this newspaper is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services offered are accurately described and willingly sold to buyers at the advertised prices. Advertisers are aware of these conditions. Advertising that does not conform to these standards or that is deceptive or misleading, is never knowingly accepted. If any reader encounters non-compliance with these standards we ask that you inform the Publisher of this newspaper and The Advertising Standards Council of B.C. OMISSION AND ERROR: The publishers do not guarantee the insertion of a particular advertisement on a specified date, or at all, although every effort will be made to meet the wishes of the advertisers. Further, the publishers do not accept liability for any loss or damage caused by an error or inaccuracy in the printing of an advertisement beyond the amount paid for the space actually occupied by the portion of the advertisement in which the error occurred. Any corrections or changes will be made in the next available issue. The North Shore News will be responsible for only one incorrect insertion with liability limited to that portion of the advertisement affected by the error. Request for adjustments or corrections on charges must be made within 30 days of the ad’s expiration.

For best results please check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Refunds made only after 7 business days notice!

1160

Memorial Gifts

To donate on-line go to www.northshorehospice.ca Or mail cheques to: PO Box 54019 1562 Lonsdale Avenue North Vancouver, V7M 3L5

1170

Obituaries

NESSETH, Arthur Orval 'Art'

Ernest Joseph Turnell

Dear Ernie, How we miss your joyful laugh, your twinkling blue eyes and whistling your favourite tunes. Not one day goes by without thinking of your special humour and your wonderful goodness. Miss You Dearly, Forever In Our Hearts, Forever Our Love, Your Family

1155

1220

Obituaries

Passed away peacefully on June 9, 2013 at the age of 89. With his daughter Sandi holding his hands he gently took his last breath. He will be remembered for his many passions. Tomatoes and roses flourished from his gentle touch. His countertop was worn smooth from countless hours laughing and playing dominoes. The twinkle in his eye caught many a ladies attention. He loved to sing and dance and play his violin. Art loved life. One of 15 children - there are but three surviving and already miss their big brother. His five children, eight grand children, and five great grandchildren all feel an enormous loss with his passing. Friends and family are invited to attend a celebration of his life on June 29, at 10:00 am at First Memorial, Boal Chapel, 1505 Lillooet Rd, N.Van. B.C. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in his memory to The Parkinsons Society of BC.

Funeral Services

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Coming Events

• RETRO DESIGN & •

ANTIQUES FAIR

Your gift in memory or honour of a loved one will support palliative care programs and patients on the North Shore.

175 tables & booths of fun, fabulous finds for you & your eclectic abode!

Sunday • JUNE 23 • 10am-3pm Croatian Cultural Centre 3250 Commercial Drive, Van. 604-980-3159 • Adm. $5

SAWCHENKO, A. (Tony) 1932 – 2013

After a five year battle with cancer, Tony passed into the presence of his Lord Jesus at the North Vancouver hospice. His “made another day” attitude helped sustain him through each new day. Survived by his loving wife Donna, sister Kay; nieces and a nephew and a host of friends. Special thanks to Dr. Nancy Crossen and Paulette for exemplary service and to the oncology staff at LGH. A Celebration of Life will be held Wednesday, June 19, 2013 at 2 p.m., West Van Baptist Church, 450 Mathers Ave., West Vancouver, B.C. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the charity of one’s choice. For those wishing to share a memory of Tony, please visit www.hollyburnfunerals.com

1075

Information Wanted

$300 CASH REWARD Seeking information to Identify VANDALS who threw 1 dozen great value extra large eggs at a house located at the bottom of Dufferin Ave on Bachelor Bay on June 4th, 2013 at approx midnight. For confidential information please call leave a message for Jeff @ 604-987-9040

1085

Lost & Found

LOST DOG, 'Mitzi' - Mon. May 13, Lynn Valley Rd. Small Female Shi-tzu/Poodle X. Call if seen, 604-219-9321 * REWARD* LOST ONE orange 10 ft Kayak on Mon June 11th, Georgia Straight, 2 miles south of Bowen Is, 15 NE. Johnathan 604-369-7780, reward.

Dorothy May Tennant (nee Rolls) passed away peacefully on Friday, June 7, 2013 at Mariposa Gardens in Osoyoos after seven years of Alzheimer’s. Dorothy was always a kind and peaceful person. She had a wonderful life with Duncan. They would have celebrated 70 years of happily married life this year. Dorothy was born in Hedley, BC on April 9, 1923. She moved to Vancouver with her family in 1931 where she attended and graduated from Kitsilano High School which is where she met Duncan. They were married at Canadian Memorial Church in 1943. Dorothy is survived by her husband Duncan; sons Bruce and Bob (Senka); seven grandchildren Chantal (Clint) Melisa, Daniel, David, Oliver, Victoria and Michael as well as many nieces and nephews. She was predeceased by her son John David in 1983. Dorothy and Dunc traveled extensively and went on fifteen medical missions with the Medical Missions International Society. They worked in places as diverse as Rwanda, the Caribbean and Central and South America. Dorothy would fit hundreds of artificial eyes while Dunc examined and fitted thousands of pairs of glasses. In 1997 they moved to Osoyoos to enjoy the sunshine. A Christian graveside service will be held at the Osoyoos Lakeview Cemetery at a later date. Condolences and tributes may be directed to the family by visiting: www.nunes-pottinger.com Arrangements entrusted to Nunes-Pottinger Funeral Service & Crematorium, Oliver & Osoyoos

Career Services/ Job Search

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SIZE 8 women’s hikers found in Grouse Mtn Parking lot. Blue & dark grey. Email kaulback_later@hotmail.com with brand name to identify. LOST PANDORA - Bracelet lost June 13 AM in Deep Cove/ Panorama Rd. 5 Charms (clover, 21, cherry etc) REWARD! PLEASE Call: (604) 910-9336

1110

Volunteers

VOLUNTEER BUS DRIVERS needed for holiday relief to drive our 16 seater bus for our Seniors Programs in North Van. Commitment: 3-5 hours per program/ class 2 or 4 driver’s license required. We need you and so do the seniors! For more information, please contact the Seniors’ Hub at: 604-988-7115

PART TIME SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS

NEEDED IN VANCOUVER, COQUITLAM AND SURREY UNR Class 4 or Class 2 preferred, but we will train the right applicant. Please e-mail your resume and a CURRENT ABSTRACT to debbie.swecera@firstgroup.com or fax 604-255-5791. We are an equal opportunity employer.

Intensive paid Intensive paid training program and field field development. development. Lauren Smylie: 604-986-1200 email resume: lauren.smylie @investorsgroup.com

1240

General Employment

Bathrooms Plus is seeking Kitchen & Bath Designer. Please call 604-983-8766

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North & West Vancouver Mature f/t housecleaners required Mon to Fri, days. $11 to $16/hr. Valid BC drivers licence required. For interview. Call 604-987-4112

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Hollyburn Funeral Home Ph. 604-922-1221

TENNANT - Dorothy May April 9, 1923 - June 7, 2013

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1031

In Memoriam

Passed Sunday, May 31st, 2009

1170

Fax: 604-985-3227 delivery: 604-986-1337

Glacier Media Group makes every effort to ensure you are responding to a reputable and legitimate job opportunity. If you suspect that an ad to which you have responded is misleading, here are some hints to remember. Legitimate employers do not ask for money as part of the application process; do not send money; do not give any credit card information; or call a 900 number in order to respond to an employment ad. Job opportunity ads are salary based and do not require an investment. If you have responded to an ad which you believe to be misleading please call the Better Business Bureau at 604-682-2711, Monday to Friday, 9am - 3pm or email inquiries@bbbvan.org and they will investigate. cont. on next page

HEY KIDS! The North Shore News is accepting applications for the following routes: 11010209 – W. 14th St., Forbes Ave., Jones Ave., W. Keith Rd. 1000215 – E. 6th St., E. 7th St., E. Keith Rd., Queensbury Ave., Sutherland Ave. 1120008 – E. 8th St., E. Keith Rd., 1170013 – Crestwood Ave., Delbrook Ave., Genoa Cres., Greenway Ave., Hermosa Ave., Vienna Cres

Please call 604-986-1337 or e-mail distribution@nsnews.com

Care Aides Needed Living Well Home Care offers home support to seniors living on the North Shore. We are currently hiring Care Aides (with home support diplomas from BC or nurses from abroad) for a variety of shifts in North & West Vancouver. If you have use of a vehicle or are able to work Live-in shifts on weekends, please highlight this in your resume as this is preferred but not necessary. All applicants must provide copies of a criminal record check, TB test and First Aide certificate as well as their diplomas / credentials should they be contacted for an interview. Rates start at $12.50 per hour. Please submit resumes to Lene Parenteau, Human Resources Manager before June 24 and successful applicants will be contacted by phone for an interview. Please fax resumes to (604) 904-3758 or e-mail to lene@livingwellhomecare.ca No phone calls please.

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Funding provided through the Canada-British Columbia Labour Market Agreement.


A38 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

EMPLOYMENT cont. from previous page

1240

General Employment

EXPERIENCED AND reliable Senior Lady will house and/or pet sit Call Pat 604-921-1063

WINDOW CLEANERS Seymour Sky Contracting Inc. Urgently need window cleaners. Positions full time and permanent. $18 per hour. Email to: info@seymoursky.com

1250

Hotel Restaurant

THE HURRICANE GRILL Hiring Experienced Kitchen Manager, Line Cooks & Servers Excellent wages & tips. Will train. Apply in person with resume at: 999 Marine Dr., North Van.

1266

Medical/Dental

WEST VAN CDA with ortho module, for busy office. F/T Mon Thurs, call Sandi 604-922-0111

1310

Trades/Technical

BUSY VANCOUVER ISLAND Body Shop has an immediate opening for Journeyman Painter and/or Journeyman Body Tech. Flat rate plus benefits. Apply to: R101 c/o Courier-Islander, Box 310, Campbell River, BC, V9W 5B5 or email: jobs@courierislander.com

Job Listings, From A-Z

From advertising executive or banker to x-ray technician or zookeeper,you'll find it in the Employment Section.

3520 3020

3040

~ Opened in 1987 ~

Preschool program offering swimming, music, French. Jane & Pam 604-985-3783

Education

ENGLISH UNIVERSITY accepting applications for pre-med starting Fall 2013. Eastern Pacific Job Placement 778-241-6575 FOODSAFE 1 Day Courses #1 in BC • $67 • 604-272-7213 www.foodsafe-courses.com INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Job Board! Funding options. Apply online, www.IHESchool.com 1-866-399-3853

1420

Tutoring Services

15 YEARS EXP in Math & Stats tutoring with proven results. Tia 604-603-9612, 604-929-9612

MICROWAVE $20, BBQ $12, vacuum almost new $90 obo, exercise bike $100, new lamps, + more bargains 604-926-5223

Antiques

RETRO DESIGN & ANTIQUES FAIR 175 tables & booths of fun, fabulous finds for you & your eclectic abode! SUN JUN 23 10-3 Croatian Cultural Center 3250 Commercial Dr, 604-980-3159 Admission: $5

2010

Appliances

ILAC APPLIANCE & VACUUMS

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2035

Burial Plots

FOREST LAWN CEMETERY PLOT, Ascension section $7900 obo. Call 604-987-2948

2060

For Sale Miscellaneous

156 - 8 TRACK music tapes. Bargain Price $60. Phone Dennis 604-922-0053 KONA LANAI Mtn Bike $150. Raleigh Serengeti $195, Marinoni 14 spd racer $300 obo. Others from 20’’-27’’ 604-986-9390

2060

3540

Pet Services

PET’S STAIN, ODOUR, SCRATCH on THE FLOORS? Call FIN 778-889-7106, member BBB A+. WoodStoneTile.ca One Stop Floors Care Solutions

BENGAL KITTENS, vet ✔ 1st shots dewormed, sweet natured, $460. Mission 1-604-814-1235

Cares! The North Shore News has partnered with the BC SPCA to encourage responsible pet guardianship and the humane treatment of animals. Before purchasing a new puppy, ensure the seller has provided excellent care and treatment of the animal and the breeding parents. For a complete guide to finding a reputable breeder and other considerations when acquiring a new pet, visit spca.bc.ca.

SIMMONS King Mattress King Beautyrest mattress. In excellent clean condition. Only used for a year. New over $1000. Sell $400. West Vancouver (604) 281-4460 MOBILITY SCOOTER. Fortress 2000 Scooter. Practically new 4 wheel model only driven 6 times. Excellent condition. Charger included. Asking $1900.00 OBO. Call: (604) 805-4512 Outdoor Patio Set, lrg glass top patio table, 4 matching chrs, good cond, $125 obo, 604-986-5755

Furniture

DINING TABLE, wood, 2 leaves, 6 chairs, expresso, mint $775. Lrg brown leather sectional, mint $575, brand new Stearns & Foster QS boxspring $125, Dyson vac, new $600, asking $475. 2 dressers obo. 604-980-1411 GORGEOUS CUSTOM made cream coloured, furniture for sale, livingroom, dining, armoir, antique sideboard, Bombay tables & lamps. Call 778-279-5595

2118

Recycler

FREE FILL - Delivered for free. North & West Van. Minimum 5 yards. 604-985-4211

1 double glaze window 46"x27" 1 single glaze sliding patio door 3’ x 6.5’ approx. 604-921-9338

2120

Sports Equipment

GOLF CLUBS for sale Ladies right hand with bag $125 Mens right hand with bag $200. Cart $25. Call: (604) 984-6667

2135

Wanted to Buy

Old Books Wanted also: Photos Postcards, Letters, Paintings. (no text books/encyclopedia) I pay cash. 604-737-0530

For Sale - Miscellaneous

★CATS & KITTENS★ FOR ADOPTION ! 604-724-7652 3 indoor cats, 5 - 7 years old, require homes immed. Owner has passed away. Fur and Feathers Rescue 604 719-7848

3508

Dogs

3 indoor cats, 5 - 7 years old, require homes immed. Owner has passed away. Fur and Feathers Rescue 604 719-7848

3508

Dogs

SAVE A LIFE. Wonderful rescue dogs from Foreclosed Upon Pets. Spay/neutered, regular vaccinations & rabies, microchipped. $499 adoption fee, avail at your local Petcetera stores.

4060

Metaphysical

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4530

Travel Destinations

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5505

Legal/Public Notices

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS having claims against the estate of LAURA ADELINE TODD, that the particulars of their claims should be sent to the Executrix at 125 West 15th St., North Vancouver, B.C., V7M 1R7 on or before July 14, 2013, after which date the Executrix will distribute the estate among the parties entitled to it, having regard to the claims of which the Executrix then has notice.

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7005

Body Work

The Art of Asian Bodycare 7days, 10am-8pm, 604-980-8809 101-1075 Marine Dr, North Van

/)% *)%5 -+4)%,&"0)+ 9&.. 3)-&/)(,&)**,, )% 5,&0. !$"&#%FG442B.<D49?'!D<

7010 Personals Lily’s Relaxation Centre AmazingMassage! Open: 10am-10pm

@ AUCTION CALENDAR place ads online @

NICE ORIENTAL SERVICE

classifieds.nsnews.com

2020

HIMALAYAN Show Cats 5-6 Yr M/F $250.00 home w/no dog/cat Kittens $500.00 up + alter Port Moody Day 604 939-1231

Legal Services

CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let your past limit your career plans!Since 1989 Confidential, Fast Affordable - A+ BBB Rating employment & travel freedom. all for free info booklet 1-8-now-pardon (1-866-972-7366) www.RemoveYourRecord.com

5040

Mobility Scooter Invacare Panther LX-4, good cond, $1500 incls battery chrger, 604-830-9856

2075 2005

Cats

For Sale Miscellaneous

KITCHEN CABINETS, wooden doors, very good cond, $1000, 604-728-8845

2011 PERCH/TB Filly, 16HH+, NH, quiet, respectful and willing. $5000. Call 604-994-1775

Full or part-time. 2.5 yrs - 6 yrs. In Tempe Heights, off 29th, between Lonsdale/William.

To advertise in Employment call 604-630-3300

2060

5060

Daycare Centres

TEMPE TOTS DAYCARE

3507

1410

Childcare Wanted

PRIVATE HOUSEHOLD Childcare Caregiver F/T Live in, salary $10.25/hr, 40/hrs per wk, North Van. Min 6 months training or relevant exp. Incls furnished accomodations, room & board, must have Driver’s License, able to cook Filipino Food an asset. Call 778-879-9488 or 778-340-0017

5070

Horses

604.986.8650

1050 Marine Dr. North Van. (by McKay) parking at rear

Auctions

GIANT RESTAURANT / FOOD

AUC TION

EQUIPMENT AUCTION

THURSDAY - JUNE 20TH @ 11 AM Viewing: Wednesday - 9 am ‘til 5 pm and Thursday - 9 am ‘til Auction Time

WATERFRONT COTTAGE sleeps 5. Safe, sandy beach, Roberts Creek. $650/wk. Some vacancies avail. 604-886-2127 WHISTLER CONDO CHEAP short term Creekside 800 sf, 2 sep areas each open to hallway, good location 3 queen beds, w/d, park, gym, hottub, by mth July $2800, Aug $2800 Sept $2300. 1-604-935-6535 classifieds.nsnews.com

SAVE A LIFE. Wonderful rescue dogs from Foreclosed Upon Pets. Spay/neutered, regular vaccinations & rabies, microchipped. $499 adoption fee, avail at your local Petcetera stores.

VQPFEQ KFT UFDD OUJJJ

Place Your Garage Sale Ad Online Now!

SNIDDOLQRDJGDGQMDJSFH

FEATURING: New & Used Equipment • Refrigeration • Walk-In Coolers • Cooler • Panels • Refrigerated Display Cases • Reach-In Coolers & Freezers • Chain Drive Pizza Oven • Deck Pizza Oven • Counter Top Chain Drive Ovens • Canopies • Tandori Oven • Sweet Display Cases • Restaurant Tables & Chairs • Booth Seating • Bar Stools • Pizza Prep Tables • Doyon Counter Top Sheeter • Pizza Pans • Refrigerated Back Bars • Refrigerated Work Cabinets • S/S Freezers • S/S Sinks • S/S Work Tables & Counters • Ranges • Pit Stoves • Deep Fryers • Hot Food Display Cases • Flat Top Grill • Char Broiler • Chandeliers • Candelabras • Massive Assortment of Small Wares • Pits & Pans • Cutlery • Plates • Bowls • Plastic & S/S Inserts • Huge Selection Bar/Wine Glasses • Glass Salad Bowls • Wicker Produce Display Baskets • Barrels • Produce Tilting Display Tables • Salad Spinner • Panini Grills • Soft Serve Machines • Single Barrel Granita/Slush Machines • Meat Slicers • Deli Display Cases • Meat Tumbler • Meat Bandsaw • Heat Lamps • Metro & Bakers Racks • Microwaves • Rice Cookers • Under Counter Dishwashers • Pass Thru Dishwashers • Glass Washers • Ice Machines • Work Cabinets • Condiment Counters • Heavy Cast Iron Ornate Table Bases • Chrome Tables Bases & Bar Table Bases • Flash Bake Ovens • U-Brew Copper Kettle Brew Line • Plastic Fermenting Barrels • Carboys • Wine Presses • Large Oak Keg Barrels • Rinse/Bottle Washing Stations/Sinks • Barrel Dollies • Bulk Dispensers • Metal Bulk Bins on Wheels • Convection Ovens • Wall Mount Sinks • Open Faced Merchandisers • Tools & Machinery • Pos System • Cash Registers & Cash Systems • Neon Signs • Cappuccino Machines • Espresso Grinders • Coffee Brew Systems • Coffee Grinders • Hot Water Towers • Butcher Block Work Tables • Pot Rack Metro Shelf • S/S Wall Shelves • Speakers/Amps • EZ Rect Shelving • 10 Door Refrigerated Back Bar/Work Cabinet w S/S Ice Well • Patio Furnishings • Coin Operated Kiddie Ride & Gum Ball Machines • Bailiff Seizure U-Brew Equipment • PLUS MUCH MORE ….

2720 No. 5 Road, Richmond, B.C.

604-244-9350

PLEASE VISIT LOVE’S WEBSITE FOR IMAGES & COMPLETE DETAILS: www.lovesauctions.com


RENTALS 6505

Apartments & Condos

ROCHE POINT Tower, nice clean, view ,1 bdrm+den, 2 bath, patio, ugrnd prk, 5 app, 1000sf, close to shop/bus/library $1180/mnth 604-460-1125 Ann

6505-11

North Van Apt. Rentals

CENTRAL LONSDALE ★Avail Now Spacious 1 BR. Features large kitchen, lots of storage, heat/hot water incl. N/s, n/p. $940 604-983-0634 1 & 2 BR’s, view, avail Now, 1 year lse, 125 West 19th, N/S, No Pets, coin w/d, 778-554-0537 1 BR , $900/mo, South Facing, Avail. July 15 Gated prkg, quiet, drapes, heat incl. no pets. 1 yr lease, walk to seabus 170 W 4th. 604-987-0558

1 BDRM, Central Lonsdale, 2nd floor, newer reno’s incl’d new appliances, dishwasher, faces north, heat & h/water incl, no pets, $1150. 604-838-5020, 604-699-5264

6505

Apartments & Condos

6505-11

North Van Apt. Rentals

BACH $795, 1BR $909, reno’d, clean, view, 2nd/St Andrews, np, JuLY 1, incls heat hotwater & prkg. Call 604-984-2148 BACH $850/mo New Reno’s, June 15th, heat, hotwater, h/w floors, ns, np, 604-971-2456

1 BR $825, avail July 1st, balc 18/Lonsdale carpet, incl heat/ hw, 1 yr lease. np, ns, 604-988-4692 1 Br, $880, 1st flr, June 1 Heat & h/w incl. quiet. gated, free outside prkg, no pets 1 yr lease. 310 E. 2nd. 604-700-7572

1 BR garden apt, E. 2nd St ns, pet ok, hydro/heat storage/prkg incl. $1150 604-813-1985 1 BR large 18/Lonsdale, incl heat & hw, drapes, balc, elevator, ns np $975, July 1, 604-220-6817 1 BR, new bath/laminate flrs, Now, central Lonsdale, suit quiet ns, np, $950/mo, 604-320-9238

6505

Apartments & Condos

6505-12

West Van Apt. Rentals

Westwind Apts 2025 Bellevue Ave, 2 bdrm mnt view & bach. Cat OK Senior discount 604-913-0734

BACH/1 BR Avail June/July. Move-in allowance, Rent start $825, well maintained building. To view call 604-985-4272 BACHELOR: UPDATED Basement unit in quiet building. Available Now $725/mth includes heat, H/W & hydro. Ph 604.726 4884. Delbrook Gardens 777 W. Queens, 2 br $1595, 3 br $2100 604-990-2971, Wkends 778-227-5042

BRIT Prop view, wd, garden 3 opt’s: 1B/1Ba 1000sf, 1B/2Ba 2000sf, 3B/2Ba 2000sf. Now 604-374-4544

AMBLESIDE TOWER

1 BR’s (Avail Now & July 1), Mnt/Ocean views, incl. heat & h/w. Tennis courts, indoor pool, saunas, exercise & games rooms. Walk to beach & shops. Small pet ok.

604-922-8443 BAYVIEW APTS

MOUNTAIN VILLAGE APTS 2 BR Apt Avail Now 2 & 3 BR’s Apt Avail July 1 Call 604-988-3828 www.mountainvillage.ca

MOVE-IN BONUS Vista Del Mar

145 West Keith Road. Studios, 1 BR’s & 2 BR’s (Avail Now & July 1) Beautiful views. Indoor pool. Heat & Hot Water included. Small pet ok.

604-986-3356

PARKRIDGE TERRACE 110 E. Keith Rd. Great location, park like setting, sauna, indoor pool, parking available. ★ Bachelor $825, 1 BR + den $1185, 2 BR $1425 No pets, 604-988-7379 www.glassmanpm.com

1550 Duchess Ave, W. Van. Studio & 1 Br avail Fitness facility, Key less entry, Move-In Bonus, outdoor pool, nr shops, transit & Seawall. 1 yr lease, N/pets. Heat, hw incl’d. Member of Crime Free MultiHousing Program 604-922-4322

Park Royal Towers

Spectacular City & Ocean Views’ Huge Balconies Walk to Shops & Transit Hardwood Floors Gym, Swimming Pool

604-922-3246

151 W. 2nd St. 604-908-7368, 1 BR on 11th flr., balc, pkg, no pets, lease, $1350. 1BR W. 20th & Lonsdale, heat, hw & prkg, no pet, ns, July 1st. Refs req’d. 604-960-0452 2 BDRM, Central Lonsdale, 3rd floor, very lrg suite, newer reno’s incl’d new appliances & dishwasher, faces south, heat & h/water incl, no pets, $1750 604-838-5020, 604-699-5264

SUITES @ The Pier 9ft ceiling, air

con, 7 appl, 1 prkg, 100 E. Esplanade: 1 br $1,350, 2 & 3 br $2,450 - $3300, 162 Victory Ship Way 1 br $1,600 hotel/gym access Anson Rlty Helen 604-671-7263.

TUCKTON PLACE 1520 Chesterfield. Studio apt there for $850. and a 1 bdrm for $995. 604 990-2971, wknd 778-340-7406

6505-12

SEASTRAND Sub Penthouse, 2 BR furnished/unfurnished Call 604-929-8410

STUNNING OCEANFRONT LOCATION Shorewood Manor 2020 Bellevue Avenue 1 BR for $1390 Large 2 BR from $3000 Unobstructed Water Views Professionally Managed Indoor pool, No Pets, Incl Heat & Hot Water Call 604.926.2713 www.austeville.com

6515

Real Estate Services

Duplexes - Rent

3 BR, 3 1/2 bath, 5 yrs old, 6 appls, nr Cap Mall, schools & park. $2100. July 1st. 604-986-5571, 604-518-2548

6522

Furnished Accommodation

HOMAWAY INNS Specializing in furn accom at reas rates. call 604-723-7820 or visit www.homawayinns.com N Van, AVAIL NOW! Fully furn self contained 1 BR ste, own wd, alarm, ns, np, wkly clean, suits 1, $975 all inclusive, 604-990-4835

WATERFRONT LUXURY The Pink Palace on the Seawall

PACIFIC WEST APTS. INC. Beautiful 1 br furn hi-rise apts, Max 2 prof, np/ns. short/long term

604-715-9184

QUALITY SHORT TERM 1 - 2 BR mtn/city view suites www.lionsgatesuites.com ★VICTORIA PARK SHORT STAY ★ 1 & 2 BR Apts, from $1500/mth. Ideal for 1-6 mo stay. Renos, families, pet ok. 604-329-3272 www.vicparkshortstay.ca

6525

3 Bdrm

Indoor/outdoor pools. Fitness centre & billiard room, no smoking 2222 Bellevue Ave. To view: 604-926-0627

For Sale by Owner

6015

Garages

@

2 CAR garage secure ideal for classic cars Mudro Fraser area $300/mth Ray 604-576-7476

place ads online @

classifieds.nsnews.com

REAL ESTATE 6005

West Van Apt. Rentals

All Utilities Included

1 BR (700-770 sq.ft.) 2 BR (1070 sq.ft.) 3 BR (1370 sq.ft.) Penthouse (1650 sq.ft.)

935 Marine Drive

1 BR, view, all new luxury apt, top corner 19th/Lonsdale, patio, storage prkg, $1400, 604-986-4927

Apartments & Condos

Completely Renovated

www.parkroyaltowersapt.com

1 BR, top flr 3rd & Mahon, n/s, n/p, $985 incl heat/hw/ 1 prkg, lease. 604-990-9388

6505

2 BR, 2 bath, ocean/mountain view, well maintained bldg, nr seawall, Ambleside, shops & library, 778-863-7630. 2BR NR Cap U, very spacious, reno’d, ns/np, $1300 incls ht/hw, 1 prkg, July 1, 604-921-4384

DODWELL STRATA MGT

1 BIG Studio, 1000sf, by Sea Bus, fp, hw fls, hi ceiling, south patio, view, 7appls, in flr ht, a/c, hw, cble, net, alrm, u/g prkg, storage, $1395, 604-986-9931

Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A39

6040

Okanagan/ Interior

DODWELL STRATA MGT

2 BR 1 bath, corner view, prkg, storage, balcony, Ravenwoods, Aug 1. $1600. 604-924-8041 2 BR $1130 July 1, cntrl Lonsdale, carpets, incls heat & h/w, no pets, 604-986-6418 2 BR, 1.5 bath, 2 storey walk up, Lower Lons, bright, 2 balcs, 7 appls, gas fp, hw flr, 1 prkg, storage, ns/np, no parties, suits quiet, ref’s, $1400/mo, 604-462-0444 , lv msg 2 BR avail July 1. Lynn Valley, large $1195. Parklike Setting, Outdoor Pool, Playground. drapes, heat & prkg. incld. 1 yr lease. no pets 1228 Emery Pl. 604- 987- 4922

Rates are going Up! Call Now. 2.60% 5 year Variable 2.79% 5 year Fixed Self Employed, Credit Damage OK, Commercial & Residential Martinique Walker, AMP Verico Assent Mortgage Corp Call: 604-984-9159

6008

Condos/ Townhouses

6008-01

Real Estate

2 BR, corner, Lonsdale & 6, hardwood, storage, new paint, cat ok $1275, Now, 604-986-4927 2 BR large, $1200, July 1st, heat, hot water, hardwood flrs, storage, ns, np, 604-971-2456 2 BR, ste, $1100, Avail July 15 Gated prkg, quiet, drapes, heat incl. no pets, 1 yr lease, 321 East 2nd. 604-987-5802

2BR $1300, incl heat/hotwater, prkg, hw flrs, balc, quiet bldg, E 21st, July 1st, no pets, 604-990-4088

SMALL PEACEFUL farm set up for horses right beside South Langley riding trail. Bright & comfortable older 2 bd home, f/p, barn, riding rings, pastures. $849,900. Call 604-323-4788 See Propertyguys.com ID: 76788

6020

Houses - Sale

6020-01

6020-34 $395,000 / 2br - approx 900ft Lions Bay Ocean, Mtn View Property for Sale by Owner This 2nd story strata unit in res/comm bldg Updated h/wood & tile, SS appl, inste ldry. Great investment property. Please Contact 604.892.3823 or 604.892.4019 G. Smillie Holdings Ltd.

Real Estate

At WE BUY HOMES We CASH YOU OUT FAST! We Also Take Over Your Payments Until Your Home is Sold. No Fees! No Risk! Call us First! (604)- 626-9647 www.webuyhomesbc.com

10 ACRES OF OKANAGAN VIEW PROPERTY FOR SALE Located 6 km from Penticton Hospital on the eastern hillsides above the city. Numerous building sites with view to the north up Okanagan Lake. One of the few remaining 10 acre country residential parcels that has not been developed. On paved road with power to the lot line. For sale by owner at only $289,000. Contact donaclair11@gmail.com or 250-493-5737

6065

Recreation Property

Surrey GALIANO EXECUTIVE Home & Cabin on priv beach, completely furn’d, many extras, ready to move in. Reduced to $849,000! Global Force Rlty. 604-802-8711 www.yourlinktorealestate.ca

GUILDFORD 1900SF 3br 2ba w/basement suite on huge 8640 sf lot, $489,000 604-613-1553 see uSELLaHOME.com id5608

To advertise call

604-630-3300

6540

Houses - Rent

1 BR House, Central Lons, newer paint/carp, 2 appls, carport, lrg yd, ns, np, $1195/mo, 778-865-7455

3 LVL, 5 bdrm, 4.5 bath, A/C, htd flrs, built in vacuum 2 car garage $4500 + util July 1 604-916-0428

LEGAL UP/DOWN duplex, fully separated, top 2 flrs with view, 1,800 sf, 3 bdrm, 2 separate bathrooms & separate shower, heated slate flrs. Terraced back yard with trees, private to duplex w/lrge deck, all wood flrs, numerous built ins, walk in closet. $2800 mth. 406 E. 4th St. 604-984-2030.

6565

6602

Suites/Partial Houses

6602

Suites/Partial Houses

1 BR beautiful, Upper Lons, semi furn, gas fp, modern, bright, suits 1, shd wd, ns/np, Aug/Sept 1, $980 incls util/wifi. 604-230-2970

3 BR clean, upper flr, 1 1/2 bath, Lower Lonsdale, deck, shared w/d & hydro, ns np, avail now, $1750. 604-980-1054, 376-3815

2 BDRM 1 bath bsmnt suite, A/C, bright, own lndry, 1000 sf July 1 $1380 + util 604-916-0428

2 Story 2BDRM+DEN/1.5BTH 343 East 14th Street August 1. SS appliances, laundry, central vac, storage, balcony. N/S, N/P. 1/3 util. Refs. $1,950 Monthly 1 Year Lease. (604) 619-9902 Open House: June 16, 2-4 pm to view.

2 BR 1100 sq ft, renovated, Central Lonsdale, shared w/d, np $1200 incls utils. 604-805-6505 2 BR Upper Lonsdale reno’d ste priv entry, f/p, no pet, ns, $1,000 incl utils 604-770-2221 lv mess. 3 BR bright, N. Van, nr amen, shops, huge balcony, ns, sm pet ok, July 1, $1990. 604-986-6338

2BDRM/2BTH 1328 Camridge Place West Van Kitchen, patio $2800/mth. No pets/non-smoke. Utilities included. 604-446-8466. UPPER DELBROOK, 1600sf, bright 1/2 bsmt ste, 2 bdrm, den, 2 bath, 7 appl, $1550 + % utils, Avail July 15, Call 604-990-9838

Office/Retail Rent

150sf - 600sf Prime Office Space Avail for Lease. Excellent Rates! Call Jeff or Ross 604-980-3003 700 SQ FT ground level office, Harbourside, North Van, own prkg in front, $1500/mth incl tax/ hydro, July 1, 604-922-8479

6595

RENT

Shared Accommodation

6595-45

North Vancouver

1 ROOM, Central Lonsdale, furnished female only, July 1, student, $550 incl util. 778-859-9470

PLACE YOUR RENTAL ADS 24/7 Place your ad online

classifieds.nsnews.com


A40 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

FRESH DEALS

AUTOMOTIVE 9110

Collectibles & Classics

Scrap Car Removal

9145

9155

Sport Utilities/ 4x4’s/Trucks

9160

Sports & Imports

9160

Sports & Imports

Removal FREEScrap/Car 07 MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE GTP

07 VOLVO C70 CONVERTIBLE

STK CD41381 WAS $18,900

STK 952570 WAS $27,900

Leather, 5spd, 80,000kms.

NOW $15,488

NOW $25,900

10 CADILLAC SRX AWD

10 GMC YUKON DENALI

STK 952500

STK 952750 WAS $49,900

Luxury performance pkg, only 32,000kms.

WAS $38,900

NOW $36,900

10 JEEP WRANGLER SAHARA Hardtop, 6spd.

No Wheels No Problem

HOUR 2Service From Call

Loaded, only 47,000kms.

AWD, Hybrid, loaded.

NOW $47,900

1989 Bentley Turbo R Automatic, 37,000 kms, V8 LWB. Impressive Luxury sedan. Service records immaculate all options, Air Cared Certified. $24,500. Call: (604) 802-2203

9125

Family Owned & Operated

(604) 209-2026

FREE

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

Domestic

No Wheels, No Problem

CASH FOR ALL COMPLETE CARS OPEN 24 HRS. INCLUDING HOLIDAYS

1998 LINCOLN Mark VIII, excellent condition, 84,000 km, $5,500 obo 604-988-0327

MIKE: 604-872-0109

12 FORD F150 XLT

WAS $25,900

NOW $23,900

12 MINI COOPER CONVERTIBLE Auto, loaded

STK 952650 WAS $28,900

NOW $26,900

STK 952640 WAS $35,900

NOW $32,900

09 MERCEDES BENZ ML 320

Diesel, leather, navigation. Stk 951661 WAS $36,900

2006 Mitsubishi Lancer. Mfr wrty until 2016. Ralliart Ed. Auto, recent brks/tires, 116k KM. 1 owner. All records avail. $7,900 OBO. 604.340.3145

9129

THE SCRAPPER SCRAP CAR & TRUCK REMOVAL

CASH FOR ALL VEHICLES

604-790-3900 OUR SERVIC

Luxury Cars

2H

NOW $34,900

E

Accelerate your car buying 11 CHEV EQUINOX LT

13 FORD ESCAPE SEL

WAS $28,900

STK 952630 WAS $35,900

AWD, loaded, only 35,000kms. Stk 205201

AWD, navigation, leather, only 6,000kms.

NOW $26,900

11 FORD F150 XLT SUPER CAB

STK 952530 WAS $32,900

STK 952330 WAS $26,900

NOW $29,900

STK 952320 WAS $49,900

STK 952420 WAS $39,900

Leather, loaded.

02 GMC SAFARI

Research vehicles on driving.ca

STK 952470 WAS $35,900

STK 8G64501 WAS $9,990

YOUR BEST BC PRICE ON 23 MANUFACTURERS’ BRANDS

09 TOYOTA VENZA

STK 952700 WAS $37,900

STK 952310 WAS $26,900

1979 FORD M/H, 23 ft, cozy, bunk beds, fully equipped, low k, hi way usage, $4,950. 778-737-3890

with factory warranty

ON APPROVED

CREDIT

2012 Hyundai Sonata GLS

Auto, well equipped, sunroof, mags

From $17,499

• 6-year / 120,000km transferable Powertrain warranty coverage, with options to upgrade to comprehensive extended warranty.

From $13,999

2012-2013 Subaru Forester Touring

Auto, pwr group, sunroof, alloys, only 11,300kms,

From $24,999

2011-2012 Mazda 3 Sport

2011-2012 Mazda 3 Sedan

from $13,999

From $13,499

Auto, a/c, pwr windows & locks, CD, mags

• 7 days / 1000km exchange privilege • 100 point inspection • Carproof Vehicle History Report (carproof.com)

AWD, low kms, one owner.

816 AUTOMALL DRIVE, NORTH VANCOUVER

604-984-0331

Auto, a/c, pwr windows & locks, CD, mags

www.pacifichonda.ca

SUPER SPECIALS 2011-2012 Ford F150, F250 & F350 XL & XLT

2010 Mitsubishi RVR

From $24,999

$20,499

4x4, crew cab

AWD, pwr group, auto, a/c, CD, T5211

2010-2011 Ford Escape LTD AWD

2011 Nissan Sentra

From $21,999

From $11,999

Leather, sunroof

Auto, pwr group, a/c, CD

2010 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara 2007 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sport

NOW $24,900

Auto, only 48,000kms. Stk# 13044B

$27,995

2012 Nissan Altima 2.5 12 CHRYSLER 300C

11 GMC SIERRA

STK 952520 WAS $33,900

STK 951950 WAS $18,900

NOW $30,800

RV’s/Trailers

Financin As Low Asg 4.99%

NOW $7,900

10 MERCEDES BENZ GLK 350

Hemi, navigation, sunroof, leather.

9522

Sports & Imports

9160

2011-2012 Dodge Ram 1500, 2013 Ford Mustang Convertible 2011 Dodge Grand Caravan Black, V6, leather, loaded, 7 pass, pwr group, a/c, Stow N Go 2500 & 3500 Quad Cab SLT 4x4 8,200kms, like new, C8594 From $16,999 From $24,999 $28,999

Rare cargo van, mint.

NOW $35,900

Boats

NOW $36,900

11 CADILLAC CTS

Sunroof, nav., leather, only 38,000kms.

9515

SOME OF THE BENEFITS THE HONDA PRE-OWNED PROGRAM OFFERS:

4dr, auto, leather, sunroof

NOW $32,900

2012 AUDI A4 Quattro, Premium, 29,000km, $39,500, panorama s/roof, auto, black lthr int, Snow tires opt 604-764-8044

1986 ZETA 26 ft C. bridge, twin Volvo diesel, with outdrives, $16,000. 604-922-8365

OVER 11 CARS UNDER $5000. Auto Depot 604-727-3111

Sales • Leasing • Rentals

2011-2012 Ford Fiesta SES

Luxury pkg, only 27,000kms.

2007 Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT 99k kms, original owner (U.S. spec, lived in U.S. & bought it new in Nov. 2006), no accidents, Chrysler ext. warranty to Nov, 2013, service records, rear camera, nav., satellite radio, remote start, Bluetooth, Mopar exhaust & cold air intake, V-One radar wiring, excellent condition. $28,888 email: t3940@telus.net

NOW $23,900

13 FORD MUSTANG GT CONVERTIBLE

NOW $46,900

1989 Rolls Royce Silver Spur Exc. cond. Auto, 98K kms, local car, blk/parch leather. $22,000. (604) 538-6319

4x4, loaded.

12 CHEV SILVERADO LT

Crew cab, long box, 4x4, diesel.

small V8, Tow & Go! lthr 1-owner! $5450. incl 1Yr Warr All options! D10578 Auto Depot, 604-727-3111

Which SUV sips gas like a subcompact?

2009 Nissan GT-R Premium 49K kms, original owner, cdn car, gun Metal, nav., XM sat. radio, bluetooth, custom exhaust, Eibach springs, Euro clear marker lenses, V-One radar wiring, service records, CarProof available, excellent condition. $68,888. Email: t3940@telus.net

NOW $33,900

12 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY Navigation, Stow ‘N’ Go, mint.

2001 YUKON 'XL' 7-pass 4x4,

1994 JAGUAR Sovereign, 133,000 km, immac cond, burgundy/beige leather, all records, garage kept 19 yrs, 6 cyl, $6950 obo. 604-788-7900

#1 FREE Scrap Vehicle Removal Ask about $500 Credit!!! $$ PAID for Some 604.683.2200

EcoBoost, CreCab, 4x4.

STK 952250

1997 LANDROVER Defender(s) 90, 5 spd diesel, mint, 160,000km, from desert $23,900 1-780-945-7945 604-926-7087 lancebright@hotmail.com

One owner, mint.

Auto, pwr group, a/c, CD, 23,600km, C8234

$16,999

2012 Ford Focus SEL

Hatchback, leather, sunroof, loaded, 11,200kms, C8403

$19,499

2012 Mazda 5

With convenience package

From $19,999

2011 Mazda 2 From $10,499

2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 2011 Dodge Ram 1500 SLT Quad Cab White, 4x4, local, very clean. Stk# 5822

$33,995

Sedan, auto, a/c, CD, pwr group

From $12,999

• Manufacturer’s warranty • 30-day/2500 km no-hassle exchange privilege • 150 + point inspection • 24-hour roadside assistance

2008 - 2011 GM & Ford 3/4 Ton Cargo Vans From $13,997

1-877-212-0735

Northshore Auto Mall, 800 Automall Dr. North Van www.carternorthshore.com

Sunroof, mags

From $22,499

Very clean, local. Stk#13136A

$26,995

2012 Ford Focus Titanium

Hatchback, fully loaded, self parking, only 9,500kms, C8528

$19,999

*Plus $199 doc fee on all vehicles. Vehicles not exactly as shown.

711B West 14th Street, North Vancouver

604-924-1080 Sales • Leasing • Rentals

Northshore

2011-2012 Hyundai Santa Fe AWD

$19,995

4 dr hatch, auto, a/c, pwr windows & locks

NOW $15,900 2012 Hyundai Accent

6spd manual, black, hard top. Stk#P5708B

2005 PT Cruiser Convertible

2009 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Rubicon

$9,995

$27,998

Great condition. Stk# 13181A

4x4, auto, freedom hardtop, Stk# P5826

ON THE SPOT FINANCING

View More Fleet at www.nationalcarsales.ca

S e a rc h . R e s e a rc h . C o m p a re .

D#30625

2011 Dodge Grand Caravan

Only 48,000kms, Stow ‘N’ Go, 7 pass, local. Stk# 13264A

$19,995

2010 Dodge Ram 1500 SLT Quad Cab Low kms, loaded, park assist. Stk# 13218A

$29,700

1600 MARINE DR., N.V. 604.980.8501

www.destinationchrysler.ca


Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A41

HOME SERVICES 8015

Appliance Repairs

SERVICE & PARTS. Licenced & Insured. Washers, Dryers, Stove, Fridge, Dishwashers. 604-346-8925

8030

Carpentry

Barring Walls Removed, Structural Repairs, Water Damaged walls. Call Paul 604-787-7484 CARPENTRY, ADDITIONS, decks, 32 yrs exp, licensed. Call Ken, Cell: 604-928-3270

8055

Cleaning

8080

#18405 Electrician Best Rates, Local, Reliable, 24-7, All jobs 100% satisfaction. 604-765-8439 Adam ALL YOUR electrical & reno needs. Lic’d electrician #37940. Bonded & insured 604-842-5276 ALP ELECTRIC #89724 Low price, big/small jobs, free est Satisfaction guar 604-765-3329 DNE ELECTRIC Lic #89267 ALL Your Electrical Needs. Panel Upgrading. Reasonable Free Estimate 604-999-2332 YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 service call. Insured. Lic # 89402. Fast same day service guar’d. We love small jobs! 604-568-1899

8087

Excavating

# 1 BACKHOES, BOBCATS, EXCAVATORS & DUMP TRUCKS

EVAS CLEANING SERVICES Licensed & Bonded Quality Cleaning ★ Move in/out We do the work personally! Ewa 604-220-0467 Eva 604-290-6061

Drainage, Paving, landscaping, stump / rock / cement / oil tank & demos, dirt removal, paver stones, Jackhammer, Water / sewer line / sumps. Slinger avail. 24 hrs. Call 341-4446 or 254-6865

Excavating - Drain Tile Demolitions. Fully insured • WCB 604-716-8528

8090 With everything life throws at you, who has time to clean?

Call Merry Maids.

It’s one less thing to worry about.

604-980-6100 www.merrymaids.ca

$20/HR. Quality House cleaning. 604-983-3477 www.qualityhc.com Golden Touch Cleaners House & office cleaning. 604-868-9440

8060

Electrical

Concrete

AGGRESSIVE CONCRETE Professional Polished Concrete Floors Grinding, polishing, sealing, beautifying. Perfect for new radiant heat concrete floors. North Shore Company

Fencing/Gates

Good Neighbour Fence & Deck Cedar, Chain link, Gates, Arbours Reasonable rates. 604-987-4522

NORTH SHORE FENCES

Quality work by professionals Repairs and construction 604-230-3559

8105

EXP’D CEMENT Finisher. I can form, place & finish any concrete job. Peter 604-988-8856 anytime NEW CONSTRUCTION Concrete Work, Framing & Forming. John 604-562-1122

8068

Demolition

DEMOLITION

Repairs & Staining Installation Free Estimates

Century Hardwood Floors 604-376-7224 www.centuryhardwood.com

8125

No More HST! BOOK NOW! • Gutter Installation, Cleaning & Repairs • Roofing & Roof Repairs • Moss Control, Removal & Prevention 25 year Warranteed Leaf & Needle Guard

WCB – Fully Insured 100% Money Back Guarantee

604-340-7189 ACCREDITED BUSINESS

8075

Drywall

A & A MILLWOOD QUALITY DRYWALL SERVICE

• Repairs • Renovations • New construction • Textured ceilings Prompt service. Free estimates.

Richard Wood

Cell 604-671-0084 Email: rkmillwood@gmail.com ACE DRYWALL. Avail immed. Board, tape, spraytex, repairs. 16 yr exp. No job too small. Mike 604-808-2432, 604-985-4321 AFFORDABLE, Reliable, Quality Guaranteed. Boarding, Taping, Spraytex. Dave 604-984-7476 VINCE’S MAGIC Drywalling & textured ceiling repairs. Complete drywall & taping. 604-307-2295

CHEAP LOADS Fast Reliable Service 604-922-5101 DD HAUL & DELIVERY Service delivered with pride. Loads from $30 each. David 604-512-7471

Kitchens/Baths

BATHROOMS & much more. 30 yrs on the North Shore. Working within your budget. 778-387-3626

8155

Landscaping

GREAT SERVICE GREAT RESULTS GREAT LANDSCAPING - EVERY DAY -

Installed • Cleaned • Repaired

604-876-4604 TROY TEATHER GUTTERS 15% OFF - 604-925-8711

greatcanadianlandscaping.com

604.924.5296 CUSTOM STONEWORK & LANDSCAPES FOR OVER 50 YEARS! Give us a call for a free, professional estimate Fully Insured - Work Safe

Aldo 604.834.8643 Anthony 778.321.2536

8130

AGRIOS HOME IMPROVEMENT

Maintenance & Repairs. ★ Fast Reliable Service ★ Reasonable Rates ★ Experienced

• New Lawn Installs • Replace Old Lawn • Lawn Drainage • Landscaping • Pavers Paving

flooring, tile, drywall, paint, deck, fence, siding, electrical, plumbing. 25 yrs exp.

ABBA RENOVATION carpentry, plumbing, wiring, painting, tiling. Work guar, Refs. (604)805-8463/ 986-4026

www.constructivelandscaping.com

CAPILANO LANDSCAPING Beds, Hedges & Beyond! Free Estimates

604.878.1300

capilanolandscaping.com CHULA VISTA LANDSCAPING General carpentry, patios concrete & stone work. Power washing. Retaining walls, decks, fences. Walkways, pavers & tiles. chulavistalandscaping.ca

Francisco 604-710-9837

8160

Lawn & Garden

A.All Area Gardening Service Lawn Maintenance • Aerating Moss Control • Power Raking Trim • Prune • Top • Gen. Clean-up

604-726-9153 604-926-1526 2013 Special Aeration, moss control $95. Lawn maintenance 604-726-9153 & 604-926-1526

Garden Services

604-723-2468; Tran the Gardener. Lawns, cutting, weeding, trimming, cleanups. Reliable. 604-723-2468

604-518-5661

All West Garden Services Lawn maint, p/raking, moss control, aerating, trim, prune top, general cleanups... CALL SUKH 604-716-8479 or 604-984-1988

Certified Horticulturists Design • Planting • Maintenance Yard Clean-ups. Call Scott. www.KatsuraLandscaping.ca

Y.K. Landscaping Co. Ltd.

604-518-5623

20 Years Experience Retaining Walls, Paving Stones, Rock Garden, Fences Water Sprinklers SPECIAL SUMMER CLEAN-UP (Garden) $23 LAWN CUTS based on 2000 sqft. We also offer a full array of services. www.seymourlawnmaint.ca or call 604-990-1252 Greenworx Redevelopment Inc. Hedges, pavers, ponds & walls, returfing, demos, drainage, jackhammering. Old pools filled in, decks, concrete 604.782.4322

ROCK WALLS, stairs, interlocking pavers, patios & sidewalks. Repairs & installation. Call Bruno 778-895-1964

8160

Lawn & Garden

Lawn Cutting

$

2300*

* Prices Based on 2000 sq.ft. + HST

Yard Clean-ups, Gardening, New Lawns, Pruning and Hedges, Manicuring, Landscaping and More! References available in EVERY neighbourhood on the North Shore!

604.990.1252

www.seymourlawnmaint.ca

A.A.BEST PRO GARDEN SERVICES LTD. Lawn Maintenance, Power Raking, Moss Control, Aerating, Trim, Top, Prune, etc. 604.726.9152 604.984.1988

~ Any size job ~

Nick 929-7732

Michael 604 619-1126 604-761-7745 ARMS & Minds Renos Carpentry cabinets, doors, finishing,

★ Cedar fencing/decks ★ Stonework paving stones ★ Pergola’s ★ 30 Yrs Exp Call Danny 604-250-7824

Call Sukh

www.EnglishLawns.com

Handyperson

CONSTRUCTIVE LANDSCAPING

Seymour Lawn Maintenance

“The Grass is Greener”

Drainage

TROY TEATHER DRAINAGE & SEWER 15% OFF - 604-925-8711

604-RUBBISH - ’’ We do all the loading & cleanup and we remove almost anything'' 604-782-2474

8150

Landscaping

Hauling

atyourhomeservicesgroup.ca

604-716-8528

8073

8135

Gutters

AT YOUR HOME GUTTER SERVICES

8155

GENERAL HELP

Labour / Odd jobs Home & Garden Indoor / Outdoor Clean up, removal, etc. North Shore Odd Job Services Michael 778-868-5079

Hardwood Floor Refinishing

Excavating - Drain Tile Old garage, carport, house, pool, repair main waterline, break concrete & removal. Licensed • Insured • WCB

-

Handyperson

Flooring/ Refinishing

778-919-7707

ALL CEMENT WORK rock walls patios, sidewalks, drainage, repairs, 30+yrs exp. Exc Ref’s 604-992-7994

8130

Al Isaac & son Colin Enjoy your Summer holidays! We will look after your lawn while you are away! 604.986.0003 Office 604.561.9100 Colin 604.218.7644 Al

greenclipperlawnservices@gmail.com

Call Jungle George Local North Shore

★ Spring Yard Cleanup ★

■ ■ ■ ■

HEDGES & TREES POWER RAKING LAWN & GARDENING JUNK REMOVAL

George’s cell ★ 604-317-3552

Cert. horticulturists 604-518-5661 Scott H. Design & Maintenance KatsuraLandscaping.ca ★ CNN ★ Exp. in WEEDING, Lawn Repair, Yrdwork, Free Est. Nick 778-840-6573

8180

Home Services

CAPILANO HANDYMAN

● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●

Renovations Demolition Plumbing Drywall Carpentry ● Cabinetry Painting ● Electrical Kitchens & Bath Flooring ● Paving Fences & Decks Insured & WCB

Tel: 604-219-0666 AGGRESSIVE CONCRETE Professional Polished Concrete Floors. 778-919-7707 Labourer Available rain or shine North Shore Odd Job Services Michael 778-868-5079 THUNDERBIRD GLASS Glass canopies, ext/int glass rails, frameless glass shower enclosures. Rick/Wayne 604-980-7511

8185

Moving & Storage

GREAT CANADIAN LAWNS New lawns & repairs, lawn mtce, landscaping, lighting, patios 604-924-LAWN (5296)

AFFORDABLE MOVING

GREAT LOOKING Landscapes Full service landscape & garden maint. Call Dave: 604-764-7220

1, 3, 5, 7 or 10 Ton $ From

GREEN PROPERTY MAINTENANCE Hedge trimming, tree pruning, yard maintenance, removal, Mike 983-3586 JAPANESE GARDENER Landscape & maintenance, clean-ups, trimming. Reas, free est, 25 yrs exp 604-986-8126 JB GARDEN'S Hedges, trimming & cleanups, pruning, weeding. Call Terry 604-354-6649 JIM’S MOWING 604-310-JIMS (5467) www.jimsmowing.ca LIONS GATE Landscaping Ltd. Your Maintenance & Landscape Specialist 604-788-9687 PACIFIC WEST LANDSCAPE SUPPLY. Soil, sand, gravel. We accept green waste. 1990 W 1st, North Van. 604-980-8334 TOP SOIL, sand, gravel, etc. Pick-up or Delivery. Headwater Management, 175 Harbour Ave, North Van 604-985-6667

8175

Masonry

CUSTOM STONEWORK & LANDSCAPES FOR OVER 50 YEARS! Fully Insured - Work Safe

Aldo

604.834.8643 Anthony

778.321.2536 ARCADIA STONEWORK bricks, blocks, natural, cultured & paving stones. Alex - 778-895-6170 Constructive Landscaping Stonework.paving stones, Cedar decks/fences, Pergola’s. 30 yrs exp. Call Danny 604-250-7824 www.constructivelandscaping.com

MASTER STONEMASON, Local, Experienced, fireplaces, facing, walls, stairs. Ivan 604-649-2271 T-A STONEWALL. Rockwalls, paving stones, Allan block walls, etc. 987-8155 / 250-4117 ww.tastonewall.com

HOME SERVICES Find the professionals you need to create the perfect renovation. to advertise call

604-630-3300

1 to 3 Men

8195

Painting/ Wallpaper

JB’s PAINTING • Interior/Exterior • Professional • Reliable • North Shore company since 2001

604-773-4549 ★ PARS PRO PAINTER ★

SUMMER SPECIALS ■ High Quality Wrk ■ WCB/Ins ■ Re-Paint ■ 10 yrs exp ■ Team Work ■ Comm & Res. ■ Powerwashing ■ Ref’s North Shore Co. Free Est. 604-868-9440

PROFESSIONAL PAINTERS

Interior – Exterior High Quality, Clean, Reliable

604-338-1321 Free Estimate

A CLEAN PAINT JOB. Quality 1 room from $137. Int-ext, WCB 22 yrs exp. Cell: 604-727-2700

45 We accept Visa, Mastercard & Interac

Excellent Pro Painting Service 20 yrs exp, refs, warranty. Reas, res/comm Richard 604-618-0205

FREE ESTIMATES

MARK GRIFFITHS Painting Co. Affordable Quality. Locally Owned & Operated. References, Insured 604-925-4330

Licenced & Insured Local & Long Distance Seniors Discount

604-537-4140 www.affordablemoversbc.com

MOVING & STORAGE

1175 W.15 St. North Van

Garbage Removal • Deliveries

MOVING

Licensed & Insured

Give us an estimate and we will beat it!

Call 778.994.5403

Low Budget Moving.com

★ 604-652-1660 ★

8195

MICHAELS PAINTING, 25 yrs Exp, Interior/Exterior, Free Estimates. Michael 604-944-3327

You Want It We’ve Got It Find What You’re Looking for in the Classifieds.

Painting/ Wallpaper

FAIRWAY PAINTING Fully Insured 20 yrs. exp. • Free Est.

INTERIOR & EXTERIOR SPECIALS 10% OFF

Call 604-

7291234

PAINTING FOR LESS $$$ European quality Since 1982 Lowest Price Guaranteed! Interior experts. Paul 778.919.2213 www.finnlineinteriors.com

classifieds.nsnews.com cont. on next page

List It. Sell It. Guaranteed. Craig Can’t Do That. Why? Trusted Sellers You know the sellers and so do we. No scams. No concerns. ]ZN PT\U YJKOXWKYWM Local Buyers You know your community and you can trust the folks you know.

$69 buys you a print and online ad in 1 market until sold*! [HLTV YLKI\ XJ \UL\M

You get what you KWWX S VZLHLK\WWXM ]JJR \JXLNM Trusted Vendors, Local Buyers

* if you reduce the cost of your item by 10% each month. Private party only.

]JJR JKQTKW KJPM SNIDDOLQRDJGDGQMDJSFH


A42 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013

Call ThE Experts SITE SERVICES

DESIGN • BUILD • MAINTAIN

Demolition • Excavation • Soil Removal • Backfill • Boulder Retaining Walls • Storm Sewer & Sanitary • Precast Foundations

RAVENWOOD

Complete Residential Site Services

Construction Ltd.

Come see us during Lynn Valley Days!

604-317-7102

778-322-2229

CONSTRUCTION

RENOVATIONS & CUSTOM HOMES Renovations & Custom Homes www.rjrrenovator.com www.rjrconstruction.ca

Download the

Builder, Renovator

778-233-0559 www.repairmasters.ca

INTERIORS

EXTERIORS

• Kitchen Remodels • Bathroom Remodels • Secondary Suites • Flooring & Trim

• Additions • Siding & Stucco • Doors & Windows • Decks & Balconies

www.buildpros.ca

You Buy It! We Build It!

Precision Craftsmanship, Professional Service Licenced - Insured - WCB Covered

App to see video Award-Winning Renovations ■ Rendering to Reality ■ ccirenos.com

604.980.8384

Advantage Aluminum Products Ltd. 143 - 14488 Knox Way, Richmond, B.C.

Tel: 604-276-2323 Fax: 604-276-2313 Toll Free: 1-877-440-2323 www.advantagealuminum.ca

8200

Patios/Decks/ Railings

THUNDERBIRD GLASS

· Quality Custom Glass Canopies · Interior/Exterior Glass Rails · Frameless Showers & Skylights

8205

Driveway, Walkway & Parking Lot Garage Apron / Speed Bump / Pot Hole / Patch Commercial & Residential www.jaconbrospaving.com

604-618-2949

drains, foundations, walls, membranes 604-618-2304/ 820-2187

TERRY’S DRIVEWAY SEALING Anniversay Special • Free ests North Shore Co. 604-980-7507

604-980-7511

www.thunderbirdglass.com

8220

Plumbing

GLOBAL PLUMBING Licenced Plumber & Gas Fitter

• $69/hr • 24/7 • Insured

604.987.7473 Atlas Vinyl Sundecks 'Your complete Sundeck Specialists' Vinyl Waterproofing, Deck Rebuilds, Custom Built Railings, Patio Covers, 778-285-2107

8225

Plumbing

10% Off with this Ad! For all your plumbing, heating & reno needs. Lic Gas Fitter, Aman. 778-895-2005 Actual Plumbing & Heating, Boilers, Furnaces, Tankless, Hotwater tanks, 24/7, Seniors Disc. Lic. BBB, 604-874-4808

DELBROOK

PLUMBING & DRAINAGE Licenced Plumber 604-729-6695

PLUMBING BY BILL Installation, repairs Honest & reliable 604-980-0993 SAVE ON PLUMBING Licensed Plumber/Gas fitter, $68/HR. Same day service. Insured, BBB member Call 604-987-7473 Samy

Power Washing A GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICE

• Power washing • Gutter cleaning/repairs • Window cleaning • WCB insured • Free estimates

604-984-4147 604-773-4549 Spring Cleanups: Driveways, walkways, etc. Get rid of that moss & mess around your home or work. POWERWASHING. GUTTERS & Windows. Best rates. Free est. Call Doug 604-985-4604 PS POWERWASHING All types of powerwashing. Reas rates. Summer Disc. Peter, 778-858-5793

HOME SERVICES

Find the professionals you need to create the perfect renovation.

#1 BARGAIN rate on plumbing & drainage. No job too small.Ken 604-987-2890 cell 604-328-7439 LOCAL PLUMBER - Licensed, insured,GASFITTING, renos, Repairs. VISA 604-929-6956

8250

Roofing

AT YOUR HOME ROOFING SERVICES

No More HST! BOOK NOW!

604-340-7189 ACCREDITED BUSINESS

atyourhomeservicesgroup.ca

AFFORDABLE QUALITY ROOFING LTD.

604-984-9004 604-984-6560

All Season Roofing

Re-Roofing & Repairs Specialists

Book your ad online: or call: 604-630-3300

604-512-7471

604-RUBBISH 782-2474 • We remove any kind of junk & recycling • Resident, Commercial, Industrial • Basement, Garage, Yard Clean-up • Old Furniture, Appliances

Gary, 604-897-3614

8240

Renovations & Home Improvement

Working Within Your Budget

Total Renos - Res & Comm 25 yrs exp. North Shore refs, Excellent Workmanship,

Call Hummingbird 778-387-3626

On Site

Interior Refinishing Kitchens Bathrooms

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

Liability Insurance, WCB, BBB, Free Estimates

604-983-0133

10% DISCOUNT. MG Roofing & Siding. WCB. Re-Roofing, New Roof, Gutters. 604-812-9721 A EASTWEST Roofing & Siding Reroofing, Gutter, BBB Member, 10% disc, Seniors Disc, 604-783-6437

A-1 Contracting & Roofing ReRoofing & Repair. WCB. 25% Discount. Jag, 778-892-1530 AFFORDABLE QUALITY ROOFING All types. BBB, insured, references. www.affordablequalityroofing.com 604-984-6560

www.RenoRite.com

All types - Reroofs & Repairs Insured/WCB 778-288-8357

✓ RenoRite

THE ROOFER (since 1978) Roof tune-up from $149. 24 hr repair. WCB, insured 604-985-1913

Save Your Dollars 604 451 0225

Bath Kitchen Suites & More 2 OLD GUYS 2 YOUNG TO RETIRE WE DO IT ALL!

BAMFORD CONSTRUCTION Ltd. Quality Renovations. 604-986-2871 www.bamford.ca

We haul everything, no load too big or small, we do it all. Free est. 604-317-2500/ 929-7194 BELL MINI BINS 604-922-5101 Small or large household jobs & Mini bin service. 7 days a week Fast ★ inexpensive ★ reliable. ● BIN RENTALS ● ★ Top Soil Deliveries ★ 7 days a wk. Fast service 604-985-4211 orangebins.com ROD’S RUBBISH REMOVAL Prompt, reliable, reasonable. Big/ small loads. 7 days 604-985-7193 RUBBISH REMOVAL & Demolition Mark 604-219-0666

8300

AMBLESIDE ROOFING

Stucco/Siding/ Exterior

J. PEARCE STUCCO CONTRACTING. 604-761-6079 www.stuccocontracting.com

8309

Tiling

renovateme.ca

all tiling, repairs, remodels, bathrooms, kitchens, patios ★★★ 604-761-2421 ★★★

8310

Top Soil

Headwater Management TOP SOIL, SAND, GRAVEL, etc. Pick-up or Delivery 175 Harbour Ave. North Vancouver

604-985-6667 PACIFIC WEST LANDSCAPE SUPPLY Soil, Sand, Gravel & more We accept green waste Pick-up or Delivery 1990 West 1st, North Van 604-980-8334 DALTON TRUCKING Top Soil, Garden Soil, Fill Soil. Gravel, Sand, Rock & More. Dirt Bins, Dump Sites, Trucking Deliveries 604-986-6944

8315

www.OnSiteRenovations.com Mike Getzlaf 604 351 9316

#1 TRAILER TRASH BOYS

604-591-3500 15 Years Experience RE-ROOF & REPAIR SPECIALIST ~ No Job Too Small ~

H 604-986-3986 C 604-537-9452

classfieds.nsnews.com

Rubbish Removal

ABOUT TIME . . . DD HAUL & DELIVERY meeting all your needs, ‘quality workmanship delivered with pride’. Loads from $30 each Please call David

20 year Labour Warranty available

Bros. Roofing Ltd.

ASPHALT PAVING

ALLEN ASPHALT concrete, brick,

CALL RICK/WAYNE:

8220

8255

On Time, Fast. Lowest Rates

FRASERVIEW COAST TO COAST ROOFING LTD. ROOFING

HOME SERVICES Paving/Seal Coating

PAINTING, LAMINATE flrs, baseboards, tiling, blinds. Clean, reliable. Free est. 604-338-1321

A+

Book your ad online: classifieds.nsnews.com or call: 604-630-3300

cont. from previous page

James Walter Carpentry Renovations, Structural Work, Decks, Stairs, Gazebos, All Insurance. Call 604-788-8863

Trusted since 1986! A+ Rating - BBB Residential/Commercial 25 yr. workmanship warranty Call for FREE ESTIMATE & SUMMER PROMOTION

RENOVATIONS

Download the

Moon Construction Building Services Additons, Renovations, New Construction, Specializing in Concrete Forming, Framing & Siding. 604-218-3064

WCB – Fully Insured 100% Money Back Guarantee

Patio Covers

• Strata Maintenance • Structural Changes • Burnt Siding • Rot Repair

Renovations & Home Improvement

• Roofing & Roof Repairs • Duroid, Cedar, Torch-on • Moss Control, Removal & Prevention • Gutter Installation, Cleaning & Repairs

PATIOS, DECKS, RAILINGS

SPECIALTIES

8240

15 & 30 Yard Dumptrucks

App to view Extras

A

604.987.5438

RENOVATIONS

jeff@ravenwoodconstruc=on.com

HOME SERVICES

Tree Services

TREE WORKS

Tree & Stump Removal Done Right! Trimming & Pruning. Fully Ins. Best rates.

604-787-5915 604-291-7778 treeworksonline.ca

10% discount with this ad NORTH SHORE TREE & Hedge Certified arborist. Fully Insured Call Daryl 604-988-4479

ROBIN’S 604-986-4091

Need help with your Home Renovation?

Expert Tree Care - Cert. Arborist 25years exp. Fully Insured.

Find it in the Classifieds!

WEST COAST Home Services Window & gutter cleaning, power washing. Guaranteed lowest price WCB insured 604-984-4147

8335

Window Cleaning


Sunday, June 16, 2013 - North Shore News - A43

RE-ROOF NOW AND SAVE

T S G d by s booke r e d r o ll on a 2013. July 1st,


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CANADA’S MOST FUEL EFFICIENT FULL-SIZE PICKUP"

2013 RAM 1500 REGULAR CAB ST 4x2

$ UP TO

A44 - North Shore News - Sunday, June 16, 2013 destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca • destinationchrysler.ca •

STEP INTO OUR RAM TRUCK EVENT North American

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"

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2013


BREAKING NEWS

ADVERTISING FEATURE

JUNE 12-22, 2013

FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER, GET 0% FINANCING FOR 84

MONTHS ON ALL 2013 GMC, CHEVROLET & BUICK MODELS. HUGE PAYMENT REDUCTIONS ON ALL 2013 MODELS INTEREST SAVINGS CALCULATOR VEHICLE PRICE

COST OF BORROWING AT 0% FOR 84 MONTHS

COST OF BORROWING AT 4.99% FOR 84 MONTHS

$15,000

$0

$2,802

$25,000

$0

$4,671

$50,000

$0 $0 $0

$9,342 $14,014 $18,685

$75,000 $100,000

You have not seen this before…and you may never again. The interest savings at 0% for 84 months can be substantial compared to a 4.99% standard rate. Depending on the purchase price of the vehicle, interest savings can be over $20,000. The reductions are extensive and the restrictions are not. Hurry in, these offers are only in effect from June 12-22, 2013. All 2013 GMC, Chevrolet, Buick Models. Unconditionally interest-free. 10 Days only!

PLUS EARN AIR MILES ON ALL 2013 MODELS †

AIR MILES® REWARD MILES

10 DAYS ONLY. JUNE 12TH-22ND Burnaby Carter Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-291-2266

Coquitlam Eagle Ridge Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-464-3941

North Vancouver Carter Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-987-5231

Langley Preston Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-534-4154

Richmond Dueck Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-273-1311

Surrey Barnes Wheaton Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-696-3754

In addition to 0% financing, get up to 3,000 AIR MILES® with the purchase of any GMC, Chevrolet and Buick model. This offer ranges from 750 to 3,000 AIR MILES® reward miles, depending on model purchased. Offer may not be combined with certain other AIR MILES® promotions or offers. See your participating dealer for details.

South Surrey Barnes Wheaton Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-759-2163

Vancouver Dueck on Marine Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-324-7222

Vancouver Dueck Downtown Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-675-7900


0

BREAKING NEWS

% 84

10 DAY

SALE

FIRST TIME EVER

FINANCING FOR

ON ALL 2013

CHEVROLET MODELS †

PLUS EARN

AIR MILES® REWARD MILES

MONTHS*

CHEVROLET.CA

HUGE PAYMENT REDUCTIONS! 2013 SPARK

2013 SONIC

2013 CRUZE

2013 MALIBU

2013 CAMARO

2013 CORVETTE

2013 TRAX

2013 SUBURBAN

2013 AVALANCHE

2013 SILVERADO 1500

Burnaby Carter Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-291-2266

Coquitlam Eagle Ridge Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-464-3941

2013 EQUINOX

2013 SILVERADO HD DIESEL

2013 IMPALA

2013 VOLT

2013 TRAVERSE

2013 TAHOE

2013 ORLANDO

2013 EXPRESS

10 DAYS ONLY. JUNE 12-22. North Vancouver Carter Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-987-5231

Langley Preston Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-534-4154

Richmond Dueck Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-273-1311

Surrey Barnes Wheaton Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-696-3754

South Surrey Barnes Wheaton Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-759-2163

Vancouver Dueck on Marine Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-324-7222

Vancouver Dueck Downtown Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-675-7900


ON NOW AT YOUR BC CHEVROLET & BC BUICK GMC DEALERS. Chevrolet.ca/bcgmcdealers.ca/bcbuickdealers.ca 1-800-GM-DRIVE. Chevrolet, GMC and Buick are brands of General Motors of Canada. ≠/*/†Offers apply to the purchase of all new or demonstrator 2013 Chevrolet and Buick GMC cars, crossovers, pickups, SUVs and vans, equipped as described. Freight included ($1,550/$1,600). License, insurance, registration, PPSA, administration fees and taxes not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers, and are subject to change without notice. Offers apply to qualified retail customers in BC Chevrolet/ Buick GMC Dealer Marketing Association area only. Dealer trade may be required. GMCL, RBC Royal Bank, TD Auto Financing Services or Scotiabank may modify, extend or terminate this offer in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See Chevrolet/ Buick GMC dealer for details. *Offers valid for delivery dates between June 12 and 22, 2013; participating lenders are subject to change. 0% purchase financing offered on approved credit by TD Auto Finance Services, Scotiabank® or RBC Royal Bank≠ for 84 months on new or demonstrator 2013 Chevrolet, GMC, Buick cars, crossovers, pickups, SUVs and vans. Rates from other lenders will vary. Down payment, trade and/or security deposit may be required. Monthly payment and cost of borrowing will vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Example: $20,000 at 0% APR, the monthly payment is $238.10 for 84 months. Cost of borrowing is $0, total obligation is $20,000. Offer is unconditionally interest-free. Freight and air tax ($100, if applicable) included. License, insurance, registration, PPSA, applicable taxes and dealer fees not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Offers apply to qualified retail customers only. Limited time offer which may not be combined with certain other offers. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate offers in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ®Registered trademark of The Bank of Nova Scotia. ≠RBC and Royal Bank are registered trademarks of Royal Bank of Canada. †Valid at participating GM dealerships in Canada only. Retail customers only. Offer ranges from 750 to 3,000 AIR MILES® reward miles, depending on model purchased. No cash value. Offer may not be combined with certain other AIR MILES promotions or offers. See your participating GM dealer for details. Offer expires July 2, 2013. Please allow 4’6 weeks after the Offer end date for reward miles to be deposited to your AIR MILES® Collector Account. To ensure that reward miles are deposited in the preferred balance, Collector should ensure his/

0

Burnaby Carter Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-291-2266

BREAKING NEWS

%

PURCHASE FINANCING FOR MONTHS* 10 DAYS ONLY FROM JUNE 12-22

Coquitlam Eagle Ridge Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-464-3941

84 PLUS EARN

AIR MILES

2013 BUICK ENCLAVE

ON ALL 2013 BUICK MODELS

North Vancouver Carter Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-987-5231

2013 BUICK ENCORE

10 DAYS ONLY. JUNE 12-22.

Langley Preston Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-534-4154 Richmond Dueck Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-273-1311 Surrey Barnes Wheaton Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-696-3754 South Surrey Barnes Wheaton Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-759-2163

®

REWARD MILES

2013 BUICK REGAL

2013 BUICK VERANO

2013 BUICK LACROSSE

BCBUICKDEALERS.CA Vancouver Dueck on Marine Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-324-7222 Vancouver Dueck Downtown Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-675-7900


BREAKING NEWS

ZERO PERCENT EVENT 10 DAYS ONLY • FROM JUNE 12-22 • ONEVERY2013GMCMODEL PLUS EARN

AIR MILES

®

REWARD MILES

2013 SIERRA1500

2013 TERRAIN

FIRST TIME EVER

0 84 %

2013 SIERRA HD DIESEL

for

PURCHASE FINANCING

Burnaby Carter Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-291-2266

2013 ACADIA

Coquitlam Eagle Ridge Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-464-3941

MONTHS*

2013 SAVANA

2013 YUKON

BCGMCDEALERS.CA

10 DAYS ONLY. JUNE 12-22. North Vancouver Carter Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-987-5231

Langley Preston Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-534-4154

Richmond Dueck Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-273-1311

Surrey Barnes Wheaton Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-696-3754

South Surrey Barnes Wheaton Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-759-2163

Vancouver Dueck on Marine Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac 604-324-7222

Vancouver Dueck Downtown Chevrolet Buick GMC 604-675-7900


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