Tri-City News January 18 2017

Page 1

ONLINE 24/7: TRICITYNEWS.COM

TC ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT: 25

Best of SD43 at Emerging Talent THE DRUG CRISIS

‘Mom, I have a problem’

TC

INSIDE: Changes planned for high school curriculum [pg. 3] / Sports [pg. 28]

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 18, 2017 Your community. Your stories.

TRI-CITY

NEWS

MEET MAILLARDVILLE’S PROPERTY BROTHERS

Grieving mom speaks at inquest into son’s death SARAH PAYNE

The Tri-CiTy News

In the midst of an opioid addiction crisis being fought by police, border officials, health authorities and the provincial and federal governments, a Coquitlam mother grieving the loss of her son is calling for change so that other families don’t suffer the same fate. Michelle Jansen, speaking after the first day of a sevenday coroner’s inquest in Burnaby into the death of her son, Brandon Jansen, said the process of getting help for a drug addiction should be no

BRANDON JANSEN different than for any other disease: immediate treatment by qualified professionals in a safe and secure setting; a centralized resource to guide patients and their families through the process; and greater public funding so that there isn’t a “two-tier system.” see ‘I TRIED’, page 5

TRANSIT UPGRADES ANNOUNCED

TransLink’s first major transit service lift in a decade is kicking in, including extended service on the Expo and Millennium SkyTrain lines. See story, page 9

DIANE STRANDBERG/THE TRI-CITY NEWS

Aman and Harry Parmar in front of the Rocheleau cottage, a 1929-era Craftsman-style home, one of three heritage homes they have recently restored in Maillardville. The brothers are becoming adept at the restoration of older homes on properties they are redeveloping using Coquitlam’s Heritage Revitalization Agreement, a legal tool that protects historical buildings while providing flexibility on density and other regulations for the developers. For more on the Parmar brothers and their building projects, see story on page 21.

Parmar bros. build – and save DIANE STRANDBERG The Tri-CiTy News

C

oquitlam has changed greatly since it was a community of homesteads cut into the forest. Towers dot the landscape next

to the Evergreen Extension, with the promise of more development to come. And along its roads and bridges, through its subdivisions and commercial areas, the city is barely recognizable from its earliest days. But tucked away in Maillard-

ville, which owes its beginning to francophone migration beginning in 1910, there remains a glimpse of the original city. While many neighbourhoods feel the bite of the bulldozer as land costs rise, Maillardville continues to be

home to some beautiful older homes, many of them sporting new paint and fixtures thanks to legal tools and those few developers who still see value in 100-year-old architecture.

see ‘IF WE DON’T’, page 19

CONTACT THE TRI-CITY NEWS: newsroom@tricitynews.com / sales@tricitynews.com / circulation@tricitynews.com / 604-472-3040

YOUR TRI-CITIES

WILLS, ESTATES AND TRUSTS TEAM Lewis Nguyen

Don A. Drysdale

Richard Rainey

Michele Y. Chow


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