richmond review, july 16, 2014

24
7771 Westminster Hwy, 604-276-2400 Summer Heat Sale See our ad on the back Page Free EXPERT ADVICE from RICHMOND’S REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONAL FREE No Obligation Home Evaluation Award Winning Service and Results Richmond Specialist Call Now! 604-649-0108 www.tonyling.com TONY LING Real Estate Services A W A R D W I N N E R 2013 RICHMOND Best of [email protected] OFFICE: 604-247-3700 DELIVERY: 604-247-3710 CLASSIFIED: 604-575-5555 NEWSROOM: 604-247-3730 RICHMONDREVIEW.COM WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014 24 PAGES REVIEW the richmond Your Kontinent festival begins tomorrow 3 The family that plays together is off to the B.C. Summer Games 9 Don Fennell photo Montreal Canadiens’ star goaltender Carey Price, who backstopped Canada’s men’s hockey team to gold at the Olympic Winter Games in Sochi, signed a few autographs Saturday at the Richmond Olympic Oval during a guest appearance at Play4Life’s 4-on-4 ball hockey tournament. Gold medal goalie visits oval Business groups back urgent action on flood works by Jeff Nagel Black Press A new report underscores the Fraser River’s importance to the Lower Mainland economy and calls for an urgent program of dredging and other flood prevention measures, as well as upgrades to critical infrastructure. Commissioned by the Richmond Cham- ber of Commerce, in partnership with other chambers in the region, the study warns the region escaped a very close call in 2007. “The river came perilously close to over- topping the dikes in the Fraser Valley dur- ing the spring freshet,” says the report, which was released yesterday. It cites estimates that another flood rival- ing the record flood of 1894 would cause tens of billions of dollars in damage and catastrophic losses for the 300,000 resi- dents of the floodplain, as well as business and industry. Unlike the sparsely populat- ed farmland of 120 years ago, there is now $50 billion worth of development on the Fraser’s floodplain. “Failure to deal expeditiously with this problem will leave a large part of the Low- er Mainland at risk of enormous damage.” The study comes a few days after new provincial government studies projected major floods will be more frequent and severe as a result of climate change, and warned most dikes in the Fraser Valley are not high enough. The new research on the influence of cli- mate change and the severe flooding in Calgary and Toronto last year“highlighted the need to act urgently to enhance flood protection along the Lower Fraser,”accord- ing to the report released by the business groups. It notes estimates of $9.5 billion in spending needed in Metro Vancouver to adapt to an expected rise in sea level. Facing the challenges posed by the river is made more difficult by the fragmented governance of the region, the report said, noting there are 15 municipal govern- ments, 29 first nations and more than 20 provincial or federal ministries involved in administration of the river. “The current costs just for diking up- grades for the tidal areas of the river and for adjacent coastal reaches required by 2100 are in range of $9 billion,” said the Richmond Chamber of Commerce’s Matt Pitcairn, who co-authored the report. “Damage from a major dike failure could be in the tens of billions of dollars, with very serious effects on the economy of this region, British Columbia, and all of Canada due to the impact on the transportation of goods and services.” Gerard Edwards, chair of the Richmond chamber, noted that some of the largest employers and businesses in Richmond occupy the banks of the Fraser River, “such as the Vancouver Airport Authority, the Steveston Harbour Authority, and Port Metro Vancouver.” Meanwhile, a broad coalition of local and senior governments and other interests have joined forces to craft a co-ordinated strategy to safeguard the Lower Main- land from a catastrophic flood. The Lower Mainland Flood Management Strategy aims to pull together an action plan with costs within two years to begin the pro- cess of raising dikes and improving other flood defences in the years ahead. It’s unclear how the billions of dollars in needed work will be raised but advocates hope a regional approach will prove more logical than leaving individual municipali- ties to work in isolation on flood planning and lobbying for grants. The initiative led by the Fraser Basin Council was announced Tuesday and will focus on the risk of Fraser River flooding and coastal flooding from win- ter storm surges, which are expected to be amplified by a rising sea level. •For more details on this story, see richmondreview.com Fraser flood risks threaten economy

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Page 1: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

7771 Westminster Hwy,604-276-2400

Summer Heat SaleSee our ad on the back Page

Free EXPERT ADVICE from RICHMOND’SREAL ESTATE PROFESSIONAL

FREE No Obligation Home EvaluationAward Winning Service and Results

Richmond Specialist

Call Now! 604-649-0108 www.tonyling.com

TONY LINGReal Estate Services

AWAR

D WINNER

2013

RICHMONDBest of

[email protected] OFFICE: 604-247-3700 DELIVERY: 604-247-3710 CLASSIFIED: 604-575-5555 NEWSROOM: 604-247-3730

RICHMONDREVIEW.COM WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014 24 PAGES

REVIEW the richmond Your Kontinent festival

begins tomorrow 3

The family that plays together is off to the B.C. Summer Games 9

Don Fennell photoMontreal Canadiens’ star goaltender Carey Price, who backstopped Canada’s men’s hockey team to gold at the Olympic Winter Games in Sochi, signed a few autographs Saturday at the Richmond Olympic Oval during a guest appearance at Play4Life’s 4-on-4 ball hockey tournament.

Gold medal goalie visits oval

Business groups back urgent action on flood works

by Jeff NagelBlack Press

A new report underscores the Fraser River’s importance to the Lower Mainland economy and calls for an urgent program of dredging and other fl ood prevention measures, as well as upgrades to critical infrastructure.

Commissioned by the Richmond Cham-ber of Commerce, in partnership with other chambers in the region, the study warns the region escaped a very close call in 2007.

“The river came perilously close to over-topping the dikes in the Fraser Valley dur-ing the spring freshet,” says the report, which was released yesterday.

It cites estimates that another fl ood rival-ing the record fl ood of 1894 would cause tens of billions of dollars in damage and catastrophic losses for the 300,000 resi-dents of the fl oodplain, as well as business and industry. Unlike the sparsely populat-ed farmland of 120 years ago, there is now $50 billion worth of development on the Fraser’s fl oodplain.

“Failure to deal expeditiously with this problem will leave a large part of the Low-er Mainland at risk of enormous damage.”

The study comes a few days after new provincial government studies projected major fl oods will be more frequent and severe as a result of climate change, and warned most dikes in the Fraser Valley are not high enough.

The new research on the infl uence of cli-mate change and the severe fl ooding in Calgary and Toronto last year “highlighted the need to act urgently to enhance fl ood protection along the Lower Fraser,” accord-ing to the report released by the business groups.

It notes estimates of $9.5 billion in spending needed in Metro Vancouver to adapt to an expected rise in sea level.

Facing the challenges posed by the river is made more diffi cult by the fragmented governance of the region, the report said, noting there are 15 municipal govern-ments, 29 fi rst nations and more than 20 provincial or federal ministries involved in administration of the river.

“The current costs just for diking up-grades for the tidal areas of the river and for adjacent coastal reaches required by 2100 are in range of $9 billion,” said the Richmond Chamber of Commerce’s Matt Pitcairn, who co-authored the report. “Damage from a major dike failure could be in the tens of billions of dollars, with very serious eff ects on the economy of this region, British Columbia, and all of Canada due to the impact on the transportation of goods and services.”

Gerard Edwards, chair of the Richmond chamber, noted that some of the largest employers and businesses in Richmond occupy the banks of the Fraser River, “such as the Vancouver Airport Authority, the Steveston Harbour Authority, and Port Metro Vancouver.”

Meanwhile, a broad coalition of local and senior governments and other interests have joined forces to craft a co-ordinated strategy to safeguard the Lower Main-land from a catastrophic fl ood. The Lower Mainland Flood Management Strategy aims to pull together an action plan with costs within two years to begin the pro-cess of raising dikes and improving other fl ood defences in the years ahead.

It’s unclear how the billions of dollars in needed work will be raised but advocates hope a regional approach will prove more logical than leaving individual municipali-ties to work in isolation on fl ood planning and lobbying for grants.

The initiative led by the Fraser Basin Council was announced Tuesday and will focus on the risk of Fraser River fl ooding and coastal fl ooding from win-ter storm surges, which are expected to be amplifi ed by a rising sea level.

•For more details on this story, see richmondreview.com

Fraser flood risks threaten economy

Page 2: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Page 2 · Richmond Review Wednesday, July 16, 2014

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Page 3: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 Richmond Review · Page 3

Artist Vjeko Sager to live in a diviNation Tower during 10-day Richmond festival

by Glenda BartoshContributor

A huge aspect of any expressive undertak-ing that most people — even artists them-selves — often overlook is the creative pro-cess itself. What ideas do you use when you create something? What ideas do you discard? Will you express yourself with words? Dance? Paint or charcoal?

Do you want your piece to last forever? Or disappear like a sandcastle at the shore?

Every year Richmond’s Your Kontinent Film & Media Arts Festival, explores a dynamic new theme, and every year the festival highlights an artist whose practice has contributed sig-nifi cantly to media arts in Canada.

This year’s theme asks questions about the interface between being human, art and tech-nology, and this year’s featured artist, Vjeko Sager, is tackling it head on by demonstrat-ing his own creative process and expression, live and in real time from the top of diviNation Tower, a 30-foot tower he’s built in front of the Richmond Cultural Centre.

A powerful multi-media artist with inter-national reach, Sager earned his master’s in Applied Arts at the University of Belgrade; his drawings are in collections around the world, including the Drawing Center in New York and

the Museum of Modern Art; he curated CBC Studio’s Art in Exile; plus he’s been featured in Vancouver’s PuSh Festival and Paul Wong’s engaging Thru the Trapdoor

Part reality TV, part anthropological study of the creative process, Sager’s project is centred on living and creating on top of his tower 12 hours a day for seven consecutive days — no matter what the weather.

During that time, live streaming will connect him to our everyday world below, just like webcams connect us to those other-worldly events like baby eagles hatching or astronauts fl oating in space. In this case, our subject will be pondering, drawing and creating non-stop using a wide range of media while document-ing his creative process and responding to re-al-time input on his work via tweets and blogs.

“I’m using my hand to write and draw, and I’m using my phone to make recordings, videos, photos. I’m using a computer. I’m using my fi n-gers to draw in the sand — everything which allows me to become creative is my tool,” he says.

“I don’t fi nd computers any diff erent than making marks in the sand.”

Each day of the week-long creative journey, Sager will assume a diff erent persona — from a techno geek and ordinary guy to a rebel/anarchist, a philosopher and a spiritual per-son. About 60 per cent of his project will be curated; 40 per cent will be shaped by his viewers and audience. Each persona will de-termine the clothes he wears, the food he eats, the nature of the artwork he produces, and the media he chooses to create it with.

It all symbolizes “how an ordinary person who uses technology learns, evolves and

is transformed by the psychological, philo-sophical, physical and mental work of creat-ing,” a considered theme in his art practice and teaching. Sager, who’s taught at Arts Umbrella and Vancouver’s International Children’s Fes-tival, is currently an instructor at Emily Carr University of Art and Design.

What is the truth of things vs. what it seems to be? What will a post-digital age be like? These are the kinds of questions Sager will explore.

Another aspect of Sager’s diviNation Tower demonstrates that creativity is rooted in the

idea of playing and just being free.“When we think about games, they all have

rules. We can win or lose,” he says. “But with play there are no rules. I think creativity is playful, with-out any boundaries or any rules. When you start playing in the sand, you don’t expect to have end results. It’s going to vanish the next day.”

“…Probably that’s one of the reasons we are scared of creativity, because we expect a fi nished product. For kids it’s very, very impor-tant to remove the fear of fi nishing anything.”

diviNation also speaks to solitude. It’s in-spired partly by a dream Sager has had since childhood to be a solitary lighthouse keeper, and partly by the stylites — saints and ascet-ics of the ancient world who lived atop pillars to transcend the ordinary world. (One stylite in Syria lived on his pillar for 37 years!) It also echoes a broadcast tower, one sending out messages on creativity.

“When I was a boy, I had my world and I en-joyed it immensely,” he says. “If I was not alone daily I would really suff er as a person.

“I’m sorry to say but sometimes in our soci-ety, aloneness and solitude are treated as a negative. But that is the most wonderful hu-man aspect because if we cannot be alone, we cannot be human,” he says.

In fact, he believes one side of our personal-ity, the creative side, needs to be isolated to in-cubate ideas, so they can carefully grow, pro-tected, “until they gain some force, some life of their own, and then they become public.”

Check out more details of DiviNation Tower at: http://ykfestival.ca/event/divination-tower.

For live streaming, go to www.divination2014.tumblr.com

Three of the seven personas Vjeko Sager will take in his diviNation Tower project during Your Kontinent Film & Media Arts Festival, which launches tomorrow.

Restaurant chain eyes Bridgeport

Pirate Paks are replacing Billy book-cases on Sweden Way.

White Spot has leased one of two spaces in a new building planned for a portion of IKEA’s old site at 3200 Sweden Way, which fronts Bridge-port Road.

According to a Colliers Interna-tional listing, the restaurant chain has leased a location at 3200 Sweden Way, and an adjacent 3,600-square-foot space is still available for retail lease.

A development permit application for the restaurant is under review at Richmond City Hall.

White Spot, founded 86 years ago, is headquartered in Vancouver. The restaurant chain has 128 White Spot and Triple O’s locations throughout B.C., Alberta and Asia.

IKEA moved to a new location on Jacombs Road in 2012, and its former location was demolished.

—Matthew Hoekstra

Canadian Pacifi c Police Ser-vice issued a plea for help Mon-day in identifying a person it believes is responsible for a fi re on the Marpole Railway Bridge.

The span, which connects Richmond to Vancouver, caught fi re at about 4:45 p.m. on July 9.

Heavy smoke from the blaze forced the temporary clo-sure of the parallel Oak Street Bridge.

Police want to speak to “a person of interest” seen leav-ing the area just after the fi re started, according to a news release. Police are also asking for any witnesses, including any who may have taken pho-tographs of the fi re scene.

Anyone with information is asked to call Canadian Pacifi c Police Service at 1-800-716-9132, or anonymously through

Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS. Photographs and e-mails can also be sent to police_com-

[email protected].

—Matthew Hoekstra

Sex offender leaves Richmond: RCMP

A sex off ender who was the subject of an RCMP warning to the public and was living in Richmond, has now been relocated out of the city, local Mounties revealed on Tuesday.

On June 27, Richmond RCMP announced that Kosta Tsekouras, 32, was released on strict conditions, including that he must stay away from children, not attend parks, public pools, playgrounds, schools or daycares and not to engage in any activity with anyone under the age of 16.

Tsekouras, who has dark hair and stands six foot three and weighs about 220 pounds, was released on a peace bond for incidents dating back to 2010.

He was subsequently found to have breached his conditions and was sent to jail for six months.

On Tuesday, Richmond RCMP Cpl. Stepha-nie Ashton said Tsekouras has “now been relocated out of Richmond.”

Ashton added that Tsekouras “continues to require an escort when out in the com-munity.”

—Martin van den Hemel

Rail police seek ‘person of interest’

Jaana Bjork photoBlack smoke could be seen across Richmond last Wednesday af-ternoon, after a fi re ripped through a North Arm railway trestle bridge linking Vancouver and Richmond.

Your Kontinent•Presented by Cinevolution Media Arts Society and the City of Richmond, Your Kontinent takes place at Richmond Cultural Centre July 17 to July 26. •Now in its fourth year, the festival will showcase over 40 international fi lms, media art installations and performanc-es, workshops, discussions and summer camps for youth. •Among the fi rst special events is Theatre Under the Sky, a drive-in style family-friendly event at Lansdowne Centre’s parking lot July 18 from 6:30 to 11:30 p.m. featuring the screening of the animated fi lm Spirited Away. •For tickets to events, including festival passes, visit ykfestival.ca.

Your Kontinent festival has towering ideas

Page 4: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Page 4 · Richmond Review Wednesday, July 16, 2014

6911 No. 3 Rd. Richmond BC V6Y 2C1 | Tel: 604-276-4000 Fax: 604-278-5139

Notice of Public HearingMonday, July 21, 2014 – 7 p.m.

Council Chambers, Richmond City Hall

TAKE NOTICE that the Council of the City of Richmond will hold a Public Hearing as noted above, on the following items:

City of Richmond | 6911 No. 3 Rd. Richmond BC V6Y 2C1 | Tel: 604-276-4000

www.richmond.ca

1. RICHMOND ZONING BYLAW 8500, AMENDMENT BYLAW 8789 (RZ 10-552482)

Location/s: 3391, 3411, 3451 No. 4 Road and Lot B, NWD PLAN 14909

Applicant/s: Tien Sher Land Investment Group Ltd.

Purpose: To rezone the subject property from “Single Detached (RS1/E)” to “Single Detached (RS2/B)”, to permit the property to be subdivided into seven (7) single-family residential lots.

City Contact: Edwin Lee604.276.4121Planning and DevelopmentDepartment

BYLAW 8789

2. RICHMOND ZONING BYLAW 8500, AMENDMENT BYLAW 9136 (RZ 13-649999)

Location/s: 9580, 9600, 9620, 9626, 9660, 9680 Alexandra Road

Applicant/s: Am-Pri Developments (2012) Ltd.

Purpose: To: a) amend the “Town

Housing (ZT67) – Alexandra Neighbourhood (West Cambie)” zone to reduce the minimum front yard setback for the subject properties, from 5.0 m to 4.5 m; and

b) rezone the subject property from “Single Detached (RS1/F)” and “Two-Unit Dwellings (RD1)” to “Town Housing (ZT67) – Alexandra Neighbourhood (West Cambie)”, to permit development of approximately 96 three storey townhomes.

City Contact: David Brownlee604.276.4200Planning and DevelopmentDepartment

BYLAW 9136

3. RICHMOND ZONING BYLAW 8500, AMENDMENT BYLAW 9138 (RZ 13-643436)

Location/s: 3471 Chatham Street Applicant/s: Cotter Architects Inc. Purpose: To create a new site

specifi c “Commercial Mixed Use (ZMU26) – Steveston Village” zone and to rezone the subject property from the “Steveston Commercial (CS3)” zone to a new “Commercial Mixed Use (ZMU26) – Steveston Village” zone, in order to permit development of a three-storey building with approximately 10 residential units and 324 m2 (3,485 ft2) commercial space.

City Contact: Sara Badyal 604.276.4282Planning and Development Department

BYLAW 9138

4. RICHMOND ZONING BYLAW 8500, AMENDMENT BYLAW 9157 (RZ 13-650616)

Location/s: 5280/5300 Moncton Street Applicant/s: Barbara Stylianou Purpose: To rezone the subject

property from “Two-Unit Dwellings (RD1)” to “Single Detached (RS2/B)”, to permit the property to be subdivided to create two (2) lots.

City Contact: Cynthia Lussier604.276.4108Planning and DevelopmentDepartment

BYLAW 9157

How to obtain further information:• By Phone: If you have questions or concerns, please call the CITY CONTACT shown above.• On the City Website: Public Hearing Agendas, including staff reports and the proposed bylaws, are available on the City Website at http://www.richmond.ca/cityhall/council/agendas/hearings/2014.htm• At City Hall: Copies of the proposed bylaw, supporting staff and Committee reports and other background material, are also available for inspection at the Planning & Development Department at City Hall, between the hours of 8:15 am and 5 pm, Monday through Friday, except statutory holidays, commencing July 11, 2014 and ending July 21, 2014, or upon the conclusion of the hearing.• By Fax or Mail: Staff reports and the proposed bylaws may also be obtained by FAX or by standard mail, by calling 604-276-4007 between the hours of 8:15 am and 5 pm, Monday through Friday, except statutory holidays, commencing July 11, 2014 and ending July 21, 2014.Participating in the Public Hearing process:• The Public Hearing is open to all members of the public. If you believe that you are affected by the proposed bylaw, you may make a presentation or submit written comments at the Public Hearing. If you are unable to attend, you may send your written comments to the City Clerk’s Offi ce by 4 pm on the date of the Public Hearing as follows:• By E-mail: using the on-line form at http://www.richmond.ca/cityhall/council/hearings/about.htm• By Standard Mail: 6911 No. 3 Road, Richmond, BC, V6Y 2C1, Attention: Director, City Clerk’s Offi ce• By Fax: 604.278.5139, Attention: Director, City Clerk’s Offi ce• Public Hearing Rules: For information on public hearing rules and procedures, please consult the City website at http://www.richmond.ca/cityhall/council/hearings/about.htm or call the City Clerk’s Offi ce at 604.276.4007.• All submissions will form part of the record of the hearing. Once the Public Hearing has concluded, no further information or submissions can be considered by Council. It should be noted that the rezoned property may be used for any or all of the uses permitted in the “new” zone.Michelle JanssonActing Director, City Clerk’s Offi ce

Page 5: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

As a riverfront neighbourhood takes shape, its developer is giving it soul

by Matthew HoekstraStaff Reporter

Richmond’s larg-est residential proj-ect marked another milestone Tuesday afternoon, as proj-ect and city offi cials celebrated a pair of art projects that form part of the fi rst phase of the $1.7-billion develop-ment.

Aspac Developments Ltd. offi cially unveiled two works of art inte-grated into the upscale Oval Village high-rise community known as River Green.

Jacqueline Metz and Nancy Chew designed a 27-metre pedestrian bridge titled stillness & motion, which links two towers.

The artists adopted Richmond’s great blue heron as a focal point for the work, which blends a glass facade of the bridge with a trans-lucent video of herons at rest.

“We were inspired by the nature of Richmond, and specifi cally the iconic bird: the great blue heron,” said Chew. “From the outside it’s kind of abstract, but from the inside you’re walking next to the…herons. They’re life size.”

At night—until 10 p.m. now—it has another life, with a slow looping video projec-tion of a heron.

Developers in Rich-mond have the option of contributing cash to the city’s public art fund, or incorporating artwork directly into their projects. Doing that, said Metz, makes a development more personal and intimate.

“It’s kind of given it an

identity, or personality,” she said.

A second piece comes from renowned Coast Salish artist Susan Point and son Thomas Can-nell, who designed Fish Trap Way: a four-part installation that repre-sents spawning salmon and their importance to the Musqueam people.

John Ryan, vice-pres-ident of development for Aspac, said River Green’s fi rst phase of 458 homes is complete and approximately 80 per cent sold. The fi rm is now in the develop-ment permit stage for Phase 2, which is east of the Richmond Olympic Oval. Those two towers will add another 173 homes to the neighbourhood—along with more public art.

“We expect to break ground in March of 2015,” said Ryan, who said a date for the sales launch has yet to be set. “We’re working with the city on a new park right on the water-front, which will have a pier. We’re looking at how to integrate some of our public art onto the waterfront park.”

River Green is ex-pected to comprise approximately 2,500 homes when com-pleted in 15 to 18 years, said Ryan.

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 Richmond Review · Page 5

SPACES AVAILABLE!Richmond Summer Camps

Feature camps:NATURE CAMP RICHMOND NATURE PARKExplore the environment, connect with nature, meet live animals and try science experiments in this camp that includes an out trip to an old growth forest.

Richmond Nature Park 8–10yrsJul 22–Jul 25 Tu–F 9:00am–3:00pm $150/4 sess (F) 533932

9–12 YEARS CAMPRoam Granville Island, visit Gateway Theatre and join in other at-centre activities that make up this fun camp!

City Centre Community Centre— General Currie School 9–12yrsJul 28–Aug 1 M–F 9:30am–3:30pm $130.50/5 sess 542858

DANCE—JAZZ AND HIP HOPTry two very different but equally exciting dance styles.

Thompson Community Centre 6–8yrs

Jul 28–Aug 1 M–F 11:30am–12:30pm $35/5 sess 585170

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for ages 3–18 | single day or full week | exciting out trips sports, arts, nature, heritage, general, adventure and other specialty camps!

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Matthew Hoekstra photoArtists Nancy Chew and Jacqueline Metz designed a pedestrian bridge at River Green that pays tribute to Richmond’s most famous bird.

River Green marks milestone

Page 6: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Page 6 · Richmond Review Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Two announcements yesterday underlined just how important the Fraser River is to the local economy and why it’s vital more steps be taken to prevent

flooding.A new report commissioned by the Richmond Chamber of Com-

merce, in partnership with other chambers in the region, warns a massive flood would cause tens of billions of dollars in damage and catastrophic losses for the 300,000 residents of the floodplain, as well as business and industry.

As well, the Lower Mainland Flood Management Strategy wants an action plan to begin the process of raising dikes and improving other flood defences in the years ahead.

Saskatchewan and Manitoba were recently hit with severe flood-ing and it’s not out of the realm of possibility that the Lower Mainland and Fraser Valley could see flood damage in the future. In fact, recent studies by the province project that major floods will be more frequent and severe as a result of climate change.

Richmond, being below sea level to begin with, already has an extensive diking system. However, with global weather patterns taking a turn to the extreme in recent years, cities on floodplains cannot take flooding for granted. Look at what happened in Calgary and many parts of normally dry Alberta last year, when the Bow River swelled past its banks.

While Richmond may be prepared for flooding, many dikes in the Fraser Valley are not high enough. But if Fraser Valley dikes are strengthened, that means more water will be being directed at Rich-mond. That’s why a co-ordinated strategy is essential.

It’s good that business groups and government are taking a proac-tive approach at a potential future risk. Let’s hope senior govern-ments put their money where there mouths are in doing upgrades now, rather than throwing money at cleaning up a disaster zone in the future.

‘What’s up, guys?” the vole seems to wonder as

he pokes his head out of the Lulu Island Bog in the cartoon.

The chance to colour it was a hit

at the Salmon Festival, so Garden City Conservation’s Michael Wolfe and Eldon Lin are adapting the activity for a free David Suzuki Foundation family event.

It’s at the Britannia Shipyards site this Sunday, 1–3 pm, and the “Bog Life” part is for “kids from one to 92” and beyond. The car-toon will prompt Michael to share insights, since he loves the sphag-num bog and loves teaching.

The event will kick off a far-reaching campaign for the human right to a healthy environment. The campaign is starting at the local level, and the aim is for Richmond to be a model for the communities of Canada. The Gar-den City Conservation board has strongly endorsed it.

The fi rst need is for broader awareness—leading toward com-mitment—about the right to a healthy environment. With coun-cil action, the right could become a guiding principle.

After two or three years to build locally and provincially, it might be time to include the right in Canada’s constitution. Support across the country could actually

make that feasible. I was curious how a constitu-

tional right to a healthy environ-ment might work in practice. I found that half the national constitutions of the world already state that right, and three-quar-ters state some environmental rights. Canada, which has yet to act, can glean the best of their experience.

Canada’s right to a healthy environment, like other human rights, is sure to include limits to enforcement. And it will have to be moderate to survive the tough formula for amending our constitution.

I also see the right as a freedom. We gain freeness from clean water, air and soil and, in the long run, from biodiversity.

At this time, the challenge is to apply the right to a healthy environment locally. To become a model for the country, we must get results.

A good place for results is the Lulu Island Bog, the area from Westminster Highway north to Alderbridge Way and from Gar-den City Road east to Jacombs

Road. It’s government-owned land that’s hanging on as a rem-nant of huge sphagnum bogs that had a vital role in forming the island.

That brings us back to the “Bog Life” cartoon and Sunday’s event at Britannia Shipyards. As a follow-up, Michael is enabling further action with a free eco-tour two days later. Whether you can come on Sunday or not, you’re welcome on Tuesday, July 22 at 7 p.m.

The eco-tour will start from the east entrance of the Garden City Lands, on No. 4 Road a little south of Alderbridge Way. Michael will help you see a world you may not know is there. With that you’ll see its role in the local right to a healthy environment.

You’ll fi nd details at GardenCity-Lands.ca/tours. For teachers, “Bog Life” class sets will be available courtesy of Garden City Conserva-tion both days.

Jim Wright is president of the Gar-den City Conservation Society. He blogs at gardencitylands.wordpress.com.

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from the public about the conduct of member newspa-pers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with

input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your

complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the council. Write (include documentation) within 45 days to B.C. Press Council, PO Box 1356, Ladysmith, V9G

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opinion

Digging DeepJim Wright

Children at the 2014 Steveston Salmon Festival coloured a “Bog Life” cartoon—butterfl y, vole, killdeer, bog blueberry and sphagnum moss in the Lulu Island Bog. This Sunday, Michael Wolfe will lead a related activity at the David Suzuki Foundation event at Britannia Shipyards. Carol Day photo and Suzanna Wright art.

Act locally for the right to a healthy environment

EDITORIAL: Before the flood

A blueprint for deliberate, planned upgrades would aim to avoid a repeat of 2007, when the Fraser threatened to fl ood and politicians frantically dis-patched hundreds of dump trucks to raise dikes as an emergency action.

Page 7: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Editor:This past school year I

taught a child, who be-cause of defi cits in his/her ability to process receptive and expres-sive language, scored in the fi rst percentile for the child’s age range.

Changes made to the ministry’s criteria for designation of the child’s disability means that the child does not qualify for any addi-tional support. This is a child who is unable to speak or to process what he/she has heard. At the beginning of my career, this child would have been fully supported. Now, the child is lucky to receive help from a speech language pathologist

once every two weeks. This is not conjecture; this is a fact.

A colleague who works in an inner city classroom in Vancouver had nine children in her class of 22 who are ministry-designated students with a range of learning diffi culties, physical, and men-tal challenges. Nine. There are thousands of stories like these; these classrooms exist. These children exist. This is not conjecture; this is a fact.

Rather than facing these facts head-on, they are ignored, and swept aside by rhetoric that education fund-ing has increased—the problem is, it hasn’t

kept up. The fact is, government routinely downloads costs onto school districts (MSP rate increases, carbon tax, increases to wages [most notably CUPE’s wage increase in the fall of 2013, BCTF’s in 2006], Hydro increases, gas increases, infl a-tionary items such as school supplies), and now costs associated with seismic upgrad-ing. This past spring an unprecedented number of districts made cuts to programs, supports, supplies, personnel, and infrastructures in order to balance their budgets. This is not conjecture; this is a fact.

Learning improve-ment funds are a small

step, but since their creation, have been open to misuse both by government (who recently used learning improvement funds to fund CUPE’s June 2014 collective agreement) and by school district management teams (who award funds to schools who did not ap-ply for funds and deny them to schools who did). This is not conjec-ture; this is a fact.

I’ve been teaching for 20 years. I experi-ence on a daily basis, fi rst hand, the results of what the past decade of cuts to education has done. The “best pos-sible deal for teachers” includes better sup-ports for students. I do

not know how this can be made any clearer and is something government cannot continue to choose to ignore.

Sharon HalesRichmond

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 Richmond Review · Page 7

Wavin’ FlagsSuffering World Cup withdrawal? Show your pride and cheer on some of the region’s best men’s and women’s soccer players as they represent for the

homeland in Richmond’s annual clash of the countries.

Nations Cup, July 18–20.

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“A smile is a curve that setseverything straight.” -Phyllis Diller

Daycamps at the Richmond Arts CentreWith summer already under way, check out these camps that still have spaces available:

Dance Boot Camp (10-18yrs)This intensive camp focuses on honing technical and performance skills. Dancers must be at an intermediate to advanced technical level.

Aug 18 – 22 9:30 am – 3:30 pm $275/5 sess 611508

Dance Camp (7-12yrs)Dancers are exposed to a variety of styles and focuses on technical and performance development in a fun, supportive setting.

Jul 14 – 18 9:30 am – 3:30 pm $253/5 sess 591558

Architecture and Design Camp (8-12yrs)Inspired by famous architects, create 2- and 3-D models and study Lower Mainland works first hand while on various out trips.

Jul 21 – 25 9:30 am – 3:30 pm $259/5 sess 592358 Aug 11 – 15 9:30 am – 3:30 pm $259/5 sess 610108 Aug 18 – 22 9:30 am – 3:30 pm $259/5 sess 611808

Painting and Arts Camp (7-11 yrs)Explore a variety of techniques and styles in this intensive camp with out-trips to Lower Mainland locations that offer inspiration for cre-ative works.

Jul 14 – 18 9:30 am – 3:30 pm $259/5 sess 587958

Register: www.richmond.ca/register or 604 276-4300 More information: www.richmond.ca/artscentre

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letters

Children with learning-difficulties are not getting the full support they need

Page 8: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Page 8 · Richmond Review Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Summer lessons start the week of June 30 and offer:

• the fundamentals of skating• quick progress with our two-week daily camps• friendly and experienced skate instructors• weekday and weekend sessions• opportunities for all skill levels and ages

Richmond Ice Centre14140 Triangle Road

To Register:Online: www.richmond.ca/registerCall Centre: 604-276-4300Richmond Ice Centre: 604-448-5366

Summer skating is on atthe Richmond Ice Centre!

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one of our Public Skate sessions!Find details at

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2 for 1 admission at West Richmond Pitch & Putt Golf Course

July 19 – August 1

www.richmond.ca

Two golfers can play for the price of one! Days and times for this special offer are:July 19–August 1Monday to Friday, 9 a.m.–5 p.m.Saturday and Sunday, 9 a.m.–noonWest Richmond 9-hole Pitch & Putt Golf Course

PLAY TODAY!www.richmond.ca/pitchandputt

Cannot be combined with any other offer or promotion.

Asphalt paving advisoryJune 15 to August 15, 2014The City of Richmond has contracted Columbia Bitulithic to grind and pave the following location in Richmond from June 15 to August 15, 2014:

• 7000 block Garden City Road• 9000 block Granville Avenue• 8000 block Ackroyd Road• 8000 block Alexandra Road• 6000 block Westminster Highway

Work hours will be 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. on weekdays, and 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. on weekends. Night time work hours will be from 7:00 p.m. to 5:00 a.m. (typically).

Traffic will be reduced to single-lane and there may be temporary lane closures. Delays may occur. The use of an alternate route is strongly encouraged.

This work is weather dependent and dates are subject to change without notice.

Questions may be directed to Wasim Memon, Supervisor, Engineering Inspections, at 604-276-4189, or visit the City’s paving program webpage at www.richmond.ca(City Services > Roads, Dykes, Water & Sewers > Construction Projects > 2014 Paving).

City Board

City of Richmond | 6911 No. 3 Rd. Richmond BC V6Y 2C1 | Tel: 604-276-4000

www.richmond.ca

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news

by Martin van den HemelStaff Reporter

A gunman who shot four people at the River-side Banquet Hall in East Richmond in January of 2013, has been found not criminally responsible.

Lawyer Danny Markov-itz, who represented ac-cused shooter Sukhdeep Singh Sandhu, told The Review that his client will now be assessed by a review board which has the option to give him an absolute discharge, a conditional discharge or can elect to hold him in a mental health centre until they see fi t to release him.

Richmond provincial court Judge Patrick Chen gave a “reasoned deci-sion” more than a month after the last evidence and testimony was entered in court, Markovitz said.

While Markovitz said his client was happy with the verdict, the reaction from the victims and their family and friends in the courtroom last week, indicated quite the op-posite.

They quickly left the courtroom and huddled in the hallway outside to discuss what had hap-pened, Markovitz said. Had he been in their shoes, Markovitz said he would have felt the same way.

“Nobody has won in this,” said Markovitz who said he and his client feel very much for the victims and their families and all those impacted by the Jan. 16, 2013 shooting.

Sandhu will remain in a psychiatric hospital after being declared a paranoid schizophrenic. While psychiatrist Stan-ley Semrau testifi ed that medication has im-proved Sandhu’s deci-sion, Markovitz believes Sandhu’s placement in a hospital is a much better setting for his treatment.

Markovitz said his cli-ent regrets the incident and feels all the victims were victims in the tru-est sense of the word and didn’t deserve what happened to them.

“My heart goes out to them,” he said.

With his victims and their families sitting in the court gallery, Sandhu tes-tifi ed that he heard voices instructing him to shoot the intended target. Sand-hu donned a bullet-proof vest and wore gloves a as he entered the banquet hall and opened fi re.

A private function was organized by members of the Longshore & Ware-house Union, both as a birthday party and to celebrate 10 newly an-nointed union members.

Banquet hall shooter found not criminally responsible

Page 9: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 Richmond Review · Page 9

Let’strimourwaste!

LET’S RECYCLE MORE THIS SUMMER!Green Carts make it easy to recycle food scraps and yard trimmings.

www.richmond.ca/greencart

Environmental Programs Information Line: 604-276-4010

Clean, odour-free carts: Convenient options for curbside collection of extra yard trimmings:

It’s Fast! It’s easy! Just drive through and drop off your containers.

Your generous donation will benefi t the Richmond Fire Fighters Charitable Society & Richmond Chamber’s Scholarship Program

What can you shred?Folders, medical and tax records, bank statement,

credit card statements, legal documents.(No hanging folders, hard drives or discs please)

The Richmond Chamber of Commerce with our partnersLansdowne Centre, Urban Impact, The Richmond Review,

are hosting the

2nd Annual Shred Day in RichmondWednesday, July 23, 2014

11:00 am – 2:00 pmNorth West Corner of Lansdowne Centre Parking Lot

North of the Lansdowne Canada Line Station

For more information please contact the Richmond Chamber of Commerceat 604-278-2822 or visit our website at www.richmondchamber.ca

· First 3 boxes by donation(Standard File Size Boxes)

· Each additional box: $5.00/box

Here’s what to expect!· Meet the Chamber Team· Meet the Urban Impact Team· Complimentary Refreshments· Local media will attend

sports

by Don FennellSports Editor

Twenty years after guiding the Fraser Riv-er-Delta zone boys’ bas-ketball team, featuring future Richmond leg-end Pasha Bains, history is about to repeat itself for Chris Kennedy.

Only this weekend’s B.C. Summer Games in Nanaimo will be a family affair for Ken-nedy, who will serve as head coach of both his daughter Elizabeth’s under-13 girls’ team and son Nicholas’ un-der-13 boys’ squad.

“It’s going to be pret-ty special,” says the always-affable Ken-nedy, who in 1994 was still in the early days of his coaching career in hoops. “So much of my life has been built around basketball and it will be neat to also have my wife and two other kids there to share the experience.”

Seemingly always ahead of the curve, the ever-innovative Ken-

nedy will be helping to introduce a new form of basketball at these Games: three on three.

“There is a huge growth in three on three around the world that is being supported

by FIBA (International Basketball Federation),” he says. “They hope to have it become an Olympic sport as early as 2020. Many in the basketball community hope that three on

three will be a high in-tensity companion to traditional five on five in the same way beach volleyball has comple-mented traditional vol-leyball.”

See Page 11

B.C. Summer Games a family aff air for Kennedy clan

Don Fennell photoTwo generations of Kennedys will represent Richmond in basketball at the upcom-ing BC Summer Games in Nanaimo. Elizabeth (left) will play for the under-13 girls’ 3 on 3 team and Nicholas (right) on the under-13 boys’ 3 on 3 team. Their dad, Chris, is head coach of both teams.

Page 10: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Page 10 · Richmond Review Wednesday, July 16, 2014

FUREVERJuly 19, 11am /July 23, 3pm / 82min/DocAs pets are increasingly being regarded as family members, what lengths will owners go to keep their deceased companions alive in their hearts?

BEHIND THE CAMERAJuly 19, 1:30pm / 85min / MockumentaryFeaturing Korean stars Ha Jung-woo, Kim Min-hee, and Park Hee-soon, the film follows a seem-ingly crazed director as he attempts to direct a short film remotely from LA using the Internet and mobile technology.

FLY ME TO MINAMIJuly 19, 3:15pm / 103min / DramaTwo transnational love stories intersect in Osaka, where an unexpected destiny awaits them. The latest feature from one of Asia’s most talented young directors.

AVANT GARDE PROGRAMJuly19, 6:15pm / 62min / ShortsA selection of remarkable experimental short films that play with cinematic techniques and the boundaries of visual storytelling.

THE ROAD TO FAMEJuly 20, 1:30pm /July 22, 3:30pm /80min/DocFollowing the lives of five students in China’s top drama academy, this film glimpses into their competition for roles, struggle with family pressures, and preparation to enter the cutthroat show business.

LA MAISON DE RADIOJuly 20, 3:20pm / 99min / DocA film about listening, and the value of great public institutions. Nicolas Philibert turns his camera on the inner workings of inspirational public broadcaster Radio France—the French equivalent of the BBC—to enchanting, enlight-ening and often humorous effect.

FRENCH ANIMATIONJuly 20, 5:30pm /July 21, 3:45pm / 75minAll the Animation lovers must see! A special an-imation selection made by Marcel Jean, Annecy Animation Festival’s director among shortlisted films for Annecy 2013.

ANYWHERE SOMEWHERE NOWHEREJuly 21, 6:30pm / 124min / DramaWorld Premiere.Two young men plan a motor-cycle trip to travel round the island of Taiwan in exploration of new sights, foods, and stories. The film presents a visual journey of two youth at the verge of adulthood. Preceded by Magabahai.

YOUTH FILMAKING PROGRAMJuly 21, 2pm /July 24, 2pm / 60minA selection of short films by BC youth in genres ranging from animation to documentary, music video to drama. An inspirational must see for aspiring young filmmakers.

ENGLISH VINGLISHJuly 22, 6:30pm / 134min / DramaA housewife who makes and sells laddoos as a home-run business, Shashi enrolls in an En-glish-speaking course to stop her husband and daughter mocking her lack of English skills, and finds self-confidence in the process. Preceded by Newcomers Swim, Every Friday.

WEB: THE FILMJuly 23, 6:30pm / 83min / DocA meditation on the growth of the Internet phenomenon and new opportunities for collab-orative learning. Enter the One Laptop per Child Project, bringing computers to children in remote areas without connectivity.

SIGN PAINTERSJuly 24, 3:30pm / 80min / DocThere was a time when all storefronts and street signs were hand-lettered with brush and paint. But the invasion of computer-designed, die-cut vinyl lettering is ushering out the classic forms of artistic signs.

HUMAN SCALEJuly 24, 6:15pm / 83min / Doc50 % of the world’s population lives in urban areas. By 2050 this will increase to 80%. Can we build cities in a way which takes human needs for inclusion and intimacy into account? Architect Jan Gehl says yes.

SAND WARSJuly 24, 8pm / 74min / DocEvery house, every skyscraper with a dazzling glass front, all our bridges, airports and sidewalks – are basically made of sand. This film investi-gates the “sand wars” now raging across the world, causing illegal smuggling and the decline of 75% of the planet’s beaches.

HIGH TECH LOW LIFEJuly 25, 6pm / 87min / DocWhere do you get your news from? CNN, CBC, or BBC? What if they don’t tell the whole story? Follow two of China’s first citizen reporters as they tackle social issues in heavily regulated China with the aid of the internet, laptops, and digital cameras.

WEB JUNKIEJuly 25, 7:45pm / 74min / Doc w/DiscussionIn China, internet addiction has been labeled as a clinical disorder. Follow three “addicts,” youth ages from 13-18, and their lives in a military in-spired rehabilitation clinic to cure them from the internet. Are we overreacting or is this right?

RENT A FAMILYJuly 26, 1:30pm / 77min / Doc Ryuichi runs “I Want To Cheer You Up Ltd.”, a small Japanese company where he pretends to be your family member, friend or colleague for social or business functions. But who is Ryuichi beneath the masks?

INSTANT MOMMYJuly 26, 3:10pm / 102min / DramaPregnant and in love, the future looks bright for Bechayda. But tragedy strikes and in a bid to offer her family a better life, Bechayda devises an absurd plan to keep her Japanese lover. A hilarious comedy starring Eugene Domingo.

TECHNOTISE: EDIT I JAJuly 26, 5:50pm / 103min / AmineIt’s 2074. Edith, a psychology student, has failed her graduation exam for the sixth time. Her friend, Herb, implants a microchip into her to help increase her IQ. Then the chip develops a mind of its own....

PRESSPAUSEPLAYJuly 25, 1:30pm / 81min / DocThe digital revolution of the last decade has unleashed creativity and talent of people in an unprecedented way.NOT BUSINESS AS USUALJuly 25, 3:30pm / 61min / Doc w/Discussion A Film About Disrupting the Business Quo. It was the promise of something better…

FEATURED ARTIST VJEKO SAGERJuly 19-26, 10:00AM - 10:00PMStarting July 19, Vjeko will live in the diviNation Tower for 7 days, from dawn to dusk, each day with a different persona. Follow him as he tweets, blogs, and video broadcasts his cre-ative process at divination2014.tumblr.com. Join the discussion at the nightly media cafe at 9pm at Minoru Plaza, Richmond.

FOREIGN RADICALJuly 23-25, 5PM, 7PM, & 9PMForeign Radical is game of secrets that plays out within a documentary theatre installation. From Edward Snowden’s revelations to a lawsuit against the Canadian government to privacy within personal relationships, the audi-ence explores the question: How do you value your privacy in the age of cyber surveillance? Suitable for ages 16+. The audience will be mobile throughout the performance.

THEATER UNDER THE SKYJuly18, 6:30PM - 11:30PM Landsdown Center West Parking LotFIRST drive-in theatre in Richmond featur-ing mini theater performance, music perfor-mance and classic Japanese animation, Spir-ited Away, perfect for the whole family to soak in an experience that has entertained generations of filmgoers. Bring your chairs & Blanket /Rain or Shine

DIGITAL CARNIVALJuly26, 7:30PM - 11:30PM Richmond Minoru PlazaPart outdoor concert and part multimedia light show, this exciting summer celebration is a perfect cocktail of art, nature and technology. Free Admission. All Welcome.

SCREEN BITES PROGRAM July 20, 7:30PMJuly 26, 10:30AMInspired by the success of our popular Dim Sum Movie program, Screen Bites is taking the food + film experience to the next level. Attend Red Obsession for a classic dim sum experience, or join us for Mussels in Love at the Gulf of Georgia Cannery for an unforgetta-ble evening with an oceanic theme.

ART IN CONTAINERJuly 17-26, 1:00PM - 10:00PMArt in Containers transform everyday shipping containers into pop-up galleries. This year’s ex-hibition features 4 installations by local artists. Each work explores the creative boundaries be-tween art, human experience, and technology. From photography to performance, from video to music, each container is a new experience waiting to be discovered. FREE

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Page 11: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 Richmond Review · Page 11

City of Richmond | 6911 No. 3 Rd. Richmond BC V6Y 2C1 | Tel: 604-276-4000

www.richmond.ca

Public Swimming

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Detailed swim schedule & admission fees at www.richmond.ca/aquatics

Note: Registration for summer swim lessons is in progress.Program opportunities for children and youth still available.

Daily public swimming available.

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sports

Kennedy coaching kids in three-on-three basketballFrom Page 9

Likening the concept to the streetball made popular by young New Yorkers, three on three is more structured and provides youth with a greater opportunity to develop their skills than traditional fi ve-on-fi ve hoops.

“Kids want to be play a part in the games they’re playing and with this there’s more oppor-tunity to be on the ball, to dribble and shoot,” says Kennedy. “And be-cause you always have to be in motion you de-velop quicker.”

“It’s become a cool cousin to regular fi ve on fi ve because the games are short with lots of action,” he adds. “Three-on-three also tends to be even more athletic with lots of one-on-one action, and among adults playing at the high end, plenty of dunks and alley-oops. You’re going to see more and more kids un-derstanding both three and three and fi ve on fi ve basketball.”

Kennedy is stoked about getting to coach kids who, at this age, are still eager to learn. He’s equally excited that he is able to work with excellent, experienced and legendary Rich-mond coaches in Sean Berda (who is helping with the boys) and Trish Nicholson (with the girls).

“It’s like 20 years ago all over again when the three of us coached at McRoberts,” says Ken-nedy.

With gym time hard to come by during the teachers’ strike, the teams have spent most nights over the last month at the South Arm Community Centre outdoor courts work-ing through their drills and preparing for the Games.

While a competitive zone—open to athletes from Richmond, Delta, Burnaby and New West-minster—the two bas-ketball teams wound up with 16 of the 18 players being from Richmond and 13 of them having been part of the Rich-mond Youth Basketball League rep program. Kennedy says that’s a real credit to the grass-roots eff orts in Rich-mond to grow youth basketball in the com-munity. Players are also developing through

the Steve Nash Program and are now part of the Basketball BC provincial programs.

The under-13 girls’ ros-ter is heavy with Grade 7s and includes eight Richmondites—Bella

Roberts, Jayna Wilson, Kara Moscovitz, Olivia Tweedlie, Emma Wal-lace, Morgan Flynn as well as Grade 6 student Elizabeth Kennedy and Grade 5 student Kate Carkner. The boys’ roster

is much younger and will have to face older com-petition at the Games. Of the eight boys from Richmond, six have just fi nished Grade 6—Ian Kern, Apaar Sahota, Jer-ric Palma, Sargun Singh,

Jordan Si and Nicholas Berda. They are joined by recent Grade 5 stu-dent Nicholas Kennedy and Grade 4 standout Marco Esteban.

Kennedy says beyond basketball, the opportu-nity to participate in the B.C. Summer Games will

be an experience that last sa lifetime.

“I think it’s the big-gest amateur sporting event we have in B.C. and we’re lucky to have a Games like this,” he says. “I had a brother compete in track and another in rugby, and

can vividly remember every game. As a young kid you get to be part of something big and to see all these other sports and athletes. Ev-eryone competes, but it’s truly more about sharing the Games ex-perience than winning.”

Nicholas Kennedy goes to the hoop against Jayna Wilson.

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Page 12: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

ARMY NAVY & AIRFORCE 284 ARMY NAVY & AIRFORCE 284 UNIT 105 - 11900 NO. 1 ROAD, STEVESTONOffi ce: 604-277-5444 Canteen: 604-277-7350

NEW MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLETo visit as a guest just sign the book!

You Must be 19 and over to visit as a guest and sign in required.

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Live Band Friday & Saturday Night • 8:30pm to 12:30amJULY 18TH & 19TH • STEVE HILLIS • JULY 25TH & 26TH • NIGHTFIRE

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STEVE HILLIS BAND | BBQ AND DANCING Friday - Meat Draw 5:00PM Saturday - BBQ & Dancing 3:00pm to 5:00PM

Meat Draw - 5:00PM to 7:30PM • Dancing 8:00PM to ?????

It’s time to exchange your World Cup soccer gear for your 10-gallon hat and cowboy boots, as the ANAF 284 Clubhouse on No. 1 Road is celebrating Western Days this Friday and Saturday.

The Steve Hillis Band will bring the house down for an evening of barbecue and dancing.

The fun starts at 5 p.m. on Friday with a special prize draw, with dancing starting at 8 p.m.

On Saturday July 19, there’s more fun planned with great food and dancing from 3 to 5 p.m., followed by a meat draw from 5 to 7:30 p.m., and a night of more dancing beginning at 8 p.m

With Germany hoisting the World Cup in Brazil as the champions of football, the planned Oktoberfest celebrations in September fi gure to be even more lively than before.

Mark this one down in your calendar too: Oktoberfest on Sept. 27, 2014.

You don’t have to be a member or a military veteran to enjoy the new ANAF Clubhouse in Steveston, which boasts great pub fare in a friendly, casual and cool air-conditioned environment that offers something for all tastes.

For sports fans, every seat in the house boasts a great view of a large high-defi nition fl at screen TV, there are dartboards, snooker and pool tables. Nightly drink and meal specials are sure to please plus they serve

up delicious fare including burgers, chicken wings, dry pork ribs, nachos and sandwiches daily starting at 11 a.m. On Fridays and Saturdays, live music entertains the customers from 8 p.m. to midnight.

Membership has boomed since the new clubhouse opened in June of 2012, with more than 1,500 members signed up. There are lots of benefi ts to joining as a member however

becoming a member is no longer a pre-requisite

for entering the multi-million dollar facility, which has become a lively and upbeat gathering place for adults of all ages.

Visitors just have to sign in to enjoy themselves.

Now with the spacious clubhouse set up to seat 200 people, it’s large enough to cater to all sizes of celebrations, from birthday parties to wedding anniversaries, and even weddings.

The fully-licensed facility also offers a sectioned-off space that’s conducive to relaxation, complete with a fi replace, magazines and novels and framed military pictures.

For more information about the clubhouse, located at 105-11900No. 1 Rd., at the intersection of Chatham Street, call 604-277-5444 or visit anaf284.bravesites.com

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Strut your stuff at ANAF 284 Western Days!

Page 12 · Richmond Review Wednesday, July 16, 2014

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arts & entertainment

Guild brings show outside as part of Britannia Shipyard’s Summer Music Series

by Matthew HoekstraStaff Reporter

The folk musician known as Petunia returns to the Steveston Folk Guild on Thursday for an outdoor show at Britannia Ship-yards.

Petunia has been swingin’ and swoonin’ audiences at bars, churches, theatres, folk festivals and street cor-ners for a decade and has seven albums to his credit, including his latest, Petunia & the Loons.

The Quebec-raised talent has found a home on the road, playing 150 shows each year in Canada, along with some dates in the States. Many of his shows are with his Vancouver

band, the Vipers. He last played Steveston

two years ago.Petunia spent the early

part of his career playing on every major street corner, subway station and park bench in Canada and New York City. He set out picking, grinning and singing his way to a living, and became a regular on the Canadian touring circuit. He became

known for his cut-to-the-heart songwriting.

Petunia has a busy sum-mer of touring, playing Edmonton before his Steveston date, and Bella Coola after. With extensive tours under his belt, Petu-nia boasts a feat of playing with “literally hundreds, and maybe thousands” of musicians throughout his travels.

Petunia and his band play a wide variety of music, drawing heavy infl uence from rockabilly and western swing. He also has his hand in old-style Quebec country and western.

Also appearing at the Steveston show is Jimmy Roy, who will accompany Petunia on steel guitar.

The July 17 concert will be staged on the grass at Britannia, 5180 Westwater Dr., as part of the Shipyards Summer Music Series. The concert begins at 7 p.m.; bring a seat or pillow.

Admission is by donation.

Petunia returns to Steveston Folk Guild

Petunia lives his life on the road, playing shows across the country.

Page 13: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 Richmond Review · Page 13

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The Family Law Act, in effect since March, 2013, recognizes agreements made between spouses dealing with family law issues, including division of property and debts. While many oral contracts can be binding, agreements addressing family law issues should be written. A written agreement may serve as evidence of its terms, while helping to prove that the parties considered legal principles that might be raised if the agreement is later challenged.

In particular, the Family Law Act allows a court to set aside an agreement concerning division of property and debts if there is evidence of:

(a) failure to disclose signifi cant property or debts;

(b) procedural unfairness;(c) lack of understanding of the nature or

consequences of the agreement; or(d) grounds under the common law for

voiding the agreement;

and, in addition to these factors, the court concludes that it would replace the agreement with a court order that is substantially different from the agreement.

Courts can still decide to set aside an agreement even if none of the above factors are present, if it fi nds that the agreement is “signifi cantly unfair”, also taking into account:

(a) the length of time that has passed since the agreement was made;

(b) the intention of the spouses when making the agreement;

(c) the degree to which the spouses relied on the terms of the agreement.

The threshold of “signifi cant unfairness” required for the court to set aside an agreement is a new concept under the Family Law Act, with few court cases yet decided.

Agreements dealing with family law issues should incorporate the new legal principles found in the Family Law Act. Spouses entering into such agreements should consider seeking legal advice and should “put it in writing”. If you have questions about family law agreements, contact Cohen Buchan Edwards LLP at 604.273.6411 and speak with one of our family lawyers.

Agreements under the Family Law Act

business | PROFILE

Page 14: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Page 14 · Richmond Review Wednesday, July 16, 2014

• F U N • F R I E N D S • F R E E D O M

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Treat yourself to an awesome experienceat Blundell Centre

If you’re looking for a relaxing place to pamper yourself for half an hour, Awesome Nails No.2 at Blundell Centre is the place for you.Under new management since November, the store’s clientele is growing, chiefl y through word-of-mouth references, according to manager Diem Nguyen.New clients are always welcome, whether by appointment or through drop-ins.There’s a wide range of services available at Awesome Nails No.2. With a name like that, there’s no doubt about what they specialize in.Manicures are just $18, and pedicures are $30. They also offer quicker versions of each, for a better deal.On Mondays, customers are treated to a 10 per cent discount on gel colours for their nails.Diem said gel colours dry faster and last longer than conventional polish, verifi ed by a nearby customer as true.

Once you go with gel colours, you won’t go back, unless it’s a few weeks later for a re-application.On Tuesdays, Awesome Nails No.2 offers a 10-per-cent discount on manicures and pedicures, or both at the same time.While manicures and pedicures take between 30 and 45 minutes, customers can take in an episode of Ellen Degeneres, something from the Food Channel, or even the World Cup broadcast live from Brazil, she said.Awesome Nails No.2 is located at Blundell Centre, Unit 190 - 8120 No. 2 Road, at the intersection with Blundell.They are open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., Monday to Saturday, and from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sundays.For more information or to book an appointment, call them at 604-277-7784. The store also sells gift certifi cates.

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community

Faith groups join forces to help less fortunate local residentsby Martin van den HemelStaff Reporter

Sunday afternoon’s second annual multi-faith food drive was an upbeat aff air, with live musical entertainment keeping donors coming to the event outside the Blundell Centre Safeway.

Volunteers from Beth Tikvah Congregation, St. Anne’s Anglican Church, St. Joseph the Worker Parish and Our Saviour Lutheran churches led the fundraising eff ort for the Richmond Food Bank, which has a mis-sion to provide food se-curity for less fortunate local residents.

Both cash and dona-tions of non-perishable

foods were accepted by staff from the Richmond Food Bank, who were on site.

The local faith groups have come together to tackle local issues, and are now collectively known as Hand-in-Hand.

“This was our second eff ort and I hope we’ll have this as an annual event,” said Francie Steen, of the Beth Tik-vah Congregation, who hopes that other reli-gions will buy-in to this event in the future.

“It’s special that we’re Richmond-based peo-ple doing something for Richmond people.”

Steen said poverty crosses all cultural and religious divides.

“And unfortunately it’s a growing need.”

Martin van den Hemel photoShoppers were treated to entertainment Sunday afternoon at the Blundell Centre Safeway location during the second annual Multi-Faith Food Drive.

Multi-faith food drive keeps donations coming

Page 15: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 Richmond Review · Page 15

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On humid summer days, even dress-ing up for an

event can feel like a chore. But with some simple yet stylish party look ideas, getting ready will be easy breezy. Whether attend-ing a garden party, bar-becue or outdoor wed-ding, have a few outfit, hair and makeup looks in mind for quick, fuss-free ensembles.

A chic alternative to dresses this season are jumpsuits and rompers. One of this season’s hot-test trends, the one-piece is a fun go-to party look. Characterized by a top attached to either pants or shorts, jumpsuits and rompers allow a stream-lined, unbroken silhou-ette. It’ll also save you the hassle of determin-ing which top goes with which bottoms.

For a more understated look, go for jumpsuits and rompers in solid colours. Solid colours will also make it easier to pair the garment with shoes, bags and jewelry. Belts are an especially good way to break up solid jumpsuits and define the waist. For a more dramatic look, patterned jumpsuits will ensure you stand out from the crowd. Jersey and linen fabrics also offer a casual vibe while silk and satins are better for nighttime or more formal events.

If you prefer shorts to beat the heat, try chang-ing it up with patterned versions. They can easily pair with a solid blouse or tank in a complemen-tary shade. Subtle pat-terns such as stripes and polka dots are a great way to venture into the trend while the fashion bold can rock colourful prints such as batik, ani-mal or giant florals. The key to finding flattering patterned shorts is fit. Baggy patterned ones tend to enlarge your hips and make it appear like you’re wearing a short skirt rather than a pair of shorts with defined lines. Whatever the length of your shorts, go for a pat-terned pair that is fitted without adding bulk to your lower half.

Summer party outfits aren’t complete without fun accessories, makeup and hair. Since hot days call for easy to maintain hairstyles, waves are an excellent, romantic

option. This season calls for carefree loose waves that don’t need to be overstyled. One of the simplest ways to get the look is through braiding damp hair. Once dried, tousle the hair a bit with your fingers. And since

messy side braids are also popular this summer due to the athletic fash-ion trend, you can work a braid for the daytime and untie the plait for the evening, creating beachy waves.

As for party makeup, piling on heavy founda-tion is the last thing we want to do in warmer weather, so it’s no wonder that a sheer, natural face is in this season for a base. Makeup artists backstage at the fashion shows relied on dewy moistur-izers and light coverage this season, letting bold colours on either the eyes or lips do the talking.

For a bright pop of colour on the lids, aqua colours such as shades of blue and green were popular on the runway. Marc Jacobs and Miu Miu, for example, incorporated turquoise shadows and cobalt blue liner to eyes of their models. Prefer a less dramatic alternative to try the trend? Switch out your black or brown eyeliner with navy.

If you want to play up your lips, the hottest hue this season veers toward orange lipsticks. Spotted at the Rag & Bone and Prabal Gurung shows, try an orange-red for a more natural shade. Matte fuchsia is also a big trend for those who stick to pink lip colours.

Whether you’re making a statement on your eyes or on your lips, finish off with some mascara and a touch of bronzer or blush for a healthy glow. Summer’s the season to incorporate wild colours and patterns into your outfits, so have fun with your party looks!

Celia Leung is editorco & Rico, a Vancouver based magazine focusing on local fashion, beauty and arts. She writes monthly on style and fashion in The Richmond Review. Reach her at [email protected]

Celia LeungFASHION STYLIST

Braids were the highlight of the Calla show. (Source: TheFashionSpot.com)

Page 16: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Page 16 · Richmond Review Wednesday, July 16, 2014

SUMMER RUNWAY OPERATIONSAT YVRSOUTH RUNWAY MAINTENANCEJuly 4 – August 1, 2014

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Starting July 4th, the south runway will be closed nightly at Vancouver International Airport (YVR) for annual runway maintenance and repairs. The north runway will be used for departures and arrivals during these closures. Up-to-date information about the closures will be available at www.yvr.ca/noise.

We appreciate your support and thank you for your ongoing patience as we continue to maintain the highest safety standards at YVR.

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sports

Hopwood proud to play for Canadaby Don FennellSports Editor

Sara Hopwood can’t stop smiling and for good reason. Being selected to Team Can-ada again this year is a huge honour.

“It’s always an amaz-ing feeling to be cho-sen to represent your country and an oppor-tunity I’m extremely grateful for,” says Rich-mond’s Hopwood, who will be wearing the maple leaf when the national team takes to the field at the 2014 Ca-nadian Open Fastpitch Internation-al Championship through Sunday at Softball City.

Canada is coming off a second-

place finish at the World Cup of Softball in Irvine, Calif., where they

dropped a 5-2 decision in Sunday’s final to Team USA, which will also be at the Canadian Open. Canada went 4-0 in round-robin with wins over Japan, Chinese Tai-pei, Phillipines and Ven-ezuela.

“I’m excited to see what this year has in store for the team, and to play in front of our home crowd,” said Hop-wood.

“Our team’s expecta-tions are to break into the top three at worlds (Aug.

15 to 24) in the Netherlands.  Our competition will be Japan, the USA and Australia who are ranked No. 1, 2 and 3 in the world.”

SARA HOPWOOD

Luck of the draw provides no favours to Squirt hosts

by Don FennellSports Editor

Richmond Islanders have reason to question the id-iom that suggests it’s the luck of the draw.

Drawing eventual gold medallist White Rock Renegades and bronze medallist Victoria Dev-ils as well as both Ridge Meadows Pride teams in the round-robin, the host Islanders missed reaching the playoff s by an unkind tiebreaking rule— bases touched—at Softball BC’s provincial under-12A girls’ championship last week-end at London Field.

“After battling so hard it may take a while to get that taste out of my mouth,” said Richmond coach Dave Gillis. “I feel for the girls.”

Gillis said it’s frustrating but drawing the No. 1, 3, 4 and 5 teams in the league will make the Islanders better in the long run.

After a challenging opening day last Friday, in which they lost 8-2 to

the Renegades and then pushed the Devils only to lose by a single run, the Islanders 2002 team put together a pair of solid vic-tories over the Pride teams.

“There was no panic (af-ter the fi rst two losses),” said Gillis. “They were there to play ball and their bats came to life. More impor-tantly, the girls knew they could win both.”

Strong performances by

Kyra Bates, Megan Man, Jessica Nonay and Mad-eline Gillis powered the Islanders to their fi rst win, while the team looked even stronger in their sec-ond victory highlighted by Jessica Gee stealing a run at home plate.

“I could never be proud-er of these girls,” said Gillis. “Rep A ball is a diff erent beast and you have to be something really special to play here. The training is top notch, the support from associations and even parent groups make it possible for these girls

to be the very best. The Islanders are there. We showed it at the tourna-ment.”

Many of the Island-ers are now heading to specialty camps in White Rock, Kelowna, Oliver and Washington. Gillis said the experiences will only help the players, and ulti-mately the team, become stronger.

“I believe we were the most well-rounded team this year and our attention to developing sound skills and fundamentals was second to none,” Gillis said.

Islanders miss playoffs by bases touched

Don Fennell photoCoach Dave Gillis waves a Richmond Islander home at last weekend’s Softball BC Under-12A girls’ championship at London Field.

Page 17: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 Richmond Review · Page 17

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by Don FennellSports Editor

Richmond has a long-standing history of participating in the B.C. Games and the 2014 Summer Games this weekend in Nanaimo is no exception.

Following is a list of the athletes, coaches and offi cials who will be participating July 17 to 20 as members of the Fraser River-Delta Zone 4 team (unless other-wise noted).

ATHLETICSMerveilles AmisiGeorgia BookerMacaela Bradley-TseEgidio CantarellaShannon GameGeorgia LamJamieson LeeNathan LoewenSamuel LowenJoshua QuiambaoBeyonce RobinsonCamryn RogersMaya Rosser

Valerie WideskiSeth Wong-HenCatherine Ylo

BASEBALLSteve Chatzispiros(assistant coach)Chris CookGavin LunnyRyder MavisNoah Or

BASKETBALL 3 on 3 boysNicholas BerdaSean BerdaMarco EstebanNicholas KennedyChris Kennedy (coach)Ian KernGary Kern (assistant coach)Jerric PalmaApaar SahotaJordan SiSargun Singh

BASKETBALL3 on 3 girlsKate CarknerElizabeth KennedyKara Moscovitz

Trish Nicholson(assistant coach)Bella RobertsOlivia TweedlieLeanne Tweedlie(adult supervisor)Emma WallaceJayna Wilson

BASKETBALL5 on 5 boysRyan LiuNathan Schroeder

BASKETBALL5 on 5 girlsCassandra BrinnJalen DonaldsonKaitlyn KwokJessica PorterCarrie Watts (coach-Vancouver- Squamish Zone 5)Abby Zawada

EQUESTRIANSophie O’Bray

GOLFLynn Benedicston(offi cial)O’Meara ChowMichael Crosologo

Kayla DossaGeorge Faithful(offi cial)Andy Fung (adult supervisor)Patsy Gauthier (offi cial)Dan Kupchenko (offi cial)Zaahidali NathuMike Parker (offi cial)

LACROSSESekawnee BakerJosh Kelly(assistant coach-Van-couver-Squamish Zone 5)Cameron OverbyRyan JensenJacob LorenzJustin PrestonJordan Roberts

ROWINGJames HoustonSara Perry

RUGBY BoysQuinn Griffi thJericho Kaus

SOCCERBoys

Marc Bowley(adult supervisor)Owen Greaves

SOCCER GirlsAlyssa Bhandal

SOFTBALL GIRLSShelly Anderson (offi cial)

SOFTBALL BoysMitch ArmstrongFrazer BlackJanice Black(assistant coach)Dreyden BrarJosh MannTrevor MerrellBill Merrell (coach)Adam MoggMerrick RobertsDawn Stadel

(assistant coach)Matt Van EuwenBirk ZukowskyDoug Zukowsky(assistant coach)

SWIMMINGEthan ChanAnthony ChanJohn ChlamWilliam DekkerAngela GuLionel HuCatherine LiaoBenjamin Zhuo

SWIMMING Special OlympicsDayan Batara (coach)Chuck Yee (assistant coach)Cullen Yee

TRIATHLONGwen De LemosBEACH VOLLEYBALL

Mark Goertzen

VOLLEYBALL BoysLucas DowlingSeong JangJeff LamJack MagnusBrendan PawerMatthew ShenConnor WilkinsonJames WinkelmanDaniel Wong (coach)Henry Yu

VOLLEYBALL GirlsTaylor MuzyczukJayden ParnellBeatrice SoberanoJuliette Sutter

WRESTLINGCarolyn Fallanga(assistant coach-Van-couver Squamish)

Richmond sending strong team to B.C. Summer Games in Nanaimo

Page 18: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Page 18 · Richmond Review Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Behind every work zone cone is a worker in a vulnerable position. Each cone stands for someone’s father, mother, son, or daughter. That’s why it’s important to know that thousands of people working by the roadside in B.C. are counting on you to slow down and drive with care when approaching a “Cone Zone.”

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sports

Isles push Renegades to the limit

by Don FennellSports Editor

The playoff s brought out the best in the Rich-mond Islanders last weekend.

After a subpar round-robin in which coach Troy

Latrace described their play as “inconsistent at best,” the 2000A girls’ softball team pushed powerhouse White Rock Renegades to the brink in Sunday’s fi nal at the under-14 provincials in Victoria, before losing 4-3 in the bottom of the seventh inning.

The result has vaulted Richmond into the up-coming nationals (be-ginning Aug. 6) in White Rock.

“I think our expectations will be higher going into nationals than they may

have been before,” said Latrace. “It’s one thing to think that you have a good team, but to prove it to yourself by getting out there and getting the job done, that instills a new level of confi dence. White Rock has had that confi dence all year long, and now we have it too.”

After splitting its fi rst two games on opening day Friday (winning 9-0 and losing 9-2), Rich-mond blew a three-run lead late in their fi rst out-ing Saturday and were within six outs of being

eliminated from the play-off round before defeat-ing host Victoria 3-2 on a late rally.

•Richmond 2002B Is-landers, coached by Tyler Gibson, also fi nished sec-ond at the U12 provincial championship, losing in the seventh inning to the Stars in Coquitlam.

In other provincial championships, Rich-mond’s 2000B team, coached by Chris Da-vies, placed fourth over-all—winning two play-off games before being eliminated in the double

knockout round, while Greg Dee’s 2001B team made it to the playoff round before one tough inning ended the title hopes of the fi rst-year under-14 team.

•Richmond’s 1992-93 senior women’s team won top prize in the Tier 1 Fraser Delta fastpitch playoff s, defeating Fleet-wood 8-3 and Surrey 14-2. Kevin Lee’s 1994 team reached the quarter-fi nals but gave up the winning run in the sev-enth inning in a 2-1 loss to Surrey.

B.C. silver medallists will play at nationals

98’s in softball ShowcaseRichmond Girls’ Softball’s 98A and 98B teams are

both competing in this week’s Canadian Women’s Fastpitch Showcase event at Softball City.

Coached by JR Robinson and Barry Riva, the 98B team have won three games—8-1 over North Shore, 7-4 over Cloverdale and 9-7 over South Delta.

Briana Adams’ 98A team has outscored Fraser Valley 8-7, River City 12-0 and Southeast Saskatch-ewan 7-1.

Page 19: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 Richmond Review · Page 19

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sports

Richmond Lacrosse is hosting the 2014 pro-vincial Peewee boys’ championships today (Wednesday) through Sunday at Minoru Are-nas, with limited games also at Richmond Ice Centre’s Coliseum rink.

Wednesday and Thursday will see the top six-ranked teams in the province get their A1 round-robin going with their fi rst three games. Host Richmond Roadrunners lead off against Kamloops at 1:30 p.m. today and follow up with games 2 and 3 on Thursday at 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. versus Ridge Meadows and Coquitlam Adan-acs respectively. Delta, and Island representa-tive Juan de Fuca, round out the A1 tier. All A1 games are at Minoru’s Stadium rink.

On Friday, anarchy reigns as the other three divisions explode into action starting at 7:30 a.m. on all three venues, with games continu-

ing through until 8:30 p.m. Richmond is repre-sented in three of the four tiers. The Peewee B Roadrunners, coached by Rusty and Dave Mason, open up at noon against North rep Prince George at the Ice Centre’s Coliseum and fi nishes its Friday against Victoria-Esquimalt on Minoru’s Stadium rink at 7 p.m.

Gregg Wheeler’s Peewee C team caps off a successful season of six wins and three ties with a couple of tough opponents on open-ing day at 10:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. on Minoru’s Silver rink and the Ice Centre’s Coliseum versus ferry-bound opponents Saanich and Sunshine Coast. Wheeler’s team features 12 players who are new to lacrosse or only second-year players. The team benefi ted from assistants Rick Larson and Mike Singh and experienced players like Jensyn Bourne, Shrvaun Singh and Aiden van

der Tas.Glenn Jensen and Mark Lucovic’s A1 Road-

runners also see action on Friday at noon against Juan de Fuca before the boys fi nish the A1 round-robin Saturday at 1:30 p.m. against Fraser River arch-rival Delta Islanders. The pa-rade of athletes recognition ceremony takes place right after at 3:30 p.m. on the Minoru Stadium rink.

Semifi nals for all divisions are set for Satur-day night on all three fl oors starting at 5 p.m. Bronze- and gold -medal games go on Sunday starting at 8: 30 a.m. at the two Minoru rinks.

There will be a barbecue, raffl e prizes and 50/50 fundraising, plus a fastest shot contest. This will be the fourth time since 2009 Rich-mond has hosted the provincials. There is no admission fee to any of the games.

Fastest game on two feet in spotlightRichmond hosting provincial Peewee lacrosse championships through Sunday

The B.C. under-19 men’s provincial rugby team, featuring Richmond’s Harjun Gill and Anton Metalnikov, departed for St. John’s, Nfl d. Monday morning ahead of the 2014 U19 Ca-nadian Rugby Championship which kicks off today (Wednesday).

B.C. will be looking for a rare three-peat when they face 2013 runner-ups Prairie Wolf Pack, hosts Atlantic Rock, Ontario Junior Blues, and Eastern Ontario and Quebec Voyageurs.

The under-19 championship is the premier

15-a-side youth rugby competition in Canada, featuring players eligible for Rugby Canada’s under-20 entry at the annual Junior World Rugby Trophy. The tournament also serves as a feeder to the senior men’s Canadian Rugby Championship, featuring the highest level of domestic players available for senior men’s na-tional team selection.

Gill is one of several B.C. players to have al-ready earned caps playing for Canada’s junior national team.

Local lads in tow as B.C. aims for rugby three-peat

HARJUN GILL

Page 20: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Page 20 - Richmond Review Wednesday, July 16, 2014

CHRIST-CENTERED CHRISTIAN CHURCHwww.cccc-richmondbc.com

COME AND JOIN USIN OUR CELEBRATION OF REDEMPTION!

Worship Service 12:20 p.m.Sunday School 2:00 p.m.

8151 Bennett Road, Richmond tel: 604-271-6491

INTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH

TO ADVERTISE IN THE COMMUNITY WORSHIP PAGECALL GEETU AT 604-575-5304

Community WorshipREFORMED CHURCH (RCA)

Fujian Evangelical Churchwelcomes you to

Sunday Worship Services • English Services: 9:00 & 10:45 a.m. • Mandarin Service: 9:00 a.m. • Minnanese Service: 10:45 a.m.

12200 Blundell Road, Richmond, B.C., V6W 1B3Phone 604-273-2757 • www.fujianevangelical.org

ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADASt. Alban

an Anglican parish in the heart of RichmondServices at 8:30 and 10:00 am

Sunday School 10:00 amThe Reverend Margaret Cornish

7260 St. Albans Road, Richmond 604-278-2770 • www.stalbansrichmond.org

St. Anne’s - Steveston Anglican Church4071 Francis Road, Richmond, BC

The Rev. Brian Vickers, Rector • 604-277-9626Sunday 8:30 a.m. - Contemplative Eucharist

10:00 a.m. Family Eucharist with Church SchoolWednesday 10:00am. Eucharist, 11:00am Bible Study, 7pm Eucharist

• www.stannessteveston.ca

UNITEDSTEVESTON UNITED CHURCH

3720 Broadway Street (at 2nd Ave.) Please join us at 10am Sunday, July 20, 2014

for Worship Service and Sunday School604-277-0508 • www.stevestonunitedchurch.ca

A caring and friendly village church

Richmond United Church8711 Cambie Rd. (near Garden City Rd.) 604-278-5622

Come for 10am Sunday Worship and Children’sSunday School and after-service coffee and fellowship.

Rev. Dr. Warren McKinnonFounded 1888. Richmond’s Oldest Church

GILMORE PARK UNITED CHURCH8060 No. 1 Road (corner of No. 1 & Blundell)

604.277.5377 www.gilmoreparkunited.caRev. Maggie Watts-Hammond, Min. of Word, Sacrament & Pastoral Care

Rev. Yoko Kihara – Min. of Christian Development & OutreachWorship and Children’s Program Sundays 10:30 am

For more information, please check our website or call the offi ceEveryone is welcome!

TRADITIONAL ANGLICANSaint Saviour’s Parish

9280 No. 2 Road, Richmond604.275.7422 www.xnec.ca

FIFTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY1.30 P.M. - HOLY EUCHARIST

BAPTIST

8140 Saunders Road, Richmond, BC604-277-8012 www.bbchurch.caDr. Tim Colborne - Lead Pastor.

Worship Service - 10:30 a.m. Sonshine Adventures for Kids

Broadmoor Baptist ChurchA safe place to connect with God and fellow

travellers on your spiritual journey

CATHOLICEastern Catholic Church :

Everyone Welcome!Sunday Service: 11:00 am

Храм Успення Пресвятої Богородиці: Божественна Літургія: 9:00amSe habla español; Bine ați venit, Просимо Ласкаво

8700 Railway Ave. (just north Francis)www.easternchurch.wordpress.com Tel: 604 447 1731

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

6 IN MEMORIAM GIFTS

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

21 COMING EVENTS21st Century Flea Market. July 20th 10am-3pm. Croatian Cultural Ctr. 3250 Commercial Dr. Adm $5.

RICHMOND Family Place, 8660 Ash St., is holding a HUGE yard sale on Saturday, July 19, 9am-3pm. We have been collecting treasures for months - jewelry, art, books, furniture, housewares, small electronics, tools, toys and more!

041 PERSONALS

Meet singles right now! No paid op-erators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange mes-sages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 1-800-712-9851

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LOCATION, LOCATION! Several excellent, COFFEE Franchise op-portunities/locations available. [email protected]

109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

EMPLOYERS SEEKING CAN-SCRIBE MEDICAL TRANSCRIP-TION GRADUATES. We can’t meet the demand! Medical Transcription is a great work-from-home career! Contact us today at:w w w . c a n s c r i b e . c o m . [email protected].

We’re on the webwww.bcclassifi ed.com

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING

Atlas Power SweepingHiring Drivers

WATER TRUCK OPERA-TORS

- require Class 3.

SWEEPER OPERATORS- require air ticket.

Experience is benefi cial but we will train. Burnaby based, must be avail for weekends. Good driving record & abstract req’d.

Email: [email protected] or Fax: 604-294-5988

CLASS 1 HIGHWAY LINE HAUL

COMPANY DRIVERSVan Kam’s Group of Companies requires Class 1 Drivers for the SURREYarea. Applicants must have a min 2 yrs industry driving experience.

We Offer AboveAverage Rates!

To join our team of professional drivers please send off a resume and cur-rent drivers abstract to:

[email protected] more info about Line Haul, call Bev,

604-968-5488

We thank all applicants for your interest!

Van-Kam is committed toEmployment Equity and

Environmental Responsibility.

Page 21: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 Richmond Review - Page 21

The Peace Arch News, a twice-weekly award-winning newspaper has an outstanding opportunity for a full-time experienced sales person.

The successful candidate will have a minimum of two years of sales experience – preferably in the advertising or retail industry. The ability to build relationships with clients and offer superior customer service is a must. The winning candidate will be a team player, a strong communicator, well organized and self-motivated. The ability to work in an extremely fast paced environment with a positive attitude is a must. A car and valid driver's license is required.

We offer a great working environment with a competitive base salary and commission plan coupled with a strong benefi t package.

Black Press has more than 170 community newspapers across Canada and the United States and for the proven candidate the opportunities are endless.

Please submit your resume with a cover letter by Friday, July 25, 2014 to:

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DriversDriverswanted...wanted...

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But hheeeaalaltth has improved forr seeeizizzzeedd Rottweilers, whohavvee eeeaaacch lost between 10 andd 11555 ppoounds

by Jaacqquuueeeliinne Langennd Maarrttinnn vvan den Hemellackk PreessssA bbid too hhavve two Rottweilers released

rom dogggyy ddeeath row was denied by a Rich-mondd proovvvinnciial court judge, who ruled last weekk hee dddiddnn’tt have jurisdiction to hear the matteer.

City lawyer Kevin Westell argued before Judge Dennis Schmidt that the court didn’thave the power to grant an interim release of the dogs before a scheduled hearing on April 10 at Richmond provincial court.

Fearing for the welfare of their pets, after learning they hadn’t been walked in months and had ballooned in weight, owner Nav Nijjer and his mother Prabjot Nijjer sought to have the court intervene and release the dogs prior to the court hearing.

But it wasn’t all bad news for the Nijjer family, who have seen a significant improve-ment in the health of their pets, Axel and Paris.

They appear to have lost between 10 and 15 pounds each in the past couple of weeks, are being walked daily, and are out in the yard

for a few hours each day, according to lawyer Joe Peschisolido, whose firm has been hired fiby the family after the City of Richmond ap-plied to have the dogs destroyed.

The Richmond Review revealed two weeks ago that volunteers and staff at the Richmond ffAnimal Protection Society were barred from walking the seized dogs, which have been labelled as dangerous by the city. A society policy had prohibited anyone from walkingdangerous dogs, which under normal circum-stances would have been seized for a maxi-mum of 21 days.

Since they were seized on Oct. 25, followinga minor biting incident involving a construc-tion worker who suff ered a dime-sized contu-ffffsion to his upper thigh, the dogs have gained an estimated 25 pounds each.

The extra exercise, along with a chaanggee ttootheir diet, has resulted in a notable upptticckk k iinntheir health, Peschisolido said.

The Nijjers are hoping their pets willl bbee rree--turned and have built an enclosure thheeyy ssaayy ensures that the dogs never escape aggainn.

The enclosure was inspected by animmaal bbbee-haviour specialist Dr. Rebecca Ledgeer, wwwhhonoted there are now three fences—eaacchh ““aatleast fi ve feet tall, robust and well-conssttruucctt-fied”—between the Nijjer’s yard and thee adddjaa-cent Henry Anderson Elementary Schooool.

“These fences prevent school childrenn ffrroommmlooking into your yard to see the dogs,, aannnddalso prevent the dogs from seeing out or ccoommm--ing within 20 feet of the property line,” LLeddggeerr wrote.

See PPaggeee 66

Richmond hhooosssttss short-track kselections

The home of the 200100 Winter Olympic lonng--ttrraacckk speed skating evenntss played host to the 2200144 Short Track Nationaal TTeeaaamm Selections last weekkeenndd.. The Richmond Rockkettss Speed Skating Club b hhoosstteedd Canada’s top short-ttraacckk k speed skaters.

Calvin Gehleenn pphhhootoo

CCoooooouurt denies bid to release seized dogssss

ADULT SUBSTITUTECARRIERS NEEDED

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door to door on Wednesdaysand Fridays. Routes vary

on a weekly/monthly basis.A reliable vehicle is a must.

Please leave your name,phone number and address at

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EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING

HIGHWAYOWNER OPERATORS$3500 SIGNING BONUS

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We offer above average rates and an excellent

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Van Kam is committed toEmployment Equity and

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109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

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Advanced Mobile First Aid & Safety requires 2 Outside Sales Rep / Account Manag-ers. Salary plus commission and bonuses. To apply visit: www.amfas.ca or Email: [email protected] Plastic Remanufacturer re-quires *Plastic sorters *Extruder op-erators *Forklift operator / Yardper-son *Wash Line workers. Call Manu at 604-462-7335

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NOON HOUR SUPERVISORS RICHMOND SCHOOL DISTRICT is seeking noon hour supervisors to work either on-call or fi ve (5) days a week. Duties will involve supervis-ing students in school buildings and grounds during the lunch break plus assisting in the offi ce or school li-brary. The shifts for this part time casual position are 1.5 hours per day on those days that the students are in attendance. $21.53 per hour which includes 4% holiday pay. For further details, please visit www.ma-keafuture.ca/richmond Interested qualifi ed applicants should forward resume to [email protected]

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160 TRADES, TECHNICAL

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K-Line Trailers is a custom trans-port trailer manufacturer in Lang-ley, BC. We seek long-term, F/T, qualifi ed Truck-Trailer mechanics to repair, maintain, inspect and certify trucks and trailers. Must have appropriate hand tools, be a solid self-starter but great in a team setting. MVI/CVI required, Class 1 drivers an asset.

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HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

203 ACCOUNTING / TAX /BOOKKEEPING

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206 APPLIANCE REPAIRS

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Page 22: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Page 22 - Richmond Review Wednesday, July 16, 2014

PLUMBING & HEATING

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BILL GILLESPIECONSTRUCTION • RENOVATIONS

PLUMBING

5 MINUTE EXPRESS PAGING SYSTEMPLUMBING SERVICES AT REASONABLE RATES

CALL 604-270-6338

RJ’S PLUMBING& HOME SERVICE

EXCAVATION

SSL ENTERPRISES INCCOMMERCIAL ~ RESIDENTIAL

•Backhoes •Backfi lling/trenching•Mini excavator (rubber track) •Asphalt/concrete removal•Bobcats (forks/buckets) •Drainage•Dump trucks •Retaining walls •Install concrete driveways/sidewalks604-833-2103

To advertise in the Home Service Guide

Call 604-247-3700email: [email protected]

604-908-3596

• Residential / Commercial• Residential / Commercial

• Rotary / Reel Cutting• Rotary / Reel Cutting

• Trimming • Trimming

• Edging• Edging

• Aeration / Power Raking• Aeration / Power Raking

•• Complete Complete

Fertilizing ProgramsFertilizing Programs

• Hedge • Hedge

Trimming / PruningTrimming / Pruning

• Pressure Washing• Pressure Washing

666000444--999000888--333555999666666000444-999000888-333555999666

LAWN SERVICE

PeninsulaProperty Management#304 - 1959 152nd Street,White Rock, B.C. V4A 9E3

RESIDENTIAL RENTALS IN B.C.604.536.0220

PHONE:

www.rentinfo.ca

Rental Homes for Qualifi ed Tenants.

Rentinfo.ca

URGENTLY NEEDED!PROUD TO SUPPORT THE LOCAL SPCA

PET WEEK OF THE

TO ADOPT CALL 604-277-3100SPCA Thriftmart

5400 MINORU BLVD • 604.276.2477

“BORIS AND WOODY” NEED A GOOD HOME WITH YOU!

“BORIS AND WOODY, ID# 331799 AND 331800, RAT CROSS, ADULT MALES”These two rats are adorable, sociable and super friendly. They arrived at the SPCA together and would love to go to their forever home together as well. Come and meet these two best of friends soon!

REVIEW the richmond

5431 NO. 3 RD 604.276.2254 &10151 NO. 3 RD Richlea Square

604.241.7586

281 GARDENING

283A HANDYPERSONS

MORE THAN HANDY

RICHMOND RESIDENTSemi-Retired w/ workshop

• Custom Cabinet Design• Cabinet & Furniture Repair

Small carpentry jobs WELCOME!* Over 40yrs. woodworking exp.*

Daryl 604-817-3028

287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

FULL SERVICE Plumbing from Parker Dean. Fast, reliable, 24/7 service. Take $50 off your next job if you present this ad. Vancouver area. 1-800-573-2928

300 LANDSCAPING

GREENWORKS Redevelopment Inc. Hedges, Pavers, Ponds &

Walls. Returfi ng, Demos, Drainage, Concrete cutting, Jack hammering,

old swimming pools fi lled in &decks. 604-782-4322

778-710-2185

320 MOVING & STORAGE

1PRO MOVING & SHIPPINGAcross the street - across the world Real Professionals, Reas. Rates.

Best in every way! 604-721-4555.

ABE MOVING - $35/Hr. Per Person*Reliable Careful Movers. *RubbishRemoval. *24 Hours. 604-999-6020

MOUNTAIN-MOVERS.ca (778)378-6683

477 PETS

320 MOVING & STORAGE

AFFORDABLE MOVINGwww.affordablemoversbc.com

From $45/Hr1, 3, 5, 7 & 10 Ton Trucks

Licensed ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 MenFree Estimate/Senior DiscountResidential~Commercial~PianosLOCAL & LONG DISTANCE

604-537-4140ABBA MOVERS & DEL Res/comm 1-5 ton truck, 2 men fr $45. Seniors Discount. Honest, bsmt clean up. 25yrs Exp. 24hrs/7days 604-506-7576

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

www.paintspecial.com 604.339.1989 Lower Mainland

604.996.8128 Fraser ValleyRunning this ad for 10yrs

PAINT SPECIAL3 rooms for $299,2 coats any colour

(Ceiling & Trim extra) Price inclsCloverdale Premium quality paint.

NO PAYMENT until Job iscompleted. Ask us about our

Laminate Flooring & Maid Services.

ABOVE THE REST “Interior & Exterior Unbeatable

Prices & Professional Crew.• Free Est. • Written Guarantee

• No Hassle • Quick Work • Insured • WCB

778-997-9582

332 PAVING/SEAL COATING

ASPHALT PAVING• Brick Driveways • Retaining Walls • Foundation Repairs • Sealcoating 604-618-2304

338 PLUMBING

10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fi tter. Aman: 778-895-2005

BRO MARV PLUMBING 24/7Plumbing, heating, plugged drains BBB. (604)582-1598, bromarv.com

477 PETS

338 PLUMBING

MIN. EXPRESS PAGING SYSTEM

Reasonable Rates 604-270-6338

341 PRESSURE WASHING

POWER WASHINGGUTTER CLEANING

SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE Call Ian 604-724-6373

Power Washing, Gutters, Windows, Maintenance, Res/Comm. Lic/Ins’d. Free Est. Call Dean 604-839-8856

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

10% DISCOUNT. MG Roofi ng & Siding. WCB

Re-roofi ng, New Roof Gutters & Replace Fascia 604-812-9721

EXCEL ROOFING LTD. All kinds of roofi ng work. Reroof, New, Repairs. Free est. (778)878-2617

356 RUBBISH REMOVAL

JUNK REMOVAL By RECYCLE-IT!604.587.5865

Brads Junk Removal.com. Same Day Service. Affordable Rates! 604.220.JUNK (5865)

FLEETWOOD WASTEBin Rentals 10-30 Yards.Call Ken at 604-294-1393

356 RUBBISH REMOVAL

#1 AAA RubbishRemoval

25 Years Serving Rmd.Residential & Commercial Clean Courteous Service

FREE ESTIMATESJoe 604-250-5481

PETS

477 PETS

BLACK LABS M&F reg’d purebred, 6/months, good temperament,

Shots. $800. Call 604-377-0820

CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866

Pure bread CAIRN TERRIER Pups Shots, dewormed. $650. House pets. 778-588-1051,604-859-1724

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

542 FRUIT & VEGETABLES

CHERRY JUBILEE Sour Cherries2014 HARVEST SEASON

July 16 - July 27 (Closed July 20th)8:00a.m. - 3:00p.m.

2017 - 272nd Street, AldergrovePlace Your Order: 604-856-5844

Fresh Juicy Raspberries. U-Pick13811 Gilbert Road, RichmondJunction of Gilbert & Dyke Rd

560 MISC. FOR SALE

KILL BED BUGS & THEIR EGGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Complete Treatment Program or Kit. Available: Hardware Stores, Buy Online: homedepot.com

KILL ROACHES! Buy Harris Roach Tablets. Eliminate Bugs - Guaran-teed. No Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting. Available online only @ Ace Hardware & The Home Depot

STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca.

REAL ESTATE

627 HOMES WANTED

WE BUY HOMES BC• All Prices • All Situations •

• All Conditions •www.webuyhomesbc.com

604-657-9422

PRIMELAKEVIEW LOTS

FROM $140,000Also; Spectacular 3 Acre

Parcel at $390,0001-250-558-7888

www.orlandoprojects.com~ FINANCING AVAILABLE ~

630 LOTS

2.5 ACRE LOTS, LUMBY, BCMabel Estates 5 mins from town, pristine lush views. De-signed and ready to build. Wells & power at lot. Starting, $139,000, $50,000 below as-sessed value. 250-317-2807.

RENTALS

706 APARTMENT/CONDO

BRAND new 2 bedrooms for rent in Bridgeport, Richmond. $1400. Big bedrooms and closet spaces. No pets and no smokers. Great for stu-dents and families. Please contact: Mr. Wong at 604-783-0050 for de-tails.

751 SUITES, UPPER

RICHMOND #1/Blundell. 3 BDRM upper, appls & lndry. NP/NS. $1300 incl utils. Avail now. 604-889-5220

TRANSPORTATION

810 AUTO FINANCING

821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS

2008 SATURN ASTRA XR3 - Red with black interior, 5 spd, 54,000 kms. No accidents. Mint cond. All options. Asking $7,500obo: Seri-ous buyers please (604)448-0785

845 SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVALMinimum $150 cash for full size

vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673

845 SCRAP CAR REMOVALThe Scrapper

#1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL

ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME

604.683.2200

847 SPORT UTILITY VEHICLES

2009 TOYOTA RAV4 LIMITEDV6, 3.5L, 4/dr, 4WD, 5spd, 83K. Pyrite colour, leather int, satellite radio, Bluetooth, a/c, pwr sunroof, heated front seats, rear fold-down seat, push button/smart key.

One owner, non-smoker. LOADED! Exc Cond! $19,950

604-338-4114

551 GARAGE SALES

GIGANTIC MOVING SALE July 19 9-3 10080 Seacote Rd 2-11ft deck umbrellas wooden deck tables household goods collectibles wine eqt toro lawn mower echo fl ow-erbed rototiller wheelbarrow bicy-cles fi tness eqt books hvy dty ce-ment mixer, cement garden benches & planters and lots more

TRIPLE Family New & Used-Good Condition, Everything Under The Sun. eg: IKEA solid wood twin bed 9:00 am - 3:00 pm JULY 19 ONLY.

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES REAL ESTATE TRANSPORTATION

736 HOMES FOR RENT 736 HOMES FOR RENT

Page 23: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 Richmond Review · Page 23

LOOK FOR OUR FLYER IN TODAY’S PAPER!

Happy togetherr

FRANCIS RD @ GILBERT#120 - 7020 Francis Rd.Richmond, BC V6Y 1A2(604) 204-0707

COPPERSMITH PLAZA(across from Canadian Tire)

11380 Steveston Hwy, Richmond

(604) 204-0511

13 99

World Cup Steveston at Steveston Park

Two days of music, games and fun in the

sun helped wrap up World Cup Steveston at Steveston Park last weekend.

“(It was) the big finale,” said Alan Clark, vice-president of the Steveston Community Society.

The event in the park

was designed to be ori-ented towards families while down the street at the Buck and Ear another celebration was being thrown that was geared towards adults.

The two-day festival at Steveston Park featured live music from more than 10 different acts, plenty of children’s activi-ties, a barbecue and face painting.

“We had a fun experi-ence,” Clark said.

A highlight for many was getting to meet and have their picture taken with Rick Hansen. In 1985, Hansen embarked on his world tour, travel-ling 40,000 kilometres through 34 countries over two years in his wheelchair. He raised over $26 million for spi-

nal cord injury research.Hansen, a Richmond

resident, stopped by the park on Sunday afternoon before head-ing over to participate in the festivities at the Buck and Ear and to watch Germany defeat Argentina in the World Cup final.

The Rick Hansen Foundation is the ben-eficiary of the fundrais-ing efforts of World Cup Steveston, which saw many of the village’s mer-chants support a compet-ing country by decorat-ing their shops and host-ing a special event during the World Cup.

Amanda Oye cov-ers the social scene for The Richmond Review. [email protected]

Around TownAmanda Oye

Photo1: Stephen Peng, Lily Zhang, Louie Zhao and Hawk Lu.

Angela and Quinn Leung enjoy the sun.

Peyton Miyashita had her face painted.

Amanda Oye photosAlan Clark, vice-president of the Steveston Commu-nity Society and Rick Hansen. Hansen, a Richmond resident, posed for photos with attendees.

Ben and Jessica Lefroy at Steveston Park.

World Cup party in the park

Page 24: Richmond Review, July 16, 2014

Page 24 · Richmond Review Wednesday, July 16, 2014

7771 Westminster Hwy,Richmond604-276-2400

( At the corner of Westminster Hwy. w& Minoru Blvd.)

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