The Silhouette - February 27, 2014

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The

ONTARIO CHAMPIONS

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The Marauders men’s and women’s volleyball teams have taken gold at the Ontario-wide tournament. Is the rest of Canada prepared? B1

McMASTER UNIVERSITY’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER

Thursday, February 27, 2014 VOL. 84 NO. 23

CRIME

More arrests made in Mac student murder case Jemma Wolfe Executive Editor

FROZEN FACEOFF Engineering students Owen Hempel, Brendan Kaas, Dan Hallatt, Paul Kuyanov and Thomas Dunlop donned their skates and took to the frozen-over Lake McMaster in front of BSB for some afternoon shinny on Wednesday, Feb 26. YOSEIF HADDAD / PHOTO EDITOR

Bike share program coming to Hamilton City getting ready to kick off communal cycling rental initiative Jemma Wolfe Executive Editor Hamilton will soon be home to a bike share program. Starting this summer, a partnership between the City of Hamilton and Social Bicycles will offer 750 bikes at 80 stations across the city. The bicycles will be available to users for a small fee ranging from $3 single-rides to $85 yearlong memberships. Bikes can be reserved using the Social Cyclist smartphone app or by using a keyboard on any of the bicycles. An unlock code then frees the bike, and riders can keep the bicycle for as long as is paid for. Bikes must be returned to one of the 80 hub locations at the end of the allotted time to avoid extra fees. “We’re excited to add this travel choice to our existing range of transportation options to make travelling even more convenient and sustainable,” said Peter Topalovic, Project Manager of Transportation Demand Management with the City of Hamilton. “Bike Share is the fastest growing transportation mode in the world, complementing existing public transit and providing first and last mile connectivity by filling in transit gaps. It’s a healthy, sustainable, and affordable form of public transportation.” Exact implementation dates are currently unknown, with their

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website simply promising to have the program in place “by summer 2014.” The 80 docking station locations are also still to be determined. Members of the public are encouraged to suggest where stations should be by using the app or by sending an email to info@ hamiltonbikeshare.ca. So far, votes have favourited a McMaster location as well as many hotspots near Jackson Square in the downtown core. In introducing a public bike share program, Hamilton is following in the footsteps of other major Canadian and international cities. While bike share programs are a successful staple in European metropolises, Canadian cities have had some difficulty sustaining the systems. Toronto’s bike program, introduced in 2011, went bankrupt in 2013 from underuse, leaving the City to take on the full amount of the cost. In Vancouver, an integrated bike share and helmet rental system is being proposed with its own slew of complications. That program is due to roll out this spring.

MONTHLY

ANNUAL

ANY TIME

$15

$85

$3*

1 HOUR FREE TIME DAILY

1 HOUR FREE TIME DAILY

PAY PER SINGLE RIDE

$5 /HOUR FOR GOING OVER

$5 /HOUR FOR GOING OVER

$6 /HOUR FOR GOING OVER

All plans include a $3 fee for locking the bicycle outside of the designated hub.

*One-time account set-up fee

Above: The three plan structures that the bike share will operate under. Below: A map of proposed bike share locations, zoomed in on the greater McMaster University area.

Tyler Johnson was shot last November during an incident in downtown Hamilton.

@jemma_wolfe

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A total of six people have now been charged in connection to last year’s murder of McMaster engingeering student Tyler Johnson. Following raids of several Hamilton residences, police arrested Hamiltonians Chad Davidson, 34, and Joshua Barreira, 25, on Valentine’s Day, and Louis Rebelo, 26, on Feb. 20. The arrests took place several months after the initial arrest of Joshua Barreira’s brother, 19-year-old Brandon Barreira, on Dec. 11, 2013. All four men have been charged with first-degree murder. Two women, Jennifer Dagenais, 28, and Ashley Dore-Davidson, 27, have also been charged with being accessories after the fact. Their connection to the men is unclear at this time. Johnson, a 30-year-old, fourth-year mechanical engineering student, was shot in the chest in the early hours of Saturday, Nov. 30, 2013. At approximately 3 a.m., Johnson was involved in an incident between two groups of men outside of Vida La Pita restaurant near the corner of King Street West and Caroline Street, one block east of Hamilton’s popular bar district, Hess Village. Hamilton police sergeant Paul Hamilton stated last year that the conflict occurring between the two groups “quickly escalated when one man produced a handgun and shot the victim.” Johnson’s body was found in the nearby Tim Hortons parking lot and was pronounced dead at Hamilton General Hospital. Initially, emergency responders thought Johnson had been stabbed and began trying to treat him for stab wounds before realizing that he had been fatally shot in the chest.

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Surveillance footage from Vida la Pita and Tim Hortons was released to the public in December in an attempt to identify six men who may have had a connection to the case. Hamilton Police detective Dave Oleniuk could not comment on whether or not those arrested are pictured in the videos, but said that they received many informative calls following the release of the surveillance footage. Details about what happened the night of the murder and what motivated the shooting remain unknown. Det. Oleniuk could only confirm that the murder “was not random.” Police are asking anyone with information on Johnson’s death to call Det. Oleniuk of the homicide unit at 905-546-3874. @jemma_wolfe


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