Vancouver Courier April 21 2016

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12TH & CAMBIE KINGSGATE MALL FOR SALE? 4 CITY LIVING LORD BYNG’S CLASS OF ’65 STILL ROCKING 8 LIVING MEET OUR NEW COLUMNISTS: THE FOOD GAYS 30 PASS IT TO BULIS WHO SHOULD CANUCKS FANS CHEER FOR? 40 THURSDAY

There’s more online at vancourier.com

Church and real estate

PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

Local News, Local Matters

April 21 2016 Established 1908

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T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

WEEKLY SPECIALS Prices Effective April 21 to April 27, 2016.

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Nature’s Path Organic Eco Pac Cereal

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

News 12TH & CAMBIE

School board considers selling Kingsgate Mall property Mike Howell

mhowell@vancourier.com

So, what the heck is going on with the Kingsgate Mall? You may have heard: The Vancouver School Board owns the property on which the quirky, timeworn shopping centre at Kingsway and Broadway sits and is considering selling it. So many questions here. Will it be turned into condos? How about a nice park? Or, maybe a museum dedicated to the annual battles between the school board and the provincial government? Mike Lombardi, the school board’s chairperson, correctly surmised there would be questions. So he emailed me his own question-and-answer document and I’ve done my best here to give it an edit for your reading pleasure. Right off the top, I should mention any sale of the property (I’m still not sure what it’s worth, or how big it is) will not help the

schoolboard’s$24.3-million shortfall. Why not? “To be clear, VSB has not begun any negotiations or made any decisions about selling the Kingsgate Mall property,” Lombardi said. “If that decision were made after consultation with the public, the proceeds of the sale of capital would need to be applied to capital projects such as building new schools or dealing with deferred maintenance upgrades.” Also, it should be made clear the school board doesn’t own the actual mall. Nope, the Beedie Group owns and operates it. The school board has a long-term lease on the building and retail operations. That lease comes up for review in late 2017. In the meantime, Lombardi said, the school board wants to be “transparent with the public about our ownership and solicit feedback from area residents about what they value at that location — now, and into the future.”

The Vancouver School Board owns the property on which Kingsgate Mall sits. Will it be sold? Turned into condos? How about a museum dedicated to the annual battles between the school board and the provincial government? PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

That feedback can be sent via email or Twitter. Or, if that doesn’t work for you, the board is hosting a show-and-tell May 1 at the mall, from 1 to 4:30 p.m. But hang on a sec here… didn’t the school board commit to not sell its properties?

“The board passed a motion not to sell school properties in their entirety, as an investment in the future for Vancouver students,” Lombardi said. “That does not preclude the board from considering partial sales or lease of school properties, or enter-

ing into discussions about non-school properties.” The school board owns three other properties without schools on them. All are used by the district. They are the nursery grounds and facility at 5905 Wales St., the school board’s works yard at 1549 Clark Dr. and the school board offices at 1580 West Broadway. The history of the school board’s connection to the Kingsgate Mall property goes back to the 1800s, when the board and the city acquired parcels of land at the mall site. Mount Pleasant school was built on the land in 1892. Then in 1962, as the area became a traffic and commercial hub, a new school was built nearby on Guelph Street. The mall was built in the early 1970s. The site is currently zoned for commercial use. Any zoning change would have to be approved by city council. I did a quick Google search to look into the crystal ball of what might happen on the property.

I came across a report by Acton Ostry Architects Inc. on the Rize mixed-use development currently being built across the street from the mall. Here’s a quote to keep in mind as you watch what happens to the mall. “As Vancouver and the Greater Vancouver Region expands, concentrated urban nodes will continue to grow and develop at significant points along busy arterial routes, such as Broadway and Kingsway. The Broadway and Kingsway node offers conditions that support highdensity, transit-oriented developments.” Here’s a better quote. “Additional significant developments in the immediate vicinity include the Biltmore Hotel, Best Western Hotel and Kingsgate Mall, which has been identified in the [Mount Pleasant Community Plan] as a future largescale mixed-use residential development site.” So, no museum? @Howellings

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T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

News ONLINE STORIES ‘Affordable home ownership’ program

The city wants to develop a program to make owning a home in Vancouver “affordable” for workers who have lived in the city for at least five years and whose household earns no more than $96,000 per year. In a report that went before city council Wednesday after the Courier’s print deadline, city staff proposed at least one member of the household be employed and a permanent resident or citizen of Canada to qualify for the program. Buyers would pay no more than 35 per cent of their gross income to housing costs, including mortgage payments, property taxes, utilities and strata fees. Singles and couples with no dependent children living at home, who earn no more than $67,540 per year, would be eligible for a studio or onebedroom unit, according to preliminary estimates in the report. Families earning no more than $96,170 per year would be eligible for two and three-bedroom units. The program, which calls for 300 housing units over the first three years, hinges on a commitment from develop-

ers willing to participate and consultation with employers, workers, mortgage lenders and the general public. — Mike Howell Full story at vancourier.com.

Strathcona residents irked by Atira proposal

A chain-link fence surrounds the Atira-owned vacant lot at 420 Hawks Ave., located just off Hastings Street. On one side of the Strathcona property sits the Rice Block — a 38-unit single-room occupancy hotel for women that Atira has run since 2007, while across the alley, at Pender Street, is the Ukrainian Hall. The fate of the lot, which Atira currently uses as a community garden, rests on the outcome of a rezoning application it filed more than a year ago. Its initial application envisioned 26 social housing units for women and children (20 studios and six two-bedroom units), while its revised proposal, submitted last October, scales back the number of units to 21, with more family housing (14 two-bedroom units and seven micro-dwelling units) as well as expanded amenity

space at street level that’s accessible to the community. Neighbourhood organizations aren’t satisfied by the changes, so they launched an online petition challenging the proposal just over a month ago. — Naoibh O’Connor Full story at vancourier.com.

YOU ARE NOT ALONE

Mayor insists he will seek fourth term

Mayor Gregor Robertson is insistent that he will seek a fourth term at city hall despite his communications director leaving in February for a job in Ottawa and his chief of staff set to step down at the end of this month. Robertson stated his intention to seek re-election last Thursday after news broke that longtime chief of staff Mike Magee will become “special advisor” to the mayor for four months, before scaling back his role later this year. He said Magee will focus on ensuring Vancouver gets its share of available federal dollars for infrastructure projects, particularly transit and affordable housing. He will continue to earn his annual $120,000-plus salary. — Mike Howell Full story at vancourier.com.

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

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News

King Ed project embodies DEVELOPING STORY Naoibh O’Connor

noconnor@vancourier.com

The walls are the most “exciting” feature of King Edward Villa, a six-storey rental building under construction at 1568 East King Edward Ave., according to Tom-Pierre Frappé-Sénéclauze. Frappé-Sénéclauze, a senior advisor at the Pembina Institute, considers them the most important “green” component. “Because they’re very well built. They’re very well insulated, very air tight. That [means] the entire rest of the building can be very simple [including] the electrical system. The heating system is great — very simple,” he said. “Here you have basically mechanical ventilation with heat recovery as the main heating source and a bit of baseboard heating. So it’s mostly electrically heated, which means it’s low carbon. But because it’s so energy efficient and the envelope is so good, you don’t actually need a lot of electricity to heat it.” Paul Warwick, senior project manager at Performance Construction, the builder of King Edward Villa, agrees. He

said every part of the wall, or envelope, which includes windows manufactured by Innotech Windows in Abbotsford, and the air barrier on the outside, work together to make a very energy efficient building. He helped lead a building tour organized by the Pembina Institute, a think tank dedicated to clean energy and reducing the impacts of fossil fuels. Warwick estimated the annual heating bill for a 500-squarefoot studio will be $60 a year, calling it “remarkable.” The building is inspired by Passive House principles and aims to earn the highest Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design certification available — LEED Platinum. It’s being built under the city’s Rental 100 program and will feature 77 units — 35 studios, 22 one-bedrooms and 20 two-bedrooms, as well as commercial space measuring about 6,000 square feet. Rents are expected to be $1,200 for a studio, going up to about $1,800 for a two-bedroom. Construction is expected to be completed this summer. Chris Higgins, a green building planner for the City of Vancouver, said the project is important because it uses simple

T technology, B.C.-produced products and reduces energy usep t in operation. “It greatly reduces the cost r for people who will be renting f in the building, it can help address affordability in a modest b way, and overall it achieves d y some of the city’s goals around carbon-neutral build- t ings in operation,” he said. V Higgins said the city has n c seen increasing interest in “ the construction of superinsulated buildings like King t h Edward Villa. “There are now about 12 t buildings in the development n permit process, so interest is t definitely surging. It’s growing, but this building is definitely an b early leader. This is the largest t building that’s not city-built that s has shown such leadership in “ reducing energy use that’s at thisg advanced stage [although] there w are others that are early in the b s process,” he said. The Pembina Institute orga- c nized the tour to highlight the fact that the government of B.C. e is expected to release a new Cli- s mate Leadership Plan later this g spring, which the organization says will likely include carbon reduction and energy efficiency s targets for the building sector. a The B.C. Climate Leadershipi

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T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

News

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vision for greener buildings Team, a government-appointed panel that includes a representative from the Pembina Institute, recommends halving emissions from buildings by 2030. “We want to see more buildings of this quality and design. But the reality is, when you look at the construction that’s happening right now in Vancouver, most of them do not meet this level of efficiency,” Frappé-Sénéclauze said. “Across B.C., that’s even more true because Vancouver has a higher standard than most of the rest of the province. So we need to move quickly to where this is the norm.” Karen Tam Wu, director of buildings and Urban Solutions at the Pembina Institute, said advocates are waiting with “bated breath” for the provincial government to come out with what the organization hopes will be a “strong and aggressive plan so we can meet some ambitious climate targets.” She wants the plan to include economic incentives to support suppliers, builders and local governments. “We’ve come out of Paris [climate talks] in December all saying we’re going to strive for around one-and-a-half degree increases in global tempera-

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tures. For B.C. to contribute its portion, we really need to see the province take the lead and put out some ambitious sectoral targets,” she said. “We need to see this type of building moving from the niche to the norm.” The Pembina Institute considers the City of Vancouver a leader in what can be done through regulations and incentives. Higgins pointed out the city is planning a zero-emissions new building plan — the ZEN plan,

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which staff will be taking to city council next month. It will outline building code updates and a rezoning policy for the next 10 to 15 years and lay out how single-family homes, as well as multi-family, commercial, industrial and institutional buildings can meet the new requirements. “There will both be incentives as part of that for leaders, along with regulation which will improve on a four-year basis,” he said. @naoibh

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

News CITY LIVING

Class of ’65 Lord Byng band still enjoys legion of fans Rebecca Blissett

rvblissett@gmail.com

The walls in Branch 142 of the West Point Grey Royal Canadian Legion are charmingly outdated with wood paneling, the ceiling hangs low with office tiles and fluorescent lights and the floor is equipped with pool and shuffle board tables. All those archaic features add up to one great neighbourhood rec room. “You won’t see many under 40 tonight,” noted Gord Walkinshaw as the crowd, many he knew on a first-name basis, lined up at the front door to pay the $5 cover Friday night. Walkinshaw plays keys for the Lord Byng Reunion Band, which is made up of five Class of ’65 graduates and one young ‘un, Gord’s brother Dave Walkinshaw, who graduated in 1973. “Just see how many people pull their cellphones out, there will be hardly any.” Walkinshaw knows his audience. While his six-piece crammed into the cave of the stage, which, inexplicably, had an unlit neon “open”

sign on the wall above, the worn vinyl seats filled. Old friends chattered and new introductions were made with cheap beers in hand instead of smartphones. Fellow graduates from the Lord Byng class of ’65 sat at the back of the room, acquainted with the band last June when they performed their first show at the school’s 50th reunion. Jeanine Ziolkoski and Peter Henley, who know Walkinshaw from the Kitsilano Yacht Club, sat near the pool table where players took short breaks from the game to play air guitar with their pool cues while the bands played. “We’ve been following Gord,” said Ziolokoski. “And wherever Gord goes, we follow!” “Class of ’65,” singer Jim Mutter said into the mic before the Lord Byng Reunion Band kicked into a cover of “This Diamond Ring” by Gary Lewis and the Playboys. “It was a great year to graduate. Houses were cheap and we were lucky in love” — the crowd responded with whoops — “well, not all of us. As they say in the old Westerns, enough talking!”

Mary Ann Mutter, far left, tore up the dance floor with friends during the Lord Byng Reunion Band’s show at the West Point Grey Royal Canadian Legion Friday night. See photo gallery at vancourier.com. PHOTO REBECCA BLISSETT

Two golden oldies in, and the dance floor was packed. Mutter and his wife Mary Ann’s friends from their West Side zumba class were easy to spot by their energy that would put people half their age to shame. As Ziolkoski and Henley danced, their gaze went to their table where their two Labrador retrievers, puppies in training for the Pacific Assistance Dogs Society, slept underneath. The Lord Byng Reunion

Band ended the first set of their first show this year with, appropriately, the number one song of 1965, Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs’ “Wooly Bully.” The collective stories in the building at the corner of West Broadway and Alma Streets are endless. The legion itself had humble beginnings in somebody’s West Side house before moving to its current location, which had to be rebuilt after a fire in 1971.

Stories of its veterans, many of whose uniforms and other artifacts from wars are in the legion’s display cases, were published in a book about Branch 142 in 1992. The musicians are a treasure of entertainment history, which is what happens when you’re 68 years old and you’ve been playing all your life. Walkinshaw’s career began after he was fired from Woodward’s department store in ’68. “Oh, I don’t know. Selling dope, probably. I had the long hair, bad attitude,” he laughed. “Sleeping on the job…” Walkinshaw joined Vancouver’s circuit of unionized nightclub musicians and often worked the noon ‘til 8 p.m. shift six nights a week at the Zanzibar, New Delhi, Smilin’ Buddha and an assortment of other independent strip clubs in town. There was no shortage of work for musicians thanks to the B.C. Liquor Control Board’s 1973 ruling that exotic dancers had to be accompanied by a three-piece orchestra. (The ruling didn’t last long, though, and taperecorded music put many

nightclub musicians out of work.) “Nobody wanted to be a rock star, we just wanted to play music,” Walkinshaw remembered. “We all knew each other, we subbed for each other, we’d just step up and play. There was no set list, no complicated P.A. system. You’d look around the room and see what mood everybody was in and what the dancers wanted to dance to, and that was your job.” He plays for a different sort of dancer these days, women such as 69-year-old Marianne Schmidt who wears a pedometer on her hip to log in the steps she takes on the floor. “Oh, I’ve known Gord since the 1970s. Gordie has a way of doing the songs that I love,” said Schmidt. “I just love to dance. I can’t stop. I do it at home, when I’m in a lineup… If I can’t really get into the music, then I don’t dance as wildly. I hear the music that I love so much then I can just let go. I don’t care what people think, or what they say.” @rebeccablissett

VSB Engagement THE FUTURE OF OUR FACILITIES The Vancouver School Board is seeking COMMUNITY INPUT on our interim Long Range Facilities Plan which sets high level goals and targets for 2030.

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T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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City Frame

MINI PROTEST

A large group of high school students, led by megaphonewielding Prince of Wales Grade 11 student Bryan Buraga, marched from the Vancouver School Board office on Fir Street to the Vancouver Art Gallery Friday morning protesting possible cuts to the mini-school program. PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

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The English Language Institute is recruiting English-speaking families to host students for its August 2016 short-term program. You must be willing to include students in daily family activities. Remuneration is $35 per night.

eli.ubc.ca/homestay 604.822.1536


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THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

Opinion ALLEN GARR COLUMNIST

agarr@vancourier.com

Assisted-death legislation will leave countless suffering

F

or those advocates fighting for medically assisted deaths since long before Sue Rodriguez became a national symbol of this struggle, last year’s Supreme Court decision in Carter V. Canada, created a tremendous burst of hope. The federal government — Harper’s Tories at the time — was ordered to rewrite legislation within a year to allow for medically assisted death that would comply with the Constitution and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

As the B.C. Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA) concluded: the bill “leaves out entire categories of suffering Canadians who should have a right to choose a safe and dignified assisted death.” As you know, Justin Trudeau’s Liberals came to power within that year and were granted a four-month extension. They struck an all-party parliamentary committee, including MPs and senators, to examine the issue and come back with recommendations. Following an exhaustive survey and a careful analysis of the Supreme Court decision, the committee produced a detailed and thoughtful report including 21 recommendations that only served to give advocates even more hope that their goal would be achieved. And then, last week, the Liberals introduced their bill, and that hope was replaced

PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

by despair. While the Liberals promised some progress would be made on improvements to palliative care, and the proposed legislation would shield medical practitioners including doctors, nurses and pharmacists from prosecution for their role in assisting in the act of dying, there was little else in which to take encouragement. As the B.C. Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA) concluded: the bill “leaves out entire categories of suffering Canadians who should have a right to choose a safe and dignified assisted death.” One great irony in the requirements of the Liberal legislation is that Kay Carter, a plaintive in this landmark decision by the court, would be excluded from legally seeking medically assisted death. The Liberal legislation — in spite of the parliamentary committee’s recommendations to the contrary — insists that for a recipient of this assistance to end their suffering, their natural death must be “reasonably foreseeable.” Actually what the Supreme Court required was simply “a grievous and irremediable medical condition (including an illness, disease or disability) that causes enduring suffering that is intolerable.” As the BCCLA notes, that would describe Kay Carter’s situation. She suffered from spinal stenosis and wasn’t going to die from that extremely painful illness. Death was not, however, reasonably foreseeable. She would simply go on in “intolerable and perhaps indefinite suffering.” The Section 7 Charter right of “life, liberty and security of the person,” raised by the Supreme Court — in spite of Liberal government claims to the contrary — has simply been ignored. In an attempt to avoid as much political risk as possible, the Liberals have kicked aside many of the committee’s recommendations. Those would include the recommendation that the legislation

allow for assistance to people who have a psychiatric condition — many people with mental illnesses are quite capable of making competent decisions. The committee also recommended that people be allowed to make an “advanced request” for a medically assisted death. That would serve folks who have been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s or dementia but are still in the early stages of a disease that would ultimately eliminate their ability to make decisions. You may recall the tragic case of Margaret Bentley who ended up with Alzheimer’s in an Abbotsford nursing home and whose family thought she had given advanced notice only to be thwarted in her request in a case opposed by the nursing home and the B.C. Government. One final issue: The committee recommended that following the “first stage” of the legislation dealing with “competent adults,” within three years it should include “competent mature minors.”

None of that was supported in the Liberal’s politically risk-averse bill. In fact, they don’t plan to even review the legislation for five years, well beyond their current mandate. And except for a possible revolt in the Senate, or among their own members of Parliament to amend the legislation, any challenges to the legislation because it violates either the Constitution or the Charter of Rights of individuals will mean a long a legal slog. Decisions that should more appropriately be made by a patient and a doctor will be back before the courts. Advocates like the BCCLA will have to seek out plaintiffs to represent and then start the challenge process all over again. Meanwhile, countless thousands of Canadians and their families will continue to suffer because of a Trudeau Liberal government that decided this issue was not their hill to die on. @allengarr


T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

Inbox letters@vancourier.com LETTERS

Baseball story and photo a hit Re: “Baseball: On this East Vancouver sandlot, everyone is a kid again,” April 14. As a community newspaper editor 40 years back — the redoubtable Surrey-Delta Messenger — I was reporter, columnist, photographer (using a Canon FT-b), compositer and paperboy delivering to all the local mom-and-pop grocery stores in the two communities. Covering the Kosmic Baseball League was a highlight of spring and summer editions of the paper we affectionately called the Mess. Most colourful local team was the Cloverdale Seagull Athletic Association whose slogan was “When a seagull s***s, it’s like a s*** from heaven.” The CSAA entered a float in the 1974 Cloverdale Rodeo Parade — a recently-used and quite fresh manure spreader they all crowded into after making room for their stashes of Uncle Ben’s canned beer. Fun as all that was — just as the funky EVBL will be a great hoot as well, based on Megan Stewart’s terrific feature — never once, not ever, did I catch a photo from the Seagull (slow-pitch) games as good as photographer Chung Chow’s front page capture of fast-pitch action. And the A-39 snap of the batter’s hands blurred frameleft in his f16 aperture setting of the pitcher and runner on second base — wow what slick stuff! I genuflect and admire for sure. Wm Baird Blackstone, Tsawwassen

ONLINE COMMENTS

Readers weigh in on Molson property sale Re: “Money talks... will Gregor listen?” April 13. If the site is to be maintained as industrial — just what sort of business do people really want to see in there anyway. Making beer is easy enough, there’s no noise and smokestacks. Very little of False Creek is industrial anymore. These aren’t barges and wharfs anymore, it’s waterfront property. It probably should be residential if there’s no industrial business to be had there anymore. No? Aaron Chapman via Facebook ••• Vancouver is expected to sacrifice its long-term residents and its economy all for the sake of private wealth. Enough of this lunacy. It’s time we start organizing against the perpetrators. It’s time for boycotts,

strikes, public information campaigns! It’s time to take our city back! JD Morden via Facebook ••• “They (city hall) also know that it is not in Vancouver’s job-creation interests to limit the term “industrial” to milling wood, making steel chain and producing cement.” Exactly. Re-purposed as a suite of high-tech offices with company sponsored housing surrounding it would create a great way to draw in skilled workers. Think outside the box - it’s the 21st century last I checked. Doug Farmer via Facebook ••• They have been plotting all this and getting people used to it for some time. The need for more housing and tech hub buzz statements have been dropped for some time. If you think there is anything that will stop it, you have not been paying attention to city hall’s games. We are only the taxpayers, we have no say. Time to accept Vancouver has been taken over by the developers thanks to Gregor and the gang. Yvonne Williams via Facebook ••• No doubt in my mind that Concord will get what they want. Vickie Squire Pynn via Facebook

Rent out of shape Re: “City of Vancouver wades into heated short-term rentals debate,” April 11. Real estate agent Zul Jiwa and various members of his family have turned a residential condo building into a hotelrental business, something that was not thought of when the condo was built and sold to people interested in living in a condo building. His takeover of the condo board shows how a condo corporation can be a battleground between private small-time business interests and owner-occupants. Not allowing owners to see documents or holding an AGM show how much power a condo board has and can abuse. This could make the condo a very toxic environment. There are condos in downtown Toronto that have dozens of units listed as short-term rentals. The new condo declarations allow it. Some condos are 2/3 long-term rental (1 year leases) and the remainder owner-occupants and hotel suites. One huge condo near the CN tower is 85% rented. It is all up to the city councillors to pass new bylaws. Only they have the power to control this. Condo Madness via Online Comments

PLANT SALE

Saturday April 23rd and Sunday April 24th, 2016

Assorted Organic Vegetables

Spring Mix Hanging Basket 14" Pot

606 pack

3.49 each

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EDITORIAL NEWSROOM

604.738.1411 FLYER SALES

Dee Dhaliwal

Michael Kissinger

ddhaliwal@vancourier.com

mkissinger@vancourier.com

PUBLISHER

CITY EDITOR

Tara Lalanne

DIRECTOR SALES & MARKETING

tlalanne@vancourier.com

The Vancouver Courier is a division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership. Canadian Publications Mail Sales Product Agreement No. 40025215. All material in the Vancouver Courier is copyrighted and cannot be reproduced without permission of the publisher. This newspaper reserves the right to reject any advertising which it considers to contain false or misleading information or involves unfair or unethical practices. The advertiser agrees the publisher shall not be liable for damages arising out of error in any advertisement beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. We collect, use and disclose your personal information in accordance with our Privacy Statement which is available at vancourier.com. The Vancouver Courier is a member of the National Newsmedia Council, which is an independent organization established to deal with acceptable journalistic practices and ethical behaviour. If you have concerns about editorial content, please contact editor@vancourier.com by email or phone 604-738-1411. If you are not satisfied with the response and wish to file a formal complaint, visit the web site at mediacouncil.ca or call toll-free 1-844-877-1163 for additional information.

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/Choices_Markets

Sale prices only effective on April 23 and 24, 2016. Plus applicable taxes. While quantities last, supply not available at all store locations. Weather permitting.

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Abbotsford

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

Prices in Effect: Friday Apr. 22, 2016 – Thursday Apr. 28, 2016

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Stong’s current location at 4560 Dunbar is closing on May 10, 2016, but we’re coming home soon! Our new store at 27th and Dunbar will open this Winter 2016. For more information and news, visit stongs.com. Conceptual renderings of Stong’s North Woods location.


T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

A13

News

Paramedics question firefighters’ use of Narcan Mike Howell

mhowell@vancourier.com

The union representing ambulance paramedics is questioning how the provincial government allowed Vancouver and Surrey firefighters to begin injecting a life-saving drug into overdose victims. Bronwyn Barter, provincial president of the Ambulance Paramedics of B.C., said the union was not properly consulted about the type of training for firefighters to administer naloxone, the protocols for handing off a patient at a scene or the medical evidence showing the need for firefighters to use the medication. “I know a lot of people would like to characterize this as a turf war, when really there’s more going on, in our view, with the way that this was handled,” Barter told the Courier. “When we normally do something like this — when we add a protocol or something — there’s some work done to make sure everybody is safe, the patient’s safe, the people using the protocol are safe. And this never happened with this issue.” In January, the B.C. government announced that firefighters in Vancouver and Surrey could use a syringe to inject naloxone, or Narcan, into overdose victims. The government, via a ministerial order from Health Minister Terry Lake, also expanded

the number of paramedics certified to use the medication, which quickly reverses the effects of opiods such as heroin and fentanyl on the body by restoring breathing within two to three minutes. That announcement came after the B.C. Coroners Service released a report the same month showing 474 people died in B.C. last year of an apparent illicit drug overdose, which was an increase of 27 per cent from the 366 people who died in 2014. So far, Vancouver firefighters have administered naloxone nine times, and their counterparts in Surrey used it eight times, said Vancouver Fire Chief John McKearney, noting 230 of his firefighters are trained to inject the medication. “At the street level, I’m told by my staff that it’s positive, it’s not negative,” said McKearney of the firefighters’ relationship with paramedics when using naloxone. “In fact, there were a couple of instances where paramedics have arrived on scene where we hadn’t yet administered naloxone and they’ve said, ‘You just go ahead and keep doing it.’ So it’s working out quite well.” Linda Lupini, executive vice-president of the Provincial Health Services Society and B.C. Emergency Health Services, said she met with Barter and the union’s executive team in June of last year

Vancouver firefighters have administered naloxone, or Narcan, nine times since they were given the go-ahead in January from the provincial government to use the life-saving drug on overdose victims. PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

to discuss firefighters using naloxone. Lupini said the rationale for firefighters being equipped with naloxone was in reaction to the spike in overdose drug deaths. She noted Vancouver and Surrey account for more than 80 per cent of overdose drug deaths and that firefighters in Metro Vancouver are the first to respond to emergency calls 70 per cent of the time. Prior to firefighters using the medication, Lupini said, the B.C. Centre for Disease Control trained more than 6,000 people, including shelter workers, drug users and other health care workers on how to administer naloxone. The medication is also avail-

able in 160 clinics and is no longer a prescription drug. “It’s understandable that [the paramedics’ union] prefer to have an increased head count in their own union with their own paramedics doing this work,” Lupini said. “But we have to look at this crisis and we have to say the most important thing to look at here is saving lives.” Added Lupini: “The ambulance paramedics of B.C. are probably not ever going to support an expanding role for firefighter first responders. Because, in their defence, they want more paramedics, so that they can always get to the scene first.” Barter wouldn’t provide a

yes or no answer to the Courier when asked whether her union supported firefighters being equipped with naloxone, saying, “They’re doing it now. It is what it is.” Barter said she was never informed by B.C. Emergency Health Services about the ministerial order that allowed firefighters to use naloxone. Although Lupini said she sent Barter a text around Christmas time informing her of the order, Barter said she never received it. “In the past when there’s been a ministerial order, there’s been a lot of collaboration, it’s had the interested parties, it’s had firefighters at the table, it’s had the paramedics at the table, they involved the politicians,” Barter said. “But something was off about this ministerial order. It feels like there was a bit of a cart before the horse.” In a letter she wrote to Vancouver city council last week, Barter cited the World Health Organization’s recommendation for managing an opiod overdose. It says the primary focus should be “to address respiration and oxygenation,” including assisted ventilation with rescue breathing or bag and mask with supplemental oxygen. “These are skills that first responders already have,” she wrote. “There is no evidence to indicate that patients in Vancouver died on scene as a result of naloxone not being

given by fire first responders.” She said administering naloxone to a chronic drug user can bring on symptoms of withdrawal, including a patient becoming combative, a rapid and significant change in blood pressure, increased heart rate and heart failure. “A first responder has limited skills to adequately manage a patient experiencing sudden withdrawal symptoms,” she said in her letter. That letter was read to council by paramedic Sophia Georgas, who is the union’s executive government liaison. Georgas raised concerns about how such a move by government to allow firefighters to administer naloxone could be seen as downloading costs and services on city taxpayers. The cost of each ampoule of naloxone for Vancouver firefighters was $1.86. A complete kit, which includes retractable syringes, is under $5. All training, except for the initial instructor training done by Dr. William Dick of emergency health services, was done in-house. Vancouver Police Chief Adam Palmer has told the Courier that he is interested in having his officers using the nasal spray form of naloxone, once it becomes available and is approved by Health Canada. Police departments in the United States use both the nasal spray and syringes. @Howellings

Health officer fears drug deaths could exceed 700 this year Mike Howell

mhowell@vancourier.com

B.C.’s health officer has declared a public health emergency in reaction to the increasing number of overdose drug deaths in the province that he says are on pace to exceed 700 by the end of the year. Dr. Perry Kendall said the extraordinary step taken by his office will allow medical health officers throughout the province to collect more real-time information from various authorities to better prevent overdoses and overdose deaths. That exercise will involve compiling data from hospital emergency rooms, paramedics, firefighters, police, health authorities, the B.C. Coroners Service and others involved in drug treatment and harm reduction services. “This is, frankly, a crisis,” said Kendall at a news conference April 14 in Victoria, where he was joined

by Health Minister Terry Lake and deputy provincial health officer Bonnie Henry. “These deaths have a serious impact on public health and the numbers are unusual and unexpected, which is the criteria for declaring such an emergency under the Public Health Act.” Having current information on a spate of overdoses, or deaths, or type of drug involved, will help enhance efforts by outreach workers and other health care providers to identify patterns and target individuals and communities affected by overdose, he said, noting the logistics of collecting the data will be done over the days and weeks ahead. The health minister noted there is a “lag time” in accessing information on overdose deaths. Lake said data received is primarily related to deaths and not overdoses, many of which have been linked to fentanyl, a synthetic narcotic 50 to 100 times more powerful than heroin.

More than 200 deaths this year

Kendall pointed out overdose drug deaths have climbed steadily in B.C. in the past six years. In 2010, there were 211 deaths. That increased to 474 last year, with 121 recorded in Vancouver. About one-third of total deaths were linked to fentanyl. More than 200 overdose deaths were recorded in the first three months of this year. “At this rate, the total for 2016 could exceed 700, or even 800,” he said, noting the increases occurred despite what he described as “heroic” efforts by public health officials, emergency services workers, health providers and organizers of drug awareness campaigns. Lake also recognized the efforts of health workers and highlighted the success of the B.C. Centre for Disease Control-led naloxone program, which has “reversed” 500 overdoses in the

province since 2012. More than 6,800 people are trained to administer naloxone, a medication that quickly reverses the effects of opiods such as heroin and fentanyl on the body by restoring breathing within two to three minutes. Some of those trained work in shelters and are members of drug users’ advocacy groups. Vancouver and Surrey firefighters began administering naloxone this year and have used it a total of 17 times. The number of paramedics certified to use naloxone was also expanded this year. “But while we’ve had great successes with our harm reduction strategies, the recent surge in overdoses and deaths over the last couple of years, really, is a huge concern for us,” Lake said. “And we have to do what’s needed to prevent future overdoses.”

Chief coroner’s statement

B.C.’s chief coroner, Lisa

Lapointe, issued a statement last Thursday, saying she was encouraged by Kendall’s “additional focus on addressing the increasing numbers of overdoses we are seeing throughout the province, both fatal and non-fatal.” Lapointe said data related to deaths is routinely shared with the coroners service’s public safety partners to support death and injury prevention measures. She said the coroners service will continue to provide such information, including results of toxicology tests in suspected overdose deaths, in “a timely manner.” “We will also continue to work with our law enforcement, health, child welfare, First Nations Health Authority and education partners to look for ways to reduce the number of people dying from illicit drug use,” she said. Vancouver Police Chief Adam Palmer welcomed Kendall’s announcement and said his department will share what information it can

to help reduce overdoses and drug deaths. “The VPD has very robust analytical capability, so when information requests come in — as long as it’s a lawful request — then we’re happy to help our health authorities and provide information to them,” said Palmer, noting his officers have conducted recent investigations in which they targeted drug dealers selling fentanyl and launched public drug awareness campaigns. “In the past, we’ve always provided information on deaths as a result of an overdose, as opposed to an overdose where somebody survives. So that’s the type of data that they’re going to be looking at.” The VPD announced in February that officers investigated 11 deaths in a 16-day stretch believed to be a result of a drug overdose. Typically, two to three people per week die of a drug overdoses in Vancouver, the police said at the time.


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THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

Opinion Northeast False Creek Stewardship Group and Park Design Advisory Group Submit Your Application The City of Vancouver and Vancouver Park Board are planning the future of Northeast False Creek and you could be part of it. We’re looking for committee members for a Stewardship Group and a Park Design Advisory Group to help us create a vibrant, sustainable new neighbourhood for everyone in the city. Committee members are selected through the City of Vancouver’s and Vancouver Park Board’s public selection process, and will be chosen to provide advice and insight. Submit your application online at: vancouver.ca/NEFC-committees

10th Avenue Health Precinct: Design Options

The City is planning to improve the 10th Avenue Corridor to better accommodate people walking and cycling for all ages and abilities. Building on what we heard from you at public open houses held last fall, we have focused our initial efforts on developing options for the Health Precinct, the portion of the 10th Avenue Corridor between Oak and Yukon Streets.

We want to hear from you! Join us at an open house.

Applications are due Friday, May 20, 2016 by 4 pm.

About the Stewardship Group The Northeast False Creek Stewardship Group will bring a broad variety of perspectives to the planning process and advise City staff in securing and maintaining the vision set out in the Northeast False Creek Conceptual Plan and approved in the Removal of Viaducts Report (2015) for a new neighbourhood and major waterfront park. The committee will have up to 15 appointed community members.

About the Park Design Advisory Group The Northeast False Creek Park Design Advisory Group will provide input on the design of the new park and open spaces in NEFC. The group will help to ensure a balanced approach to park uses, as part of a thoughtful and comprehensive design process; provide feedback to the project team (Park Board staff, City staff and consultant team) on the approach and progress of community engagement; and encourage public education and contribution in the design of the park and open spaces. The committee will have 10 to 12 appointed community members. FOR DETAILS AND TERMS OF THE APPLICATION PROCESS: vancouver.ca/NEFC-committees The City of Vancouver reserves the right to suspend or terminate its call for applications at any time without further explanation or notification; however, if the process is suspended or terminated the City will attempt to notify all applicants directly and will issue a public update. The City assumes no legal duty or obligation to any applicant and does not owe any duty of care, fairness or impartiality in the selection process. The City may accept or reject any or all applications without providing reasons. Subject to the applicable provisions of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (British Columbia) and other applicable legal requirements, the City will treat the information provided by each applicant in confidence. Each applicant consents to the City contacting any references named by the applicant.

These meetings will be drop-in open house format. City staff will be available to discuss the project, answer questions and gather your feedback. Saturday, April 23, 2016 11 am – 3 pm and Tuesday, April 26, 2016 12 noon – 8 pm Both open houses at: Park Inn and Suites 898 West Broadway (at Laurel Street) You can also learn more, view the display boards and complete a feedback form online at vancouver.ca/10th-avenue FOR MORE INFORMATION: Phone: 3-1-1 or 10thavenue@vancouver.ca

RAIN BARREL SALE! Quench the thirst of your plants with free water from a rain barrel. Water collected in rain barrels provides a source of chlorine-free, ambient temperature water which is a great drink for a happy garden.

$51 – Pre-order today at vancouver.ca/rainbarrel Drop-ins welcome, pre-ordering advised but not required.

Four special sales dates: Saturday, April 30, 10 am - 3 pm City of Vancouver, VanDusen Garden (driveway off of Oak Street) Sunday, May 1, 10 am - 3 pm City of Coquitlam, Mariner Service Centre 500 Mariner Way

Saturday, May 7, 10 am - 3 pm North Shore, Ambleside Park Sunday, May 8, 9 am - 3 pm City of Langley, Willowbrook Shopping Centre (intersection of Fraser Highway and No. 10 Highway)

Cut a fully grown white carnation stem (at an angle is best) and put it in a glass of rain barrel water. Put a few drops of food colouring into the water. Over the next few days the carnation will change colour!

Visit: vancouver.ca Phone: 3-1-1 TTY: 7-1-1

Politicians known for company they keep Geoff Olson

geoffolson.com

“You are known by the company you keep.” That adage sure holds true in politics. In 2008, Barack Obama was swept into the Oval Office on a mass wave of “hope and change.” Over the next two terms he spent down his political capital through serial concessions to the GOP, the deportation of more than two million undocumented immigrants, the failure to close Guantanamo Bay as promised, and a major expansion of both the U.S. surveillance state and Bush’s legacy of undeclared wars through special ops and drone strikes. Oh, and the Nobel Peace Prize winner also presided over the prosecution of more whistleblowers than all previous U.S. presidents in total. Yet, Obummer failed to jail a single principal behind the 2008 subprime mortgage bubble and financial collapse. This is no surprise considering those who rode his coattails into the White House, including Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, previously president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and former Freddie Mac board member Rahm Emanuel, who served as White House Chief of Staff. Former hedge fund manager Lawrence Summers was a key advisor on handling the post-2008 recession. Other Wall Street-friendly staffers seamlessly made the transition from the Bush to Obama administration. Whether or not his declared intention to take on the “fat cats” of Wall Street was disingenuous from the get go, Obama and his circle ensured a few big banks would face billions in fines but no serious regulatory actions, much less individual prosecution. On to Donald Trump. Whether or not he remains the GOP’s in-house incendiary device and/or Hillary-abetting sideshow, millions of Americans persist in believing that a self-promoting businessman will upend business as usual in Washington. All they have to support this peculiar notion is Trump’s narcissism, which appears to preclude any talent for Beltway team-playing. Based on Drumpf’s evermutating remarks on foreign policy, many of his supporters believe he will pull the U.S. out of foreign entanglements, or at least make allies shell out for the courtesy. Yet the reality TV star’s thuggish intentions may be signalled in his selection of former

Pentagon Inspector General Joseph E. Schmitz as a key foreign policy advisor. Schmitz was forced out of the Pentagon over accusations he was blocking investigations of corruption by Bush administration officials involving defence contracts. This is not the sort of guy who is going to petition against endless wartime profiteering and get a “you’re fired” from Drumpf in response. As for the chickenhawk Democratic contender and former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, it would be naïve to believe her circle won’t be thick with banksterenablers, corporate lobbyists, and warriors for Empire. Bill Clinton’s former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright recently stated that there is “a special place in hell” for women who don’t electorally support the former First Lady. This was the same Albright who once offered a jaw-dropping response to reporter Lesley Stahl about U.S. sanctions against Iraq. “We have heard that a half million children have died. I mean, that’s more children than died in Hiroshima. And, you know, is the price worth it?” Stahl asked Albright in a 1996 60 Minutes segment. “I think this is a very hard choice, but the price — we think the price is worth it,” she responded. Meanwhile in B.C., our Premier has made some interesting new friends. “Dozens of frightened refugees have been given political asylum by B.C. Premier Christy Clark, after losing all they held dear in their homelands,” comments Bill Tieleman in The Tyee, based on a story that first broke in Pacific Political Report. Tieleman isn’t talking about Syrians, but rather former members of defeated governments in Ottawa and Alberta. Trailing accusations of wrongdoing behind them, a number of former Harperites have found high-paid jobs in Clark’s government. Perversely, much of their work will be helping guide the B.C. Liberals into victory in 2017. That’s Brutish Columbian politics for you: members of a neocon government flushed down the Rideau Canal wash up on the shores of Victoria, where they do their Walking Dead routine up the legislature steps. Remember, you are known by the company you keep, Christy. On second thought, forget about it for now. Leave it to voters to remind you in 2017.

J


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T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

Opinion

Support for shared housing vital to Vancouver’s future Jessica Barrett

Jessica.Barrett@gmail.com

I woke up on a recent Sunday morning to an unusual invitation. “Lol. My friend wants to know if we want to go to a mansion party in Shaughnessy,” read the text. “He says there’s a bar, and a pool, and workshops, and a bar!” I already had plans and thus had to turn down the invite, but, curiosity piqued, I met up with my friend later for the low-down. Mansion parties in Shaughnessy are a thing now, apparently. But they’re not being hosted by nouveau riche boogeymen buoyed by foreign capital. Rather a different kind of resident is populating these sprawling abodes and breathing new life into the near ghost-town of a neighbourhood. This particular house was shared among 20 people who found, in one of city’s ritziest neighbourhoods, a rather ingenious affordable housing opportunity. Together, they could easily afford the $10,000 monthly rent while enjoying much more living space than they could ever hope to afford individually. (Then there’s the added perk of mansion living in that you’re so far away from your neighbours that throwing an all-day rager barely registers.) Of course, young people embracing communal living to cut down on costs is an old story. In Vancouver, anyone under 40 is by necessity an expert at figuring out

alternative housing arrangements. Compared to some of the other home-spun solutions I’ve come across — such as repurposing “extra” space like bathrooms into bedrooms, or living in one’s van — getting comfy with a double-digit number of roommates is definitely one of the better options. The trouble is, our culture and our systems aren’t set up to support this style of shared housing in any official capacity. In fact, they’re often hostile to it. A friend who shares a rental house in Strathcona with his partner and three other roommates, all professionals in their late 20s and 30s, reports that the relationship challenges of living in a high-volume household pale in comparison to navigating bureaucracies built for a culture clinging by its fingernails to a selfcontained mode living. An example: when the fridge began bursting at the seams, he and his housemates were able to settle on a system of buying bulk, farm fresh eggs in order to conserve both money and kitchen space. But when they went shopping for tenants’ insurance, they couldn’t find any financial institution willing to insure a home with so many unrelated adults. The verdict was that the home was too insecure with so many people coming and going. When Vancouver’s first co-housing development opened in March, it provided a great example of citizens taking matters into their own

hands and investing in a long-term community rather than simple equity. Unfortunately, by the time the owners completed four years of negotiation and planning, the price tag for larger, family-friendly units came in at nearly $800,000, putting them squarely out of reach of most young families. That’s really a shame, since this is a group that is all too happy to swap square-footage for the chance to put down roots in Vancouver, as long as they have access to the amenities that are often neglected in multi-unit dwellings: gardens, outdoor children’s play spaces, storage, and workshops — not to mention a ground-oriented layout that’s conducive to actual interaction with neighbours. People are desperate for this, it’s why waitlists for the city’s aging housing co-ops are years long and landing a spot in one is akin to winning the lottery. For a population increasingly fine-tuning exit strategies, a degree of communal living and common space can mean the difference between a viable future in Vancouver or not. But this is a detail not high on the lists for developers, nor the city, which has just released a new plan for an affordable home ownership program that seems heavily slanted toward segmented, condominium-style living. Nor are community-oriented designs, such as townhouses, welcome in many of Vancouver’s single-family neigh-

dreams of owning a house. At the same time, we’re faced with the pervasive expectation that we will one day grow up, grow out of the “roommate phase,” and move heaven and earth to secure a postagestamp piece of real estate that doesn’t meet our needs. Those who envision a form of communal living not as a sacrifice, but as a desirable

bourhoods, where any form of density is automatically met with vehement protest. As the affordability crisis tightens its grip on Vancouver, a glaring hypocrisy has emerged. We are told the era of single-family housing is over and gone, yet it is only my generation that is constantly, and condescendingly, counselled to abandon our

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A16

THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

Community TALK OF THE BLOCK

Churches feel the squeeze in city’s hot real estate market Downsizing, redeveloping and renting — just some of the ways churches try to afford Vancouver

Urban planning

Christopher Cheung

bychrischeung@gmail.com

For Valerie Weinert, life happened at church. She remembers learning about God in the gym during Sunday school. She remembers saying her wedding vows at the front of the stained-glassed sanctuary. She remembers longtime friends who have passed away. Weinert was born in 1948. She attended Oakridge United Church growing up, six blocks east from her family’s duplex on Cambie and 46th. But development is coming to the site, and the church building of nearly seven decades will be demolished. “It’s like any family home,” said Weinert. “You lose a family home and you remember all the good times you’ve had. Even when you’ve got all the memories, it’s still a sad thing.” Weinert remembers having to sit in the basement with her parents whenever they were late for big Christmas and Easter. They had to listen to the service from a pipe because the upstairs was packed. There isn’t that kind of attendance today. There are now 60 regular churchgoers, most over 50 years of age. That’s why the United

1. Holy Realtors’ Leonardo Di Francesco and Rav Rampuri have been selling religious properties together for 21 years, everything from churches to temples to mosques, and they’ve seen the market heat up like never before. 2. Valerie Weinert (foreground), Cheryl Entwistle, Dorothy Briggs and Josie Fesenmaier regularly attend Oakridge United Church, which has decided to redevelop the site in partnership with a developer. Fifty-eight condos will be built, and the congregation will meet in a smaller space in the building. PHOTOS DAN TOULGOET

Church has decided to redevelop the site in partnership with a developer. Fifty-eight condos will be built, and the congregation will meet in a smaller space in the building.

Holy rollers

Just like how Vancouverites are hard-pressed for housing solutions in the expensive city, churches have also been forced to get creative with the space they have. After all, their land is worth millions.

Oakridge Lutheran a block away is also partnering with a developer to downsize and bring in housing units. Downtown’s Coastal Church made a deal with developers who put Vancouver’s tallest tower — the 62-storey Shangri-La Hotel — on the property beside the church building. In exchange, they got a $4.4-million renovation. “Real estate is real estate at the end of the day,” said Rav Rampuri. He and his partner

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Leonardo Di Francesco are the Holy Realtors. They’ve been selling religious properties together for 21 years, everything from churches to temples to mosques, and they’ve seen the market heat up like never before. The Holy Realtors used to have up to seven properties for sale a time. No one has that many listings today. As soon as a reasonablypriced church is on the market, it’s snapped up. Some groups don’t even care if a building is from a different faith. A Buddhist monastery once purchased the art deco Salvation Army Temple at Hastings and Gore. A mosque took over a Chinese Mennonite church near Commercial and Broadway. And if another religious group doesn’t snap up the property, a developer usually will. “The value of the land outweighs the capacities of some groups to buy them,” said Rampuri. On the East Side, churches sell for about $2 million and up. On the West Side, about $5 million and up. “I’m not a big fan of development — me and Leo love to sell buildings to maintain the church status — but my manager said to me earlier: God also renovates.”

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Vancouver’s churches are not all decades-old neighbourhood establishments. There are many young churches too, and like young residents in the city, they can’t afford to buy, only rent. Young churches

have also had to get creative with their options. Renting churches have sung their hallelujahs at the Hollywood Theatre on West Broadway, the Rickshaw Theatre on East Hastings, the gym of Charles Dickens elementary, Granville Island’s Arts Club, the Empire Landmark Hotel, UBC Robson Square, the central library and even the nightclub AuBAR. Dennis Wilkinson was a pastor who wanted to start a new church in the city. He came to Vancouver from Winnipeg in 2011 with the vision for a neighbourhood-oriented church in the West End. Friends warned him that not everyone in the West End was friendly towards churches and it would be hard to find an affordable space to rent, not to mention a nearby home for his family of six. While the West End has the city’s largest concentration of artists, it’s also known for its lack of community venues. “You have to be really creative if you’re going to come into a city with a family and a faith,” said Wilkinson. The church, Meta Communities, doesn’t meet in an actual church building every week, but it’s helped with their outreach. They use Wilkinson’s threebedroom home, the West End’s playgrounds and pubs and even picnics and barbecues to meet the neighbours. Their core members number 30, but community events often have up to 150 attendees.

The sheer cost of Vancouver might beg the question of why churches are choosing to start in the city rather than the suburbs. One answer lies in religion’s decline. More than a quarter of Canadians said they had no religious affiliation in the 2011 National Household Survey. In Metro Vancouver, the share of unreligious is even higher at 41 per cent. The liberal mindedness of North America’s west coast is known for being more resistant to religion. For this very reason, Mark Burch says that’s why church “plants” such as Meta Communities are targeting cities. Burch is the national associate director of C2C, a Canada-wide network that supports church planters — individuals who see the need for a new church in a neighbourhood and usually begin in a grassroots way by meeting in homes or renting. “For years churches moved away from the cities,” said Burch. “They would maybe sell a building in the urban core and move out to the suburbs and buy a chunk of land. Churches have typically done better in rural than in suburban locations. But in the last 10, 15 years, there’s been a bunch of planters coming back to the urban core saying, hey, we gotta reach our cities.”

Loss of heritage

Whether sharing, rezoning or renting will be the saviour of churches in increasingly expensive Vancouver, it’s likely that a few, rare buildings will be lost along the way. Oakridge United was included on Heritage Vancouver’s list of top endangered sites last year. Another church, Kerrisdale Baptist, made the list the year before. Eleven religious properties have been demolished since 2000, according to city data. “I will be one of those who weep when the building goes down,” said Oakridge United’s Rev. Neill McCrae. The congregation has until the end of the year to say goodbye — goodbye to the cornerstone, goodbye to the bell tower, goodbye to the sanctuary, goodbye to another house in Vancouver. @bychrischeung


T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

SCHEDULE EVENTS PERFORMER

Most events take place Saturday. Check the list carefully for location and time. Most events are located along West 41st between Larch and Maple Streets and North and South Yew Street.

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DATE

TIME

LOCATION

Bell-E-Buttons Balloon Animals

Friday Saturday

12-4 pm 12-4pm

Roving

Face Painter & Balloons

Friday Saturday

12-4pm 12-4pm

RBC Royal Bank 2208 West 41st

Soul Survivors

Friday Saturday

12-4pm 12-4pm

Under the Clock- 41st and Yew West 41st and East Boulevard

Balloons

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City Vancouver Academy 2448 West 41st

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12-4pm

North Yew Street and West 41st

Balloons

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Balloons

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CIBC 2288 West 41st

Face Painter

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Kerrisdale Pharmacy 5591 West Boulevard

Kerrisdale Legion Branch 30 Information Table

Saturday

All Day

North Yew Street and West 41st

Pancho & Sal

Saturday

12-4pm

CIBC 2288 West 41st

Roving Bands

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Roving

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Maple to Larch Streets along West 41st

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North Yew Street and West 41st

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12- 4pm

On stage at North Yew Street and West 41st

Balloons

Fri. & Sat.

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Luxor Hair Salon 2173 West 41st

Balloons

Fri. & Sat.

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Hills of Kerrisdale 2125 West 41st

Huge Inflatable Slide & Balloons

Saturday

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Provident Security South Yew Street and West 41st

Dixie Land Band

Fri & Sat.

12-2pm

Roving


T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

A19

Let’s do coffee

Comfortable shoes? Check. Credit cards? Check. Caffeine to fuel your shopping spree? Not yet? Sandra Thomas sthomas@vancourier.com

Well, here are just a few suggestions for grabbing a quick cup of coffee on the go or sitting over a leisurely latte while spending a day power shopping or real estate perusing in Kerrisdale. ROCANINI COFFEE ROASTERS The Kerrisdale location of this popular café offers handcrafted coffee brewed from beans roasted at their Mount Pleasant roastery. Besides coffee, this 30-seat eatery offers pastries, sandwiches and chocolate.

BEAN BROTHERS CAFÉ BISTRO A fixture in the heart of Kerrisdale for almost two decades, Bean Brothers is a home-style bistro great for a cup of coffee, baked goods, wood stone baked pizza, paninis and more.

FAUBOURG This French-inspired café is right at home within the old world charm of Kerrisdale. Besides its high-quality coffee beans and decadent pastries, Faubourg has introduced an afternoon tea, which launches this month.

CAFFÉ ARTIGIANO The goal of Caffé Artigiano is to create and distribute an exceptional product all day, every day. Caffé Artigiano sources high quality beans from coffee growing countries and then roasts them to its distinct flavour profile.

HOURS:

HOURS:

6am–9pm

HOURS:

HOURS:

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2179 West 41st Ave. 604-559-9080 beanbrotherscafe.com

ADDRESS:

5631 West Boulevard 604-428-5631 rocanini.com

Monday–Friday: 7am–6pm Saturday–Sunday: 8am–6pm ADDRESS:

2156 West 41st Ave. 604-266-2156 faubourg.com

6am–6pm ADDRESS:

2154 West 41st Ave. 604-267-1008 caffeartigiano.com

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A20

THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

‘Quaint Kerrisdale’ Once sleepy neighbourhood attracting younger, hipper crowd Nathan Caddell NathanCaddell@cmail.carleton.ca James Iranzad wears collared shirts inside tailored suit jackets. His thick-rimmed glasses sit on a head that sports a trendy fade haircut and a full beard. In short, the 39-year-old is exactly the kind of person you wouldn’t expect to find in Kerrisdale. The sleepy neighbourhood has long been known as a destination for older residents, young families and Asian migrants. But Iranzad and his business partner, Josh Pape, aimed to bring some youth back to the area when they started Bufala, a trendy pizzeria with a liquor license. The two had already established Wildebeest in Gastown, and when they looked for their

next location, settled on the West Side. “We like to think against the grain a little bit,” says Iranzad inside the brick encrusted walls that surround Wildebeest. “If everybody’s saying not to do something and everybody isn’t doing something, well that’s a good time to consider doing it.” Many regarded Bufala as the exception, not the rule. But since the pizzeria’s inception nearly two years ago, a strange thing started happening: Kerrisdale has started getting trendy.

There’s the new ramen place in the storefront that Thomas Hobbs Florist occupied for 23 years. On the other side of the same street, a new pho restaurant has picked up where the Avenue Grill left off. Meanwhile, Minverva’s sprawled out into the vacated Art’s Place to establish a new wine bar, Barra 41. It all screams a new era for the tree-lined district. When Sasha Teller-Sawyer and her boyfriend decided to move in together, they weighed their options. Teller-Sawyer, 27, a nursing student at BCIT, was moving

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Mother’s Day Brunch Buffet Sunday, May 8th, 11:00 am to 2:00 pm Entertainment by Blackthorn Tree-O - 11:30 am to 1:00 pm Adults $28* (*excluding wine & spirits) Children 12 & Under $12 Reservations required by May 6th

604.240.8550

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T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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changing quickly

from a house on Main Street that she occupied with a few friends. Her boyfriend works in Richmond. Kerrisdale seemed like a good compromise.

“It’s funny because initially all my girlfriends were like ‘Oh Kerrisdale? Why would you choose to live in Kerrisdale, there’s nothing going on there,’” she recalls. “But personally, I live right on East Boulevard, and I’m really into nature and trees and quiet. Like I would never live downtown, that’s not my thing. So to me, Kerrisdale has a little of that quiet, quaint feel to it. She also appreciates the new businesses, though, in particular applauding Barra 41. “We’ve actually been there, we’ve tried it out a couple times and it’s chill,” she says. “It’s got sort of the old person and young

person vibe to it, so it’s really great that way. And it’s sort of a minimalized menu, more burgers and stuff, and it’s cool, they have a young, hip staff and it’s updated. It’s not like Minerva’s where it’s like old-school Greek. Which is still great, I love Minerva’s.” Boris Zugic and Vanessa Singleton had a similar decision to make. Wanting to leave their apartment in Railtown, the two found themselves considering Kerrisdale. Zugic, who’d grown up in the area was originally opposed.

Singleton, however, had gone to high school downtown, but grown up on Bowen Island. Kerrisdale reminded her of the island life. It’s a little bit like being on an island or in the country,” says Singleton, a UBC student. “All this green space, I really like it. And

it’s really close to UBC, so much closer than where we were living before. There’s just so much space here.”

Even Zugic, 27, has come around. “They do have that hipster coffee joint there now, next to Subway. And right next to that is the designer mattress place,” he says. “Kerrisdale is definitely hipper.” It was also a homecoming for Iranzad. He attended school at Kerrisdale elementary and Prince of Wales secondary. It was about going back and providing his old neighbourhood with some much-needed flavour: “But there’s always been very little there and it’s always been more lunch oriented. Like OK, you go grab a sandwich at [Caffe] Artigiano. You go to dim sum, or you grab some cheap sushi. There’s a

James Iranzad and his business partner, Josh Pape, opened the popular pizzeria Bufala in Kerridale nearly two years ago. PHOTOS: DAN TOULGOET

million sushi places.”

There’s tons of young people around Kerrisdale and it’s the quaint little village that it is and I like that about it.”

He continues, his soft voice ebbing and flowing until he makes an emphatic point. “But there’s a lot of people that live there, you know. There are young families, there’s a ton of elementary schools that are full. Which means that it’s not just everyone’s idea of a retirement community.

Corridor, which the city announced it had purchased from CP Rail for $55 million. The corridor, which runs right through Kerrisdale, has been designated as a “public thoroughfare” for transportation and greenways for walking and cycling and perhaps light transit. But the lure of condos will be tempting. Only time will tell.

It may not be quaint for too much longer. With all the changes and the high rent prices everywhere else, there could be an influx of people into the West Side. There’s also the changing nature of the Arbutus

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

Community

Vancouver Courier and PlaceSpeak are asking you about your city

Share your opinion and still protect your private information Megan Stewart

mstewart@vancourier.com

The Courier will be using PlaceSpeak to poll residents on community issues and engage with readers. PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

The City of Vancouver routinely asks residents what they think about changes to their neighbourhoods: a highrise planned for the corner intersection, changes to a

bike route, the future of the viaducts, an expanded skate park, and so on. Seeking feedback from residents, who are part of that larger group of stakeholders, these issues reach them through the post by targeting home addresses. City staff can cite

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limited public consultation as reasons to delay or advance civic projects since not everyone responds to a pamphlet they picked out of their mailbox. But now cities, starting with a prototype five years ago in Vancouver, are increasingly coupling the hard-copy analogue system with a secure digital counterpart. Designed with the support of the National Research Council, this emerging resource is called PlaceSpeak, and it promises to protect people’s privacy while allowing them to give meaningful feedback about their neighbourhood and city. A computer and Internet access are required. So far in Vancouver, 3,600 people have registered. PlaceSpeak is the creation of Colleen Hardwick, a PhD student at UBC’s School of Community and Regional Planning, and the daughter of late urban geographer Walter Hardwick who helped establish the TEAM civic party and was a three-term city councillor beginning in 1968. Colleen Hardwick identified the need for PlaceSpeak during the protracted debate between city hall and Canadian Pacific Railway over the Arbutus Corridor that runs north to south through nine West Side neighbourhoods. The community consultation started in 2000 and ended last month when the city bought 42 acres of land for $55 million. “Both the city and CPR said there was a log jam around public consultation and what we needed was hard evidence of public opinion,” she told the Courier. “There was no way to get that evidence in a reliable way. That is what really led to the creation of PlaceSpeak.” Numerous organizations are using PlaceSpeak in an effort to connect with residents. The Vancouver Courier will be using it to poll readers and engage with Vancouverites. I registered earlier this month and am one of thousands of “green dots,” which represent participants, on the map of this city. PlaceSpeak is a locationbased consultation platform, which means it can

target questions or issues to specific places, such as a street, a neighbourhood, a city block or an entire province, and also identify where feedback is coming from. Unlike anonymous commenters on websites and online news stories, people are who they say they are. “This has been an antidote to trolls,” said Hardwick. The service also upholds privacy by design, an essential feature that protects user information. Users must confirm their address (for their home, workplace or otherwise) and then this data is stored separately from any comments they make, opinion they give, or polls they take. An individual’s feedback may be sought for a development in Kitsilano, but her private information will never appear with her public comment. “We separate the private information that people use to verify their location from the feedback they provide,” said Hardwick. “Privacy is the single largest concern people have about putting their address online.” The platform can be considered a geosocial civic technology start-up. Characterized as a social venture, PlaceSpeak charges corporate and municipal clients in order to subsidize the costs for non-profit and community organizations. If you haven’t signed up or have yet to explore the site’s topics, you can do both at placespeak. com. Going forward, the Vancouver Courier will be using the PlaceSpeak platform to poll readers. We encourage everyone to visit the site and consider signing up. PlaceSpeak is tackling one of its largest projects yet and is asking what the future should look like in Vancouver. It’s asking this essential question about Vancouver’s future by partnering with Urbanarium, a charity dedicated to urban design and “intelligent city building” that hosted exhibits at the Museum of Vancouver in addition to sold-out public debates this year and counts urban planners, architects and developers on its board of directors. To find out more information, go to placespeak.com.


T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

Arts & Entertainment

A23

GOT ARTS? 604.738.1411 or events@vancourier.com

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April 21 to 27, 2016 1. Billed as Canada’s largest alternative literary festival, the sixth annual Verses Festival of Words casts its wordy charms across the East Side with 35 events, including competitions, performances, workshops and readings April 21 to May 1. For a full list of events, including Hullaballoo: B.C.’s Youth Spoken Word Festival and the Canadian Individual Poetry Slam championship, go to versesfestival.ca.

2

3

2. Don’t let the sunny weather dampen your appetite for blood, gore and cannibalism. The second annual Northwest Horror Show features the best and sometimes most cringe-worthy classics of horror, cult, exploitation and art house splatter films, including such family-unfriendly titles as Night Of The Creeps, I Drink Your Blood and Cannibal Ferox. Things get extreme April 22 to 24 at Vancity Theatre. Details at viff.org. 3. One of the more respectable U.K. bands from the 1990s, Lush does the reunion thing April 21 at the Rio Theatre (moved from the Commodore). Tickets at Red Cat, Zulu and ticketmaster.ca. 4. Enjoyably verbose, howl-prone indie rockers Frog Eyes headline the annual fundraiser for CiTR’s Discorder Magazine, April 23 at the ANZA Club. Weird Candle, the Backhomes, Malcolm Jack and Experience This round out the bill. Details at discorder.ca. 5. Mexico’s Son De Madera headlines the Vancouver World Music Festival, April 22 and 23 at the Rio Theatre. Performers include En Canto (Brazil), Roberto Lopez Project (Colombia), Lapis (India), Ostwelve (First Nations) and Locarno (Mexico/B.C.), among others. Tickets at Highlife, Zulu, Red Cat and eventbrite.com.

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

Community

OPERA FINDS ITS VOICE: The Queen Elizabeth Theatre came alive for Vancouver Opera’s Overture Gala. Always an opulent affair, the BMOsponsored event paid tribute to the glamour of Versailles. Multi-platinum Canadian recording artists the Tenors kicked off the posh party performing their greatest to 400 well-heeled guests. Following a standing ovation, masked partygoers took to the QE stage for a Four Seasons-catered dinner paired with exclusive wines from Mission Hill Family Estate winery. Chaired by Chantelle Wong and Cindy Richmond, the gala featured unique auction items, including an original work by Richmond’s husband Ian Wallace, which fetched $34,000. But it was an invitation to the Queen’s 90th birthday party in London that received the biggest buzz. The exclusive opportunity to hob knob with the royal garnered a remarkable $35,000, sold twice. The outpouring of generosity bolstered the opera’s fortunes beyond the $250,000 mark. The monies will support the firm’s education outreach efforts to 5,000 school kids annually. BREAKFAST CLUB: The International Day of Pink is marked annually in communities and countries around the globe to raise awareness and start a conversation against bullying, discrimination, homophobia, and transphobia. Held on the second Wednesday of April, the event started when students David Shepherd and Travis Price saw another student, who was wearing a pink shirt, bullied in their Nova Scotia high school. The pair showed their support for the student by getting everyone at their school to wear pink the next day. Marking the occasion in Vanhattan, Out in Schools hosted its Out for Breakfast fundraiser. More than 200 guests — pretty in pink — got up bright and early to attend the breakfast benefit at the Coast Coal Harbour Hotel. Hosted by executive director Stephanie Goodwin, the morning affair raised a reported $50,000 to facilitate dialogue in schools about the reality of LGBTTQ youth experiences through film. More than 40 school districts around B.C. have participated in the innovative program.

email yvrflee@hotmail.com twitter @FredAboutTown

City councillor Andrea Reimer, mother of a transgender teen, and Tru Wilson, a 13-yearold transgender girl, attended the Out in School’s International Day of Pink breakfast benefit.

Out in School’s chief fundraiser Sam Snobelen and executive director Stephanie Goodwin were all smiles after a reported $50,000 was raised from its pretty-in-pink fundraising breakfast.

Gala chairs Cindy Richmond, left, and Chantelle Wong welcomed the Tenors’ Fraser Walters to the opera’s signature soiree. The Tenors headlined the festivities, which included a dinner and auction. More than $250,000 was raised from the gala-do.

Broadcaster Sophie Lui and business leader Wendy Lisogar-Cocchia fronted the inaugural Fashion Blooms fashion fundraiser in support of the Pacific Autism Family Centre scheduled to open this fall.

Vancouver Opera chair Pascal Spothelfer and general director James Wright welcomed a sold-out crowd to the company’s flagship fundraiser on the Queen Elizabeth Theatre Stage. After 18 years at the helm, Wright will retire at the end of this season.

Holt Rendrew’s Carla Stef, left, dressed the city’s top personalities, including actress Keegan Connor Tracy (Once Upon A Time) in support of those affected by autism and related conditions.

Katy Harandi, PALS Autism School Society board chair, was grateful to guests for the $280,000 netted for the province’s only specialized K-12 school for children and adolescents with autism.

In time for the season’s warmer temperatures, Rosewood Hotel Georgia managing director Philip Meyer officially reopened Reflections, its elegant al fresco rooftop bar and lounge — the see and be seen summer hot spot.


T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

Arts & Entertainment Vancouver’s Handmade Market

THEATRE REVIEW

The Valley explores mental illness with depth and balance

Find over 175 of your favourite Makies selling awesome handmade items, along with food carts and a beer garden!

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Jo Ledingham joled@telus.net

Something that can be said about depression and mental illness: they aren’t choosy. They can just as easily strike bright young adults from well to do, loving families as those born to addicted or uncaring parents. Old, young, male or female, everyone is susceptible. Unrecognized, mental illness can — in the worst-case scenarios — result in death-by-cop. And love is not always enough to keep the dark forces at bay. We wait a while for a new play by Victoria-based Joan MacLeod; she’s a professor in the writing department at the University of Victoria, and she also writes poetry, prose and TV scripts. But when a new play emerges from this award-winning Canadian playwright, it’s always worth the wait. MacLeod writes charac-

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The Valley, written by award-winning Canadian playwright Joan MacLeod, takes a compassionate but critical look at how society deals with mental illness.

ter-driven plays, which is not to say they are without plot. But the plot arises from the characters — their hopes and dreams, failures and successes and, most often, their fears. The Valley focuses on four characters:

teenaged Connor (Daniel Doheny), his mother Sharon (Kerry Sandomirsky), a policeman Dan (Robert Salvador) and his wife Janie (Pippa Mackie). Thoughtfully directed by Mindy Parfitt, The Valley

strikes such a fine balance that MacLeod makes it impossible to lay blame on any one person. Connor’s mother, a well educated, single-again woman almost loves her son to death. Continued on page 26

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A26

THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

Arts & Entertainment

Anne Giardini, Nicholar Giardini, Laura Trunkey & Elizabeth McLean

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Continued from page 25 She’s so overwhelmingly optimistic about Connor’s future that she doesn’t see his increasing anxiety. As Sharon, Sandomirsky exudes smiling, maternal affection but also her character’s smothering effect on Connor. And when we see Sharon go on the offensive, we almost don’t notice that she doesn’t have all the facts. She’s complicated. First on the scene when Connor creates an incident at the Joyce-Collingwood SkyTrain Station is Dan, a cop with a “s*** list” of people he has to deal with: crackheads, hookers, addicts, dealers, strippers, Canucks fans, jumpers, bikers and more. Dan is not a bad cop, but he’s ill-equipped to handle mental illness on the street as well as at home. Salvador, as Dan, also strikes a delicate balance: it’s easy to dislike his uncaring, macho manner, but his life isn’t easy. He’s complicated, too. While the four characters are very balanced, our

hearts bleed most for young Connor and Janie. Doheny makes a gangly, lovable but lost Connor. All arms, legs and nervously twitching fingers, Doheny’s Connor is every anxious teenager you have ever known. As new mother Janie, Mackie shows us how devastating being home alone with a new baby can be especially when married to a largely unsympathetic husband. These are all good people trying to do their best. These are people we know. Most importantly, MacLeod shows us these are people much like those we love but that we may be too busy to notice are losing ground. While the characters are very real, Amir Ofek’s set design for The Valley — the title of the sci-fi novel Connor is writing — is sci-fi inspired: a steeply raked, circular “concrete” slab over which looms, at about 45 degrees, a huge, stage-filling “concrete” orb within which there is a large hole, symbolic perhaps of the black hole that threatens

to suck in Connor and Janie. Projections, by designer Jamie Nesbitt, are colourfully splashed against this backdrop. The performers remain on this stage throughout, sometimes moving into or sitting in shadow, at other times coming forward. Itai Erdal dramatically lights this spare but very impressive set. The Valley does not offer a fun night at the theatre. The play takes a compassionate but critical look at how much we expect from our police officers who are insufficiently trained to handle the crises they meet all day, every day. If there is a villain in The Valley — and there is — that’s it. If there’s hope — and there is — it’s recognizing the problem and doing something about it. For more reviews, go to joledingham.ca. The Valley is at the Arts Club Granville Island Stage until May 7. For tickets, call 604-687-1644 or go to artsclub.com.

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T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

WEEKLY FORECAST: APRIL 24 – 30, 2016 START NOTHING: Before 5:46 a.m. Sun., 8:51 a.m. to 4:54 p.m. Tues., 0:07 a.m. to 1:47 a.m. Fri., and after 7:56 p.m.

The main accent lies on money, earnings, buying/selling, possessions, memory, rote learning, and sensual attractions. (You respond very quickly sensually, it’s who you are, but you also grow bored quickly, so enter any sensual/ physical relationship cautiously and honestly this month. When one person wants a lifetime love, and the other just wants a roll in the hay, then sex isn’t consensual.)

Now to late May, the focus lies on secrets, mysteries, investigation, medical diagnoses, lifestyle choices, commitment and consequence(s) and, most obviously, on sexual desires and financial urges. This same period overlaps another (April 28 to May 22) of Mercury retrograde – causing indecision, delay, misunderstandings and missed meetings, supply shortages, false starts, etc.

Read Aries’ last sentence, Taurus. Although your charisma, energy, clout and leadership capabilities shine at their peak this week and the next few, Mercury retro from April 28 to May 22 warns against starting any new ventures – they would wilt on the vines of delay, indecision, false starts, etc. Use this week to wrap up ongoing projects

Complete tasks rather than starting anything new, Scorpio. A period of delays, false starts, indecision and misinformation prevails from April 28 to May 22. That said, the weeks ahead (covering virtually the same period) feature relationships, new horizons, opportunities, possible relocation, agreements, negotiations and litigation, dealings with the public, even fame.

The emphasis lies on rest, recuperation, selfexamination, charity, spirituality, and background efforts, until May 20. Almost coincidentally (April 28 to May 22) Mercury retrogrades, bringing delays, false starts, indecision, misunderstandings and missed appointments. Luckily, this fits in with your present state of low energy and rest. Start nothing new before May 22. This period is a great one for contemplation.

The weeks ahead hold chores and health concerns. Usually this would be a good time to buy machinery/tools, get a health check-up, or tackle new tasks (or seek employment). None of these are likely to succeed easily, unless they have a link to the past: e.g., seek employment from former bosses, and tackle chores that have already begun.

The weeks ahead bring joy, heightened popularity, entertainment, wish fulfillment, social delights, and, possibly, a friendly romance (perhaps someone met in a group). However, it’s far better to enjoy life’s happiness bounty than to try to use it, i.e., to start something new. (A period of mistakes, delays and false starts begins this Thursday, and lasts until May 22.)

Use this week to wrap up things, rather than begin anything new. This Thursday through May 22 brings a slowdown, mistakes, missed appointments, wrong figures, supply shortages, etc. Until May 22, stick with and protect ongoing projects and relationships – or reprise past ones – rather than initiating anything new. DON’T buy electronic items, new fashions, or pleasure “craft” (e.g., a boat, or a spiffy new bicycle).

HEALTHY, VIBRANT AND CLEAN NEIGHBOURHOODS START WITH YOU. LEAD OR JOIN A BLOCK CLEANUP. Spring has sprung and we are looking for volunteers to join our annual city-wide litter cleanup campaign: Keep Vancouver Spectacular. Individuals, businesses and neighbourhood groups are encouraged to join. All cleanup teams receive garbage bags, gloves and cleanup tools.

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Protecting our power lines When: April 1, 2016 to July 8, 2016 Working hours: 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. As important as they are, trees and other plants can cause significant power interruptions. Contact between trees and power lines can be very dangerous, which is why over the next few months, we’ll be pruning and removing trees and other plants in Vancouver.

Use this week to wrap up projects and tasks, Leo, rather than start new ones. A period of delays, missed meeting, misunderstood directions, indecision and false starts looms from April 28, this Thurs., to May 22. That’s a shame, as almost the entire time is one of ambition, career, prestige meetings, worldly status – in other words, a time when you would usually be working hard to push new proposals and projects.

Use the present week to complete projects rather than start new ones, Aquarius. Now to May 22, slowdowns, delays, mistakes, false starts and indecision are enough to squelch almost any new project or relationship. So stick with ongoing ventures and relationships, protect them from upsets or mistakes. The main emphasis, now to late May, lies on your domestic arena.

Project boundaries — Killarney area: North: East 22nd Avenue East:

Wrap up chores and ventures this week rather than starting anything new. Until May 22, a period of slowdowns, mistakes, misunderstanding, indecision and false starts prevails. So use these weeks ahead to protect ongoing projects (e.g., double-confirm that the right workers will be on site, or order needed supplies early to avoid snafus, etc.) – or to reprise past projects and relationships. Not to launch anything new.

Boundary River

South: Fraser Street West: Nanaimo Street and Elliott Street Project boundaries — Langara area: North: East 33rd Avenue East:

The weeks ahead emphasize legalities, learning, far travel, international affairs, teachers and foreign-born people, all intellectual pursuits, abstract truths, religion, philosophy, culture and media. These will carry more good luck than bad for you, with one big BUT – these same weeks form a period of delays, mistakes, second-guessing and indecision, and false starts – mainly in this same zone of far travel, legalities, media, etc.

A27

Knight Street

South: Fraser River West: Ontario Street, West 49th Street to Cambie Street At BC Hydro, we ensure trees and plants are pruned using the best arboriculture (tree care) practices possible. We employ skilled workers— trained in both electrical safety and plant care—who only use proper techniques to eliminate safety hazards. To learn more about this work, please contact Joe Taaffe at 604 528 3297. For more information about our vegetation management practices, please visit bchydro.com/trees.

April 21: Queen Elizabeth II (90). April 22: Jack Nicholson (79). April 23: Joyce DeWitt (67). April 24: Barbra Streisand (74). April 25: Al Pacino (76). April 26: Carol Burnett (83). April 27: Ace Frehley (65). 4980


A28

THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

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T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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604-873-8377 open 7am –11pm, 7 days a week

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

Living

Adrian Harris and Jeremy Inglett, a.k.a. the Food Gays, create original recipes, which they test at home and will share with Vancouver Courier readers in a weekly column. PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

Meet the Food Gays Sandra Thomas

of us knew anyone there, so clearly it was meant to be.

They know food, they’re talented photographers, they’re social media influencers and they have a beagle-boxer mix named Milo. Meet Adrian Harris and Jeremy Inglett, also known as the Food Gays. Together these home cooks create original recipes, which they test at home and, starting today, will share with Vancouver Courier readers in a weekly column. To coincide with the launch of the Food Gays column, the Courier had a few questions for Adrian and Jeremy.

Were you both into food when you met?

stomas@vancourier.com

VA N C O U V E R H A L F - M A R A T H O N & 5k

June 26, 2016 VancouverHalf.com

How did you two meet?

Every Step Helps Build Our Community

We met at a random house party and never really stopped hanging out. Neither

We always enjoyed going out to eat and cooking at home together, but not at all in the way we’re interested now. Our whole life revolves around food now — and we really love it. How and when did you decide to create “the Food Gays”?

We started the blog in 2012. We were looking for a hobby together and it really grew organically from there. We thought it would be a great way to learn about food and explore Vancouver’s food scene. What exactly is the Food Gays brand? A website? A blog?

We do wear a few different hats. We offer social media management, recipe development, food styling and photography. We’re just starting to get into video content, so we’ll see where that leads. What’s next for the Food Gays?

We’re excited about just completing a city guide book called The HUNT Vancouver, slated for publication this summer. We’ve also got some exciting projects down the pipeline that we’re looking forward to sharing soon. Tell us about Milo.

Milo is definitely a big part of our family, and we love spending time with him. He’s a beagle-boxer mix, and will be eight years old in July.

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T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

Living

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THE FOOD GAYS Adrian Harris and Jeremy Inglett info@foodgays.com

Craving something entirely different for lunch or dinner? We’ve become

quite fond of lentils lately, and besides their obvious ability to add substance to a meal for mere cents, they’re like little flavour vessels that soak up whatever you

cook them with. This colourful Moroccan-spiced salad features warm aromatic spices, including fresh ginger, garlic, black mustard seeds, turmeric and paprika, just to name

a few. The end result is a robust, hearty and downright satisfying salad we’re certain you’ll love. Adrian Harris and Jeremy Inglett are the founders and owners of Food Gays Media.

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• 1 lemon, juice and zest • ⅓ cup feta cheese

Ingredients: • ½ cup dried yellow lentils • 1 ½ cups water • ⅛ teaspoon sea salt • ½ cup radish, thinly sliced • ½ cup red onion, thinly sliced • ¾ cup small tomatoes, roughly chopped • ⅓ cup fresh cilantro leaves • ⅓ cup fresh mint leaves • 1.5 oz. lentil micro greens (optional) • ⅛ teaspoon paprika • ⅛ teaspoon coriander • ⅛ teaspoon black mustard seeds • ⅛ teaspoon turmeric • ⅛ teaspoon chili flakes • ⅛ teaspoon cumin seeds • ⅛ teaspoon sea salt • ⅛ teaspoon black pepper • 1 teaspoon sugar • 1 tablespoon fresh ginger, minced

Method: In a small pot, add lentils and water and heat on high until boiling. Lower heat to minimum, add salt, then let simmer with the lid ajar for about 20-25 minutes, until the lentils are tender and have absorbed the water. Meanwhile, make the dressing. In a pestle and mortar, combine paprika, coriander, black mustard seeds, turmeric, chili flakes, cumin seeds, sea salt and black pepper. Add sugar, fresh ginger, lemon zest and juice, and grind until smooth. (You can use a small food processor for this step, if you prefer). Chill dressing in the refrigerator until needed. Once the lentils are cooked, place them in a strainer and

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A31

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rinse under cold water. Shake dry and combine with vegetables and microgreens, tossing everything together with the dressing and crumbled feta cheese. Serve immediately or

chill for a couple of hours and enjoy cold. Tip: If lentil microgreens are not available to you, try using a bitter green like arugula or dandelion instead.

Learn to simply and effectively address root causes of health problems instead of just managing or suppressing symptoms with chemical medication or surgery. If you’re looking to boost your energy and vitality, don’t miss this class. Free Event. Register online at choicesmarkets.com/event. For inquiries call 604-952-2266. /Choices_Markets

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A32

THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

Living

West End’s Blind Craft beer and cross-cultural fare attracts a crowd

THE HIRED BELLY

Day of Mourning Last year, 29 B.C. workers died as a result of a construction-related incident. Now 29 families mourn. Let’s make our workplaces safe and healthy. Thursday, April 28 For more information about ceremonies in your area, visit dayofmourning.bc.ca

Tim Pawsey

info@hiredbelly.com

First there was the venerable Café de Paris, which morphed into Le Parisien and then fizzled as Left Bank — a tasty haunt that never figured out its identity. However, it became apparent that West Enders were chomping at the bit for a casual spot with good food and well-priced drinks. Enter the Blind Sparrow (751 Denman St.), which loftily bills itself as a “gastro tavern” — and delivers. Arrive mid-evening any night and chances are you’ll wind up sitting at the bar — or in the back, near the

glass-wrapped keg room. Actually it’s a great spot to take in all the action at this laid back and lively spot, which has built a steady and appreciative clientele since opening a few months ago. There’s a wealth of share plates, starting with the tricooked fries and red curry coconut dip ($6). Also on our hit list are the Koreanstyle, chili-braised boar ribs and slaw ($16), spicy prawn tacos with cilantro sour cream ($10) and the spicy, crunchy, sriracha buttermilk-fried chicken nuggets. ($10). The menu makes for an appealing cross-cultural statement, with West Coast meats and seafood (seared tuna or mussels and fries with IPA broth) and plenty

of Asian twists. It’s been a while since I’ve seen kimchi on a menu (as a side) — a lure for the blossoming Korean population of lower Robson. That keg room gets a serious workout most nights, thanks to a dozen good, rotating local brews, fairly priced and smartly served. Most sleeves are around $4.50 while a 20-ounce pint runs around $6.50. Wines by the glass are also smartly chosen and priced, such as Syncromesh Riesling (also on tap) for $9. The Blind Sparrow is also home to the West End’s (so far) only laneway patio, which is hopping now that the warm weather is here.

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T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

Living

A33

Diabetes Clinic

Sparrow takes off

Wednesday, April 27 10:30 am to 2 pm

W 42nd Avenue, Kerrisdale 604-263-1811

Overall, the mood is warm and welcoming, with a good buzz in the room and live (but not too overpowering) entertainment most nights. Service is savvy and friendly — although nobody could tell us the real inspiration for the name. We think it might have something to do with a mural. Details at blindsparrow.ca.

Friday, May 13

Friday, May 13

Broadway & Cambie, Vancouver 604-872-5177

Broadway & Vine, Vancouver 604-742-6000

10:30 am to 2 pm

3:30 pm to 7 pm

Raise a glass

You don’t have to look far to find wines by the glass these days. By the glass — and keg wines — are standard fare for any selfrespecting resto these days but no more so than at the Wine Bar at Provence Marinaside, which now pours no less than 145 wines by the glass, including several from an impressive battery of 48 taps. Best kept secret? The “perfect pairings,” where customers can sample small bites paired with three different tastes under the guidance of sommelier Rachelle Goudreau every other Thursday for $14. Reservations a must. More information at thewinebar.ca.

The Blind Sparrow’s spicy prawn tacos are a hit, as are the sriracha buttermilk-fried chicken nuggets and solid craft beer list. PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

Through the grapevine

B.C.’s grapevine lit up last week with the news that pioneering Harry McWatters has sold his Sundial portion of the iconic Black Sage Vineyard, and winery under construction, for an undisclosed sum. The Asian buyer plans to make premium Bordeaux blends. The vineyard was home to the first Okanagan planting (at the time the largest

Book your appointment today.

in Canada) of Cab. Sauv, Merlot and others.

Our London Drugs Certified Diabetes Educators will provide you with a checklist for diabetes self-management as well as guide you through a discussion on what you need to know about your feet and diabetes. During the 45 minute, one-on-one consultation, you will learn the steps for living well with diabetes and have the opportunity to ask your pharmacist about any questions you may have. If necessary, you will be booked for a complimentary follow up appointment.

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A34

THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

Community AWARDS

Vancouver Courier wins four national community newspaper awards The Vancouver Courier captured four awards in the 2016 Canadian Community Newspaper Awards competition. Results were announced April 15. The awards recognize the best work published across Canada in categories ranging from writing to photography to

multimedia. The Courier earned second place for Best Website, as well as second place for Best Multimedia Feature for Courier editor Michael Kissinger’s story and video “Humour as a weapon against the Holocaust.” It focused on painter Hinda Avery’s “Rozen

women” series of largescale paintings depicting fun-loving feminist, Nazi resistance fighters. Long-time reporter Sandra Thomas won third place for Best Feature Series. The twopart series revealed how Downtown Eastside pets, including dogs, rats, birds, cats and rabbits,

provide a lifeline of love and hope to residents. Photographer Rebecca Blissett provided the art. Writer Lisa Smedman was awarded first place for Best Historical Story. Her story “In from the Cold” was published on Dec. 24 and revealed how Vancouver welcomed refugees fleeing a

crisis in a different part of the world — Hungary, in 1956. The Courier is also nominated for seven B.C.-Yukon community newspaper awards. Nominees include photographer Dan Toulgoet, photographer Rebecca Blissett, columnist Jessica Barrett, cartoonist

Geoff Olson, former Courier editor Barry Link, as well as Manon Paradis, Tara Lalanne, Marina Rockey and Tori Clark who are finalists in Ad Design, Collaborative category. The Ma Murray award winners will be announced May 7 at a gala at River Rock Casino Resort.

“By accessing world markets for Canadian oil, we’ll enjoy increased tax dollars and years of employment.” - Deborah Cahill, President, Electrical Contractors Association of BC

Now more than ever, this project makes sense for Canada and British Columbia. It’s vital we receive the most from our natural resources at a time when our economy needs it most. The Trans Mountain Expansion Project will allow Canadian oil to be delivered to international markets and, as a result, Canada will earn approximately $3.7 billion more a year for our oil. By realizing full value, everyone will benefit. In addition, the expansion will create tens of thousands of jobs over the next 25 years.

For more information, go to TransMountain.com/benefits Email: info@transmountain.com · Phone: 1-866-514-6700

Committed to safety since 1953.


T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

SPACE

A35

home design + style

Working with white WORDS BY LISE BOULLARD VITAMINDAILY.COM

Four ways to decorate with the colour of 2016 Clean, modern and the stuff of Parisian architecture, it’s no surprise Benjamin Moore’s Colour of 2016 is simply white. Here’s how to bring the hue home. POP ART When considering contrast, start by asking yourself how you want to feel in a room. If you’re

going for calm and harmonious, layer white on white. For high energy, pull in bold colours. A white cushion on a grey sofa or a white picture frame on a coloured wall “really pops,” says Sharon Grech, Benjamin Moore’s colour and style expert. FAIR FURNISHINGS If furniture is on your

Buy One Get One

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holiday wish list, heed Grech’s advice and go for pieces with a nice silhouette, which look even more fabulous in white. Have kids? Skip the couch and bring in unupholstered pieces like coffee tables, chairs and desks. MARBLE ON The stuff of Michelangelo’s columns, Carrara marble is having a resurgence. Look for tables like the tulip

Saarinen (made famous by designer Eero Saarinen in 1957) in Carrara marble or quartz. EMBRACE WHITE SPACE If the thought of an empty white wall is enough to keep you up at night, fear not. A floor-length antique, or painted patina, mirror with a gorgeous frame could be all you need to transform a room.

LAYER UP Add interest to a modern all-white space with glass, concrete and resin fixtures and furniture. If you favour a traditional look bring in white linens, pillows and natural, reclaimed wood. And holiday décor can be especially stunning in white: try white stockings on a white mantle or piles of white pillows and blankets with festive motifs.

Buy one, get one FREE* on all Dulux manufactured paint

April 18 - May 8, 2016 Find a store near you at Dulux.ca *Cannot be combined with any other offer or promotion. Buy any container (3.4L-3.78L and 850mL-946mL sizes) of Dulux or Glidden paint at the regular retail price and get the second container (of equal or lesser value) free. Excludes Flood products. All products may not be available at all locations. See instore for offer details. At participating locations only. © 2016 PPG Industries Inc. All rights reserved. Dulux is a registered trademark of AkzoNobel and is licensed to PPG Architectural Coatings Canada Inc. for use in Canada only. The Multi-Colored Swatches Design is a trademark of PPG Architectural Finishes, Inc. Glidden is a registered trademark of the PPG Group of Companies.

2091 W. Broadway Vancouver 604-731-8111

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1920 Kingsway Vancouver 604-872-2522

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A36

THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6


T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

A37

Q+A:

Designer Lee Broom WORDS BY KRYSTIN TYSIRE VITAMINDAILY.COM

Designer is to furniture what Marc Jacobs or Tom Ford are to fashion With more than 20 awards, including British Designer of the Year, and partnerships with Christian Louboutin and Mulberry, the Brit, who designs and manufactures furniture and lighting under his own label, is one of the hottest designers around. Vitamin Daily recently had the chance to chat with Broom, who was in Toronto recently to showcase his collection at Canada’s Interior Design Show. Which city sums up your design vibe now? London [Broom’s home town].

What colour are you into this year? Monochrome, particularly black and white.

What inspires your design? Life: anything and everything.

What one piece of furniture should young people invest in now (besides a couch)? A table lamp.

Who’s your design inspiration or mentor? Vivienne Westwood. [Broom worked for the designer shortly after winning a fashion design competition at age 17].

What’s your favourite new Lee Broom lighting or furniture product? The Crescent Light, an illuminated sphere sliced in half to reveal a crescentshaped brushed brass fascia, launched in Milan last year.

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A38

THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

SPRING DECORATING EVENT

HOME BUYER’S RESOURCE GUIDE: Now available in print and online WORDS BY REW.CA

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Now available in print and online, the Home Buyer’s Resource Guide, published by Real Estate Weekly in partnership with the Greater Vancouver Home Builders’ Association, takes buyers through the entire purchasing process, from choosing an agent to moving in. This new annual publication — filled with checklists and directories — is a crucial tool for all home buyers. Joannah Connolly, editor-in-chief of REW.ca and the Home Buyer’s Resource Guide, said, “Our unparalleled team of industry experts offer insightful advice throughout the guide. Along the way, you’ll find invaluable articles suggesting ways to save money, helping you prepare for unexpected costs, demystifying mortgages and down payments, explaining the home inspection process, taking you through the steps of closing and much more besides.”

ARTICLES INCLUDE: • Using a real estate agent • How to assess a neighbourhood • Understanding strata documentation • Ways to save money on your home • Mortgages and down payments • When and why to hire a home inspector CHECKLISTS AND TOOLS: • House hunting needs and wants • Home affordability calculator • Closing costs • Moving countdown DIRECTORY: • Associations • Resources In addition to this digital edition available online, copies of the guide will be distributed and made available yearround at community centres, real estate offices and local chambers of commerce. You can also call 604-669-8500 ext. 21150 to have your free hard copy mailed to you.

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T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

A39

Sports & Recreation

Above: Percy Williams dashes to Olympic gold in the 100 metre event at the 1928 Amsterdam Summer Games. Right: UBC women’s basketball team represents the “West” at the 1930 World Games in Prague, Czechoslovakia where they defeated France 18-14 to become the earliest women’s team from B.C. to win an international title. PHOTOS BC SPORTS HALL OF FAME Inset: Christine Sinclair, the Canada captain from Burnaby, celebrates a 1-0 victory over France to win Olympic bronze at the 2012 Summer Games. PHOTO SOCCER CANADA

B.C. Sports Hall of Fame marks memorable moments

Public can vote for top 50 Megan Stewart

mstewart@vancourier.com

Terry Fox’s Atlantic Ocean toe-dip? Christine Sinclair’s captaincy and emotional bronze medal at the London Olympic Games? The near impossible feat of winning Olympic gold in the 100- and 200-metre sprints, as Percy Williams did 82 years before Usain Bolt? Out of these three and 47 others, you decide which moment is the best. To celebrate its 50th anniversary commemorating and charting athletic heritage and excellence, the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame has created a massive bracket and stocked it with a selection of the greatest moments in sport that either took place within our provincial borders or happened overseas to B.C. athletes and teams. “We wanted to put a spotlight on how amazing the depth of sport has been for our province,” said the

41

In thousands — 41,134 participants, according to race results — the number of people who participated in the 32nd annual Sun Run on a downtown course April 17.

hall of fame’s executive director Allison Mailer. “We wanted the public to dig a little deeper and go back to the ’90s and even the 1890s. It’s a success if people are reminded of all of the achievements and moments they didn’t realize that happened here.” The Hall started by petitioning the public for their choice for the most important moments and then scaled that down to 50, the oldest dating to 1908, the year the New West Salmonbellies won B.C.’s first national lacrosse title and Victoria’s Robert Powell reached the semifinals at Wimbledon. The Hall is emphasizing moments — not people — since it’s not a popularity contest so much as an effort to tap the collective memory for milestones that helped shape the province’s athletic identity and draw future generations together through sport, said Mailer.

“If you look at the highperforming MVPs that are from British Columbia, how do you rank them? Do you rank Larry Walker and Steve Nash and Carey Price? If you’re an MVP, aren’t you just an MVP?” Nash appears at No. 8 on the Top 50, not explicitly as an individual but rather for his moment in 2005 when he was named the most valuable player in the NBA. Walker is also on the list at No. 14 for his National League MVP honour in 1997. The Hall already ranked the top 14, which assured those moments a place in the bracket. The rest were seeded Tuesday afternoon after they were randomly drawn from a large silver bowl that was presented to Karen Magnussen in 1972 by Premier WAC Bennett to commemorate her Olympic silver medal win in figure skating at the 1972 Sapporo Olympic Games. Mailer’s top choice is

Percy Williams winning double gold. in the 100- and 200-metre events at the 1928 Summer Games. “For me, it’s a slam dunk,” she said. “I’ve put it into perspective as to what Usain Bolt has meant to the Olympics now. For those of us who love sport, we stop and watch and remember those moments.” For the 50 Golden Moments of B.C. Sports History, the public can vote in the first round starting today, Thursday, April 21. Each round will last six days before the winner advances to the next round. The public can vote once in each match-up through all rounds. “I only get one vote just like everybody else,” said the executive director. Voting continues through the end of May. The four finalists will be announced at the Hall’s Banquet of Champions on June 9. Visit bcsportshalloffame.com. @MHStewart

Top Six Moments What says “sports” more than a single-knock out competition, a win-or-gohome tournament that whittles the very best out of the top 50? The B.C. Hall of Fame picked the top 14 moments, to ensure their place in the bracket. Here are their top five: No. 1 In the space of an hour on Aug. 7, 1954, two unforgettable moments on the final day of the British Empire and Commonwealth Games at Empire Stadium combined for perhaps the most thrilling afternoon in B.C. sport history. First, two men ran the mile in under four minutes. Less than an hour later, a runner straggled into the stadium and collapsed before reaching the finish line of the marathon, which only six competitors finished that very hot day. No. 2 Sidney Crosby scored the “Golden Goal” to win Olympic Gold in men’s hockey at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Games at Canada Hockey Place, which we all know as Rogers Arena.

: On lapping it up…

28

In minutes, plus 52 seconds, clocked by Guelpf marathon runner Eric Gillis who finished first in the 10 km Sun Run. Lanni Marchant was the fastest woman, finishing 31st overall in 32:15.

4

Placement for Lord Byng Grade 12 athlete Kieran Lumb in the boys 16- to 18-year-old age group in the Sun Run. He finished 40th overall in 32:43.

“I can’t tell you how many times I have been thinking about this moment, probably more than 100. Just having this dream finally come true is surreal. At the same time, I know I have worked my butt off for the past four years.” — Swimmer and Magee graduate Noemie Thomas, after she made Team Canada for the Rio Summer Games.

No. 3 In 1980, Coquitlam’s Terry Fox captivated Canadians and eventually the world as the cancer survivor attempted to make his way across the country from east to west in an epic endeavour to run the equivalent of one marathon a day on his prosthetic leg to raise awareness for cancer research and treatment. No. 4 In 1928, Vancouver’s Percy Williams ran the 100m in 10.8 seconds to win gold at the Amsterdam Olympic Games. It was the first individual gold medal captured by a B.C. athlete. A few days later, he doubled up and won the 200m event, a very rare and special feat in athletics. No. 5 Nancy Greene, who grew up skiing at Red Mountain near Rossland, broke European dominance of the slopes when she won the giant slalom gold medal at the 1968 Olympic Games in Grenoble. She also won silver in the giant slalom and back-to-back World Cup titles.

132

In seconds — one minute, 72 seconds — that Noemie Thomas, 20, came under the Olympic qualifying standard of 58.74 in the 100-metre butterfly. Her time of 57.02 put her second behind 15-year-old Penny Oleksiak, of Toronto, at the Olympic swimming trials in Toronto April 5. Both qualified for Rio 2016.


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THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

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Canucks fans, here’s who you can Anaheim will test your allegiances, but San Jose is basically Vancouver NHL PLAYOFFS: CHOOSE YOUR OWN BANDWAGON Harrison Mooney

harrisonmooney@gmail.com

The NHL playoffs began last week. The Canucks aren’t in them. Instead, to the delight of no one, fans can look forward to a higher draft

pick, a stress-free spring, and the opportunity for one of the greatest pleasures in sports: band-wagoning. Oh, your team isn’t making a Cup run? Then cheer for one that is. Sure, you’ll get grief from the diehards. That’s to be expected. If one can enjoy a team’s championship without having suffered alongside the

club for years and years of disappointment and defeat, then what’s the point of such intense fandom? The answer: there really isn’t one. Pay them no mind. But if you’ve had tunnel vision for the Canucks all season — we call that Massey Tunnel vision — you may be at a loss in deciding which team will

receive your fair-weather fandom. Anticipating this, we’ve whipped up a quick guide to help you make your decision.

Florida Panthers

To cheer: The Panthers have two things working for them, and by things, I mean people. There’s Jaromir Jagr, who has become a hockey folk

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hero for his ability to play into his mid-40s. (Cheliosing, they all it.) How can you root against Jaromir Jagr? The man is hockey himself. The Panthers also employ one Roberto Luongo, who may no longer live among us in Vancouver, but still resides in all our hearts. Or not to cheer: Do you really want to see Luongo win a Cup somewhere else? You’d be forgiven for hoping he gets to the Cup Final, watches his team implode in front of him, is blamed for all of it, and is chased out of Sunrise by an emotional fanbase that is yet to realize what they’re doing and doesn’t know what they’ll be missing. But the Panthers may not have enough fans for that.

Washington Capitals

To cheer: Alex Ovechkin is awesome and I don’t think I’m alone in wanting to see him win a Stanley Cup and then hump it right in front of a weeping Don Cherry. Plus, if they go deep, maybe Barack Obama finally attends a friggin’ hockey game. Or not to cheer: Every time a team that wins the Presidents’ Trophy wins the Stanley Cup, it makes the Canucks look sillier for winning it twice and failing in the postseason. I prefer a

world where people think it can’t be done; where people think winning the regular-season points race is detrimental to postseason success; where people blame the trophy, not the team. If the Capitals lose, it will fuel the notion that the trophy is a curse, and it’s hilarious, to me at least, when the hockey world believes in superstitious nonsense.

Minnesota Wild

To cheer: There is no reason to cheer for the Minnesota Wild. Or not to cheer: There has never been a reason to cheer for the Minnesota Wild.

St. Louis Blues

To cheer: The Blues came into the NHL just a few years before the Canucks, which makes it very easy to empathize with the frustration their fans must feel at having never won the Stanley Cup. Or not to cheer: Forget that, man. If we have to wait, they have to wait.

Chicago Blackhawks

To cheer: Up until the trade deadline, I’d have about as much good to say about Chicago as I do about Minnesota, but then the Blackhawks went out and acquired the legendary Dale Weise. It’s impossible to cheer against Dale Weise.

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1. Roberto Luongo returned to the Florida Panthers but Canucks fans keep a light on for him here at home, in our hearts. PHOTO ELIOT SCHECHTER / FLORIDA PANTHERS. 2. Born and raised in Vancouver, Milan Lucic gives Canucks fans one reason to cheer for the L.A. Kings. That’s only one reason, though. PHOTO L.A. KINGS

He’s Dutch Gretzky, for Pete’s sake! I want to live in a world where Dale Weise has a Stanley Cup ring. Or not to cheer: I don’t know that I want to live in a world where Patrick Kane has another.

Anaheim Ducks

To cheer: Kevin Bieksa. Or not to cheer: Ryan Kesler.

Nashville Predators

To cheer: I’m willing to jump on the Predators bandwagon as a fan of fashion: their new gold helmets, unveiled this season, are fantastic. But the NHL is a lame league that struggles with colour (both as it pertains to

helmets and, on occasion, people), so many balked at the idea that Nashville might wear a helmet that matches their sweater. That was stupid. The gold helmet is gold, Jerry, gold. Or not to cheer: Mike Ribeiro’s kind of a jerk. Plus the Predators haven’t been in the league for 20 years yet. Speaking as a Canucks fan, they haven’t put in the time. Talk to me in 2036.

Los Angeles Kings

To cheer: I dunno, maybe you’re a bad person? Or not to cheer: The Kings’ roster has more thoroughly unlikeable men than an episode of The Bachelorette.

San Jose Sharks

To cheer: I like the Sharks. I wish I didn’t, since they beat up on Vancouver constantly, but they’ve got two guys I’d really like to see win a Cup: Joe Thornton, who suffers from the same lack of respect the Sedins do, because the NHL hates a pass-first player for some stupid reason, and Brent Burns, who is unlike anyone else in the game. Plus, moving from Canucks fandom to Sharks fandom is an effortless transition, as bloggers on Fear the Fin pointed out recently: “They’re a Pacific Division team located on the West Coast that’s never won a Stanley Cup and is led by a pair of aging superstars

who were top-three picks in the same draft year over a decade and a half ago but are still looking for their first taste of championship glory, in part to silence lazy narratives about how they can’t get it done when the pressure is on.” If you close your eyes, it’s like the Canucks are in the playoffs. Or not to cheer: I will never forgive Joe Thornton for the finger incident, when he forced his gloved index finger into Hank’s mouth, trolling on the Alex Burrows 2011 playoff biting spree. Actually, never mind, it’s pretty funny. Read Pass It To Bulis online at vancourier.com/ sports.

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Phone Hours: Mon to Fri 8:30 am to 4:30 pm Office Hours: 9 am to 5 pm

OFFICE/CLERICAL Handy Appliances Ltd located at (business and work location) Unit 100-1398 East 49th Ave, Vancouver, BC requires permanent, F/T qualified Personal Secretary to report to General Manager. Duties include: determine and establish office procedures, maintain manual and computerized filing /database systems, compile data and other information, answer telephone and electronic enquiries, relay messages, schedule and confirm meetings. Secondary School and min 1 year of experience. Salary $ 22/hr. email resume to: info@handyappliances.ca

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

St. Philip’s Rummage Sale Saturday April 23 9.00am to noon. 3737 West 27th Avenue, Vancouver

MARKETPLACE ANTIQUE & COLLECTIBLE 23rd Annual Show & Sale Hosted by Fraser Valley Antique & Collectible Club SAT • April 30 • 9 - 4 SUN • May 1 • 10 - 3 General Admission $5.00 Dealer Set up - Early Bird Admission $20 - 3 day pass. FRI • April 29 • 6:30pm *200 plus Tables QUEENS PARK ARENA (1st Street & 3rd Ave) New Westminster Google us: FVACC WE BUY ANTIQUES Generous prices paid for Fine Art, Silver, Jewellery, Military Medals, Militaria, Coin Collections, pre 1910 Furniture & Lighting, etc. Est. in 1990. We make house calls. Call David 604-716-8032 www.britishfineart andantiques.ca

HEALTH PRODUCTS EMERGENCY DEVICE FOR SENIORS - Free equipment, monitored 24/7. Stay safe in your home for less than $1.00 a day. For free information guide, call toll-free 1-888-865-5001 or www.LifeAssure.com.

FOR SALE - MISC POLE BARNS, Shops, steel buildings metal clad or fabric clad. Complete supply and installation. Call John at 403-998-7907; jcameron@ advancebuildings.com REFORESTATION NURSERY SEEDLINGS of hardy trees, shrubs, & berries for shelterbelts or landscaping. Spruce & Pine from $0.99/tree. Free Shipping. Replacement guarantee. 1-866-873-3846 or www.treetime.ca SAWMILLS from only $4,397 Make money & save money with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT

cont. on next page

TODAY'S PUZZLE ANSWERS


THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 2016 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

HOME SERVICES

MARKETPLACE

CRAFT FAIRS/BAZAARS

WANTED

!&3*/ 4(&0*2 43.-

43%' "(&0. #$ ' +&), .51553, %0.. #(, &/

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Old Books Wanted also: Photos Postcards, Letters, Paintings. no text books or encyclopedias. I pay cash. 604-737-0530 Vintage mid century modern 50s/60s, teak, walnut, beech, rosewood or elm, Canadian, American, Scandinavian, English made furniture. Call 604 727.9423 or 604 669.0813

CLEANING

FLOORING

CLEANING SERVICE Kits & Westside. Weekly, bi-weekly refs. $20/hr (604)725-4211 EUROPEAN DETAILED Service Cleaning www.puma-cleaning.ca Sophia 604-805-3376

MESSY HOUSE OR OFFICE? The most thorough cleaning or its FREE! Single Parent & Senior’s disc. (604) 945-0004

*!(-!&// ,!&($#$% ($' )0%($#+(.#"$

'086?..-8>&) #)?&>->1 &>! 801&>-7&E-8>" E8 .E0?&C)->? :8@0 /8C? &>! 866-#? (&+? &>! +??5 :8@0 .5&#? &. 6)&=)?.. &. & *-&C8>!9 ,43AD3;ABD4< 6)&=)?..):-C5?##&$)?%1C&-)2#8C

CERAMIC TILING THE CATHOLIC WOMEN’S LEAGUE Holy Name of Jesus Parish Council

ANNUAL SPRING FAIR Saturday April 23rd, 9:30am-1pm Sunday April 24th, 10am-1pm

Featuring: A Phenomenal Garage Sale; clothing, books, kitchenwares, etc. Homemade baked goods.

Come and Enjoy our Coffee/Tea Garden on Saturday and KC Pancake Breakfast on Sunday

PTV TILE INSTALLATIONS Ceramic Tile, Porcelain, Stone. 27yrs exp. Santo 778-235-1772 ALL SMALL BREED PUPS Local, Non-Shedding and Vet Checked. 604-590-3727 www.puppiesfishcritters.com

4925 Cambie Street, Vancouver

BUSINESS SERVICES

Healthcare Documentation Specialists in huge demand. Employers want CanScribe graduates. A great workfrom-home career! Train with Canada’s best-rated program. Enroll today. www.canscribe.com. 1.800.466.1535. info@canscribe.com LEARN HOW to operate a Mini-Office outlet from your home computer. Can be done on a p/t basis or full time if you choose. FREE online training and support. www.project4wellness.com MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! In-demand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get the online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit:CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855-7683362 to start training for your work-at-home career today! NEW EXCITING MINI VLT’S. Produce Buckets of Cash Monthly. Attracts Customers Like Money Magnets. Locations Provided. Ground Floor Opportunity. Full Details CALL NOW 1-866-668-6629. WWW.TCVEND.COM

To advertise call

604-630-3300 FINANCIAL SERVICES HIP OR KNEE Replacement? Arthritic Conditions/COPD? Restrictions in Walking/ Dressing? Disability Tax Credit $2,000 Tax Credit $20,000 Refund. For assistance! 1-844-453-5372.

INCOME TAX RETURNS Fast & Reliable Great Prices!

Call or text 604-512-6854

TAX FREE MONEY

is available, if you are a homeowner, today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income. CALL ANYTIME 1-800-639-2274 or 604-430-1498 Apply online at www.capitaldirect.ca

FRANCHISES * %54", $"@-,>5-"+ &5"@6.-34 #;;>5,A@-,:

:*JJI=. 5L=8L0J9 8+G+JI+ HF -K<1AAA3-EKA1AAA :$0J> 0JG+5L,+JL =5 .HD =5 -2A?A 8+;> :&I=8=JL++/ 4.+=J0J9 4HJL8=4L5 :"8HF+550HJ=. L8=0J0J9 B8HG0/+/ :'0J=J40J9 =G=0.=7.+ :#J9H0J9 5IBBH8L '>@,"6, '>?45"++ >2 (' * !+5B+4L+/ @H8./D0/+ %+=/+8 0J '8=J4605+/ #FC4+ (.+=J0J9)

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PERSONALS

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GENTLEMEN! Attractive, discreet European lady is available for company. 604-451-0175 LOCAL HOOKUPS BROWSE4FREE 1-888628-6790 or #7878 Mobile

**SWEDISH MASSAGE** 604-739-3998 Broadway at Oak

TRAVEL SAVE 30% on our Heart of the Arctic adventure. Visit Inuit communities in Greenland and Nunavut aboard the comfortable 198-passenger Ocean Endeavour. CALL FOR DETAILS! 1-800-3637566 or visit www.adventure canada.com (TICO#04001400)

ADVERTISING POLICIES

All advertising published in this newspaper is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services offered are accurately described and willingly sold to buyers at the advertised prices. Advertisers are aware of these conditions. Advertising that does not conform to these standards or that is deceptive or misleading, is never knowingly accepted. If any reader encounters non-compliance with these standards we ask that you inform the Publisher of this newspaper and The Advertising Standards Council of B.C. OMISSION AND ERROR: The publishers do not guarantee the insertion of a particular advertisement on a specified date, or at all, although every effort will be made to meet the wishes of the advertisers. Further, the publishers do not accept liability for any loss of damage caused by an error or inaccuracy in the printing of an advertisement beyond the amount paid for the space actually occupied by the portion of the advertisement in which the error occurred. Any corrections of changes will be made in the next available issue. The Vancouver Courier will be responsible for only one incorrect insertion with liability limited to that portion of the advertisement affected by the error. Request for adjustments or corrections on charges must be made within 30 days of the ad’s expiration. For best results please check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Refunds made only after 7 business days notice!

REAL ESTATE

HOUSES FOR SALE BY OWNER 2268 E. 40th Ave nice bungalow on 40x140 lot, lane, $1.850 M BUILD TO SUIT. 604-836-6098

* WE BUY HOMES *

Yes, We Pay Cash!

Damaged or Older Houses!! Condos & Pretty Homes too! www.webuyhomesbc.com

( 604 ) 657-9422

PROPERTY FOR SALE Maple Ridge Urban Reserve. 5 acres, rent $3200. $1.775M 5 acres raw land, $915K. 10 acres, 2 houses, $3.3M. 2.2 acres, Silver Valley, $900K. 7.2 acres, land only, $1.5M. Galiano Isl Beach ppty, $659K. 604-761-6935, 778-246-4430

LOTS & ACREAGES FOR SALE SINGLE FAMILY and duplex lots available in Vancouver. Starting $1.3 million and up. 604-836-6098

ELECTRICAL A LIC’D. Electrician #30582 Rewiring & reno, appliance/ plumbing, rotor rooter 778998-9026, 604-255-9026 LIC. ELECTRICIAN bf#37309 Commercial &

CONCRETE

residential renos & small jobs. 778-322-0934

CONCRETE SPECIALIST Sidewalk, Driveway, Patio Exposed Aggregate, Remove & Replacing Reasonable Rates. 35 yrs experience For free est.

Call Mario 604-253-0049

YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call. Lic#89402. Fast same day service. Insured. Guar’d. We love small jobs. 604-568-1899

EXCAVATING

A 1 Retaining Walls, Stairs, Driveway, Patio, Sidewalk. Any concrete work. Free Est. Since 1977. Basile 604-617-5813.

@

place ads online @

classifieds.vancourier.com

DRAINAGE

BAJ Mini Excavating Demo •Drainage •Dry Bsmt. Remove •Concrete •Retain Walls & •Blacktop • 604-779-7816 DRAINAGE Services & more Claudio’s Backhoe Services Dry Basements+ 604-341-4446

DRYWALL (#$'& %!"! $('#" %&!& $$$*#()%'!"*+&#

0#64. ? 0#2*<0. 97)9 ."@>$";(33: .-5= ,@;5

/8%!1+)!'%&+ DRYWALL all kinds repairs,

Small jobs only, BY certified tradesman. 604-762-4024

Hardwood Floor Refinishing Repairs & Staining Installation Free Estimates Century Hardwood Floors 604-376-7224

classifieds. vancourier.com

PETS

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

A43

.

#1 Backhoes & Excavators Trenchless Waterlines Bobcats & Dump Truck & All Material Deliveries

www.centuryhardwood.com

ANYTHING IN WOOD Hardwood floors, installs, refinishing. Non-toxic finishes. 604-782-8275

Artistry Of Hardwood Floors .com Refinish, sand, install,dustless Prof & Quality work. Mark 604-219-6944

604-341-4446

Golden Hardwood & Laminate & Tiles. Prof install, refinishing, sanding & repairs. 778-858-7263 INSTALLATION REFINISHING, Sanding. Free est, great prices. Satisfaction guar. 604-518-7508

& $2!/34, *294)- &/!99 *!+)<389 & %+48;3);7(.48;3); &/!99 #!3/9 & ';!-8/899 "5)08;9 : "1,/36549

"$88 7645

$"*)(,")%+''

999'#-!)31&0,&3/+2%%'.(*

GARDEN VILLA

BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES

GORGEOUS HUGE 2 BR, 1300sf, 2 f/bath, quiet sunny grd flr, 2 secure patios, renos full size appl, incl dw, wd, prkg, ht/hw incl. Marpole $1795/mo, June 1. 604-261-1917 UNIVERSITY POINT -1 br heat and hot water - 1 year lease. No pets, no smoking. Refs. $1175 per month. Avail. now. 778-285-1616

(#$'& %!"! $('#" %&!& $$$*#()%'!"*+&#

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$.43,1

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Dusttin’s Handyman Service All jobs large & small. Competitive rates 604-562-5711

GUTTERS GUTTER CLEANING ROOF CLEANING WINDOW CLEANING POWER WASHING 30 yrs experience For Prompt Service Call

Simon 604-230-0627

HANDYMAN Reno, kitchen, bath, plumbing, countertop, floors, paint, etc. Mic, 604-725-3127 SMALL RENOS, electrical plumbing jobs. Drywall and painting. 604-805-6191

LANDSCAPING

Ken’s Power Washing Plus

FENCING

SPRING SPECIALS Gutter & window cleaning " Power washing " WCB, Insured, Free est.

"

Call Ken 604-716-7468

Able Boys Landscaping Ltd Bobcat, turf, Cedar fence, Tree trimming, Asphalt Call (604)377-3107

Akasha Turf Grass Mngt Complete Lawn Restoration, Aeration & Fert. Res/Comm, $89. 604-526-6305

APARTMENTS/CONDOS FOR RENT

1010 6th Ave. New West. Suites Available. Beautiful atrium with fountain. By shops, college & transit. Pets negotiable. Ref req. CALL 604 715-7764

'+#),%+#*!##(*"&!#$*!%

AAA All types repairs, tiling, painting, plumbing, electrical, more. David 604-862-7537

RENTALS

&!,$&!" +&-)##%## /"0' 2./1, 1"*( 7 ,1(+). ,;=N 1JJ" 3 =;L D(.) E(;D JL 7:.) *$JJ1 9@?(L+ 0JF.) (L?$F=(L+ 7 !@1&(L+ K.@$$ > 7 K.J1@+; %J?&;1 @L= (L 0F(.; %@FL=1C4 G ,$J?&0 @D@C 91J" 'JC?; K&C I1@(L K.@.(JL 9J1 < 7-BB4BB 3 A.($(.(;04 #J !;.04 M;9;1;L?;0 1;2F(1;=4 /B-N:H/N/:88 6 =@C 5 J1 /B-N8G7N//8: 6 L(+). 5 &#*+0%&+&0,, .)2-"3/!$"1(('4"

9H:1@<@1=030

03.-764!147 5/#22

Excavation, Sidewalk, Brick Pavers, Retaining Walls, Disposal, Trenching, Blacktop, Landscape, Sod, Backhoe/Bobcat/Dumptruck Services

West Coast Cedar Installations New, Repaired or Rebuilt Fences & Decks 604-788-6458 cedarinstall@hotmail.com

'FGC 8I.),D ".)CG)CED 'FGC 5.746D (FGECED %I+B+G6CCED #G?IBCED

GLASS/MIRRORS

Concrete, Drainage,

Call 604-833-2103

$>!& 5&;*#52 5&A>-*/#>A2 #A2/*""*/#>A2

A to Z CERAMIC TILES Installation, Repairs, Free Est. 604 444-4715, 604 805-4319

Drainage, Video

Inspection, Landscaping, Stump/Rock/Cement/Oil Tank & Demos, Paving, Pool/Dirt Removal, Paver Stones, Jackhammer, Water/Sewer, Line/Sumps, Slinger Avail, Concrete Cutting, Hand Excavating, Basements Made Dry Claudio’s Backhoe Service

HANDYPERSON

COMMERCIAL SKYLINE TOWERS 102-120 Agnes St, New West .

LANGARA GARDENS

#101 - 621 W. 57th Ave, Van Spacious 1, 2 & 3 BR Rental Apartments & Townhouses. Heat, hot water & lrg storage locker included. Many units have in-suite laundry and lrg patios/balconies with gorgeous views. Tasteful gardens, swim pools, hot tub, gym, laundry, gated parking, plus shops & services. Near Oakridge Ctrl, Canada Line stations, Langara College, Churchill High School & more. Sorry no pets. www.langaragardens.com

Call 604-327-1178

info@langaragardens.com Managed by Peterson Residential Property Management Inc.

classifieds.vancourier.com

Hi-Rise Apartment with River View & Indoor Pool. 1 BR & 2 BR Available. Rent includes heat & hot water. Remodeled Building and Common area. Gated underground parking available. References required.

CALL 604 525-2122

BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES

VILLA MARGARETA

320-9th St, New West Suites Available. All suites have balconies, Undergrd. parking avail. Refs. req. Small Pet OK. CALL 604-715-7764

BAYSIDE PROPERTY SERVICES

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BOOK YOUR AD ONLINE classifieds.vancourier.com

+#*&#!)+%( $#(( !(#, "')( (<1.6.:& <$2,/'4;& +4'.76.:& 8$%:$;) *<$$ $;760 2'7$;) 99#035"0-5!5

LAWN & GARDEN

• • • •

BC GARDENING 25 Years Exp. Lawn & Garden Maint.

Power Raking, Trimming

Tree Topping, Planting Cleanup & more!

All Work Guar. Free Est.

Donny 604-600-6049 GARY’S LAWN MAINTENANCE Power Raking, Lawn Cut, Yard Cleanup,Weeding, Moss Control, Fertilizer, Hedge & Tree Trimming, Tree Pruning, Free Est. 604-307-6375

LAWNS CUT $22 and up Edge and Trim Wes 604-266-5912

Home Services cont. on next page


A44

THE VANCOUVER COURIER THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 2016

SUDOKU

HOME SERVICES LAWN & GARDEN MASA’S GARDENING SERVICE

• • •

MASA USUI (MSC) JAPANESE GARDENER Over 20 year’s exp. Knowledge of plants and insects General garden maintenance, pruning, power raking, clean up

604-524-0515

PAINTING/ WALLPAPER

MOVING

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WILDWOOD LANDSCAPING

•Hedge Trim •Tree Prune •Hedge Removal •Spring Clean Up •Lawn Restoration. •Chaffer Control •Garden Install •Comm/Strata/Res Free Est • 604-893-5745

PUZZLE ANSWERS ON SEPARATE PAGE

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ABBA MOVERS bsmt clean 1-5 ton Lic, senior disc, 1 man $35, 2 men from $40/hr, 24/7, 26 yrs 604-506-7576 ABE MOVING & Delivery & Rubbish Removal $30/HR per Person• 24/7. 604-999-6020

43$- "0&3%1)- ' !0&%1/1#1-* 2.+(+,

TCP MOVING 1 to 3 men from $40.Lic & Ins local &

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storage. Ca & US long distance 604-505-1386 604-505-9166

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17. Jewish state 18. 2015 postseason hero 21. Largest English dictionary (abbr.) 22. Goddess of the dawn 23. __ Squad 24. Belonging to a thing 25. Food-related allergic reaction (abbr.) 26. Car mechanics group 27. Exceed in weight 34. Deserved

35. Singer Thicke 36. Clemencies 38. Critique 39. Resented 40. Type of tissue 41. Passages 42. It comes in a can 43. His heart is in San Francisco 44. Retirement account

14. The Science Guy Bill 15. Soviet Socialist Republic 17. Contraceptive device 19. Unfastened 20. __ student, learns healing 23. Ties the knot 24. Actor McKellen 25. Optical phenomenon 26. Turf

LAWN CUTTING, free est. Andrew 604 708-1152

Ny Ton Gardening

Yard/Rub Clean Up, Hedge/ Bush Trim/Prune, P/Rake. 604-782-5288 • SD ENTERPRISES • •Landscaping •Lawn Care Power raking •Gardening •Pruning •Clean-up •Top Soil •CEDAR FENCING Call Terry • 604-726-1931

classifieds.vancourier.com

DOWN 1. Belittled 2. Actress King 3. They pour drinks 4. Communicates 5. Take advantage of 6. Take on cargo 7. A stiff drink 9. Actress Watts 10. Natives of the American Southwest 12. Covered

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OIL TANK REMOVAL

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PLUMBING

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cont. on next page


THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 2016 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

HOME SERVICES

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Need a Painter? Find one in the Home Services section.

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PLEASE READ THE FINE PRINT: Each specific model may not be available at each dealer at all times; factory order or dealer trade may be necessary. Offers valid until May 02, 2016. See scion.ca or toyota.ca for complete details. In the event of any discrepancy or inconsistency between Toyota prices, rates and/or other information contained on www.getyourtoyota.ca and that contained on scion.ca or toyota.ca, the latter shall prevail. Errors and omissions excepted. *Lease example: 2016 Corolla CE Manual BURCEM-6M MSRP is $17,610 and includes $1,615 freight/PDI I and fees leased at 0.99% over 60 months with $0 down payment (after application of the $1,500 cash back which is available only on that model), equals 130 bi-weekly payments of $77 with a total lease obligation of $9,955. Applicable taxes are extra. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.07. †$1,000 Stackable cash back available on select other 2016 Corolla models and can be combined with advertised lease rate. **Lease example: 2016 iM Automatic KARJEC-A with a vehicle price of $23,810 includes $1,820 freight/PDI and fees leased at 1.49% over 60 months with $1,150 down payment, equals 130 bi-weekly payments of $97 with a total lease obligation of $13,774. Applicable taxes are extra. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.07. †† Up to $1,500 Stackable Cash Back available on 2016 iM models and can be combined with advertised lease rate. *** Stackable cash back offers on select 2016 Corolla and 2016 iM models are valid until May 2, 2016. If you would like to lease or finance at standard TFS rates (not the above special rates), then you may by May 2, 2016. Cash incentives include taxes and are applied after taxes have been charged on the full amount of the negotiated price. See toyota.ca and scion.ca for complete details on all cash back offers. †††Bi-weekly lease offer available through Toyota Financial Services (TFS) on approved credit to qualified retail customers on most 60 month leases of new and demonstrator Toyota and Scion vehicles. Down payment and first bi-weekly payment due at lease inception and next bi-weekly payment due approximately 14 days later and bi-weekly thereafter throughout the term. ‡®Aeroplan miles: Miles offers valid on vehicles purchased/leased, registered and delivered between April 1 and May 02, 2016. Customers must be an Aeroplan Member prior to the completion of the transaction. Offer subject to change without notice. Some conditions apply. Other miles offers available on other vehicles. See www.Scion.ca/scion/en/aeroplan or your Dealer for details. ®Aeroplan and the Aeroplan logo are registered trademarks of Aimia Canada Inc. Visit your Toyota Dealer or www.getyourtoyota.ca for more details. Some conditions apply; offers are time limited and may change without notice. Dealer may lease/sell for less.

RENOS & HOME IMPROVEMENT

A45

)

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COROLLA SPORT SHOWN MSRP incl. F+PDI $21,495

2016 COROLLA

EARN

2016 COROLLA CE MSRP FROM $17,610 incl. F+PDI

5,000

$

AEROPLAN MILES

77

$

OR

0 DOWN

BI-WEEKLY/60 MOS. @ 0.99% A.P.R.

MILES VARY BY MODEL

GET UP TO †

1,500

CASHBACK

$

®

LEASE FROM *

ON SELECT 2016 MODELS***

PErfEctLy praCtiCal. PRacTicAllY PErfEct. 2016 iM

EARN

15,000

2016 iM MSRP FROM $23,810 incl. F+PDI

$

LEASE FROM **

97

OR

$

BI-WEEKLY/60 MOS. @ 1.49% A.P.R.

AEROPLAN MILES

GET ††

1,500

®

CASH PURCHASE INCENTIVE***

iM Model SHOWN Specific model may not be available at each dealer; dealer trade may be necessary.

G E T YO U R T OYO TA .C A / B C JIM PATTISON TOYOTA DOWNTOWN 1395 West Broadway (604) 682-8881 30692

JIM PATTISON TOYOTA NORTH SHORE 849 Auto Mall Drive (604) 985-0591

GRANVILLE TOYOTA VANCOUVER 8265 Fraser Street (604) 263-2711 6978

18732

LANGLEY TOYOTATOWN LANGLEY 20622 Langley Bypass (604) 530-3156

JIM PATTISON TOYOTA SURREY 15389 Guildford Drive (604) 495-4100 6701

9497

OPENROAD TOYOTA RICHMOND Richmond Auto Mall (604) 273-3766

OPENROAD TOYOTA PORT MOODY 3166 St. John’s Street (604) 461-3656 7826

7825

DESTINATION TOYOTA BURNABY 4278 Lougheed Highway (604) 571-4350 9374

PEACE ARCH TOYOTA SOUTH SURREY 3174 King George Highway (604) 531-2916 30377

SUNRISE TOYOTA ABBOTSFORD Fraser Valley Auto Mall (604) 857-2657 5736

REGENCY TOYOTA VANCOUVER 401 Kingsway (604) 879-8411 8507

WEST COAST TOYOTA PITT MEADOWS 19950 Lougheed Highway (866) 910-9543 7662

VALLEY TOYOTA CHILLIWACK 8750 Young Road (604) 792-1167 8176

SQUAMISH TOYOTA SQUAMISH 39150 Queens Way (604) 567-8888 31003

WESTMINSTER TOYOTA NEW WESTMINSTER 210 - 12th Street (604) 520-3333 8531


A46

THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6

today’sdrive Your journey starts here.

20 Mazda 16

MX-5

The car stays small, the fun stays big.

PLEASE READ THE FINE PRINT: Offers valid until May 02, 2016. See toyota.ca for complete details. In the event of any discrepancy or inconsistency between Toyota prices, rates and/or other information contained on www.getyourtoyota.ca and that contained on toyota.ca, the latter shall prevail. Errors and omissions excepted. *Lease example: 2016 RAV4 FWD LE Automatic ZFREVT-A with a vehicle price of $27,125 includes $1,885 freight/PDI and fees leased at 1.99% over 60 months with $0 down payment (after application of the $1,500 cash back), equals 130 bi-weekly payments of $130 with a total lease obligation of $16,868. Applicable taxes are extra. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.10. $1,000 stackable cash back can be combined with advertised lease offer on the 2016 RAV4 FWD LE Automatic ZFREVT-A only. Up to $1,000 non-stackable cash back available on select other 2016 RAV4 models cannot be combined with advertised lease offer. **Lease example: 2016 Corolla CE Manual BURCEM-6M MSRP is $17,610 and includes $1,615 freight/ PDI and fees leased at 0.99% over 60 months with $0 down payment (after application of the $1,500 cash back), equals 130 bi-weekly payments of $77 with a total lease obligation of $9,955. Applicable taxes are extra. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.07. $1,000 Stackable cash back available on select other 2016 Corolla models and can be combined with advertised lease rate. *** Lease example: 2016 4Runner SR5 V6 Automatic BU5JRA-A with a vehicle price of $45,975 includes $1,885 freight/PDI and fees leased at 3.99% over 60 months with $2,925 down payment equals 130 bi-weekly payments of $230 with a total lease obligation of $32,819. Applicable taxes are extra. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.15. †Finance offer: 1.99% finance for 48 months, upon credit approval. †† Stackable cash back offers on select 2016 Corolla models are valid until May 2, 2016. Non-stackable cash back offers on select 2016 RAV4 models are valid until May 2, 2016 and may not be combined with Toyota Financial Services (TFS) lease or finance rates. If you would like to lease or finance at standard TFS rates (not the above special rates), then you may be able to take advantage of cash back offers by May 2, 2016. Cash incentives include taxes and are applied after taxes have been charged on the full amount of the negotiated price. See toyota.ca for complete details on all cash back offers. †††Bi-weekly lease offer available through Toyota Financial Services (TFS) on approved credit to qualified retail customers on most 60 month leases of new and demonstrator Toyota vehicles. Down payment and first bi-weekly payment due at lease inception and next bi-weekly payment due approximately 14 days later and bi-weekly thereafter throughout the term. ‡Aeroplan miles: Vehicle MSRP greater than $60,000 earns 20,000 Aeroplan miles plus 5000 Aeroplan bonus miles for a total of 25,000 miles. Miles offer valid on vehicles purchased/leased, registered and delivered between April 01, and May 02, 2016. Customers must be an Aeroplan Member prior to the completion of the transaction. Offer subject to change without notice. Some conditions apply. Other miles offers available on other vehicles. See Toyota.ca/aeroplan or your Dealer for details. ®Aeroplan and the Aeroplan logo are registered trademarks of Aimia Canada Inc. Visit your Toyota Dealer or www.getyourtoyota.ca for more details. Some conditions apply; offers are time limited and may change without notice. Dealer may lease/sell for less. Each specific model may not be available at each dealer at all times; factory order or dealer trade may be necessary.

BY BRENDAN McALEER brendanmcaleer@gmail.com twitter.com/brendan_mcaleer

R

EARN UP TO

25,000

MILES

® ‡

Miles vary by modell

Miles vary by model

2016 RAV4

RAV4 FWD LE MSRP FROM $27,125 incl. F+PDI

$

LEASE FROM *

130

OR

$

GET ††

1,000

RAV4 AWD LIMITED SHOWN MSRP incl. F+PDI $39,635

CASHBACK

0 DOWN

$

NOW AVAILABLE AS A HYBRID

ON SELECT 2016 MODELS

bi-weekly/60 mos. @ 1.99% A.P.R.†††

2016 COROLLA 2016 COROLLA CE MSRP FROM $17,610 incl. F+PDI

$

LEASE FROM **

77

OR

$

0 DOWN bi-weekly/60 mos.

1,500

CASHBACK

$

ON SELECT 2016 MODELS

@ 0.99% A.P.R.†††

COROLLA SPORT SHOWN MSRP incl. F+PDI $21,495

GET UP TO ††

2016 4RUNNER

Design:

SR5 V6 AUTOMATIC MSRP FROM $45,975 incl. F+PDI FINANCE FROM †

LEASE FROM ***

230

$

OR

1.99% A.P.R. / 48 mos.

bi-weekly/60 mos. @ 3.99% A.P.R.†††

SR5 V6 AUTOMATIC SHOWN

G E T YO U R T OYO TA .C A / B C JIM PATTISON TOYOTA DOWNTOWN 1395 West Broadway (604) 682-8881 30692

JIM PATTISON TOYOTA NORTH SHORE 849 Auto Mall Drive (604) 985-0591

GRANVILLE TOYOTA VANCOUVER 8265 Fraser Street (604) 263-2711 6978

18732

LANGLEY TOYOTATOWN LANGLEY 20622 Langley Bypass (604) 530-3156

JIM PATTISON TOYOTA SURREY 15389 Guildford Drive (604) 495-4100 6701

9497

OPENROAD TOYOTA RICHMOND Richmond Auto Mall (604) 273-3766

OPENROAD TOYOTA PORT MOODY 3166 St. John’s Street (604) 461-3656 7826

affi sang it best: everything grows. Higher beltlines, swelling curb weight, ballooning footprints; from the once-tiny Honda Civic to the Mini Cooper, every single car on the road these days just keeps getting bigger and bigger — with the exception of one. After a quarter-century, the Mazda Miata (or MX5, if you prefer) enters its fourth generation with one big surprise: it’s still small. The recipe remains the same — modest power, lightweight, rear-drive, open-topped — and really, that’s most of the shock. How, when everybody from BMW to Porsche seems to be making more and more complex vehicles, does Mazda manage to keep it simple? This new MX-5 is actually shorter than the original, and just a few kilos heavier. How’ve they done that? Remember how tiny the original 1990 version was? You could have delivered them to the dealership in a Tic-Tac box. There’s no turbo. There’s no clever torquevectoring differential. The cupholders are flat-out terrible. But it’s as wonderful as ever.

7825

DESTINATION TOYOTA BURNABY 4278 Lougheed Highway (604) 571-4350 9374

PEACE ARCH TOYOTA SOUTH SURREY 3174 King George Highway (604) 531-2916 30377

SUNRISE TOYOTA ABBOTSFORD Fraser Valley Auto Mall (604) 857-2657 5736

REGENCY TOYOTA VANCOUVER 401 Kingsway (604) 879-8411 8507

WEST COAST TOYOTA PITT MEADOWS 19950 Lougheed Highway (866) 910-9543 7662

VALLEY TOYOTA CHILLIWACK 8750 Young Road (604) 792-1167 8176

SQUAMISH TOYOTA SQUAMISH 39150 Queens Way (604) 567-8888 31003

WESTMINSTER TOYOTA NEW WESTMINSTER 210 - 12th Street (604) 520-3333 8531

Some of the MX-5’s diminutive size is thanks to its compact LED headlights. Mazda’s best-selling roadster still has a “face,” but it’s much less cutesy than before, almost snake-like. Or maybe make that cat-like as from some angles the MX-5 looks an awful lot like the Jaguar F-Type. You could do worse for a car to emulate, especially since the original Miata did such a good job at translating British-style open topped motoring into Japanese dependability. That the midlevel GS is just over $35K

— about half the F-Type’s price — doesn’t hurt either. The nose is extremely low, giving the driver a better sense of the road, even as the arches over the wheels make it easy to tell where the corners of the car are. 16” alloys are standard on the basic GX model, with 17” sevenspoke rims on the GS and GT models.

Environment:

One of the more interesting details is the way the sheetmetal seems to wrap around the doors, with body colour continuing into the cockpit of the car. It’s a neat tweak to the recipe, and sets off the small cabin with a splash of colour. Besides that small design tweak, the rest of the MX-5’s interior is function first. Weight has been saved almost everywhere, with the result that the detachable cupholders are right where your elbow goes (you can move one down to the passenger-side of the transmission tunnel if you’re flying solo). Further minimalism can be found with the seats, which exchange foam padding for a supportive web. The seats don’t have height adjustability, but are instead mounted on an inclined track – shorter drivers will gain height the closer they sit to the steering wheel. It’s an elegant solution, and while the MX-5 has occasional ergonomic oddities (volume knob between the seats, infotainment screen just stuck to the dash), it’s overall a nicely-executed effort. The small steering wheel with its compact airbag feels light and lively, and the shifter is perfectly positioned. Never mind the cupholders, this thing’s for driving.


T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

A47

today’sdrive Performance:

When Mazda revealed a 2.0L four-cylinder powerplant for their new car, many pundits raised their eyebrows. What, no forced induction? And it makes less power than the outgoing model? Now making essentially the same 155hp at 6000rpm and 148lb-ft of torque at 4600rpm as the regular Mazda3, the MX5’s new engine requires premium fuel and is down 10hp versus the previous model. Not the kind of thing to get a gearhead’s pulse racing. However, there’s so much more going on here, it’s hard to know where to start. Every inch of this little car has had the impurities hammered out of it; from chassis to suspension to the first electronic power assisted steering that actually has some feedback. It’s the result of an endless amount of tiny engineering tweaks, ranging from an obsession over the way the manual shifter slots into gear to hanging microscopic weights on the rear differential to get the right harmonics out of the engine sound. It’s not about the power, it’s not about the seats, it’s not about the stereo, its not about the absolute cornering grip. The MX-5 isn’t dominated by one element — instead, it’s the blend and balance of everything all at once. There’s no sport button, you just go. Flop the top down with a single arm motion, press it once to latch, then let out the clutch and scamper off the line with that little four-pot fizzing away merrily. If you can drive this thing with a straight face, you’re doing it wrong. Turn in is sharp, and body roll allows a sense of motion and speed. Speaking of which, the MX-5 is actually really quite quick. Like the original car, it’s a momentum machine, los-

ing little speed between the corners. String up a couple of apexes right, and it’s an absolute thrill. And then there’s the whole open-topped fall motoring aspect of it. In the MX-5 you smell the coffee roaster as you pass, hear the dry leaves crackle under your wheels, see the clouds whipping by overhead. Sure, it’s got a trunk and a seat for a friend, but the MX-5 is still all about the elemental experience of driving.

The small steering wheel with its compact airbag feels light and lively, and the shifter is perfectly positioned.

Features:

While the dedication to light weight must be praised, it’d be nice to see an optional power folding hardtop back for folks who’d like to street-park their sprightly Mazda roadster without worrying about security (maybe on the loaded GT models only). In terms of safety features, everything from blind-spot monitoring to lane-departure is here, and the navigation system is quick and easy to use. As mentioned, premium is required with official figures rating 6.9L/100kms on the highway for manualequipped cars, and 8.8L/100kms in the city. Like most current Mazdas, flogging the little MX-5 doesn’t seem to hurt real-world economy much.

Green Light:

Great new look; still provides an elemental drive; very well balanced; fun!

Stop Sign:

No more optional hardtop; some wonky ergonomics; no Mazdaspeed version any time soon.

The Checkered Flag:

The car stays small, the fun stays big.

Great new look, still provides an elemental drive, very well balanced and fun!

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A48 THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, A P R I L 2 1 , 2 0 1 6


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