Tri-City News August 19 2015

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TC ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT: A19

Public art sets sail in Port Moody CP WOMEN’S OPEN

TC

Local government auditor problems confirmed / Self-employment numbers up WEDNESDAY, AUG. 19, 2015 Your community. Your stories.

TRI-CITY

NEWS

MARKING THE SPOT FOR SAFETY

SARAH PAYNE/THE TRI-CITY NEWS

Competitors in the Canadian Pacific Women’s Open practise putting on Monday at Vancouver Golf Club in Coquitlam.

Golf world eyes are on LPGA in Coquitlam Benefits seen for local businesses (and golf fans) SARAH PAYNE

The Tri-CiTy News

Some of the world’s top golfers are teeing it up at the Vancouver Golf Club this week for the Canadian Pacific Women’s Open — and anywhere from 70,000 to 100,000 spectators will be coming to Coquitlam to watch them. There are 156 players in the field, about a third of whom, hailing from some 25 countries, are billeting with local families. New Zealand’s Lydia Ko, who as a 15-year-old rocketed to international fame after winning the event in 2012 at the Coquitlam course, will be competing along with Ontario’s Brooke Henderson, a teenager who dominated sports headlines this week after winning the LPGA

Portland Classic on Sunday, the first Canadian to win an LPGA event since 2001. And that kind of competition means even more eyes will be on this week’s events in Coquitlam. “All of the top 10 golfers are here and 96 of the top 100 golfers,” said tournament co-chair Byron Cook. “Golf Canada said it’s the strongest field of any of their tournaments.” Cook said organizers had anticipated being asked to host the globally televised event again in 2017 or 2018 but Golf Canada approached VGC in March 2014 to see about hosting this year. The club’s members supported the idea and planning began in earnest. About three quarters of the 2012 organizing committee chairs returned to help this year, shepherding some 1,200 volunteers, stickhandling traffic and parking, and arranging player and spectator services. see CHARITIES, page A4

SUBMITTED PHOTO

Coquitlam Search and Rescue volunteers are busy on Tri-City trails this summer in a bid to prevent hikers from getting lost in the backcountry. They’re hanging three-inch-square pieces of aluminum along popular hiking trails, saying the markers will help hikers find their way and, if they get lost, information on them will help searchers find them. For more on this, please see article on page A5.

ANIMAL PLANET

A beloved bird is brought home while bears are kept away in Port Moody: see stories on page A3

THRIFTY’S AD HERE

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