Maple Ridge News, October 17, 2012

Page 1

B.C. Views Fantasies won’t keep ferries afloat. p6

MR council looks at new dog bylaw. p16

THE NEws

Arts&life Broken Narrative at art gallery. p23

www.mapleridgenews.com wednesday, October 17, 2012 · Serving Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows · est. 1978 · 604-467-1122 · 50¢

Colleen Flanagan/the newS

A Coast Guard dive team returns a body to the dock at Grant Narrows park. See video @mapleridgenews.com.

Man dies in Pitt Lake plane crash Another saved by boater, taken to hospital by Ph i l M e lnych uk staff reporter

Colleen Flanagan/the newS

Young people light candles in memory of Amanda Todd during a gathering at Memorial Peace Park on Monday. See video of the vigil @mapleridgenews.com.

Rest in peace, Amanda Students mourn loss of teenage girl at vigil by Ro b er t M a n g e ls d or f staff reporter

W

ith a grey sky overhead, and a cold rain beating down upon their backs, more than 80 local high school students huddled around the edge of the rotunda in Memorial Peace Park Monday afternoon to remember Amanda Todd.

In the centre of the covered stage lay a bouquet of flowers, surrounded by glowing candles: a makeshift memorial for Todd, the teenage girl from Maple Ridge who took her own life last week after being tormented by bullies. She would have turned 16 next month. Many who came to pay their respects never knew Todd, but they knew how she felt. Dozens of young girls, dressed in pink, held hands, hugging and leaning on each other for support, eyes cast downwards at the bouquet of flowers on the

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ground. J e s s i c a Standish, who graduated from Westview secondary in 2008, says she too was bullied throughout high school. “I didn’t Amanda Todd know her, but I went through what she did growing up, so that could have been me, I guess,” she says. “Girls just try

so hard to fit in, and sometimes it backfires like it did with me and it did with her.” The bullying was so bad, Standish says she would make up excuses to not go to school, and spend lunch hours eating alone. “It was a hard time for me,” she says softly. Steve Forbes, who works for Westridge Security and looks after Memorial Peace Park, was one of the few adults at the vigil who was not wielding a television camera or a microphone. See Amanda, p5

A 71-year-old flying instructor from Surrey is dead, while his 55-year-old passenger was treated in hospital following a float plane crash on Pitt Lake, Monday. Police said the two were in a Pacific Rim Aviation Academy Cessna 172 float plane from Pitt Meadows Regional Airport. The plane flipped over on the lake at about 4:30 p.m. during stormy conditions. “They were carrying out touchand-go landings for training. During the sixth touch-and-go the aircraft tipped over,” said Bill Yearwood, with the Transportation Safety Board. “The student was able to get out, but tragically the instructor was not.” Yearwood said when a plane over turns in water it can be challenging even for an uninjured person to get out. Many people have died in such instances, he added. “It is a risk when an aircraft upsets and submerges. “The student made an attempt to help the instructor, but the aircraft was filling up with water fast. He was unable to help him.” See Plane, p12

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