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First pitch opens the baseball season
Jenna Hauck / Black Press photo A community mailbox recently targeted by mail thieves in Chilliwack. A Richmond City Hall report notes identity theft as one concern in Canada Post’s shift away from door-to-door delivery.
Don Fennell photo Mayor Malcolm Brodie officially opened the 2014 Richmond City Baseball Association season Sunday at Blundell Park. See story, Page 18.
Welcome changes coming to Richmond Hospital Staff Reporter A major renovation of Richmond Hospital's entrance will improve patient comfort and give families an easier time navigating the maze of corridors in the half-century-old facility. “It's very exciting. It's going to really increase the comfort, the welcome feel of the hospital,” said Carolle Sauro, the hospital’s director of special projects. “It's going to enhance the overall experience for people who have to access services at Richmond Hospital.” Construction begins this week on the $2-million-plus project, which is being funded almost entirely by the Milan and
Maureen Ilich Foundation. The hospital’s redesigned atrium—scheduled to be finished at the end of August—will be renamed the Milan Ilich Pavilion in honour of the late developer and philanthropist. Sauro said the space will become a hub for information and services, where the admitting desk will be frontand-centre. New signs and way-finding symbols with an ode to Richmond— salmon, heron, lotus flower—will make for a more pleasant hospital visit. “So many people came and they looked totally bewildered. You don’t want that experience when people are coming for procedures and are anxious already,” said Sauro.
The project involves a reconfiguring of space, shifting the academic library elsewhere in the hospital, and creating a dedicated family and patient centre stocked with health care resources that will also serve as a spiritual sanctuary. “We really have nothing available for quiet reflection—(a place for) families to go when they're experiencing some traumatic or difficult situations as a result of a family member being in acute care or patients themselves,” said Sauro. Rough flooring will be replaced with a smooth service more suitable for wheeling patients and equipment on, new exterior signs will go up and the hub's Starbucks outlet will expand its food services.
Vandalism, theft, traffic, trash, hardship among potential impacts by Matthew Hoekstra Staff Reporter Canada Post’s authority to install community mailboxes in established neighbourhoods without municipal approval is prompting concerns from Richmond City Hall. The federal Crown corporation is phasing out door-to-door delivery in urban centres over the next five years in favour of community mailboxes—a service already in place in newer neighbourhoods. The fact the corporation can set up the mailboxes without consulting local government—an authority granted under the Canada Post Corporation Act—is just one concern laid out in a new staff report, triggered by a similar brief from the City of Burnaby. “The proposed elimination of home delivery mail service by Canada Post has numerous community impacts, which warrant further discussion and attention before implementation,” said Amarjeet Rattan, director of the city’s intergovernmental relations and protocol unit, in a report to a council committee. See Page 6
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