Vancouver Courier February 27 2020

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12TH & CAMBIE WHY KEN SIM WANTS TO RUN FOR MAYOR AGAIN 4 OPINION PROTESTS CAUSE PAUSE FOR THOUGHT 10 SHAKEDOWN MUSICIAN’S 25-YEAR TEENAGE OBSESSION PUT TO VINYL 24 PASS IT TO BULIS SPORTS CANUCKS FACE MARCH MADNESS 26 THURSDAY

February 27 2020 Established 1908

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West Side worry

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THE VA NCOU VE R COUR IER T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0

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News 12TH & CAMBIE

Ken Sim wants to run again for Vancouver mayor The NPA’s mayoral candidate in 2018 is back on Twitter and has created a website Mike Howell

mhowell@vancourier.com

Remember Ken Sim? He’s the guy who came within 957 votes of becoming Vancouver’s mayor in the October 2018 civic election. But some guy named Kennedy Stewart beat him. Now Sim wants a rematch. “I’d like to run again,” he told me by telephone last week while waiting to board a plane in Colorado. “I’m been walking around the city for the last year-and-a-half and I’ve met a ton of people. It’s been overwhelming the number of people who were supporters of mine, or didn’t support me, who said I should run again and they would support me.” Sim was the NPA’s mayoral candidate in 2018. But he wouldn’t say whether a run for mayor would be with that party, another party, or as an independent.

Rumours are circulating that he’s forming his own party. “It’s too early to say,” he said. But it hasn’t been too early for Sim to return to Twitter and create a website that looks very much like a campaign website, including a section he titled, “What’s important to me.” He makes four points: • Make housing “more attainable” for everyone across the city. • Support businesses that are shutting down. • Protect the environment. • Improve “the dire situation” in the Downtown Eastside. I asked him to rate the performance of Stewart and his 10-member council, which includes five councillors he ran with in 2018; Rebecca Bligh has since resigned from the party, leaving the NPA with four councillors. Sim said he didn’t want

Ken Sim was the NPA’s mayoral candidate in the 2018 civic election and came within 957 votes of being elected mayor. FILE PHOTO ROB KRUYT

to point fingers or give letter grades, preferring to answer by saying the city is still a long way out from meeting residents’ needs, including hitting its housing targets. “Vancouver used to be a place where you could get an education, have a career, start a business, raise a family and enjoy the city,” said Sim, who was born in

Vancouver and is married with four children. “That’s no longer the case for a lot of people.” Added Sim: “If the issues I’m passionate about — and most of the city is passionate about — were getting better, then I wouldn’t consider running for mayor. There would be no point.” Sim’s announcement that

he wants to run for mayor when the next election isn’t until the fall of 2022 may seem a little early. But Stewart has already declared he will seek re-election. Sim made it clear that he is not interested in making a provincial or federal run, acknowledging that elections at both government levels are likely to occur before the civic vote in 2022. “The reason I ran civically wasn’t to be a politician, it was to make a difference in the city that I love,” said Sim, who is the chairperson of seniors’ care service Nurse Next Door and co-founder of Rosemary Rocksalt Bagels. He’s had a lot of time to reflect on why he didn’t get elected in 2018. Asked why he lost, Sim said this: “I wouldn’t say I lost. I think I gained some valuable experience and started a conversation. I met over 10,000 people in this city,

and I heard so many stories. There are a bunch of people who are super concerned.” Added Sim: “If we had two more days we would have won it. If any one mayoral candidate would have stepped away, we probably would have won it. If we started [our campaign] one week earlier, we could have won it.” But he didn’t, and Stewart told me last week that he welcomes a rematch. “He’s a real quality guy, I really like Ken, I’ve talked to him a number of times,” Stewart said. “I think he’s got the best intentions at heart here. That said, I’m going to do a better job than he’ll ever do, so I’m going to run again.” Until then, both men have to get through 2020, 2021 and most of 2022 before any of this really matters. A week is a long time in politics, never mind three years. But here we are. @Howellings

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T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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News

VPD identify ‘gap’ in sale of luxury boats to organized crime Police submitted 42 files to money laundering inquiry, which began this week Mike Howell

mhowell@vancourier.com

Vancouver police have identified a gap in the record-keeping and sale of high-end boats to people tied to organized crime in the city. Deputy Chief Laurence Rankin said the information has been supplied to Crown counsel acting on behalf of government in the Cullen Commission of Inquiry to Money Laundering, which began Monday. “We’ve identified a number of individuals with ties to organized crime that possess pleasure craft operator cards who were operating marine vessels with significant value, but those vessels weren’t registered to them,” Rankin told the Vancouver Police Board Feb. 20. “So based on that information, we believe it reveals gaps in the record keeping for the sale and purchase of marine vehicles, and that may require and benefit from a review of regulatory processes that exist at this time.”

Rankin said police reviewed 10 years of investigations in Vancouver involving “substantive criminal offences” that had a nexus to money laundering. That research led police to submit 42 files to the inquiry. The department was asked for follow-up on 29 of those 42 files and given a further request from government lawyers for information on high-end marine vessels in Vancouver. Meanwhile, Rankin said police continue to work with the City of Vancouver on anti-money laundering measures that will be revealed in a report expected to go before city council in March. The report will look at ways to enhance the working relationship between the VPD and the City of Vancouver through a number of initiatives, including enhanced financial reporting, Rankin said. “So more stringent financial reporting in the area of property ownership, in particular real estate

Vancouver police have identified a gap in the record-keeping and sale of high-end boats to people tied to organized crime in the city. PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

procurement,” he said, noting police have also helped develop bylaws that regulate the use of cryptocurrency automatic teller machines and money service businesses. Police believe cryptocurrency, in particular, is a tool used to facilitate money

laundering. A VPD report published in February 2019 said there had been 70 cryptocurrency files reported to Vancouver police in just two months. “This trend is alarming and should get the attention of every police leader and police board across Canada,

as well as the Canadian government,” said the report, which went before the police board last year. “The alarming rise in cryptocurrency files is primarily due to the way Bitcoin has been adopted by fraudsters as the instrument of choice to transfer funds.” The report said unregulated bitcoin automatic teller machines are “an ideal money laundering vehicle.” Since there are no requirements to register customer details, “it is easy to see how cash can be transferred into bitcoin and vice-versa.” “A user can also launder an unlimited amount of money using smaller transactions so as not to arouse suspicion, like they would at a regular bank,” the report said “This becomes even easier if a criminal group were to purchase an ATM for a few thousand dollars and put all their cash through that one ATM, laundering the money as many times as required and either profit from or eliminate the transaction fee.”

The issue of money laundering attracted the attention of Vancouver city council in January 2019 when two councillors said citizens were bringing money in suitcases and reusable shopping bags into city hall to pay taxes. That same month, the City of Vancouver announced it would no longer accept cash payments of more than $10,000 from people paying bills in an effort to prevent or deter potential money laundering. The city said $10,000 is the limit that aligns with the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre (FINTRAC) reporting requirements for identifying and tracking money laundering. In May 2019, Peter German — the author of two reports that detailed the extent of money laundering in B.C. — suggested to Vancouver council the city consider creating an anti-money laundering committee to review its financial operations. @Howellings

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At last, here is Whistler Blackcomb’s best-kept secret It might be surprising at first, but Whistler’s best-kept secret is springtime, which offers a whole lot of awesomeness to explore in the area.

patio weather. A relaxing lunch out on a sun-soaked midmountain deck at the Roundhouse, Chic Pea, or Crystal Hut, is a can’t-miss daily ritual.

The March snowfall average of 2.4 metres adds to what is typically an amazing base, with the longest ski season in North America that goes well into May. Meaning, there’s tons of time left to enjoy Whistler and even more reasons why it’s destined to become one of your all-time favorite getaways.

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Crystal Hut on Crystal Ridge famous for all-day Belgian waffles. PHOTO CREDIT: JOHN ENTWISTLE

Spring skiing in the alpine, our best kept secret.

Longer, sunnier days means more of everything Who doesn’t love choice? With spring’s extra daylight, the possibilities at Whistler Blackcomb are mind-boggling. After a day on the mountain, why not trying something completely different such as zip lining, which is Whistler’s highlight and is perfect for the warmer days of spring. Another fun activity that Whistler offers is snowmobile tours that give a unique chance to see the town from a whole new perspective. It is a great fit for springtime conditions and a must-do for Whistler first-timers.

The perfect time to relax on the patio One of the great things about spring in the mountains is that anytime is a great time to kick back and enjoy the

In September 2017, Whistler also introduced the Umbrella Bar, which is part of the renovated Roundhouse Lodge Terrace and Viewing Deck. These two new patios added an additional 555 seats with the heated umbrella bar’s 63 year-round patio seats overlooking Whistler Village at the Roundhouse Lodge. At the end of the day, the party is just getting started in the Village down below, with the likes of The GLC, Merlin’s, and Dusty’s serving up some of the best après you’ll find anywhere in the world.

With spring comes the year’s biggest party

Whistler turns up the volume with countless live concerts, legendary arts events, endless nightlife and the best spring skiing and riding anywhere. There’s also a healthy dose of ski and snowboard competitions to take part in.

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T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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Avenue and Arbutus Street threatened that store’s loss prevention officer with bear spray. By mid-December, there had been 2,000 reported cases of shoplifting in Vancouver in 2019, surpassing 2018’s total of 1,930. Vehicle break-ins are also on the rise. Vancouver Police Department released its year-end crime stats for 2019 Feb. 19, which saw a 12.9 per cent increase in theft from auto incidents. And that trend has continued into 2020 — the first seven days of the year saw 258 car break-ins in Vancouver. The majority of the thefts were concentrated downtown between Main Street and Burrard Street, with pockets in Mount Pleasant, Kitsilano, Fairview, Kensington-Cedar Cottage and Sunset also hit hard by thieves between Jan. 1 and 7. The statistics represent only those break-ins reported to police. — with files from Mike Howell @JessicaEKerr

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An ongoing effort targeting property crime in Vancouver’s downtown core has netted police 26 arrests in three months. “Since December, our patrol officers have been working closely with our partners in retail security around the city,” media relations officer Const. Tania Visintin said in a press release. “We have a common goal, and that is to target violent property crime offenders and protect retailers from financial loss.” The 26 arrests have resulted in 150 criminal charges, including: breach of probation, theft from auto, theft under $5,000, possession of break-in instruments and possession of stolen property. Vancouver Police Department has targeted property crime and shoplifters in recent months. In November, the department completed a three-week project targeting shoplifters in downtown Vancouver. That initiative

resulted in 25 arrests. And in early December, the department partnered with the Downtown Vancouver Business Improvement Association and the Robson Street Business Association to launch the Christmas Crime Team. “Thanks to our partnerships with the Downtown Vancouver Business Improvement Association and loss prevention officers at multiple retail stores, we have been able to target repeat offenders who threaten retail staff with violence in committing their crimes,” Visintin said. Late last year, the department expressed concern over the level of violence associated with shoplifting in the city. In one case, a man caught stealing alcohol from the B.C. Liquor Store on Commercial Drive and Grant Street pulled a knife on the store’s loss prevention officer before fleeing. He was later arrested by police. In another case, a man allegedly trying to steal clothing from the Lululemon store on West Fourth

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THE VA NCOU VE R COUR IER T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0

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Tapestry communities embrace ‘Fit February’ to inspire wellness Zumba, yoga, bridge, mediation, Reiki. While this short list of wellness activities might read like the schedule from a luxury spa, it actually highlights just some of the many wellness programs and services offered to residents at Tapestry, a community for independent adults with a passion for active aging. And with “Fit February” just wrapping up, Mark Andrew, Tapestry’s senior vice president, says there is no better time to highlight the community’s commitment to nurturing the seven dimensions of wellness to help residents live their best life possible. “We believe that when each of the seven dimensions of wellness is equally nurtured and prioritized, it can elevate health and enhance an individual’s overall sense of well-being,” says Andrew. “With Fit February, we ‘pump up’ our commitment to wellness to inspire our residents to get involved in the community’s varied offerings and try new events or classes that promote their physical, mental and spiritual wellness.”

During Fit February, Tapestry’s communities created an exciting approach to wellness in all of its dimensions, including physical, spiritual, intellectual, Occupational, environmental, emotional and social. Residents and employees volunteered to be grouped into teams and competed in various wellness activities to earn points. The team with the most points at the end of the month wins. And do residents take these competitions seriously? “They’re very diligent to make sure their points are being calculated and their team is making good progress,” says Andrew. “What’s more important is that many participants are inspired to pursue new classes and activities which is exactly the point of Tapestry’s wellness-focused contest!” While wellness is spotlighted at Tapestry during Fit February, residents have unlimited opportunities throughout the year to maintain an active, healthy and engaged lifestyle. It all begins the minute a resident joins the community. During the first two

weeks, Tapestry’s wellness professionals coordinate an orientation to learn more about an individual’s wellness objectives and to develop a tailored program to meet individual needs. Andrew says no matter what a resident’s fitness level is when they move into a Tapestry community, there is always some kind of activity they can take part in. “We like to meet residents where they are at in their fitness journey and tailor an approach that meets their interests and experiences.” One example of that, he says, is incorporating dancing into personal training programs, which can not only be fun, but is also a way to work on balance and coordination for someone who’s loved dancing all their life. “Or for those who have enjoyed hiking, we invite them join us on our forest walks through Pacific Spirit Park.” Andrew says new residents are often surprised at just how easy it is to get involved and participate in the community’s many fitness programs.

drew is quickk to note thhat Tapestry’s And wellness focus, however, isn’t solely on physical fitness. Each community’s monthly activities calendar is bursting at the seams with unique wellness offerings, like challenging puzzles and games, which allow residents to exercise their minds, right along with their bodies. “At Tapestry, we believe it is possible to feel healthier and more vibrant as we age,” says Andrew. “We know that age is only a number and that opportunities for pursuing wellness are unlimited.” 

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VANCOURIER.COM

T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

A9

News

Duplexes making ‘modest’ inroads in Vancouver Naoibh O’Connor

noconnor@vancourier.com

When council agreed to allow duplexes in most single-family neighbourhoods on a trial basis, city staff predicted the uptake would be modest. That’s proved correct. Over the 2019 trial period, the city received 86 duplex applications, which translates to about 23 per cent of all redevelopment applications in single-family (RS) zones. The information is revealed in a staff report presented to council Feb. 26 after the Courier’s print deadline. “This modest level of uptake is in line with what was anticipated given that the duplex option was intentionally introduced in a modest way offering the same floor area that is possible for a house,” Neil Hrushowy, assistant director of community planning, writes in the report. Hrushowy notes that duplexes provide twice as many units as onefamily homes, create new lower-cost homeownership options, create secondary rental suites, and offer better energy efficiency than single-family homes. He also mentions public engagement over the past year revealed “strong public support for duplexes as a housing choice” in singlefamily neighbourhoods.

A Talk Vancouver survey in 2019 found 88 per cent of the 3,400 respondents agreed or strongly agreed with allowing them. Hrushowy’s report doesn’t call for any council action — some changes to regulations were made in the spring of 2019 — but suggests existing regulations remain in place. Staff will, however, be bringing forward a report sometime this year about the possibility of allowing duplexes in RS-3 and RS3A zones as well. The road to getting to this point wasn’t smooth. Some housing advocates think council hasn’t been aggressive enough in allowing different types of housing in single-family zones, while others have argued forms such as duplexes aren’t creating housing that’s affordable to most Vancouverites and redevelopment has the potential to displace some affordable rental suites. But, in September of 2018, the previous council approved duplexes in most single-family zones in a 7-4 vote. It was meant to be a “quick-start action” in the city’s Making Room program to increase the supply of medium-sized, mediumdensity housing throughout the city in single-family neighbourhoods. Duplexes were already allowed in some areas of the city, including areas of Grandview-Woodland and Mount

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Pleasant but, in 2018, staff said they only accounted for about 1.6 per cent of the housing stock. In December of 2018, the new council decided not to reverse their predecessors’ decision. Instead, they opted to allow duplexes on a trial basis with staff tracking data such as applications, approvals, pricing and impact on renters, and

reporting back to council. All the information will also be discussed during the citywide planning process. Duplexes are an option for new construction only, and an increase in floor area over what’s currently permitted is not permitted. Laneway houses aren’t allowed in conjunction with duplexes. Duplexes on small lots

aren’t required to have secondary suites, while duplexes on larger lots, which are more than 5,500 square feet, must have at least one suite and they can include two suites — one for each half duplex. Information about duplex sales prices isn’t available yet because few are completed, according to the staff report, although it notes

duplexes typically sell for 66 per cent of the cost of a new single-family home. “The introduction of duplexes in RS zones has not resulted in an increase in land values,” the report also reveals, while houses demolished to build duplexes are similar in age, size and value to those demolished and replaced with new onefamily homes.

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VANC OUR IER .CO M

Opinion

How noble intentions can breed self-righteousness

‘Transient legion of activists’ turning Canada into ‘global battlefield’ is nothing new Mike Klassen

mike@mikeklassen.net

If you have yet to be impacted by the #ShutDownCanada protests that are stalling tens of thousands of travellers and commuters, or choking supply lines for goods in our ports, don’t worry, it’s only a matter of time before our whole economy feels it. For those who’ve had a bus re-routed or have been unable to take the West Coast Express, or for others stuck in traffic thanks to protestors occupying an intersection, it might have meant missing a job interview, or being late to pick up a child or a pet from daycare, or giving up any hope of getting to a medical appointment. The evident lack of concern for an average citizen’s autonomy boils down to the ethical lapse of protest organizers, who believe the nobility of their cause supersedes the interests of other Canadians. Note the blockading of access points in government offices in Victoria this month — which of course has its own hashtag: #BCGovtShutdown. Someone shared with me a hyperlink to a freely available document that I was shocked to see listed all major government offices in Victoria, including notes on the loca-

tion of building entrances, and the estimated number of protesters needed to block each one of them. Incredibly, it’s alleged that many protesters involved in the shutdown, or crashed the B.C. Legislative Assembly a few days beforehand, were given the day off from classes by their UVIC professors, who are public employees themselves. Some of us will recall that government offices have also been the target of terrorism, such as in Oklahoma City where a bomber took 168 lives. What kind of person thinks to target dozens of government offices to prevent employees moving in or out of a workplace? Or what group or organization is responsible for facilitating the work that went into creating a spreadsheet that pairs protesters with side entrance of a public building? Through the use of social media, protest organizers can meet and mobilize mass actions while remaining completely anonymous. It has been astonishing lately to witness just how vulnerable our institutions, ports and transportation networks are. Margareta Dovgal, director of research at Resource Works Society, a B.C.-based non-profit providing information on responsible resource

The techniques used in the current #ShutDownCanada protests that are stalling tens of thousands of travelers and commuters is nothing new, points out columnist Mike Klassen. PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

development, is not surprised however. Dovgal says Canada is an “incredibly great target” for those who seek attention for an array of concerns. I interviewed her for my latest Vancouver Overcast podcast episode. “I’ve seen how in the environmental space, the fact that Canada has this amazing concern and responsiveness to the public’s needs,” said Dovgal. “I’ve seen how that characteristic of our governance is easily used by outsiders who

want global and national environmental solutions.” Indeed, there is plenty of precedent for what she describes. In his seminal book on the Clayoquot Sound’s “war in the woods” protests of the early 1990s, Environmental Groups and the International Conflict Over the Forests of British Columbia, UBC professor emeritus Bill Stanbury, gives detailed insights into the environmental protest movement. Stanbury, who died in

2011, was praised by a Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives economist for his “remarkable mind.” Of the protests, Stanbury wrote that their “noble cause” bred self-righteousness among leaders and fervent followers. “When powerful interest groups become imbued with the idea that the end justifies the means, violations of ethical norms are likely to follow.” He went on to list many of them. Years before others promoted the idea, Stanbury

documented how protesters “internationalized” domestic environmental disputes, in particular how some American capitalists flush from a boom in the tech sector, poured millions into charitable foundations to support environmental causes in Canada. Stanbury explains how protesters exploit our legal system too by imposing the cost of their safety on the police and our court system. Barricades are usually erected in the presence of police, who in turn must protect their civil rights against those who would tear them down. Stanbury also questioned the ethics of involving children in protests too, calling it “utterly irresponsible” to put them in harm’s way. No doubt he could have foreseen that the modern face of climate activism would be in her teens. It’s as if Canadians are resigned to this loss of our sovereignty. As Stanbury noted back in 2000, “the transient legion of activists” taking up their fight on our streets and rail right-of-ways have made our country a “global battlefield.” ••• Listen to the Vancouver Overcast podcast for Mike Klassen interview with Margareta Dovgal atovercastyvr.podbean.com. @MikeKlassen

Don’t turn away from civil unrest — let’s learn from it Ingrid Abbott

delta-optimist.com

Have the LNG gas line protesters got your attention? They’ve got mine, and they’ve got the attention of our whole country, not only by inconveniencing us, but by affecting the economic livelihood of thousands of workers. Protesters across the country say they stand in solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs who oppose the LNG pipeline going through their unceded lands. They don’t mince words, they plan to shut down Canada, and so far they are succeeding. Earlier this month, access to Deltaport was successfully shut down for close to 40 hours by a group called the Red Braid Alliance for Decolonization. They handed out pamphlets to truck drivers and 14 members were arrested by Delta police as they enforced a Supreme

Court injunction. I’ve never heard of the Red Braid Alliance and I bet you haven’t either, but we can’t dismiss groups like this anymore, they are effectively fuelling civil disobedience and it has repercussions for all of us. Our national railway has been shut down for more than 12 days and our ports are clogged on both sides of the country. There’s something happening in our cities and in our rural communities. People are angry and they don’t give a damn who they hurt. You don’t have to be Aboriginal to feel the neglect and hurt First Nations have suffered for decades. This column is not long enough to list all the injustices, and reconciliation is long overdue. The origins of this conflict have been brewing for some time. Canadians of all demographics are challenging the status quo,

This is a historic moment that shouldn’t be dismissed, says writer Ingrid Abbott. “Let’s listen, learn and hope for a peaceful and satisfactory end to this current unrest, we all deserve a harmonious homeland.” PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

the establishment and the politicians who pit economics versus the environment. Not all the protesters are educated on the Wet’suwet’en chiefs complaints. Some people on the front lines don’t know the difference between a

band council and a hereditary chief. They don’t even know what’s in the LNG pipeline; is it natural gas or crude oil, it doesn’t seem to matter. So who’s inspired to show up and protest? Outgoing Conservative

party leader Andrew Scheer says protesters need to “check their privilege.” He suggests only the few have time on their hands to protest, in reality most protesters are far from privileged. Protesters feel disenfranchised from modern society,

with varying agendas like climate change, saving the whales, GMO’s in our food, or women’s rights. They stand in solidarity with anyone they believe is suffering from injustice. This is a potent cocktail for civil unrest, we better get used to it, some of our young people are very angry. Meanwhile, I sit on the sidelines waiting to see what our politicians will do, because we elected them to deal with highly complicated issues. Even if my only role is as conscientious observer, I won’t be distracted by other world issues such as the coronavirus or the U.S. election campaign. I am present. For protesters, for police, for politicians and for all of us this is a historic moment, don’t dismiss it. Let’s listen, learn and hope for a peaceful and satisfactory end to this current unrest. We all deserve a harmonious homeland.


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T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0 THE VA NCOUVER COURIER

Inbox letters@vancourier.com LETTERS

Inspired by inspiring teachers column Re: “Here’s to all our favourite teachers who made a difference,” Jan. 20. As both a student myself and a teacher, I enjoyed your article in the Vancouver Courier very much. I was lucky or blessed (depending on your point of view) to have very inspiring professors at university. Not so much in high school in B.C. I did junior high in Toronto and that was a different story. I still have my notebook from my science course there. I am 66 years old now. I moved to B.C. and was so bored by school here that I was not

a good student in high school. However, I was very fortunate to have incredibly inspiring professors at university. What a difference it makes! I eventually became a teacher myself (and owned a private school for 20 years) and at one point, I bumped into one of my former students who took me out for dinner and gave me the speech about the two most influential people in his life, his math teacher and myself, his English teacher. I was blown away and so touched. I never dreamed that I made such a difference in someone’s life. Your article hit it exactly right. Thank you. Lorie Lee, Vancouver

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0

VANCOURI ER.COM

Feature

West Point Grey businesses struggle amid rent hikes, Business owners in Vancouver’s smallest commercial district reporting losses ranging from 20 to 50 per cent John Kurucz

jkurucz@vancourier.com

Vancouver’s smallest commercial district is in big trouble. You don’t need spreadsheets or a business degree to see what ails the westernmost stretch of West 10th Avenue. Walking the three blocks spanning Discovery to Tolmie streets, the first thing that pops to mind: “Where is everyone?” Foot traffic is down significantly. Boarded-up shops with “for lease” signs dot each block. Some business owners are reporting six-digit losses, while others are giving up entirely — not just on that particular street, but on Vancouver altogether. The Courier spent the better part of last week visiting independent shops and speaking to locals in the West Point Grey Village area, near the entrance to the University of British Columbia. Many factors contributing to the business crisis are unique to the immediate area. Safeway leaving in November 2018 killed much of the foot traffic. House prices are well beyond the reach of anyone outside the one per cent. Online shopping is hurting retailers both big and small. Families are smaller, there are less children and more seniors in the area. That UBC has grown into a city unto itself has resulted in more and more students opting not to leave campus to shop or eat. Whether the SkyTrain gets extended to UBC looms large on business owners, planners, residents and investors. Some shop owners and residents who spoke to the Courier said the retail mix was off, or in need of a refresh. Others suggested the increasing number of Asian families in the area don’t care for the shops and instead take their money to Richmond. Variables aside, the problems plaguing West

Businesses along West 10th Avenue in West Point Grey are struggling. The Diner’s Reg Lee and Tom Hodgkinson (top right) and pharmacist Safouh El Rayes (bottom right) say the loss of Safeway, increased taxes and shifting demographics are to blame. PHOTOS DAN TOULGOET

Point Grey are also seen in virtually every other part of Vancouver: rents are out control and the tax burden is overwhelming.

‘I’ve never seen anything like this’

Lee Richmond is kind of like the mother hen of the neighbourhood. Owner of the Kaboodles Toy Store between Sasamat and Trimble streets, she’s been in West Point Grey for 40 years. She knows everyone, everyone knows her and she’s been a director with the local BIA since its inception. That ends soon, as she prepares to close shop and move to another location in Kitsilano. Four shops will soon become three. “My rent has gone from a couple thousand to well over $10,000 monthly. It’s unbelievable,” Richmond said. “I’ve never seen anything like this in 40 years. Nothing like this at all.” Like most businesses in the neighbourhood, Richmond has a triple net lease — she pays rent, property tax, insurance, utilities and all the upkeep. She opens up her books for the Courier, which shows monthly costs in rent and tax alone: $4,978 in 2007 versus $11,173 last year. Those numbers exclude wages, insurance and other escalating costs that eat at her bottom line. Going through the books further shows a $10,000 drop for three consecutive Januarys. Richmond is making $100,000 less during the Christmas season now compared to a decade ago. Taxes and rent are the primary killers for Rich-

mond, but she recognizes other factors. The online marketplace is a killer. A 2,200 square foot storefront is a relic from a bygone era in Vancouver. Though now a lawyer, there was a time when Richmond’s daughter contemplated taking over the business. “I said, ‘Don’t even think about it. I wouldn’t wish this upon you.’ It’s hard work and it’s nerve wracking work,” Richmond said.

Talk of the block

After visiting Richmond, the Courier walked the span of the neighbourhood from west to east and spoke to more than a dozen residents and business owners. They all point to the Safeway closure in 2018 as a mitigating factor in the area’s current decline. The lot covers a massive footprint in the neighbourhood — close to 130,000 square feet — and its assessed value for 2020 is $125 million. What happens to the lot moving forward remains in question. The land is owned by Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, while BentallGreenOak is the property manager. “We have been pursuing a path for the long term redevelopment of the lot,” BentallGreenOak spokesperson Rahim Ladha told the Courier in an email. “Our efforts remain ongoing and we will be sure to inform our stakeholders and members of the public with future updates.” Directly across the street from the vacant lot, Reg Lee sits in The Diner alongside chef Tom Hodgkinson and four customers. The

58-year-old, all-things-England diner is soon empty and it stays that way for the balance of the Courier’s visit. Lee expects, and banks on, three days a week where the total take is $60. He can barely pay his staff. Hodgkinson said the most recent property tax bill was about $30,000 for just over 1,000 square feet. The only saving grace is that Lee’s wife Stella Shurety owns the property. “Foot traffic is terrible, absolutely. Safeway was what brought people here,” Lee said. “If you don’t own the land here, you’ve had it. Impossible.” Less than 10 metres to the east, a large fluorescent sign that says “Drugs” harkens back to old Vancouver. Inside is Safouh El Rayes, head pharmacist of Point Grey Pharmacy. The next property over has a for lease sign in the window. El Rayes is not happy — not with his landlord, the city or the province. He’s been in the area since 1992 and the words “used to be” come up in every second sentence: used to be affordable, used to be vibrant. With a triple net lease in place, El Rayes is paying about $14,000 a month to remain afloat. He’s furious with the “best and highest” use model of assessment that taxes the unoccupied air above his pharmacy. “Now, tell me what kind of business can survive that? How many prescriptions do you have to fill for that?” El Rayes asks. “The problem is this: why would you charge me for something above me when there’s nothing above me? It’s greed.”

Across the street at Varsity Shoe Repair, Victor Tran is seated in his storefront, reading a book. He brings that point up specifically when the Courier asks how business is. Tran points to a shelving unit normally packed with four shelves worth of shoes. No more than five pairs are on display. Tran’s been in the neighbourhood for 15 years and his survival is based solely on having no staff. His 530-square-foot space costs him about $25,000 a year. “I used to be really busy in the wintertime,” Tran said. “Now, as you could see, I was sitting there reading a book.”

Changing demographics

Further west near the intersection of Trimble and West 10th, two storefronts have sat vacant for roughly four years. A pair of medical clinics are closing, which is particularly worrisome for seniors who spoke to the Courier. Arguably the most ubiquitous Canadian business imaginable, Tim Hortons closed its location at Trimble and West 10th last month after a decade in the neighbourhood. “The restaurant closure was a decision between the restaurant and the landlord

due to an increase in rent,” f a Tim Hortons spokesper- i son confirmed in an email. 2 After 25 years as a barber in the area, Jihan Moham- T med has stories aplenty. The Sasamat Barber Shop M owner recalls the guy who s came in recently complain- b ing about a $200,000 property tax bill on his home. Another customer Mohammed’s seen for 15 years offered this: “He’s retired but his kids can’t live here,” Mohammed said. “Each house, there are three or four people moving out. It is affecting everyone.” Mohammed’s 380 square feet costs him about $2,000 a month. Business is down 10 per cent so far this year. Mohammed and others who spoke to the Courier for this story suggest there’s been an influx of Asian homeowners in the area who simply prefer to shop elsewhere. “The big change that’s happened is this crazy, almost uncontrolled redevelopment knocking down all the houses,” added Peter Munns, who’s lived at Tolmie and West Sixth Avenue for four decades. “The people who are buying them, and I hate to say this, they are Asian and they don’t shop here. So there’s a change in the demographics and how this area works.”


VANCOURIER.COM

T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0 THE VA NCOUVER COURIER

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Feature

taxes and uncertainty

This graph shows the incremental increase in the percentage of Mandarin speaking residents over a 15-year period in Point Grey. COURTESY OF CITY OF VANCOUVER.

The city’s historical tracking of the area suggests that West Point Grey has 30 per cent more seniors than children as of 2016. Over time, there has been a decline in the population with English origins and an increase of those with Chinese origins. Seventeen per cent of the population has some knowledge of Mandarin, a number that jumped by 12 per cent between 2001 and 2016. Across the rest of Vancouver, that number remained at seven per cent from 2001 to 2011 and increased to 11 per cent in 2016.

Taxes, taxes, taxes

In an interview Monday, Mayor Kennedy Stewart said he’s spoken to members of the BIA and is

aware of the issues facing the small neighbourhood. More density is needed, along with a commitment to extend the SkyTrain all the way out to UBC. Stewart added that a split assessment model of taxation, one that the province balked at this week, would be a game changer. The majority of business owners the Courier spoke to lived outside of Vancouver, though Didier Facchin is in the unique position of renting a home and owning a business in West Point Grey. He pays more than $2,000 for an 800 square foot apartment and roughly $6,000 monthly for his 780 square foot coffee shop, the Figaro Café + Bakery. Located between Trimble and Discovery streets, Fac-

chin’s business has been there for four years. “The base rent is almost the same as four years ago,” Facchin said. “It’s the taxes — they’ve gone up 40 per cent every year. The rent is not that bad. It’s the commercial taxes.” Facchin’s business is down 25 per cent since Safeway left. He and his partner have an eightmonth-old son who could likely celebrate his second birthday in another city. “What we’re paying now, it’s not sustainable,” Facchin said. “We are a young family. I’ve seen it over the last four years with my customers who are young families. They just leave, they don’t stay in Vancouver. It’s not possible.” @JohnKurucz

Community Chat With Michael Lee e, MLA Vancouver-Laangara

Mayor blasts provincial tax relief pitch What was announced by the province Monday as an interim tax relief measure for small business and the arts sector is being panned by City of Vancouver council members and staff as unrealistic, short sighted and simply not doable. The province’s proposed fix to deal with huge property tax bills and triple net leases is temporary and puts the onus on individual municipalities to debate tax rates across large swaths of the commercial sector. In Vancouver, that means staff and council would have to make those decisions in a piecemeal fashion across thousands of businesses. The city’s preference, and the preference of other Lower Mainland municipalities, is for a new property tax class to be created that would ease tax levels on small businesses with undeveloped air above them. Currently, one and twostorey buildings are hit with property tax bills that reflect the undeveloped potential above them — effectively, a tax on air. The city wants a separate tax class for those properties specifically, so the tax burden could be lessened and based on a property’s current use rather than its future development potential. It’s a tax model commonly referred to as split assessment. That’s not what Vancouver got, and Mayor Kennedy Stewart isn’t happy about, nor are some of his fellow councillors. “There’s a huge gap

favour of the province’s pitch, getting it done in time could be impossible. Bylaw changes are needed by April 22. Having staff draft the bylaw and do the requisite public feedback with the business sector in two months puts the city’s finance staff in a bind. “It would require literally each municipality to go through thousands of different properties and determine who would be eligible, so [there’s] a lot of room for inequity. And also administratively, it’s almost impossible to achieve,” NPA Coun. Sarah Kirby-Yung told the Courier Tuesday. The split assessment model has the backing of a wide range of policy makers: chief financial officers from Vancouver, Burnaby, Coquitlam, North Vancouver, Richmond, Surrey and West Vancouver. It’s also received support from the Lower Mainland chambers of commerce and boards of trade and the B.C. Chamber of Commerce. Several resolutions on the issue have received support from the Union of B.C. Municipalities. Kirby-Yung likened the tax proposal to the recent introduction of ride hailing. “When municipalities started going it alone and looking at putting it in, we saw very quickly a patchwork of regulations developing that would have been inconsistent,” she said. “That’s not what we want to achieve here. You want taxation to be predictable and consistent and equitable.” —John Kurucz

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between what we are asking for and what this is,” Stewart told the Courier Monday. “At the core of our ask was for the province to give us the tools to deal with development potential and that’s not here.” The province’s tax proposal includes the following: • a base tax year of 2015 or later to use as comparison to the current taxation year. To put that in perspective, a municipality where property values began to spike in 2017 could choose 2016 as the base year. • a minimum percentage of increase in land value since the chosen base year. Cities can choose the tax increases — 20, 30 or 40 per cent, for example — as the threshold for which properties qualify. • the increase in value must be to the land, rather than improvements to a building. At least one tenant has to be responsible for all or a portion of the property taxes to qualify for the exemption. Stewart cited an example of a Walmart or big bank that shares the same building as a small business. The city’s preference is to be able to help that small business specifically, while the province’s proposal would give tax breaks to both. “When the highest and best use is applied to their properties and their leasing, they’re getting hit with very heavy property taxes because of that — split assessment would have really helped,” Stewart said. Even if the city was in

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THE VAN COU VER CO URIER T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0

VAN CO U RI E R. C OM

News

Proposed 26-storey Waterfront Station tower remains divisive Naoibh O’Connor

noconnor@vancourier.com

In late 2014, Anthony Norfolk was one of two members of the Vancouver Heritage Commission who voted against Cadillac

Fairview’s development proposal to build a modern 26-storey office tower next to Waterfront Station. The site, at 555 West Cordova St., is currently a parking lot located between the transit station and The Landing

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heritage building. Norfolk concluded the proposed tower failed to relate respectfully to both historic buildings. More than five years and a redesign later — a result of criticism from various groups, individuals, and the city’s Urban Design Panel — Norfolk’s opinion hasn’t changed. That was clear at a Feb. 18 open house about the revised plans for what Cadillac Fairview is calling “The Crystal at Waterfront Square” and what opponents, including Norfolk, have dubbed Icepick 2. The redesign still envisions a 26-storey building, but it’s been shifted away from the street and tucked behind Waterfront Station, views to the north are clearer through the building, there’s a public viewing terrace on the fourth floor that’s larger than the building’s floor plate, and there’s a public plaza at street level with the ability to create a future pedestrian and vehicle connection through it to the waterfront. But Norfolk maintains the tower’s redesign is only “marginally” better than the previous plan, and it’s still inappropriate for the site. “It’s too big in its relationship in the context of the two heritage buildings either side. It basically disrespects them,” he told the Courier. “It is far too big. I’m all in favour of a very contemporary design but it is not the right building for that location, as the hub study indicates, in its current form.”

On the waterfront

Norfolk is referring to the City of Vancouver’s Central Waterfront Hub Framework, completed more than a decade ago to guide future planning in the area, which stretches from the Convention Centre to about Carrall Street between Cordova and the waterfront. Aside from Cadillac Fairview, landowners include PavCo, the Port and the Vancouver Whitecaps. A drawing within the framework document shows an 11-storey building on the site at 555 West Cordova, although it describes the drawing as an “Illustrative Concept Plan” for “illustrative purposes only and that a variety of alternative approaches to the layout and form of development could be considered in further planning work…” The overall vision outlined in the framework includes an extension of Granville Street to the north and a Cordova connector that would run from Cordova Street north past Cadillac Fairview’s site through the proposed public plaza. The connector may

The redesign of the tower proposed for 555 West Cordova.

not be a conventional road, but such details still have to be worked out through further waterfront planning, which has been re-initiated. Background technical work is underway, in partnership with the Port and landowners, looking at issues such as sea level rise, local transportation and rail transportation. The next phase of planning work is expected to begin later this year. Norfolk is also a member of the Downtown Waterfront Working Group, a group that includes retired planners and architects, some of whom were involved in helping to create the framework. The group has been active in opposing Cadillac Fairview’s plans, questioning its appropriateness and arguing numerous issues need to be worked out, such as the allocation of public, cultural space and greenways, transit expansion requirements, distribution of density, land uses and infrastructure, before any development, including at 555 West Cordova, is permitted in the waterfront area. “First things first. You’ve got to get the planning right,” Norfolk said. Kevin McNaney, the City of Vancouver’s director of special projects, which includes the Waterfront Hub planning area, said all landowners in the area have been encouraged to wait until planning is completed, but developers and landowners have property development rights under current zoning and can submit proposals. “They’re applying under the zoning and we’re obliged to assess the application through the Development Permit Board,” he said. “But we do think, like everyone does, there’s a bigger vision here. Can this proceed? Yes, it can proceed and we are considering it. It will go to Development Permit Board, but there is more planning to be done.” Currently, the development application is scheduled to go before the DPB for a decision May 25. McNaney notes that while the illustrated plan in the Central Waterfront Hub Framework shows an 11-storey building on the

site, “it’s very clear it’s an illustrative plan of one way the hub could be built out.” “This proposal is not inconsistent with that, but it’s different than the illustrative plan in the study itself. But it was always intended just to be illustrative. It’s suggestive of this is how it might look, and it says right beside it that other configurations can be considered,” he said. McNaney said the proposal has to stand on its own right and go before bodies including the Urban Design Panel and the heritage commission, of which Norfolk is no longer a member. They will offer advice and then city staff will make recommendations to the Development Permit Board. “They can approve it, they can approve it with conditions, and they can turn it down. It’s at their discretion as the decision-makers from council,” he said.

Case for building now

Tom Knoepfel, senior vice president of the western portfolio for Cadillac Fairview, maintains this is the right time to move forward with the application and that the proposed height is appropriate. “We feel that 26 storeys works for the site. We are not maxing out our floor space ratio allowance and it’s about creating space that brings jobs to Vancouver. With the location being directly adjacent to our prime transit hub, we think it makes sense to create as much job space as we can,” he said. Knoepfel added that the building site is part of the Downtown Official Community Plan District and, as such, is permissible. “Our building doesn’t preclude any work on the hub lands which [are] adjacent to us. That can still proceed. We are providing a road easement to that area as well — our building doesn’t preclude that from happening in the future.” Knoepfel added that they’ve been involved in “significant” consultation about the project, including a working session with the Urban Design Panel in 2015 and further public consultation in late 2015. “That’s why you see the

building having shifted further in behind the station and, [we] really focused on the public space, the public plaza. We heard that was very important to people. Now we’re taking what is currently a parking lot and creating a beautiful public space out of it.” Gordon Gill of the Chicago-based firm Adrian Smith and Gordon Gill Architecture, which designed the tower, believes some past criticisms were valid and he maintains the latest iteration is much improved as a result. “The comments from the UDP made this building better. Some of the comments that we’ve heard, and the public comments that we received, have made the building better…” Charles Gauthier, president and CEO of the Downtown Vancouver Business Improvement Association, dropped by the open house to offer support. The organization backs the overall proposal due to the scarcity of office space. Gauthier told the Courier 60 per cent of the space in buildings currently under construction, which will come on stream over the next four to five years, has been pre-leased. “By the time this thing gets through the cycle, it’s going to be three or five years before it’s actually completed and open. So we’re going to need that — there’s so much demand for job space. And, I think, Cadillac Fairview has done an excellent job in terms of taking all the comments that they’ve received in the first go-round,” he said. “They’ve got a building that’s respectful of the heritage building. We’ve seen this where you’ve got new buildings beside heritage buildings throughout the downtown area.” Gauthier doesn’t see any reason to delay the project. “Wait? For how long? You know, unfortunately, city processes take a long time. Are we going to hold all redevelopment, all development, because we’re waiting for the city to complete a plan? I don’t agree with that approach.” Norfolk, meanwhile, still wants the proposed building’s scale to be reconsidered and reduced to something more in the range of 11 storeys. He’s hopeful the development application won’t be approved. “I have every hope that the staff first, and then the Development Permit Board itself, will stick with city policy that the hub study has to be completed before anything is approved for a site in this position,” he said.


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Health A to Z It’s the start of a new year and, if you’re anything like thousands of other Canadians, you might be watching what you eat, cutting back on spending or simply making plans to ensure 2020 is a worthwhile one. No matter what your goals are for the New Year, here are three simple tips to help reinvigorated you as we look back at winter and move towards spring. Meatless Mondays: Cutting back on meat and introducing some plant-based recipes to your menu repertoire is one way to not only eat healthier, but also save money. Walking: Now that the weather is improving and, we’ve had a few glimpses of sun, taking a walk is one of the easiest — and least expensive — ways to enjoy some fresh air and get moving. Ask an expert: When it comes to health and wellness, look no further than Vancouver where if you can name it, you can find it. You’ll also find experts from A to Z in these pages of the Vancouver Courier.

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Arthritis Research Canada

Arthritis Research Canada is leading research, finding answers, and saving lives. Headquartered in British Columbia, they are the largest clinical arthritis research organization in North America, addressing arthritis prevention, early diagnosis, better treatment, and improved quality of life. Arthritis Research Canada’s diversely disciplined team of expert research scientists, along with their patient partners, are working diligently to reduce the burden of arthritis and put research results into the hands of those who need it most, right now! The Arthritis Lifestyle Management Guide is one of the many practical tools available. Developed by arthritis patients, the Guide offers over 150 practical tips to help cope with the everyday challenges of arthritis. Available free. Download at www.arthritisresearch.ca or limited print copies available, please call. Arthritis is serious! Only through arthritis research can we make life-changing discovery. Arthritis Research Canada is creating a future where people with arthritis are empowered to triumph over pain and disability.

www.arthritisresearch.ca 5911 No. 3 Road, Richmond, BC 604-207-0400

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Bright smiles

Kingsgate Dental is a full service family and cosmetic dental clinic located in the heart of Vancouver, BC. Conveniently located in the Kingsgate Mall on East Broadway near where Kingsway and Broadway cross (in the neighbourhood of Mt. Pleasant). Owned and operated by Drs. Do & Largani and associates. Our Vancouver dentists are experienced and many of our dentists have taught as part time clinical instructors at the University of British Columbia’s Faculty of Dentistry. We are all

committed to lifelong learning and consistent continuing education, and all of our dentists dedicate many hours a year at dental conferences and courses.

At Kingsgate Dental, our goal is to create and maintain happy and healthy smiles for kids, teens, adults and seniors. We are here to serve families and all individuals in Vancouver to provide a comfortable setting for all your dental needs. Our Vancouver dentists can accommodate most of your dental health needs,

including: cleanings, fillings, teeth whitening, Invisalign correction (to straighten teeth without braces), crowns and much more. In addition, Dr. Do and the rest of the Kingsgate Dental team are available for emergency dental procedures, root canals, crowns, and fillings. We specialize in everything from cosmetic dentistry to pediatric dentistry and from emergency dentistry to preventative dentistry. If you’re looking to find a dentist in Vancouver who is well equipped to serve your entire family, then look no further!

370 East Broadway, Vancouver 604-879-9999 Kingsgatedentist@gmail.com

2019

WINNER!


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THE VAN COU VER CO URIER T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0

Clear Counselling a counsellor,” but with whom, when there is a sea of counsellors with various credentials by their name? Joe Ramirez answered the call by bringing together a strong team of counsellors with distinct specializations and significant training that clients can confidently choose from by their online profiles, and called it Clear Counselling. Clear Counselling is a downtown private practice providing Individual Counselling, Couples Counselling, and Sex Therapy. Reliable counselling is provided in three distinct comfortable and stylish rooms, within the historic Rogers Building, 7 days a week.

Smiles for life!

Norma Hoeppner MSW, RSW (Psychotherapist) Over 25 years working with individuals & couples, health diagnosis impact, chronic pain, grief, trauma, PTSD, and personal growth. Skype available. Renee Bartkiewicz DVATI, MA, RCC (Psychotherapist) Over 18 years working trauma, PTSD, female and male survivors of sexual abuse, relationship issues, and personal growth. Uses EMDR. Claudette Alain MEd, MA, CCC, RCC (Psychotherapist)Individual counselling in French available. Past French Immersion Principal. Parent-child relationships, education concerns, trauma. Gabriel Contreras MCP, RCC (Psychotherapist) Individual & Couples counselling in Spanish available. Past Doctor in Medicine. Cross Cultural identities, LGBTQ+ concerns and family support.

THE CLEAR COUNSELLING TEAM Joe Ramirez MCP, CAC, CCC (Certified Adlerian Psychotherapist) Adler U. instructor and past Adlerian Psych. Assoc. of BC Director. Providing support with individual & couples counselling; sex therapy with kink, fetish, porn; male survivors of sexual abuse; LGBTQ relationships. Parenting support for men.

David Holmes MA, RCC (Psychotherapist)Specializing in grief counselling, career counselling, life transitions, sex therapy, and men’s issues. Gottman Couples Counselling Level 2.

Anthony Cave R. Psych, RCC (Registered Psychologist) Over 20 years experience working with anxiety, depression, psychiatric disorders, relationship issues, HIV/AIDS, and LGBTQ+ concerns.

Catherine G Focus in sex therapy, women’s sexual health issues, relationships, teen and young adult life transitions. Prior work with addictions. The first ten respondents to this ad may be eligible for 5 to 7 months of FREE weekly counselling Vancouver, B.C., V6C 1V5 with a Counsellor OFFICE: 604.620.5010 in Practicum.

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Alita Dommann (Counsellor in Practicum)Past Doctor in Medicine for 15 years. Afrikaans bilingual. Focus in career change, parenting, divorce, sports psychology, and senior related life concerns.

www.clearcounselling.ca

Eat well

Sweet and Smoky BBQ Salad Ja ar

SERVES: 4 | PREP TIME: 20 MINUTES | COOK TIME: 10 MINUTES S | TOTAL TIME: 30 MINUTE ES

INGREDIENTS

INSTRUCTIONS

2 cups cooked quinoa (about 1 cup dry)

Cook quinoa according to package directions (usually about 1 cup dryy quinoa with 2 cu ups water on the sto ovetop for 10 minutes).

1 container (283 g) Sabra Sweet & Smoky BBQ hummus with Jackfruit and Smoked Paprika 1 can black beans, drained and rinsed 1 (8 oz/240 g) package of cherry tomatoes, sliced in half 1 medium-sized red onion, diced 1 mango, diced 2 cups arugula CHILI LIME VINAIGRETTE 2 tbsp olive oil 2 tbsp lime juice 1 tsp Dijon mustard 1 tsp chili powder ½ tsp salt YOU’LL NEED 4 (950 ml) mason jars

Meanwhiile, prepare ingredien nts for the jars. Divide hu ummus and place in the bottom of each ja ar, then layer in quinoa, black beans, ch herry tomatoes, red onion n, mango and arugula. Mix togetther ingredients for chili liime vinaigrette and pack in seeparate containers. Serve sallad in a deep bowl an nd toss with h vinaigrette.

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*CONDITIONS APPLY

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Dr. Sakura Iwagami and Dr. Robin Mak at Kits Family Dental. WQ:95PQ 5LP [B%6R:9P K;5: 5LPK7 RHK;KRg (5S6 9W75 :O P2P7- 7:35K;P 2K6K5 O:7 WQ3H56 W;Q K6 36PQ 5: QP5PR5 5LP PW7H- 65WNP6 :O :7WH RW;RP7 W;Q :5LP7 :7WH QK6PW6P6g (5S6 W 83KRIf 9WK;HP66 97P2P;5K2P 5::H 5LW5 NK2P6 9W5KP;56 9PWRP :O <K;Q 1 W;Q W;:5LP7 7PW6:; 5: 6<KHPg Make an appointment and come visit Kits Family Dental today!

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Grace Fert rtility t Centre offers an exclusive approach, in a caring environment that highlights continuity of care throughout by the same physician. We focus on totally personalized, evidence-based and costeffective treatments for patients, in a state-of-the-art facilityy with innovative,, tested technolog gy. The Centre was founded by Dr. Anthony Cheung, a highly experienced clinician/ researcher and Clinical Associate Professor, Division of REI, Department of OB-GYN, UBC. Grace Fertility Centre offers the complete range of fertility treatments:

Fertility with Grace

) D=$%;9!E!90 '<=:8E919!<=: ) -<=<; %##: and treatment ) 58;;<#1'0 ) D3+ 1=& ;%E19%& ) @;%=191E 9%:9!=# 9%'"=<E<#!%:* ) @<E0'0:9!' A71;0 ) ,## $;%%/!=# 50=&;<>%

.,2AB- +,?4DCD42 We also offer help in other areas of women’s health: 0 \7PW5<P;5 O:7 ?]$ C 6-<95:<6 O7:< QPRHK;K;N estrogen, typically with age, but can also occur after childbirth, or in cancer patients after chemotherapy (personalized laser therapy may be an option depending on individual assessment) 0 GV;:7<WH 35P7K;P VHPPQK;Nf 3H57W6:3;Q W66P66<P;5 and timely management 0 "H36 <:7P

210- 604 West Broadway, Vancouver (Corner of Ash and West Broadway) a+c bb_ c__a 0 OP75KHK5-.K5LN7WRPgR:<


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VANCOURIER.COM

T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0 THE VA NCOUVER COURIER

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Hearing issues?

Are you suffering from tinnitus and don’t know where to turn?

G I

Have you been told “nothing can be done — you just have to learn to live with it”? You, too, deserv rve v peace and quiet! At the Sound id·EARS Hearing and Speech Clinic, we offer over 20 years of expert rtise t in treating tinnitus. Research shows that hearing loss is the leading cause of tinnitus.

Gut health Gastrointestinal health can affect more than just your tummy.

Increase your heart rate Does a body good!

J

In addition to targeting hearing loss, we use the Tinnitus Retraining Therapy (TRT) method, based on the Neurophysiological Model of Tinnitus, to activate the brain’s natural ability to “habituate” to the tinnitus so it becomes less noticeable. 85% of our clients report rted t improvements in their

conditions. The TRT method has been employed in 25 countries all over the world since 1996. Relief is just a phone call away. Call us today to book a consultation or assessment at 604-708-9780. Also proudly hosting the 13th Annual Tinnitus Research Initiative (TRI) conference.

ORGANIZER AND HOST OF TRI-2020 CONFERENCE Oakridge Centre South Tower 304 – 650 West 41st Avenue, Vancouver, BC V5Z 2M9 6:3;QKQPW76gR:< 0 K;O:Z6:3;QKQPW76gR:< 604-708-9780

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K is for Kegel Exercises Kegels are often prescribed but rarely taught, therefore most women are doing them incorrectly and thinking they don’t work. Kegels work when done correctly, consistently and coordinated with movement. Symptoms such as leaking with laughing or jumping, heaviness in the pelvis, and chronic low back pain are not something you need to accept as ‘normal’ because you have had kids or because you’ve been told it is ‘just part of being a woman’. You CAN ditch the pads and live leak free with Kegel Mojo! Try the 28 Buff Muff Challenge and use code kisforkegels to save $10.

Justt do it!

Anything... get out and get active. You’ll feel better for it.

Kim Vopni THE VAGINA COACH ! a+cC^*+Cd+ab 0 2WNK;WR:WRLgR:<


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THE VAN COU VER CO URIER T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0

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Weekly Meals. Groceries Included. Cooked in Your Home.

Save time. Eat well. Always have meals ready, fresh in your fridge. Your life’s not just busy, it’s bursting. There’s not enough time to plan, shop, and cook the balanced meals you enjoy. And then there’s the clean-up. Throw someone’s dietary restrictions into the mix, and it just gets more complicated.

L is for LIVE WELL Exercise Clinic

Lifestyle changes are hard. Many of us know what we should be doing but struggle to do it. LIVE WELL Exercise Clinic is a health and fitness clinic that can help you take control of your health so you can live life to its fullest. Whether you have high blood pressure, diabetes, are overweight or want to prevent future conditions, our highly

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customized program will help you improve your health. “Since start rting t at LIVE WELL, my life and my health have improved significantly. First of all, within two months of start rting t the regular exercise and implementing healthy habits learned from the LIVE WELL education, my doctor took

me off all three medications (diabetes, hypert rtension t and high cholesterol),” Trang Pham member East Vancouver Clinic. “The main thing that keeps me coming back to LIVE WELL is the community,” Pham says. “The staff at LIVE WELL, as well as the members, have become friends and we all support rtt each other.”

Perhaps you’ve tried meal kits and meal delivery services and have found that cookie-cutter meal plans don’t work for you. Wouldn’t it be nice if we all had a personal chef? Those were the thoughts in our mind when we created Fresh In Your Fridge. Fresh In Your Fridge exists to remove unhealthy associations and the everyday challenges with meal preparation, so all that’s left is the joy of sharing a meal. We provide In-home weekly meal preparation made by your dedicated Holistic Nutritionist, who designs menus just for you. Now that’s personal.

Want to know more? Book your free one on one program consultation:

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info@vancouver.livewellclinic.ca 604-269-3705

O

O hi!

We’re a natural wellness and beauty company from beautiful British Columbia, Canada. We love helping people live healthier lives, and we’ve been doing it for the past 30 years.

New smile. BRACES OR INVISALIGN — how to know which is right for you?

We’ve grown from a humble line of supplements to an always-evolving collection of natural health and beauty products, including Canada’s #1 selling collagen powder.

Call 604-733-1130 or email arbutusvillageortho@gmail. com for directions to your next appointment. How will you be transported to your next orthodontic appointment?

778-606-2002 | info@freshinyourfridge.com | www.freshinyourfridge.com

Scoprite quale è giusto per voi.

Our quest is to guide people to better health through a genuine passion for wellness and innovation.

It’s Organika! ENHANCE YOUR GLOW FROM THE INSIDE OUT! Collagen is the most plentiful form of protein in the body, and acts like the “glue” that holds it together. With age, collagen formation declines naturally, leading to a loss of elasticity, strength, and tone throughout the body. Organika’s Enhanced Collagen helps address low collagen levels by providing peptides, the building blocks of collagen, contributing to skin care, joint health, gut health, and sports recovery.

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU: SmileTown Burnaby #430-4460 Beresford St., Burnaby 604-428-9633

SmileTown Delta #111-7511 120th St., North Delta 778-564-1095

The Dunbar Dental Clinic #215-3540 West 41st Ave., Vancouver 604-261-2220

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VANCOURIER.COM

T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0 THE VA NCOUVER COURIER

Quit smoking

Proactive health screening Heartbroken by the loss of our dear friend, we set out on a mission to create a safe and accurate scan that could tell what is happening inside your body before you start to feel sick.

With life changing breakthroughs such as the Prenuvo scan, we can:

Thousands of scans later we are more excited than ever about our proactive approach. Our Prenuvo scan detects over 340 cancers and medical conditions and provides key insights into many others. The Prenuvo scan is for those who are healthy and wish to be proactive in their health as well as those who are worried that something is not quite right in their body.

! Discover aneurysms before they burst

S

! Diagnose chronic illnesses earlier

! Detect cancer before you have symptoms when it is still treatable Call today to book your appointment. We look forward to being part of your journey to a healthier you!

1371 West Broadway, Vancouver, BC, V6H 1G9 604-227-3000 0 hello@prenuvo.com 0 prenuvo.com

Calling all Seniors!

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Better for you and everyone around you.

Relax

Take a moment to recharge, refresh and reboot.

T is for Thrift

Neighbourhood thrift stores are so much more than a place to find a bargain. Clothes and Collectibles is the friendly thrift boutique of the West End Seniors’ Network.

0 YP :=P7 83WHK5- 36PQ RH:5LK;Nf 6L:P6f and accessories at reasonable prices, as well as books and small household items. 0 YP WH6: RW77- W75.:7If R:HHPR5KVHP6f W;Q vintage items. 0 YP W7P 2:H3;5PP7CQ7K2P; .K5L WV:35 d+ volunteers who accept, assess, and sell the goods so generously donated. 0 YP W7P WH.W-6 7PWQ- 5: 6LW7P :37 latest treasures, some fashion advice, and a smile.

0 YP W7P WH.W-6 H::IK;N O:7 O7KP;QH-f :35N:K;N 2:H3;5PP76 5: J:K; :37 O3;CH:2K;N 5PW< O:7 weekly shifts. 0 ]5:7P 97:RPPQ6 6399:75 6:RKWHf 7PR7PW5K:;WHf educational, and supportive programs and services for older adults in our neighbourhood. 0 B2P7- 5K<P -:3 Q:;W5P -:37 NP;5H- 36PQ items or purchase something, you are helping to empower older adults in the YP65 B;Qf E:WH >W7V:37 W;Q XWHP5:.; 5: live involved, healthy, and fulfilling lives.

For more information, visit www.wesn.ca, email clothes@wesn.ca or call 604-682-0327.

Clothes and Collectibles Thrift Boutique Denman Place Mall, 1030 Denman Street clothesandcollectibles

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THE VAN COU VER CO URIER T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0

VAN CO U RI E R. C OM

Use your sunscreen

Be sun savvy! Make sure your skin is protected from the sun’s harmful rays.

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X

It’s still the most effective (and easiest) way to prevent infection.

Xeroderma

Vaccinate

With winter often comes abnormally dry skin. Xeroderma can usually be addressed with the use of an over-the-counter, topical preparation.

Make sure all your shots are up to date. Do your part to keep the herd healthy.

Get healthy and fit at Ron Zalko Fitness & Yoga in Vancouver!

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Ron Zalko Fitness & Yoga offers the very best to meet all your health and fitness needs.

YOGA: Yin, Restorative, and Vinyasa style Open Door Yoga is a studio... Open Door Yoga has had its doors open wide in Vancouver for over 20 years! ! Where teachers teach safe classes with Starting in 1999 as a drop in space, Open Door modifications to accommodate students of all Yoga had to quickly offer a variety of classes to ages, experiences and fitness levels accommodate the rapidly growing student population. ! Where teachers are encouraged to learn and

Although they had to add teachers and classes quickly, teach what they love they still maintained an emphasis on breathing, ! Where classes are often smaller so teachers can alignment, and connection. help nurture a student-teacher bond Twenty years later, ODY remains a predominantly hatha based studio but has grown along with its students. They now offer Yin, Restorative, and Vinyasa style classes daily. Outside of the regular schedule, students can also benefit from many workshop offerings as well as specialty classes such as Pre and Post Natal.

! Where input and feedback is welcomed and encouraged ! Where every individual is treated with respect, courtesy and dignity Give them a try if you want to stretch out those winter bodies :)

FREE

YOGA CLASS*

Bring this in for a free class

*FOR NEW STUDENTS ONLY. ONE PER PERSON.

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Wash your hands

MAIN @ 14TH 200-2940 Main St

COMMERCIAL DR *ab* E:<<P7RKWH D7

Z

From a state of the art fitness club facility for strength workout, yoga, core, weight training & personal training to their spacious studio offering more than 50 classes of group exercises per week which includes yoga, Pilates, Zumba, HIIT, dance sculpt, spinning & more! Centrally located in Kitsilano, Vancouver with easy access to Kitsilano Beach — 2 minutes from Downtown, adjacent to local bike routes. It has free parking too! Voted six times as Vancouver’s no. 1 fitness club for highest quality and most reasonable rates in town! Ron Zalko, Visionary and Founder of IRONMAN Canada also introduced the aerobic classes to Canada & trained many A-list celebrities. Ron Zalko Fitness & Yoga is your one-stop destination for health and wellness! LET’S GET MOVING, VANCOUVER!

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VANCOURIER.COM

T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0 THE VA NCOUVER COURIER

News Overdose calls increase despite drop in deaths Mike Howell

mhowell@vancourier.com

The number of people who died of a drug overdose in British Columbia in 2019 decreased by 36 per cent from the previous year but emergency calls for overdoses increased by two per cent. Statistics released Monday by the B.C. Coroners Service at a news conference in Victoria revealed 981 people died of an overdose in the province last year, a decrease from 1,543 in 2018 and 1,495 in 2017. In Vancouver, 245 people died last year. At the same time, calls answered by paramedics to overdoses increased by two per cent in 2019 over the average of 24,000 per year, said Lance Stephenson, director of patient care delivery with B.C. Emergency Health Services. “I can only speculate that we’re doing a better job at saving lives of the people that are overdosing,” said Stephenson, noting that prior to the widespread emergence of fentanyl in 2016, paramedics responded to 10,000 to 12,000 overdose calls per year in the province. Stephenson said paramedics have been averaging 16 overdose calls per day in B.C. but that increases to 130 per day on welfare cheque day and the days that follow users collecting social assistance. The conclusion from health experts for the decrease in deaths is that harm reduction measures such as the widespread use of the overdose-reversing drug naloxone, medication-assisted treatment and the opening of drug injection sites helped keep people alive. In addition, B.C. Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said some drug users have developed a tolerance to fentanyl, the synthetic opioid connected to 85 per cent of the 981 deaths in 2019 and 87 per cent of deaths in 2018. “As fentanyl flooded the streets, and people were not used to it, we saw a lot of people die — even people who had long-term opioid addictions,” Henry told reporters. “We do see people who are now dependent on fentanyl, and it’s even more challenging in some cases for people to recover from fentanyl addiction than from other opioid addictions. So the challenge has become worse in many ways.” A statistic that wasn’t shared Monday and is still being researched is how

Overdose calls in B.C. increased last year, despite a drop in overdose deaths. In Vancouver, 245 people died, a drop from 395 in 2018 and 375 in 2017. PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

many overdose survivors now have a long-lasting brain injury or associated injury to almost dying. The B.C. Centre for Disease Control will soon release data on this unknown statistic, according to Dr. Perry Kendall, who recently retired as provincial health officer, and attended Monday’s news conference. “We’re only just beginning to really understand the full impact of this emergency and what the long-term effects will be on those who survived,” said Kendall, who is now co-interim executive director at the B.C. Centre on Substance Use. “What we do know already is many hundreds of overdose survivors will need a lifetime of care and the resulting health-socialjustice system supports that we will need will be a tremendous burden on all British Columbians.” The 981 deaths recorded last year, which are expected to rise once further toxicology reports are completed, almost matches the 990 that occurred in the province in 2016 — the year the provincial government declared a public health emergency. The 990 deaths recorded that year were a substantial increase from the 529 in 2015 and 369 in 2014. Overdoses killed 334 people in 2013 and 270 in 2012 in B.C. It was on Thanksgiving Day in 2014 in Vancouver when the presence of fentanyl became a widespread concern to health experts. That’s when the opioid was detected in an unusually high number of overdoses at the Insite supervised injection site on East Hastings. The Courier asked Kendall in a telephone interview after the news conference whether the reduction in overdose deaths last year is at all connected to the fact there are now fewer drug users in the province. The question was based on the fact that more than 5,000 people died in B.C. of a drug overdose between 2016 and 2019, with Vancouver seeing the highest

number of deaths. The B.C. Centre for Disease Control, using data from 2015, estimated the number of injection drug users in Vancouver at 8,500 people. Province-wide estimates were not available at press time. “That’s a good question, the answer is we don’t really know,” said Kendall, although he added that it is likely among the factors that explain a decrease in deaths, but not the major reason. Judy Darcy, the Minister of Mental Health and Addictions, said the decrease in deaths is encouraging, but acknowledged the government has to continue with its initiatives to reduce the death toll. “We still saw 981 people die last year — that’s two or three people every single day in British Columbia,” she told reporters in a news conference separate from the release of the overdose death statistics. “We are not giving up, we are not slowing down. This is still a public health emergency and our overdose response as a government will continue firing on all cylinders.” She said the combination of naloxone, injection sites and medication-assisted treatment — where 3,500 people have been prescribed opioid agonist treatment since July 2017 — are among the reasons that averted more than 5,000

deaths since the crisis began. Darcy said calls to decriminalize drugs is a decision that can only be taken by the federal government. On the call for a “safe supply” of drugs, the minister said the B.C. government has significantly scaled up access to prescription alternatives to street drugs. “We hope to be making an announcement soon with the federal government about increased access to other forms of safe prescription medications,” she said. At Monday’s news conference, Chief Coroner Lisa Lapointe said 747 of the 981 who died last year were men, between 30 and 60 years old, and 234 were women. They ranged in age from 13 to 76. Lapointe shared brief stories of some of those who died, including a 42-year-old woman who was living with a mental illness and addiction. “She was found deceased in the living room of her home by her child,” said Lapointe, noting toxicology tests confirmed fentanyl and amphetamines were detected in her blood. “She is survived and grieved by her husband and two children.” Added Lapointe: “Those who died of drug toxicity this year are more than statistics. They’re people, they were loved, they had hopes and dreams and challenges just like the rest of us.” Meanwhile, the First Nations Health Authority is expected to release data in the coming weeks about the impact the overdose crisis is having on Indigenous peoples in B.C. Data released in August 2017 showed Indigenous peoples are three times more likely to die from a drug overdose than a non-First Nations person and five times more likely to overdose.

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UBC Faculty of Dentistry UBC Dentistry is screening patients 12 years of age and older who require

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Exploring culture & identity with an exciting mashup of street dance, hip hop, Dancehall, Afrobeat & more.

Thursday March 5, 12 noon + 6:30pm Scotiabank Dance Centre 677 Davie Street, Vancouver

Tickets $13-$22 Tickets Tonight 604.684.2787 | ticketstonight.ca Information: 604.606.6400 | thedancecentre.ca


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THE VAN COU VER CO URIER T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0

VAN CO U RI E R. C OM

Community Sneaker Con

Get your sneak on, because sneakerheads, this is your time to shine. This event will have you up to

your knees in Yeezy 700 v3, Air Jordan 1’s and any sneaker you can imagine. Sure, you can do some serious sneaker shopping,

but you can also take part in giveaways, meet like-minded sneaker enthusiasts and take a dive into the event’s infamous “trading pit.”

When: Feb. 29, noon to 7 p.m. Where: Vancouver Conven-

tion Centre, 1055 Canada Place sneakercon.com

Japan Food Fair

Send your tastebuds on a trip to Japan without leaving Vancouver, thanks to the annual Japan Food Fair.

Hosted by the Vancouver Buddhist Temple, this spring bazaar-style event features heaps of traditional Japanese fare such as maki (roll) sushi, nigiri sushi, chicken teriyaki, ohagi (sweet sticky rice balls), manju (Japanese steamed cake), udon noodles and more, all at affordable prices. Admission is free, and the event is family-friendly. Organizers suggest showing up early, as tables fill up fast. When: March 1, noon to 2 p.m. Where: Vancouver Buddhist Temple, 220 Jackson Ave. vancouverbuddhisttemple.com

Singin’ In My Soul

The power of gospel music together with the magnificent sound of 130 impassioned singers is sure to spark joy and gladness as Good Noise Vancouver Gospel Choir presents its annual Black History Month concert. “Singin’ In My Soul” will feature music ranging from powerful arrangements of traditional spirituals to contemporary gospel music. When: Feb. 29 at 7:30 p.m. Where: Christ Church Cathedral, 690 Burrard St. brownpapertickets.com

Biggest Dog Meet-Up

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Who let the dogs out? YOU did, of course, because you and your fourlegged friend are taking part in Vancouver’s Biggest Dog Meet-Up. It’s the eighth installation of the ongoing event — and the first of 2020 — that finds all dogs and their people invited to gather to enjoy each other’s company. “Bring all the dogs, no dogs left behind,” say organizers. When: March 1, noon to 4 p.m. Where: Trout Lake Beach, 2120 East 19th Ave. facebook.com

Vegan Week

Here in Vancouver it’s pretty easy to live that plantbased life, thanks to restaurants that either specialize in vegan eats or the many that offer vegan-friendly dishes. Now a few of our popular veg-centric eateries have signed on to take part in the city’s inaugural Vegan Week. It’s an initiative out of Portland, Ore. that aims to get more people out and trying vegan food available across the city. You’ll find Vegan Week offerings at Vancouver’s Nuba, Beetbox, Tacofino, Old Bird and Bandidas Taqueria. When: Until March 1 Where: Nuba, Beetbox, Tacofino, Old Bird and Bandidas Taqueria weekofthevegan.com —Lindsay William-Ross vancouverisawesome.com


VANCOURIER.COM

T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0 THE VA NCOUVER COURIER

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0

VANCOURI ER.COM

Arts & Entertainment VANCOUVER SHAKEDOWN

Why it took Rob Nesbitt 25 years to complete his new album

Victoria rocker puts decades’ worth of teen angst, unrequited love and obsession into epic concept album Grant Lawrence

grantlawrence12@gmail.com

If you blinked in the early 1990s, you might have easily missed the flash of power pop brilliance that was Bum, a hugely underrated four-piece rock band from Victoria. In 1993, they released their debut album, Wanna Smash Sensation. It is absolutely one of the greatest records I’ve ever heard in my 30 years of music journalism. All four members of the band were pure talents, but it was Bum member Rob Nesbitt, guitarist, co-lead singer and one of the principal songwriters, who was arguably the tortured genius/ Brian Wilson of the band. Within a year of the release of that classic debut, Nesbitt left Bum, shocking fans from B.C. to Barcelona (Bum was and probably still are huge in Spain, the one place on Earth they were truly appreciated). Ever since, Nesbitt has been working on a solo album. That record finally came out in January. Entitled Mine Would Be The Sun, it was released under the artist name The Suitesixteen. It is Nesbitt’s magnum opus — searing, propulsive, emotional and highly melodic power pop, combining the best of Cheap Trick, the Descendents and Bum, released in a unique triple gatefold,

double vinyl package that comes complete with a 50page book and beautiful photography. Nesbitt performs all the vocals and most of the guitars on the record. And like past concept albums of infatuation, such as the Who’s Quadrophenia or Joel Plaskett’s Ashtray Rock, Nesbitt’s Mine Would Be The Sun dives deep into teenage angst and first love, Maple Ridge style, where Nesbitt spent his teen years obsessing over a girl who quickly moved on. Nesbitt never did. Until now. Congratulations on this release. It’s an awesome record, but why did it take 25 years to make?

Every aspect of this piece — from writing, production, art direction, selection of specialty paper stock, writing and rewriting the book — all of it was given as much attention possible. I’ve spent most of my musical life on the punk side of the fence, which comes with limitations. Some are financial. You have no money — and studio time is expensive. So you rush. You settle for takes or sounds that might not be the best because the clock is ticking. I grew up obsessed with records like Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours and Def Leppard’s Pyromania — albums that took a solid

is to understand and express this in a cogent manner. I’ve never seen anything quite like the physical packaging of this project. What inspired it?

Rob Nesbitt spent 25 years working on his new album, Mine Would Be The Sun, under the guise of The Suitesixteen. PHOTO WENDY NESBITT

year of work to complete. I believed you could hear the care and attention to detail in the final product and so it became my dream to work on something career-defining that took as long as it took to get it right. With Mine Would Be The Sun I did that. I read that you spent your life savings on this record. Is that true?

Close to it, yeah. A lot of studio time, ferries, hotels, gear, hiring drummers… that money is gone. Then the design of the packaging began. There is no way to tally the cost of this. It can’t be done. Too many hours. There is a dollar amount that could compensate me, but I won’t ever see it.

Why is this particular project so deeply important to you?

Without my knowing it, writing songs about this girl was a way for me to understand what happened in our relationship and why. I wanted to be healed and this was self-therapy, essentially. But as the project grew in scale, I realized I was talking about the nature of love itself. People tend to dismiss adolescent emotional experiences, or at least diminish them. I feel the opposite. During that time of life one is on the precipice of everything for the first time. First time experiences are almost always the most impactful, the most formative. I feel that the very reason for my being

This was originally planned as a hardcover book with records glued into the covers. Once I began researching, I found that no one in North America could produce what I was looking for, so the book had to morph. I was adamant that the package be a selfcontained thing: all the parts had to sit together and not become separated. I ended up with the triple gatefold sleeve. Nothing quite like it has ever been done. In the end, it probably would have been cheaper to get those books made. You’ve done a deep dive into a one-sided teenage romance from 35 years ago. What does your wife of 25 years think of your lifelong obsession with another woman?

My wife Wendy — who did the photography for this record — is an incredible woman. I told her about this “problem” on our first date. It was the subject of 98 per cent of my songs in Bum. The ghost of this other person drifted through every corner of our relationship. But Wendy is kind and she

loves me. My music makes her cry — not because she is jealous or hurt by my feelings for this THING I’ve been grappling with for most of my life. She cries because she knows me and it hurts her to hear and see how deep this wound went. On the flipside, what does Rhona, the woman who is the subject of this project, think of all this?

She doesn’t seem to have any real interest, which I get — this relationship meant WAY more to me than it did to her. It must seem kind of creepy on some level but I don’t think she’s troubled by it. With all my heart, I hope not. The creation of this thing cured me of — again — a “wound” that I was desperate for decades to be free of. I made this music as a part intellectual examination/ part exorcism. I intensely re-lived these moments from my past as I created the music and the book. Mine Would Be The Sun made me live in that moment to free me from it. Mine Would Be The Sun is limited to 500 physical copies and is not available in stores. To purchase a copy for $60 before shipping, go to the Suitesixteen’s Facebook or Bandcamp page. ••• A longer version of this story is at vancourier.com.

UBC musuem and Musqueam explore nature and culture… digitally Beaty Biodiversity Museum exhibit receives Governor General’s History Award Drew Clarke

dclarke@vancourier.com

An exhibit at the Beaty Biodiversity Museum at the University of B.C. has received the Governor General’s History Award for Excellence in Museums. The exhibit, Sturgeon Harpoon Knowledge Web, is a collaboration between the museum and the Musqueam First Nation, and explores the interconnectedness between nature, culture, language and technology. The museum is perhaps best known for its 82 foot blue whale skeleton — the largest in Canada — which hangs at the entrance to the underground bunker containing more than two million natural history specimens. The Sturgeon Harpoon exhibit relies less on physical specimens, and exists mostly in the digital realm, with online interactive elements and

virtual reality checkpoints within the museum. The only two physical specimens in the exhibit are unique, in that the public can actually touch them. “These are our first unsupervised, touchable exhibits at the museum,” says exhibits manager Yukiko Stranger-Galey, gesturing to a display of reeds. “There’s so many different ways of learning and they say that touch and smell can trigger memories.” She runs her fingers across the reed’s rough surface, which is covered in microscopic silica crystals. “This scouring rush was used like sandpaper in the process of making the sturgeon harpoon.” The harpoon is a traditional Musqueam fishing tool which has not been built or used for generations, due to a self-imposed moratorium on harvesting

Yukiko Stranger-Galey, exhibits manager at UBC’s Beaty Biodiversity Museum. PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

sturgeon. The fish, which was declared a species at risk in 1994, is the largest freshwater species in North America. It can grow up to six metres long, weigh up to 600 kilograms and live to more than 100 years. A 35-foot-long sturgeon harpoon has been created by Morgan Guerin, and will eventually be on display

in the exhibition, once it clears the museum’s strict quarantine process. Guerin, who is a fisheries officer and elected councillor for the Musqueam, built the tool by drawing upon the oral history of his band. For the purposes of the exhibition, the harpoon functions as a window into an interconnected web

of knowledge. “We took the harpoon as our starting point, and from there, picked a few species to illustrate the connections between culture, technology and language,” says Stranger-Galey. The ongoing exhibition will act as an extension and evolution of oral history for both the Musqueam and the wider public. “This is a living exhibition, which we’ll continue to add to,” says StrangerGaley. “We hope that over time, other Musqueam knowledge-keepers will have information they wish to share, to help build this digital repository.” Visitors to the museum can also use their digital devices to access an interactive, virtual element of the exhibit. At two locations in the museum, users can peer through the screens of their phones or tablets to glimpse

a 360 degree view of a natural environment. The first location transports the viewer to a heavily wooded forest, the second to the bottom of a river, filled with salmon, sea lions and, you guessed it, sturgeon. Hovering just above one of the sturgeon is the tip of a harpoon, and if visitors tilt their phone or tablet screens up, they can see the surface of the river, the bottom of a canoe and the fisherman on the other end of the harpoon. “It’s amazing to think that there could be a sturgeon in the river right now that was alive a hundred years ago,” says StrangerGaley. “Imagine the memories they might hold.” The Beaty Biodiversity Museum is located at 2212 Main Mall, University of British Columbia. More info at beatymuseum.ubc.ca. @DrewClarkeBC


VANCOURIER.COM

T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0 THE VA NCOUVER COURIER

Arts & Entertainment

Renew Your Smile

A25

KERRISDALE DENTURE CLINIC

THE SHOWBIZ

Not your typical fairytale

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Sabrina Furminger

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A Typical Fairytale isn’t a typical fairytale. Sure, the locally produced short film ticks many of the boxes we’re used to seeing in proto-Disney fairytales: a king and queen in love, a princess in crisis, a fairy godmother, a narrative arc is recounted in rhyming couplets by a kindly, disembodied voice. But while A Typical Fairytale looks and sounds like other fairytales we’ve seen play out on screen before, it isn’t — because once upon a time, a group of Vancouverites decided to produce a transgender fairytale. And in this particular fairytale, “happily ever after” doesn’t require any slaying of dragons, love’s first kiss, or reinforcement of gender norms. It means loving your child, and giving them the freedom to live their truth. “There are so many tropes to play with in the fairytale world,” says Annette Reilly. Reilly directed, produced and co-stars in A Typical Fairytale, which was written by Jessica McLeod and screens March 6 at the 2020 Vancouver International Women in Film Festival. “Fairytales can be problematic, especially what they teach young girls. This film went beyond that [concept of] happily ever after and continued that story in the real world.” A Typical Fairytale tells the story of Sherry (Reilly), Larry (Brendan Taylor), and their child, Princess (Ameko Eks Mass Carroll). Princess grows up insisting that she’s a boy, but her protests only cause conflict with her parents. It takes a visit from a fairy godmother (Amy Fox) for the family to find harmony and for Princess to

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A Typical Fairytale screens at Vancouver International Women in Film Festival.

live his truth as Prince. Reilly said she knew she had to direct McLeod’s script as soon as she read it. She found beauty in the rhyming couplets, and the fact that this type of story hadn’t before been told in the fairytale realm. She saw the potential for it to touch people — especially trans kids and their families. “I grew up in Alberta knowing nothing about any of this,” says Reilly. “I’m queer, but I didn’t have the language to figure out what that meant. I never really felt like my sexuality or my preferences mattered. It’s only been in the last five or six years that I’ve had the language and started meeting people and working within more queer and LGBTQ communities.” Reilly and co. found their lead child in Carroll. In 2017, Carroll — who is gender-fluid — made history as the first potential nominee in both the male and female categories at the Leo Awards for a starring role in the short film Limina. For the pivotal role of the fairy godmother, Reilly cast Fox, who’d created and starred in The Switch, the first sitcom on the planet to feature a transgender lead.

“Amy walked into the audition and had this absurd quirkiness and playfulness,” says Reilly. “What really hit me — I get goose-bumps remembering it — was when she said the words, ‘[Gender’s] not something a doctor decides.’ It was so deep and so connected that I might as well have just told her right there that she was cast.” A Typical Fairytale has been riding the film festival circuit since its premiere in 2018. Reilly says the feedback has been mostly positive. “[But] I’ve noticed a very big lack of festival acceptances in certain areas of the world. I find the biggest support in our festival run has been the west coast of Canada and the States, a little bit in New York, Toronto — definitely the more progressive areas. “I think it’s a matter of opening people to compassion for other humans, and opening hearts,” she adds. “What we can do is educate. We can send out these messages of love.” The 2020 Vancouver International Women in Film Festival runs March 3 to 8 at Vancity Theatre. Tickets and schedule at viwff.ca.

You’re Invited

VCH OPEN BOARD FORUM Vancouver Coastal Health board of directors and senior leadership invite you to our next open board forum.

EVENT Vancouver Coastal Health open board forum

Open to the public, our board forum is an opportunity to hear from you and engage in dialogue with our board.

DATE

Our board chair will provide an update about VCH’s priorities to serve you better and there will be a question and answer session.

LOCATION

You will hear about updates to our hospitals and community services that you rely on. We’ll also have a presentation from Guy Felicella about his experiences surviving addiction through harm reduction strategies.

Wednesday, March 4th from 6 to 8 pm

Lakewood Room Trout Lake Community Centre 3360 Victoria Drive, Vancouver We look forward to meeting and connecting with you.

LAST DAY to vote for your favourites For your chance to win a luxurious spa getaway for two. Visit vancourier.com for more details.

2020

VOTING CLOSES FEBRUARY 27 AT 11:59PM.

vancourier.com/contests


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THE VAN COU VER CO URIER T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0

Pass It to Bulis

VAN CO U RI E R. C OM

The hockey blog that knows who needs the puck

March Madness: Markstrom’s injury comes at exactly the wrong time Canucks face their toughest stretch of the season next month

Backhand Sauce Daniel Wagner

By their standards, the Canucks have been very fortunate when it comes to injuries this season. While they’ve had some long-term injuries, they’ve mostly avoided injuries to their top players. That’s particularly true on defence, where the oft-injured Chris Tanev has played every game this season. Their most significant injury came to Brock Boeser, a rib cartilage fracture that is expected to keep him out of the lineup for the rest of the regular season. The Canucks covered for that injury with the trade for Tyler Toffoli, a capable top-six winger that should be able to fill in the hole left by Boeser and improve the team significantly when Boeser returns. On Monday, however, Canucks Nation got news of an injury that could change the course of the season: Jacob Markstrom could be out of the lineup for three to four weeks with a knee injury. It couldn’t come at a worse time, as the Canucks are about to embark on their most difficult stretch of the season, a mad March that will likely decide their playoff fate. The Canucks have had a fairly easy schedule over the past couple months. They’ve had just two sets of back to back games in the last two months and had the bye week in January to help them stay well-rested. Their toughest month was November, and it showed in their record, going 5-7-3. While the Canucks played 15 games in 30 days in November, March is just that extra bit tougher: 16 games in 30 days. The first game of the month will be the second game of a back-to-back weekend. That sets the tone for three more backto-backs during the month of March. At one point near the end of the month, the Canucks will play six games in just nine nights, a mix of home and road games that could clinch them the playoffs or send them teetering to the edge of the Wild Card race. What makes these March games even more significant is that half of their games are within the Pacific Division. They’ll play two games against the Arizona Coyotes that could decide the Coyotes playoff fate, and also games against the Calgary Flames and Vegas Golden Knights. These will be crucial games — sometimes referred to as four-point games — for determining where the Canucks finish in the Pacific Division standings. While some of the Canucks don’t like to

Stick-taps & Glove-drops • A tap of the stick to Troy Stecher, who was thrilled when he didn’t get traded on Monday. “I’m a lifelong Canucks fan and they have no Stanley Cup,” said Stecher to reporters in Montreal. “I think it would be really cool to bring a Stanley Cup to Vancouver. That’s part of my bucket list as a hockey player.” • A stick-tap to Louis Domingue’s father,

who drove from his home near Montreal to bring his son his old blue and white goalie gear from the Tampa Bay Lightning so he wouldn’t look out of place among the Canucks with his red and black Devils’ gear.

Big Numbers • 42 Dale Tallon had 42 assists as a rookie

If Jacob Markstrom is only out for a brief period of time and can return mid-March, it might not be a problem, but if not, the Canucks face a difficult challenge. PHOTO DAN TOULGOET

think too far ahead when it comes to the schedule, others are well aware of the upcoming challenge. Quinn Hughes, who will play twice as many games this season as he did in college hockey last season, knows that he needs to prepare carefully. “In March when you play 16 games, it’s gonna wear on everyone here, especially me,” said Hughes. “I’m just gonna have to figure that out.” The bigger issue for the Canucks is the loss of Markstrom. If Markstrom is only out for a brief period of time and can return mid-March, it might not be a problem, but if not, the Canucks face a difficult challenge. The Canucks believe in Thatcher Demko, but with the heavy schedule, including four back-to-backs, the Canucks need two trustworthy goaltenders, not just one. “Our team has confidence in [Demko],”

said Canucks GM Jim Benning on Monday. “This is an opportunity for him to step in and play like he’s played for us all year. It’s not a perfect situation but it is what it is and it’s going to be a great opportunity for Thatcher.” Along with the opportunity for Demko comes the need to give starts to Louis Domingue, who the Canucks picked up at the trade deadline. While Domingue has NHL experience, he’s struggled with the New Jersey Devils this season, with an ugly .882 save percentage. “He is a player with experience that can come in and help support Thatcher,” said Benning, “and he can play games for us and be competitive if we need him.” The Canucks have to hope that’s true or March Madness could quickly turn to sadness for Canucks fans.

defenceman in the Canucks’ first season, a record that still stands, albeit temporarily. Quinn Hughes had 41 assists heading into Tuesday’s game against the Montreal Canadiens.

• 88 According to HockeyViz.com, the

Canucks had an 88 per cent chance of making the playoffs coming out of the trade deadline, the fifth-best odds in the Western Conference.

CONTACT US AT:

www.bettermeals.com 604.299.1877

BETTER MEALS home delivered meals since 1993

THANK YOU FOR RECYCLING THIS NEWSPAPER.


VANCOURIER.COM

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

A27

Your Community

MARKETPLACE Book your ad ONLINE:

Or call to place your ad at

Visit the online MARKETPLACE:

or 604-444-3000 Email: classifieds@van.net

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FOR SALE - MISC

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LEGAL SERVICES CRIMINAL RECORD? Why suffer Employment/Licensing loss? Travel/Business opportunities? Be embarrassed? Think: Criminal Pardon. US Entry Waiver. Record Purge. File Destruction. Free Consultation 1-800-3472540. accesslegalmjf.com

“At the Cottage”

KUNISS, Gordon E. October 6, 1931 − February 4, 2020 Gordon (Gotthard) Ernst Kuniss, age 88, of Vancouver, British Columbia, passed away peacefully on February 4, 2020, after a lengthy illness. Gordon was born in Schwarzbach, Germany on October 6, 1931, to Willi and Herta Kuniss. He is survived by his wife of 68 years, Helen; sons, Gerry and Allan; grand−daughters, Melissa, Kimberly, Brittany, and Jaymi; step−grand− children, Griffin and Aidan; daughters−in−law, Deirdre, Lesley, and Jennifer; step−brother, Manfred (sons: Daniel and Thorsten); step−sister, Karin; and his large extended family of nephews, nieces, cousins, and close friends. He is predeceased by his father, mother, and his brother, Harold. Dad had many lifelong passions including hunting, fishing, coaching soccer, those infamous Canuckleheads, and the family cabin at Birkenhead. Dad was generous, humble and kind. He always had a smile and a warm greeting. We have all been blessed to share the many remarkable facets of Dad’s 88 years and will miss him dearly. Dad’s service was held at St Mark’s Lutheran Church, 1573 East 18th Ave. at 11:00 am on Wednesday, February 26, 2020, followed by a brief internment at Ocean View Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, the family would appreciate donations to the Alzheimer’s Society of BC. A special thank−you to the many personal caregivers and staff at the German Canadian Care home who treated Dad with dignity and respect. Share memories through Hamilton Harron Funeral Home at: www.dignitymemorial.com/obituaries/9028521

Hospice Cottage Charity Shoppe 1521 - 56 Street, Tsawwassen 604-943-4348

ATTENTION

INVENTORS! Ideas wanted! Call Davison today! 1.800.218.2909 or visit us at inventing.davison.com/BC Free inventor’s guide!

PERSONALS GENTLEMEN! Attractive, discreet European lady offers companionship. 604-451-0175

classifie eds. vancouriier.c com

We Buy Homes since 2003. Call Today! 604-626-9647 www.webuyhomesbc.com A BBB Accredited Business Land Value Homes available for new construction in Van & BBY. Call 604-836-6098

TRAVEL

**SWEDISH MASSAGE**

@

place ads online @

REAL ESTATE SERVICES

604-739-3998 West Broadway at Oak St.

Cruise Desolation Sound & Toba Inlet Stay Homfray Lodg ge Limited Time Offer FREE R/T AIRFARE Vancouver-Powell River coastalcruises.ca Call us • 604-566-8027 .

To advertise call

604-630-3300

. .

EMPLOYMENT

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

WANTED Old Books Wanted. also: Photos Postcards, Letters, Paintings. no text books or encyclopedias. I pay cash. 604-737-0530

TRUTH IN EMPLOYMENT ADVERTISING

604.630.3300 Celebrate the lives of loved ones with your stories, photographs and tributes

SPROTTSHAW.COM

BUSINESS SERVICES

Collectible Month

Old, Vintage & New Visit Hospice Cottage Each week for new Collectible features March 2 - Collectable furniture, Wood, First Nations, Asian, Clocks, Figurines, China Sets, Crystal & Silver March 9 - Weird & Unique Collectibles, Antique Books, Magazines, Stamps & Comic Books March 16 - Toys, Dolls, Die Cast cars, Trains, Games, Pokemon, & Collectible movies March 23 - Musical Instruments, Sheet Music, Record Players, Cameras & Lenses, Tripods & Records March 30 - Sports Memorabilia & more…

HEALTH CARE ASSISTANT

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TODAY'S PUZZLE ANSWERS

Glacier Media Group makes every effort to ensure you are responding to a reputable and legitimate job opportunity. If you suspect that an ad to which you have responded is misleading, here are some hints to remember. Legitimate employers do not ask for money as part of the application process; do not send money; do not give any credit card information; or call a 900 number in order to respond to an employment ad. Job opportunity ads are salary based and do not require an investment. If you have responded to an ad which you believe to be misleading please call the: Better Business Bureau at 604-682-2711 Monday to Friday, 9am - 3pm or email: inquiries@bbbvan.org and they will investigate.

PETS

FOR SALE: Purebred Holland Lop Bunnies − $50.00 Super sweet bunnies ready to go to their new homes. 604−817−1180

classifieds.vancourier.com

Executive Director, Wholesale Operations, Liquor Regular, Full Time Burnaby, BC The Executive Director, Wholesale Operations, Liquor is accountable for the leadership and strategic direction of the British Columbia beverage alcohol supply chain which fully integrates all functions from supplier through to the wholesale customer, driving profitability through supply chain and delivery of product through LDB logistics channels. The Executive Director, acting with significant independence, is accountable for directing the following major programs and operational functions of the Liquor Distribution Branch (LDB): Wholesale Supply Chain, Wholesale Pricing and Imports, Distribution, and Wholesale Customer Centre. Qualifications/Experience: • A university degree in business, public administration or related discipline and a minimum 10 years managerial/ supervisory progressive experience; and/or an equivalent combination of experience, education and training. • Minimum 10 years progressive business experience at a senior level and extensive experience in strategic planning, wholesale and supply chain, performance management, change leadership, retail/wholesale business accounts and budget development. • Minimum five years’ experience leading a diverse workgroup of executives: strategic planning, wholesale and supply chain, goal setting, change management, driving profitability and developing team members.

Apply online at http://www.bcldb.com/careers


A28

THE VANCOUVER COURIER THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020

VANCOURIER.COM

EMPLOYMENT

HOME SERVICES

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

BUILDING CONTRACTORS

Disability Case Management Advisor Regular, Full Time Burnaby, BC

Qualifications/Experience: • Post-secondary diploma or certificate in disability management • 4 years of recent, progressive, experience in disability management, or claims management. • Managing (or experience with) a breadth of different claims with varying degrees of complexity • Adjudication of benefits • Return to work planning • Absence management/accommodation • Interpreting and applying legislation and/or policy. Apply online at http://www.bcldb.com/careers Close Date: March 4, 2020

LANGARA GARDENS

#101 - 621 W. 57th Ave, Van Spacious 1, 2 & 3 BR Rental Apartments & Townhouses. Heat, hot water 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.petersonrentals.com

Call 604-327-1178

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

Need a New Place?

Find one in the Classifieds To advertise call 604-630-3300

CLEANING SERVICE Reas rates, specializing in homes. Guar work. Refs. Call 604-715-4706

604-376-7224 centuryhardwood.com INSTALLATION REFINISHING, Sanding. Free est, great prices. Satisfaction guar.604-518-7508

Gutter Cleaning, Power washing, Window Cleaning, Roof Cleaning Call Simon for prompt & professional service 30 yrs exp. 604-230-0627

• Polished Concrete Floors • Pumping • Placing • Sealing • Acid Staining • Decorative Concrete • Forming • Demolition • Foundation Pouring Professional Work

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

Call Mario 604-253-0049 604-764-2726

DRAINAGE

Ken’s Power Washing Plus WINTER SPECIALS Pressure washing Gutter & window cleaning " Work Safe, Free est. " "

HANDYPERSON

HANDYMAN • RENOVATIONS •Kitchen •Bath • Plumbing •Countertop •Floors •Paint & more. Call MIC for quote:

604-725-3127

Drainage & Excavation SERVICES • We make Basements Dry • 604-341-4446

ELECTRICAL All Electrical, Low Cost.

Licensed. Res/Com. Small job expert. Renos, Panel changes.

HOUSES FOR RENT

residential reno’s & small jobs.

778-322-0934

Jenny Wu 778-776-7190 info@yolkhomerental.com RE/MAX Crest Realty - 1428 W7th Ave, Vancouver

ADVERTISING POLICIES

All advertising published in this newspaper is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services offered are accurately described and wil ingly 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 wil 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 wil be made in the next available issue. The Vancouver Courier wil be responsible for only one incorrect insertion with liability limited to that portion of the advertisement ff t d b th R t f dj t t

Your Community Newspaper

YOUR ELECTRICIAN Lic#89402. Insured. Guar’d. Fast same day service. We love BIG & small jobs! 604-568-1899 goldenleafelectrical.com A LIC’D. Electrician #30582 Rewiring & reno, appliance/ plumbing, rotor rooter 778998-9026, 604-255-9026

EXCAVATING

All Work Guar. Free Est. John 604-616-2934

MASONRY

604-437-7272 PROPERTY MAINTENANCE

MASONRY AND REPAIRS •Stone Walls •Bricks •Chimneys & Fireplaces •Pavers •Asphalt •& More •ALL CONCRETE WORK •20+ years experience. George • 778-998-3689

PAINTING/ WALLPAPER Home Maintenance We provide pressure washing, window clean− ing, gutter cleaning, power raking, aerating, mowing and driveway sealing. 7 years of experi− ence. 604−209−3445 www.npservices.ca

BC’s Best Painters in Town! PAINTING (25+ yrs exp) BBB Top Quality Paint & Workmanship. Interior: 3 Coats & Repairs for $250ea room. 778-545-0098 604-377-5423

RENOS & HOME IMPROVEMENT

D&M PAINTING

HOME REPAIRS RENOVATIONS INSTALLATIONS CARPENTRY • ELECTRICAL PLUMBING • PAINTING FLOORING • TO-DO LIST

Done Quick. Licensed. Done Right. Bonded. Guaranteed. Insured.

604-878-5232 HandymanConnection.com

Interior / Exterior Specialist Many Years Experience Fully Insured Top Quality, Quick Work Free estimate

ALL HOME

RENOVATIONS. Kitchen & Bath Specialist. Licensed Builder. WCB.

604-724-3832

developmentbrick@gmail.com

SpeedLine Painting

Dima • 604-908-3800

Top quality Affordable rates Interiors and exteriors Drywall fixes 10 Years’ experience WCB Insured Free estimates

AAA All types repairs, renos, kitchens, baths, tiling, painting, plumbing, electrical and more. David: 604-862-7537

Celebrating 30 Years!

PAINTSPECIAL.COM

West Coast Cedar Installations New, Repaired, Rebuilt since 1991. Fences & Decks. 604-788-6458 cedarinstall@hotmail.com

Tree Pruning & Hedge Trimming Blackberry ry Removal

• Power Wash & Gutters • Concrete & Stucco Repairs • Driveways •Paths •Patios’ • DECKS & FENCING & more

25+ yrs exp. WCB. Insured

Donny 604-600-6049

Need help with your Home Renovation? Find it in the Classifieds!

MASTER CARPENTER •Finishing•Doors•Mouldings •Decks•Renos•Repairs

Emil: 778-773-1407

PATIOS .

Patio Covers, Sunrooms, Vinyl, Railings

www.mrbuild.com

Winter Specials & Clean-up Chafer Beetle Repair Lawn Seed, Install, Rep pair

hummingbirdrenovations.com

778-895-3503

Free Estimate 604-821-8088 • 604-518-6395

RENO OS • REPAIRS S 9129 Shaughnessy St., Van.

604-732-8453

778-387-3626

3 rooms for $375, 2 coats any colour (Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint. NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring & Maid Services.

Since 1989

.

FENCING

Specializing in Bathrooms, Ensuites and much more Work within your budget

BOWEN ALUMINUM

patiocoversunroomvancouver.com

RENOS & HOME IMPROVEMENT

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

HUMMINGBIRD RENOVATIONS

778-929-6107

LAWN & GARDEN

604-341-4446

call to place your ad 604.630.3300

• Hot Water Tanks • Plumbing • Heating • Furnaces • Boilers • Drainage • Res. & Comm. • 24/7 /77 Service

WINTER CLEAN-UP

• Power Washing Junk Removal Available. Senior Disc

.

bf#37309 Commercial &

www.yolkhomerental.com http://rem.ax/luxuryrentals

Lawn & Garden Care

• Power Rake, Pruning • Tree Topping, Trimming

Call Ken 604-716-7468

LIC. ELECTRICIAN

Shaughnessy Mansion $12,000/month Wesbrook Senior Home $9,000/month Vancouver House etc.

PLUMBING

GUTTERS

AGGRECON SPECIALTIES

778-919-7707

LAWN & GARDEN

Hardwood Floor Refinishing Experts • Repairs • Staining • Installation • Free Estimates

CONCRETE

(604)374-0062 Simply Electric

RENTALS APARTMENTS/ CONDOS FOR RENT

We do all types of renovation at the best price! Specialize in: Interior & Exterior Painting, Flooring, Kitchen & Bathroom Upgrade, Fencing & Roof Decking 778−244−8707 perspective−solutions.com

CLEANING

The Disability Case Management Advisor is responsible for the timely and effective case management, rehabilitation services, accommodation, and return to work planning for the Liquor Distribution Branch (LDB). The advisor is responsible for the co-ordination of a variety of services flowing from the Short Term Illness and Injury Plan (STIIP), long term disability and WorkSafeBC programs that are available to LDB employees.

FLOORING

BC AWNING & RAILING

•Aluminum/Glass Patio Cover •Sunrooms & Windows •Aluminum Railings, Vinyl Deck Free Est • 604-521-2688 PatioCoverVancouver.com

PLUMBING WESTMOR PLUMBING Ltd Residential & Commercial Professional Service 7 DAYS/WK

604-551-8531 Honest Service Lic - Ins - Bonded

Kitchen & Bathrooms, all Tile, all Flooring, Drywall, Paint. ALL REPAIRS +More! INT & EXT • 778-836-0436

HOME REPAIRS RENOVATIONS INSTALLATIONS CARPENTRY • ELECTRICAL PLUMBING • PAINTING FLOORING • TO-DO LIST

Done Quick. Licensed. Done Right. Bonded. Guaranteed. Insured.

604-878-5232 HandymanConnection.com


VANCOURIER.COM

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

SUDOKU

HOME SERVICES RENOS & HOME IMPROVEMENT

RUBBISH REMOVAL

Celebrating 30 Years!

A29

TREE SERVICES TREE SERVICES

Pruning, Hedge Trimming Tree & Stump Removal 75 ft Bucket Trucks .

604 - 787-5915 604 - 291-7778

Since 1989

www.treeworksonline.ca 10% discount with this ad

www.mrbuild.com  ALL RENOS  BATHROOM RENOS  KITCHEN RENOS  WATER DAMAGE REPAIRS  ALL DOORS AND WINDOWS  DECKS AND FENCES  ALL ELECTRICAL AND PLUMBING  ROOFING AND DRAINAGE

Need anything done or repaired?

604-732-8453

mrbuild@mrbuild.com

BATHROOM SPECIALIST Tiles, Tap, Vanities, Plumbing, Painting, Framing Complete Bathroom Renos

RUBBISH REMOVAL

Reasonable rates Free estimates. Pat 604-224-2112 anytime

BRADS JUNK REMOVAL.com

• FULL SERVICE JUNK REMOVAL & Clean-Up at Affordable Rates • Pianos & Hot Tubs No Problem • Booked Appointments • Same-Day Service • Residential & Commercial 20 YARD BIN RENTALS

249 for a week + dump fees

AUTOMOTIVE

SPORTS & IMPORTS

1993 BMW 325i Convertible, Collectors, auto, 138k. $8500. 604-875-6833

$

604.220.JUNK (5865)

classifieds.vancourier.com

Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a Sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes.

Over 25 Years Experience

CALL PETER: 604-715-0030 D & M Renovations. Flooring, tiling, finishing. Fully Insured. Top quality, quick work, 604-724-3832

ROOFING

PUZZLE ANSWERS ON SEPARATE PAGE

Grow Your Business

A-1 Contracting & Roofing New & Re-Roofing • All Types All Maintenance & Repairs GUTTER CLEANING Gutter Guard Installations • RENOVATION WORK • WCB. 25% Discount • Emergency Repairs •

Call Jag at:

.

778-892-1530

MCNABB ROOFING

ALL Roofing & Repairs. Insured • WCB

Call 604-6 630-3 3300 to place your ad (!"--/.&)-*,"#('+%/&%*('$

40+ yrs exp • Free Est’s

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Liability Insurance, WCB, BBB, Free Estimates

604-946-4333

CAN YOU DIG IT?

BC ROOFING LTD

Roofing & Re−Roofing BCROOFER.CA Mike: 604−240−1850

GL Roofing & Repairs. New Roof, Clean Gutters $80. info@ glroofing.ca • 604-240-5362 MCR Mastercraft Roofing Right the 1st time! Repairs, reroofing, garage, decks. Hart 604-322-5517

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Find help in the Home Serv vices section

classifieds.vancourier.com

classifieds.vancourier.com

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A30

THE VAN COU VER CO URIER T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0

VAN CO U RI E R. C OM

Because there’s always a favourite. Cast your votes in the Stars of Vancouver Reader’s Choice Awards and be entered to win a luxurious spa getaway for two at the Tigh-Na-Mara Seaside Spa Resort!

2020

ART & CULTURE 1 CASINO 2 CHILDREN’S ENTERTAINMENT 3 CLASSICAL MUSIC ENSEMBLE 4 COMEDY CLUB 5 COMMUNITY FESTIVAL 6 CRAFT FAIR

Vote online at vancourier.com/contests or alternatively, mail your completed ballot to us at 303 West 5th Avenue, V5Y 1J6. Must vote in at least 25 categories. Nominees must be located in the City of Vancouver. VOTING ENDS TODAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020. ONE ENTRY PER READER. 14 ITALIAN RESTAURANT

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43 MORTGAGE BROKER

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44 NAIL SALON

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45 OIL CHANGE

10 MASSAGE

46 PET STORE

11 NATUROPATH

47 PLUMBER

12 NUTRITIONIST

48 PRESCHOOL DAYCARE

13 OPTOMETRIST

18 LATIN AMERICAN RESTAURANT 19 MIDDLE EASTERN RESTAURANT 20 NEW RESTAURANT (OPENED IN 2019)

17 COOKING CLASSES 18 DRY CLEANER 19 ELECTRICIAN

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20 ETHNIC FOOD STORE

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49 PRIVATE SCHOOL

14 ORGANIC PRODUCE STORE

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23 FUNERAL HOME

50 REALTOR

15 PHYSIOTHERAPIST

10 LIVE MUSIC VENUE

25 SPORTS BAR

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51 SENIORS CARE SUPPORT SERVICES

16 SPIN STUDIO

11 LOCAL POLITICIAN 12 NEIGHBOURHOOD

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7 DANCE/THEATRE PRODUCTION COMPANY 8 GALLERY/MUSEUM 9 INDEPENDENT CINEMA

EAT & DRINK 1 BAKERY 2 BRUNCH 3 BEST BURGER 4 CHINESE RESTAURANT 5 COCKTAIL BAR 6 COFFEE SHOP 7 CRAFT BREWERY 8 DESSERT 9 FINE DINING 10 FOOD TRUCK 11 GREEK RESTAURANT 12 ICE CREAM/GELATO 13 INDIAN/SOUTH ASIAN RESTAURANT

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52 SENIORS RESIDENCE 53 SHOE STORE 54 SHOPPING CENTRE 55 SPA/BEAUTY THERAPY 56 TOY STORE 57 TRAVEL AGENCY 58 VETERINARIAN

17 WALK-IN CLINIC 18 YOGA

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59 VINTAGE/ CONSIGNMENT STORE

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38 LANDSCAPING

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33 HOME RENOVATIONS 34 HOTEL

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PHONE


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THE VA NCO UVER COUR IER T H U R SDAY, F E B RUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0

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