North Shore News September 7 2014

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SUNDAY Sept. 7

Renew your c insurance a t a r BCAA. Members an d no

2014

FOCUS 3

Monster homes

n-Members welcome

TRAVEL 32

Riverboat safari SPORT 36

Wolf Pack hunt title L o c a l N e w s . L o c a l M at t e r s

Lonsdale A venue & th North Van 15 Street couver

N S N E WS.C O M

Faith restored by return of photos

Family photos stolen from safe found, returned by homeless man BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com

A North Vancouver man has been reunited with some precious heirlooms

after a homeless man found and returned them recently. When thieves broke into Glen Lancaster’s home in May, ironically,

the only thing they made off with was a floor safe plastered with a sign declaring there were no valuables inside and that the safe was “not worth stealing.” “It had a big sign slapped on it but obviously they’re illiterate thieves or

they thought they hit the motherlode,” Lancaster said. Inside, the safe contained mainly documents, passports and an album of old family photo negatives. After the theft, “I’d written these off. I had no

expectation I’d ever see them again,” he said. Then Lancaster got a call on Aug. 29 from a stranger saying he’d found the safe in a ravine near the North Shore Emergency Shelter. Tim Storey, 42, and living currently without

a job or permanent home, was searching for bottles and cans when he happened by the safe. Its contents had been scattered about and exposed to the elements. But Storey could make See Storey page 5

Seaspan cuts steel at modern shipyard JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com

)_=&,=P 9_R_;(=$_7 $Y_ &$=($ .] 9.P&$("9$W.P .P = P_e 9=;R_ ]_((C eW$Y = 7_Q.P&$(=$W.P .] &.Q_ .] $Y_ &YW,C=(75& Q.7_(P P_e _*"W,Q_P$ )_,$> `> M_(_@ 2Y_&$_( )=(_$ &Y.e& Y.e Y_ Q=S_& = ,(_9W&W.P 9"$ "&WP[ = 9.Q,"$_(?7(Wf_P &$__R 9"$$_(> DME'E CINDY GOODMAN

A new cable ferry that will run between Buckley Bay and Denman Island will be the first vessel built in Seaspan’s modernized new shipyard. A steel-cutting ceremony Wednesday in North Vancouver marked the start of the project, expected to take about eight months. Construction of the relatively small 78.5-metre ferry marks the first time Seaspan’s new shipyard — modernized at a cost of about $185 million — will be put into use. “It’s a very good project for us,” said Brian Carter, president of Seaspan Shipyards. He said building the ferry with the new system will allow Seaspan’s workforce to get familiar with the new system before they move on to bigger ships. SeeWork page 9


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