The Tri-City News, February 27, 2015

Page 1

TRICITYNEWS.COM EXTRAS >>

THINGS-TO-DO GUIDE: A18

Merry music and maple syrup

TC

Trans. plan would boost economy by $450M / Students urge safety on social media

FRIDAY, FEB. 27, 2015 Your community. Your stories

TRI-CITY

NEWS

VOLUNTEERS DIG HISTORY

Shiloh and Keziah Johnston of Coquitlam from Shiloh’s Facebook page. The sisters died within 10 days of each other.

DOUBLE TRAGEDY

Memorial is planned for 2 sisters Diane StranDberg The Tri-CiTy News

A grieving young woman from Coquitlam who wanted a legacy bench to keep the memory of her younger sister alive will now have a bench in her name as well after she died tragically in a car accident. A fundraising campaign has been established on the website gofundme.com to buy the bench and contribute to other charities supported by Keziah, 20, and Shiloh Johnston, 22.

The two young women died within 10 days of each other: Keziah earlier in February of undisclosed causes and Shiloh on Feb. 17 from injuries she sustained when she was hit by a car while walking in Burnaby. Now their family, friends and church communities are in mourning. “Keziah was a wonderful young woman filled with passion and life; 10 days later, her older sister Shiloh Johnston was tragically killed.” see shilOh, page A7

TRANS. REFERENDUM

PoMo council is backing Yes vote

Sarah Payne

The Tri-CiTy News

Port Moody council is backing the Yes campaign after a visit Tuesday from Port Coquitlam Mayor Greg Moore on behalf of the Mayors’ Council’s transportation plan. With a million people moving to the region and,

along with them, 700,000 new jobs, the transportation plan will provide the buses, SkyTrain and West Coast Express service as well as better walking and cycling routes, to keep all those people moving, Moore told Port Moody councillors.

see MOORE, page A6

DIANE STRANDBERG/TRI-CITY NEWS

Volunteers Guy Black (centre), Alan Fox (left) and Sonny Son in the replica First World War trench they dug and reinforced behind Port Moody Station Museum. Named the McKnight Trench, after a Port Moody engineer who died in battle, the educational display will be completed next month and unveiled at a ceremony in early April. For more on the memorial trench, see article on page A4.

CONTACT ThE TRI-CITY NEWS: newsroom@tricitynews.com

/ sales@tricitynews.com / delivery@tricitynews.com / 604-525-6397


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.