www.theasianstar.com Vol 17 - Issue 13
Saturday, April 28, 2018
Single mother Renuka Amarasingha killed in Toronto van attack Toronto District School Board (TDSB) employee was killed in the Yonge Street rampage that left 10 dead and 14 injured, school board trustee Tiffany Ford said in a Facebook post. “It was just confirmed that one of our TDSB staff members was killed on Monday in the tragic event. Ms. Renuka Amarasingha, a single mom from Sri Lanka,” Ford’s post states. A statement Toronto van attack victim Renuka from the school Amarasingha with her son Diyon. board added that Amarasingha worked as a nutrition services staff member at Earl Haig Secondary School. She was also a former adult student of TDSB. “This is a difficult Continued on page 7
Vancouver gas prices break record at 158.9 158.9 cents — the new price for a litre of regular gas in Vancouver. The price at the pump jumped by a full cent overnight, with city drivers waking up to the recordbreaking figure on Wednesday morning. Dan McTeague, who watches Canadian prices for the Gas Buddy site, predicted the jump after prices started to rise drastically from the 1.30-mark in February. He didn’t, however, expect prices to creep up close to the $1.60 mark until summer. If the trend continues, McTeague said, $1.65 is more likely by the summer months. ‘The days of under $1.40-a-litre gasoline are over’: Lower Mainland gas prices set to jump “Whatever prices we see from today on continue to establish new records for gasoline for any major city across North America, and will continue to do so for the remainder of 2018,” he said. “If they can be this high at this time, you can imagine the changeover from winter to summer.”
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Vaisakhi celebrations in Surrey
Huge crowds turned out for Surrey’s Vaisakhi parade last Saturday.
British Columbia moves to cap auto insurance payouts B.C. government introduced legislation on Monday to curb skyrocketing payments for minor injury claims by capping settlements and limiting when accident victims can sue. The province is the last in Canada to abandon a system in which victims can sue for any type of injury − known as a full tort system − a move it was forced to make to contain staggering losses at the Crown-owned Insurance Corporation of B.C. “These are huge changes for British Columbia, huge changes for ICBC,” AttorneyGeneral David Eby told reporters.Starting next April, settlements for pain and suffering claims
for minor injuries will be capped at $5,500. The definition of a minor injury will be set by cabinet at a later date. Mr. Eby said that will allow the government to respond if lawyers find loopholes to exploit. “We know from other jurisdictions that lawyers will try to get around the definition of minor injury, to try to get people into the B.C. Supreme Court system,” he said. Although the cabinet will determine what constitutes a minor injury, Mr. Eby said the proposed
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BC government targets tax evasion in condo market to keep prices down British Columbia’s government wants to crack down on tax evasion in the condominium market and gives municipalities more control over rental housing as it looks for ways of easing a housing crunch. Finance Minister Carole James said legislation introduced Tuesday would require developers to collect and report buyer information on the purchase and sale of condos before they are built to ensure the
proper amount of tax is paid. The prices of so-called presale condominiums are inflated by people who buy and sell the properties without ever living in them or paying capital gains tax, she said. “This is a key step to stopping people from using presale condos as a quick, lucrative investment,” James said. “It’s also to stop them from driving prices up for British C o l u m b i a n s Continued on page 6