December 7, 2022

Page 1

WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 7 2022

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NEWS4

Remembering Ralf

Tributes pour in for Lonsdale Quay’s beloved Soup Meister

LIFESTYLE13

Hallmark history

Actor stars in groundbreaking queer-led Christmas movie

SPORTS35

High school soccer

Argyle scores silver, STA bronze at provincial championships

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‘ALARMING AND FRIGHTENING’

Carjacking crime spree ends with 15-year-old suspect in custody ALEX KURIAL AND JANE SEYD

jseyd@nsnews.com

A North Vancouver teen is in custody facing robbery and weapons charges following a scary series of events on Nov. 30, which included a pair of armed carjackings.

North Vancouver RCMP announced the arrest Dec. 1, providing a timeline of the alleged crimes by the 15-yearold male suspect. Under the provisions of the Youth Criminal Justice Act, his name cannot be published. The crime spree began around 5:30 p.m. on the evening of Nov. 30, when the suspect broke into a house in a neighbourhood near Edgemont Village and Capilano Road, according to North Vancouver RCMP. During the break-in, the teen took the keys to a vehicle parked there and used them to steal it. He later crashed the vehicle on Capilano Road and fled from it. Later on, around 8 p.m., police said, the youth went to the Capilano Suspension Bridge parking lot and carried Continued on page 39

PUT UP YOUR DUKES Running back Brady Smith of the Windsor Dukes fights off a tackler from the Vernon Panthers during a Windsor win in the junior boys AA provincial final played Saturday at BC Place. See page 34 for the full story. NICK LABA / NSN

HOUSING REGULATIONS

Strata owners worried over end of rental restrictions

JANE SEYD

jseyd@nsnews.com

Strata council members and owners of older condominium buildings on the North Shore say recent provincial changes to ban rental restrictions could have negative consequences for them – without

providing much affordable rental housing in return.

Owners of condos in small, older buildings say they fear their strata councils being overrun by people buying apartments as investments, who may not be willing to take on volunteer tasks or vote to pay for needed repairs.

Many fear their strata insurance rates will skyrocket. They’re also concerned their strata council will be forced to take on roles of dealing with tenant complaints when owners aren’t available. “I’ve lost sleep a couple of nights,” said Tina Hopkins, the president of a three-person strata council for an older building

at Queen Street and Westview, occupied mostly by retirees. “There’s been a lot of angst.” In an effort to make more housing available, province recently moved to lift strata regulations banning rental of condominium units. The province also made it Continued on page 38


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