North Shore News March 18 2015

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WEDNESDAY March

18 2015

BRIGHT LIGHTS 12

Corrigan Nature House TASTE 39

Tacos take centre stage SPORT 41

Pack built on twin pillars L o c a l N e w s . L o c a l M at t e r s

INTERACT WITH THE NEWS at N S N E W S .C O M

Upper Lands vision unveiled Mixed-use ā€˜urban village’ in hillside development draft plan

MARIA SPITALE-LEISK mspitale-leisk@nsnews.com

The District ofWest Vancouver is one step closer to deciding what should become of a large swath of undeveloped land

on the hillside above the highway. In the Upper Lands, between the British Properties and Cypress Provincial Park, exists a blank canvas — 6,000 acres of public and private

property representing just over one-quarter of West Van’s total land area. The question is: how will the stakeholders plan for a sensitive ecosystem, recreational opportunities and future neighbourhoods to coexist in harmony in the Upper Lands territory? Preserve as much parkland as possible and concentrate density in a

small area near the base of Cypress — those are the chief recommendations of a citizens’ group tasked with revisiting the findings of a council-commissioned Upper Lands study from a decade ago. Those findings informed the district’s 2004 official community plan, which in turn informed the Rodgers Creek residential plan, and

all other future decisions involving the Upper Lands. The purpose of reopening the dialogue now is to seek more clarity for the Upper Lands plan, to incorporate new environmental data and to integrate new district policy such as the Parks Master Plan. Starting in 2012, the Upper Lands Working

Group engaged community interest groups and the general public to help inform the recommendations outlined in their draft report released last week. ā€œWorking groups can step outside of the dayto-day operations of the municipality and look at the big picture from a citizen’s SeeVillage page 9

Measles scare prompts mom to speak out MARIA SPITALE-LEISK mspitale-leisk@nsnews.com

A NorthVancouver mom is concerned her teenage son, who has a compromised immune system, will contract a serious illness from his potentially unvaccinated classmates. Shannon Westerlund brings a personal perspective to the polarizing vaccine debate. Her son Andrew, 14, endured two open-heart surgeries on the road to receiving a new heart in 2013. The Westerlunds thought Andrew was out of the woods, in terms of imminent health problems. He was back skiing two months after his heart transplant and acting like a normal SeeVaccination page 3

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