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Family homeless following Christmas Day fire in South Surrey
Apartment robbed, doused in gasoline having been the target of Christmas Day thieves who apparently doused the home in gasoline and lit it on fire as they left. “We had a great Christmas together in the morning, and then we left,” Oskam said Friday, as he and son Ben picked through the rubble left in the fire’s wake. “We came back, and they’d just taken anything of value – almost all the electronics, all the Christmas presents, $400 in gift cards. “And what they didn’t take is melted now.
Nick Greenizan & Alex Browne Staff Reporters
Everything is gone. The TV, couch, clothes, volleyball medals, video games, soccer photos, nearly all the family mementos… all of them gone with the strike of a match. That was Oz Oskam’s realization when he arrived back at his South Surrey apartment Tuesday, after two days spent camping in Manning Park with his children – his home
It’s just horrible.” The family cat is also missing. The fire – in a first-floor apartment at Somerset Gardens I, broke out after 11:30 p.m. According to the Surrey Fire Department, the blaze was quickly confined to contents of the apartment, causing “moderate damage.” Contacted Friday, Surrey RCMP said they did not know anything of a potential arson investigation. see page 4
Nick Greenizan photo
Oz Oskam and son Ben comb the wreckage.
Sarah Massah Black Press
A White Rock chaplain says a $52 fee for criminal-record checks for Surrey residents volunteering in White Rock will cause “undue hardship” on both the volunteers and the organizations depending on them. Rev. Dr. Ken Klassen, who has been co-ordinating volunteers at Evergreen Baptist Campus of Care for the last two years, said he first heard of the fee late November when student volunteer Julie Wang went to get her criminal-record check and was charged because she lives in Surrey and was volunteering at the care home located in White Rock. “Up until then, I’ve had no problems receiving criminal-record reports,” Klassen said. “They were either mailed or brought directly to me without any sort of extra charge. “If her parents had not been with her, there is no way a Grade 11 student would be able to pay for it.” Wang said her parents reluctantly paid the fee, but they were not happy about it. see page 2
Gord Goble photos
Nearly 500 took part in the 42nd annual White Rock Polar Bear Swim. See more photographs online at www.peacearchnews.com
New Year dips usher in 2012
Hundreds take the plunge the crowd was fantastic,” said organizer Don Miller, of the Peace Arch Monarch Lions Club. “There were at least 2,000 spectators between the promenade and the pier. The weather turned out, if not 100 per cent, then 99 per cent. Last year we had quite a breeze. “ An hour later, 15 people – nearly all au naturel – splashed into the water at Crescent Beach at the annual Polar ‘Bare’ Swim. Surrey United Naturists reported $165 was collected in donations to the Canadian War Amps Champs and Playsafe child-amputee programs.
Taking the plunge wasn’t quite as chilly in White Rock and South Surrey this year – but that only meant there were more spectators from the shoreline watching those actually ushering in the new year with a brisk dip in the ocean. With Semiahmoo Bay chilled at about 4 C at noon Sunday, there were close to 500 who celebrated the arrival of 2012 by dashing into the waves at the 42nd annual White Rock Polar Bear Swim. “The weather was great and
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Back to school: Surrey's oldest high school will mark 100 years with an anniversary reunion June 2. see page 11
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Mayor calls for tougher sentences for gun crimes
Two shot, one killed in Surrey hit
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Tracy Holmes
bodily harm in connection with the May 18, 2011 incident. Prosecutor Brad Kielmann said Thursday that the plea decision was made “fairly recently.” It is not official until it is heard in court. Danyliuk’s next court appearance is scheduled for Feb. 15. Danyliuk was arrested last July 18, two months to the day after Laursen, 56, was struck and killed by a northbound vehicle as she crossed Johnston Road at
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Thrift Avenue in White Rock. Police said at the time that the car that hit Laursen had avoided a police stop and sideswiped another northbound vehicle just prior to the incident, which occurred around 9:40 p.m. A suspect vehicle was found abandoned a short time later in the area of 160 Street and King George Boulevard in South Surrey. At its peak, the police investigation into the hit-and-run involved about 40 officers. It was led by Surrey RCMP’s
Serious Crime Unit, and supported by White Rock RCMP, the Integrated Collision Analysis and Reconstruction Service, Integrated Forensic Identification Services and other Lower Mainland police units. Kielmann said if a guilty plea is entered Feb. 15, the next step will be to set a date for sentencing. While he could not speculate on what sentence may result, Kielmann said a jail term is “definitely on the table.”
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Alex Browne Staff Reporter
MP Russ Hiebert’s private member’s bill aimed at increasing public disclosure of unions’ financial affairs received a bumpy ride from Opposition politicians in the House Of Commons Monday. Speaking on second reading of his bill to amend the Income Tax Act (C.377 – Requirements For Labour Organi-
zations), Hiebert (South Surrey-White Rock-Cloverdale) argued that requiring unions to file statements with Canada Revenue Agency that would also be available to the public is a move toward greater transparency and accountability. He predicted it would, in fact, confirm to union members that public monies (through tax exemptions to unions) are being well-spent on their behalf.
But Opposition House leader Joe Comartin, NDP MP for WindsorTecumseh – who attacked the proposed legislation when it was introduced in October – labelled some of Hiebert’s comments “disingenuous… a frontal attack on the labour movement.” He added it would actually threaten the rights to association, privacy and freedom of speech.
“It’s not about transparency,” he said. Comartin compared it to legislation introduced by the Republicans during the George W. Bush administration in the U.S. – legislation, he said, that doesn’t go as far as Hiebert’s bill in the level of disclosure and reporting required. Documents authored by right-wing policy advisors prior to the U.S. legisla see page 4
Evan Seal photo
Dan Ferguson Staff Reporter
A helicopter pilot killed in a crash Tuesday while on a training exercise near Chilliwack was a father of two who lived and grew up in Cloverdale and South Surrey. Dave Brolin, 46, joined the RCMP in June 2006. A statement released by the RCMP described Brolin as a dedicated family man who flew Lower Mainland Traffic Services helicopters Air 1, Air 2 and
Air 5, the latter of which was frequently Chief Supt. Wayne Rideout said Broused for search-and-rescue operations. lin was a civilian member of the RCMP Brolin died Jan. 17, and the sole occupant after Air 5 crashed ❝All who knew him regarded of the helicopter. He near Cultus Lake, was taken to hospihim with great respect shortly after complettal by members of the and admiration.❞ ing a successful trainRCMP Emergency Bill Randall ing exercise. He was Response Team who West Shore RCMP preparing to return to were part of the trainbase at the time of the ing exercise. crash, which occurred around 2 p.m. “I want to express my sincere conThe Transportation Safety Board and dolences to his family, friends and B.C. Coroners Service are investigating. coworkers during this difficult time,”
Rideout said in the statement. “(Brolin) was also a part of our RCMP family and he will be missed.” Brolin had an eight-year-old daughter and an 11-year-old son. Born in California, he was a pilot with the U.S. Army and with Blackcomb Aviation in Whistler prior to joining the RCMP. During his tour of duty with the U.S. military, Brolin flew various sorties during Operation Desert Storm, the first
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see page 2
Tributes paid to life lost in helicopter crash
Officers, civilians mourn RCMP pilot Sarah Massah Staff Reporter
Dave Brolin knew at age 18 that he wanted to be a helicopter pilot. The Lord Tweedsmuir Secondary alumnus told his dad as much, then quit college to pursue the dream. “He just ran with it and never looked back,” said Cpl. Paul Hayes, recalling a story Brolin’s dad had shared with him in the lead-up to Brolin’s funeral Thursday.
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The tale was among several told during the afternoon service at Peace Portal Alliance Church, held nine days after Brolin’s Jan. 17 death. Family, friends and co-workers packed the church to pay tribute to the 46-year-old, a civilian pilot with the RCMP who died shortly after completing a training exercise, when his helicopter crashed near Cultus Lake. He was the craft’s sole occupant. The investigation to determine just what
caused the helicopter to go down is ongoing. Thursday, as bagpipes played, eight Mounties escorted Brolin’s flag-draped casket past hundreds of mourners, many of them in red serge. Hayes’ tales – compiled from family members’ memories – evoked both tears and laughter. He described Brolin as a man who lived life to the fullest; who loved his family, his profession and his country. see page 2
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In kindness: The South Surrey/White Rock Oneness Gogos are spending Random Acts of Kindness Week thanking the community for helping raise more than $100,000. see page 11
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T-shirt slogans rile court
Judge dresses down gallery
Evan Seal photo
Tracy Holmes
‘We don’t need luck’
Staff Reporter
Evan Seal
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Kelowna RCMP close in on members of the Tamanawis Wildcats basketball team after reports of teens with handguns. They found toy pistols.
‘Powerful lesson’ for Surrey athletes, chaperones on Kelowna visit
Teenagers’ toy guns turn into big to-do Kevin Diakiw Black Press
About a dozen Surrey basketball players were the recipient of the Kelowna RCMP’s version of a full court press Thursday afternoon, after a pair of toy guns got them temporarily arrested. Members of the senior boys Tamanawis Wildcats – who last month won the Surrey RCMP Classic – were in town for a tournament and were heading to a mall restaurant in downtown Kelowna at about 2:15 p.m. Thursday, when a police officer noticed one of them tucking a gun into the back of his sweatpants. They would later find out that one of two
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women chaperones – a mother of one of the subsequently released without charges. children – also had a mock pistol in her purse. “It is very concerning, and it is treated accordPerceiving a potential danger at the crowded ingly,” said Kelowna RCMP Sgt. Ann Morrison. Capri Mall, the officer called for “We assume that it’s a real firearm backup – which included a heli- ❝We assume that it’s a real until we’re able to determine that copter, an emergency response firearm until we’re able to it’s not… they look very real.” team and police dogs. Surrey Board of Education determine that it’s not.❞ RCMP waited for other cuschair Laurae McNally said the Sgt. Ann Morrison tomers to leave the Subway resstudents should not have had Kelowna RCMP taurant, then phoned and told replica guns in their possession, staff to clear out the premises. and that mailers are often sent asking that stuThey then ordered the dozen ball players to dents not bring them to school or school events. leave the restaurant and arrested them. She said district staff are reviewing the matter. They seized the two replicas and the team was see page 4
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t was a dark, wet Tuesday night on Dec. 7, 2010, and Paul Thomson had just sat down at a computer at Semiahmoo House Society to surf the web. It was a regular evening routine for Paul, as he enjoyed the quiet time by himself. The last few years had been challenging for the lifelong Surrey resident. In October 2003, while driving home from work, Paul was overcome by a severe vere pain in his head. The details that followed remain a mystery to Paul, however, he remembers waking up in hospital and being told he had been involved in a car accident. While behind the wheel, Paul suffered an intracranial hemorrhage resulting in a build-up of blood in his skull that caused serious brain damage. He spent three months in a coma and seven months in hospital learning how to eat, walk and talk again. His battle back had been inspiring to many, but in recent years, Paul had become more withdrawn, and his physical and mental progress seemed to plateau. see page 4
Grand Opening
Boaz Joseph photo
All that jazz
Marshall Herridge plays the bass behind trumpeter Alex Webb with the Semiahmoo Secondary Grade 12 Combo during the 30th annual Envision Jazz Festival at the Sheraton Vancouver Guildford Hotel Saturday. The three-day festival featured 2,500 secondary school musicians and evening performances by jazz professionals, as well as award and scholarship presentations.
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No physical injury but concern for trauma
Hit-and-run driver remorseful: lawyer Tracy Holmes Staff Reporter
In a brief appearance in Surrey Provincial Court this week, Kyle Brandon Danyliuk took responsibility for the May 2011 hitand-run death of White Rock resident Marilyn Laursen. Danyliuk – who was arrested two months
later – pleaded guilty Wednesday afternoon to: dangerous driving causing death in the case of Laursen; dangerous driving causing bodily harm, in connection with a second victim who was injured in the same incident; and two counts of failure to stop at an accident scene causing death or bodily harm, with the intent to escape civil or criminal liability.
Hands grasped behind his back, Danyliuk, a slim, clean-shaven 20-year-old with closecropped dark hair, said “guilty” four times, after each charge was read. The plea made before Judge Michael Hicks is an admission that Danyliuk was behind the wheel of the car that struck and killed Laursen, 56, as she walked across Johnston
Jeff Nagel attacker using a dog but were Black Press unsuccessful. A Coast Mountain bus driver is Video surveillance was in use unhurt after a passenger in New- on the bus and the recording has ton tried to choke him Saturday been retrieved and will be used morning. by Mounties in their investigation. The assault happened at King About 10 other people were on George Boulevard near 76 Avenue the bus. on the southbound RCMP spokes❝As a driver who has 321 bus from Surman Drew Granger rey Central station been assaulted three said the assailant is to White Rock. described as a white The driver had times, I can tell you the male age 18-20, big thing that keeps asked the passenger, five-foot-10, with who boarded and was playing on your mind is short, dark hair. He standing too close to ‘Is this guy going to get was wearing a black the windshield, to jacket over a hoodie back on my bus again?’❞ and blue jeans. move back. Gavin Davies, viceDavies said Gavin Davies president of local 111 Canadian Auto Workers union although there was of the Canadian Auto no physical injury Workers union, said the young man to the driver, such assaults inflict complied without objection but at a ongoing mental trauma. later stop grabbed the driver “with “As a driver who has been both hands around the throat and assaulted three times, I can tell you started choking him.” the big thing that keeps playing The driver was in shock and didn’t on your mind is ‘Is this guy going fight back, but his assailant sud- to get back on my bus again?’” he denly let go and bolted off the bus. said. Surrey RCMP tried to find the see page 4
City program drops by
Residents keep an eye out for crime
Fashion sense Tracy Holmes Staff Reporter
Ugandan orphans who call Abetavu Children’s Village home are sporting new fashions these days, following a concerted effort by Peninsula Girl Guides to make a difference. Nearly two dozen colourful dresses were distributed last month to youngsters under the care of Coquitlam native Carli Travers. They were sewn over a two-week period by parents of 1st Kla How Ya Guides, using fabric donated by Laura’s Fashion Fabrics in White Rock and Surrey’s Wineberry Fabrics. “The dresses are amazing,” Travers said by email from Uganda Monday. “Our girls all felt like princesses.” The Guides hosted Travers and her husband, Robert Birungi, at the South Surrey home of Susan Richards de Wit on Dec. 5. Travers has lived in Uganda and taken in street children there since 2007. She and Birungi are currently ‘parents’ to 14 Ugandan children and three of their own. Their visit here was a highlight of the Guides’ work on an international community service project, and included a chance to hear from Travers herself all about the work she and Birungi are undertaking in an effort to change lives of young Ugandans. Among other things, they learned it’s not uncommon for
Bus passenger chokes driver
Road at Thrift Avenue on May 18. Surviving victim Solmaz Pourmohammmadbhagerna was in a vehicle not directly involved in the fatal crash. Outside court, Danyliuk – escorted at his request by a court sheriff – declined comment as he left with a woman and their young son. see page A4
Guides help orphans
Dan Ferguson Staff Reporter
At 67 members, a City of Surrey program that fights crime in multiunit rental housing has now grown too big to hold its regular monthly meeting at RCMP headquarters. Which is why, on Tuesday, the Crime Free Multi-Housing Program meeting was held in the spacious amenities room of the Sunnyside Villas seniors’ housing complex at 151 Street and 26 Avenue. It marked the first time the participants have met in one of the building complexes participating in the crime-reduction program that launched in Surrey in 2004. Sunnyside building manager Joanne Menzies said the plan is to rotate the regular meeting among the members in the future. Sunnyside Villas joined the program two years ago. Menzies said the biggest physical change to the nine-acre site for security was landscaping, with greenery getting trimmed to eliminate potential places of concealment. Attitudes changed, too. Because the housing is in a quiet, relatively low-crime area, Menzies said some residents had become too nonchalant. “They left the front door open all the time,” Menzies recalled. “It was ridiculous.” see page A4
Contributed photos
Ugandan children (top) show off their new styles, sent by local Girl Guides and their families.
girls their ages (9-12) to work all day with an infant on their backs – news they were “so surprised” by, Richards de Wit said. The Dec. 5 event included a sale of Ugandan crafts. In just two hours, the Guides raised $1,800, all of which will benefit the children’s village. In addition to baking, marketing and hosting, the Guides collected school supplies and gently used clothing for Travers and Birungi to take back to Uganda.
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Leading by example: A group of Lower Mainland mayors – including Surrey’s Dianne Watts – will be front and centre next month after volunteering to participate in the Healthy Community Challenge, which aims to promote fitness throughout the province. see page 11
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Fatal-crash review calls for reinforcement
Railings ‘not to blame’ Dan Ferguson Staff Reporter
Gord Goble photo
Squeeze play
White Rock Christian Academy Warriors point guard Tyus Allen is sandwiched between a pair of Tamanawis Wildcat defenders during WRCA’s 60-58 win Friday night in the final game of the Fraser Valley Southwest tournament. For more, see page 31.
Nearly a year after a car plunged through a railing of the Serpentine River bridge in South Surrey – submerging the driver for 90 minutes – a report on the fatal crash has been released. At a Monday briefing, Ministry of Transportation bridge and traffic engineers said an examination of the section of guard rail that failed to prevent the driver from crashing into the Serpentine River on Feb. 28, 2011 showed there was no structural problem with the bridge. Regardless, the 1961-era bridge will be beefed up with more con-
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crete guard rails in place of the cast aluminum railings originally installed. The report only deals with the structural integrity of the bridge, however it refers to the police inves see page 4
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February 21, 2012 (Vol.. 37 No. 15)
A walk in the park: Randal Atkinson shares the history and showcases the rare and exotic treasures of Darts Hill Garden Park in the hopes of attracting more visitors to what he calls a “hidden gem” in South Surrey. see page A11
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A court appearance for a White Rock woman facing multiple dog-theft charges was short last week, but the presiding judge made sure to let opponents of Janet Olson know that disrespect for the legal process won’t be tolerated. Several attendees seated in the Surrey Provincial Court gallery Thursday wore white T-shirts with the phrase ‘Stealing pets is not rescue’ on the front and ‘Return our family members now’ on the back. Judge Ellen Gordon admonished them for their attire. “For those of you that ❝If you want are in here, the T-shirts to watch… don’t help,” Gordon come dressed said. “If you want to watch… come dressed like normal people.❞ like normal people.” Olson, founder of A Ellen Gordon Better Life Dog Rescue, Surrey judge was one of two women arrested in November in connection with what police described as “an elaborate dog-theft investigation” into allegations a rescue group was stealing dogs from backyards across the Lower Mainland. At the time, police said investigators observed Olson and co-accused Louise Reid enter a Coquitlam backyard and walk away with a bulldog named Samson. Olson – who has acknowledged she took Samson – was also charged with theft and fraud in connection with the alleged theft of a Jack Russell terrier in Surrey on April 13, 2011. Last month, following a flood of tips to police, several more charges were sworn against Olson, in connection with incidents between Nov. 14, 2009, and Dec. 21, 2011 in White Rock, Surrey, Richmond and Abbotsford. A Richmond woman, Michaela Schnittker, was also announced as facing charges. see page 2
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Carla Henderson & Paul Thomson.
One of the White Rock councillors who voted for new lights and arches for the seaside city’s famous pier last year has defended the decision, saying Mayor Wayne Baldwin was wrong to describe it as Wayne Baldwin a “last-minute panic attack.” Al Campbell did not respond at the Jan. 23 council meeting when the new mayor made his remarks, but days later contacted Peace Al Campbell Arch News to comment that Baldwin was “misinformed” about last fall’s situation. “No panic here,” Campbell states in an email received Thursday. see page 4
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MP Russ Hiebert
Staff Reporter
Officers line the entrance to Peace Portal Alliance Church in South Surrey, where helicopter pilot Dave Brolin was remembered Thursday.
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MPs give Hiebert’s bill rough reception
Dan Ferguson
Evan Seal photo
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‘Frontal attack’ on labour movement, says Opposition House leader
Mayor rebuked for staff criticism
A police videographer documents damage to a new-model Chevy Silverado, following a double shooting Jan. 19 in the 13900-block of 56 Avenue.
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Feb. 16, 2012 (Vol. 37 No. 14))
Feb. 14, 2012 (Vol. l. 37 No. 13)
They mean business: New South Surrey and White Rock Chamber of Commerce leaders Gary Hollick and Cliff Annable outline their new goals for their community. see page 11
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Feb. 7, 2012 (Vol. 37 7 No. 11))
Bodychecking bounced: Bodychecking in amateur hockey has been put on ice, following overwhelming support last week by the Pacific Coast Amateur Hockey Association for eliminating the practice at the recreational level. see page 29
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Pier work defended
Helicopter pilot was ‘selfless and dedicated’
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Plea expected in hit-and-run fatality A Surrey man charged in connection with the hit-and-run death of White Rock resident Marilyn Laursen is expected to plead guilty next month to a number of charges. According to Surrey Provincial Court records, Kyle Brandon Danyliuk is scheduled to plead guilty to charges Marilyn Laursen including dangerous driving causing victim death and dangerous driving causing
Dave Brolin flew for the RCMP since 2006
SANDPIPER
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Jail term ‘definitely on the table,’ prosecutor says
Staff Reporter
Shots rang out in Panorama Ridge Thursday night, leaving one man dead and another critically injured in what police are describing as a targeted hit. Surrey RCMP responded to a call of shots fired in the 13900-block of 56 Avenue around 11 p.m. Thursday, and found two men, 27 and 28 years old, on the front lawn of a property. Both were taken to hospital, where one died and the other remains in critical condition. Friday morning, several orange police-evidence cones surrounded a new-model black Chevy Silverado truck on the lawn of a home in the area. The driver’s-side window appeared to have bullet holes in it. Neighbours in the upscale neighbourhood said they heard six to eight shots ring out in rapid succession; one described the gunfire as sounding like a semi-automatic weapon. The four-acre property was sold last year, and neighbours said it was rented out to Caucasian males who sported full sleeves (arms) of tattoos, and who always wore hooded jackets. “They were extremely intimidating,” one neighbour said. see page 4
Dave Brolin RCMP pilot
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Differing fees for volunteers frustrate
Alex Browne
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Non-residents pay up
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January 31, 2012 (Vol. 37 No. 9)
January 24, 2012 (Vol. 37 No. 7)
Mission of peace: Walt Sutherland is taking a career’s worth of expertise as an RCMP officer to South Sudan, where he’ll help install a police force. see page 5
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Thrift store fire hampers Superfluity Alex Browne Staff Reporter
Bargain hunters, keen thrifters and other regulars for whom the Peace Arch Hospital Auxiliary’s Superfluity Shop has become a way of life were in for a shock last week. A fire that broke out early Thursday morning has forced the indefi-
2012
Thursday June 28, 2012 (Vol. 37 No. 52)
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Dream come true: Beach House Theatre Society’s inaugural production, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, is on target for a landing at Blackie Spit Aug. 15-19, the first in a series of annual Shakespeare productions at Crescent Beach planned by the society. see page 37
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White Rock mourns
CCTVs explored by councillors
Remembering Mary-Wade
Only one opposes cameras
Tracy Holmes Staff Reporter
The City of White Rock is in mourning this week, following news of the passing of longtime Coun. Mary-Wade Anderson. The senior politician died at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, four weeks after being admitted to Peace Arch Hospital with complications from a heart procedure. She was 84. “I kept saying… you have to hang on, you have to hang on,” friend Marilyn Rice said Wednesday, recalling conversations she’d had with Anderson in recent days. “But it just wasn’t going to work.” Told by doctors that her heart was failing, Anderson had been anxiously waiting to visit with the long-lost daughter who she had reunited with briefly in April after 50 years apart. She believed a complication that was delaying Ginny Awakuni from obtaining a U.S. passport was about to clear. But it didn’t happen in time. After news Wednesday morning that her passport application has been denied, Awakuni told Peace Arch News from Texas that it is “very unlikely” she’ll get the chance to bid a proper farewell to her mother. Awakuni’s son, Michael Montgomery – Anderson’s grandson – was due to fly in to Bellingham see page 5
Tracy Holmes Staff Reporter
Much to the disgust of one White Rock politician, city staff have been asked to look into the cost, necessity and legality of installing surveillance cameras along the city’s waterfront. “I think it’s a total waste of time,” Coun. Helen Fathers said Monday, during discussion of a motion put forward by Coun. Al Campbell. “I cannot believe we’re even having a conversation about having security cameras on our beach. I’m Helen Fathers very disturbed by this.” ‘waste of time’ Campbell alerted council June 11 that he wanted the concept explored, citing a need for a system that will help deter crime, gather information on what’s happening in the area and preserve safety. Monday, he acknowledged that the suggestion – reported June 14 in Peace Arch News – “caused a little bit of emotion around town,” but didn’t back down on his feeling that “it’s the right thing to do.” He told council he was spurred to raise the issue by the recent train protest. see page 4
File photo
After 12 years of serving White Rock, Mary-Wade Anderson died Tuesday in Peace Arch Hospital.
Residents group voices concern over ‘administrative review’
Spectre of South Surrey highrise plan still looms Dan Ferguson Staff Reporter
The recent decision to update the Semiahmoo Town Centre plan will reopen the debate over housing density in South Surrey, a local community activist predicts. However, a Surrey councillor who cast his vote for an interim overhaul of building-size limits for the area around the shopping mall describes it as an administrative matter, nothing more. Semiahmoo Residents Association president
Dan Ferguson photo
David Cann, outside Semi Centre.
David Cann is concerned about a May 28 Surrey city council vote that approved an interim land use and density concept plan for the land around the area of 152 Street and 16 Avenue until a local area plan has been finalized. Cann views the interim plan as a slightly modified version of a controversial 2008 proposal that would have added six highrise towers – with heights up to 36 storeys – to the shopping-centre site. That plan was withdrawn by the then-owners of the shopping centre after
the global economy fell into a recession. Cann complains the new plan, as approved by council, could allow up to three towers of substantially more than 20 storeys with other buildings that together would create an overall density greater than the 2008 proposal. “It changes it, if you like, to make it worse,” Cann said, shortly after city council voted unanimously to approve the temporary new development guidelines for the area. see page 4
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July 24, 2012 (Vol. 37 7 No. 59)
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Threads of art: The 39th annual Arnold Mikelson Festival of the Arts was about every kind of visual art – from fibre- and metal-work to jewelry-making and wood and soapstone carving. see page 12
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Police superintendent serves notice to splinter group from White Rock chapter
Hells Angels ‘not welcome in Surrey’ Jeff Nagel Black Press
Supt. Bill Fordy pledged to do everything possible to counter the planned establishment of a new group and clubhouse by Hells Angels formerly with the White Rock chapter. “Outlaw motorcycle gangs are not
welcome here or anywhere else,” Fordy said. “If the Hells Angels expect to set up a clubhouse in Surrey, I am serving them notice right here and now that they are not welcome. I will use every lawful means at my disposal to ensure they understand that.” The Angels’ White Rock chapter
is actually located in Langley – it left White Rock in the early 1990s – but a splinter group of members are reportedly calling themselves the West Point chapter and aim to establish themselves in Surrey. Fordy called it an “emerging threat” but wouldn’t say what strategies or tactics Mounties might use
to counter the outlaw bikers. “I have allocated resources that I am confident will allow us to meet this threat head on,” Fordy said. Mayor Dianne Watts said Surrey’s Crime Reduction Strategy and the sheer number of RCMP officers based in the city will make it an unwelcome environment.
Watts said there’s been no application to the city for permitting to establish a new clubhouse. “I’ve heard the rumours,” Watts said. “As officer in charge, (Fordy) said the RCMP will deal with it and look into what the intentions are.” A new Hells Angels chapter would be the ninth in B.C.
Neighbours pay to replace
City OKs tree trade Tracy Holmes Staff Reporter
Boaz Joseph photo
Sports weekend
Evan Seal photo
BC Summer Games athletes competed at various local venues last weekend, including South Surrey Pool for diving, Semiahmoo Secondary for beach volleyball, Blackie Spit for sailing and Cloverdale for equestrian jumping. see page 15
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Eight trees are to be removed from city property in the 1100-block of Balsam Street in White Rock this week, following an appeal by neighbours to restore their views and have the boulevard cleaned up. The decision – made last week during a special meeting of council – followed a motion by Coun. Larry Robinson to accept a solution proposed by area residents. The residents committed to putting $30,000 towards the project, which they suggested should include clearing undergrowth in the area, infilling a ditch and replanting limited-growth trees. “The boulevard in its current state violates three city bylaws or policies,” Balsam Street resident John Bower told council. In addition to restoring views that many of the residents moved to the area for, “the solution will provide privacy and noise buffering,” he said. Bower submitted a 15-name petition in support of removing the trees, and several neighbours voiced their agreement with the plan – many highlighting the fact that the trees were not planted by the city in the first place. The issue of how to deal with trees on city land has been a contentious one in recent years and led to officials redrafting the tree-management policy. The new rules, which eliminate the opportunity to appeal denied treeremoval requests, were adopted by council in January – after the appeal regarding the Balsam Street trees was filed. see page 4
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Photos by (clockwise from left) Ian McNicol, Mike Ridewood and Jason Ransom
Nick Greenizan Staff Reporter
The 2012 Summer Olympics came to an end Sunday in London, and though Canada failed in its goal to finish among the top 12 countries in total medals – instead placing 13th – it was, without question, the most successful Games for the Semiahmoo Peninsula. Three of Canada’s 18 total medals were won by those with South Surrey and White Rock connections, led by Christine Girard,
who in the first week of Olympic competition won bronze in the 63-kg division of women’s weightlifting. For Girard, a Quebec native who has lived in White Rock for the last four years, the podium finish was redemption for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where she finished fourth – just three kilograms away from a bronze medal. In Week 2, Canada’s national women’s soccer team captur
Thursday July 5, 2012 (Vol. 37 No. 54)
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Homeward bound: Former Florida Panthers defenceman Jason Garrison, a White Rock native, will play a little closer to home this fall after signing a contract with the Vancouver Canucks. see page 31
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‘Ludicrous’ to claim defendants were just smuggling car parts, judge says
Border guard guilty in drug scheme Dan Ferguson Staff Reporter
A Surrey border guard who waved a cocaine-laden SUV through the Pacific Highway crossing has been convicted of drug smuggling, breach of trust and accepting a bribe as an officer. The written ruling convicting Baljinder Kandola, 39, was released Friday by B.C.
Supreme Court Justice Selwyn Romilly, who also convicted Richmond resident Shminder Johal on related charges of smuggling and offering a bribe to an officer. They were among three men arrested Oct. 25, 2007, after police found 11 boxes with 208 bricks of cocaine worth $5-6 million inside a GMC Yukon Denali that passed unchecked through the South Surrey border crossing
into Canada. The third man, Richmond Herman Riar, was earlier sentenced to 12 years in jail in January 26, 2010 by a Surrey provincial court judge, after pleading guilty. In finding Kandola and Johal guilty, Romilly dismissed the claim advanced by defence lawyers that the pair were only smuggling car parts and had nothing do with the cocaine that was being transported in the SUV that
Riar was driving at the time of the arrests. Romilly called that suggestion “ludicrous.” Sometimes using blunt language, Romilly ruled that the evidence of 25 witnesses and 140 intercepted phone calls proved the three men had a scheme to get large amounts of cocaine through the Canada-U.S. border undetected. see page 4
Cowichan politics
Surrey schools superintendent takes place of fired trustees Dan Ferguson Staff Reporter
Shane MacKichan photo
Freeway rollover
An air ambulance helicopter prepares to rush an injured man to Royal Columbian Hospital from South Surrey Sunday evening. The rollover crash took place southbound on Highway 99 just before the Serpentine Bridge near 136A Street around 9 p.m. The victim’s condition was said to be serious. Video online at www.peacearchnews.com
Surrey business group adds to Canadian groundswell of support
Blaine train station picks up steam announced it has passed a resolution of support for a “minimum stop” by the Amtrak Cascades just south of the U.S. border. The support follows votes by city councils of both White Rock and Surrey earlier this year backing the proposal. Blaine council members voted June 25 to support the establishment of an Amtrak passenger rail stop there and to send a letter to Washington State Gov. Chris Gregoire and
Dan Ferguson Staff Reporter
The international campaign to reopen the historic train station in Blaine, Wash. gathered a little more momentum in recent days. First, Blaine city council last week formally endorsed a passenger train stop for their community, then the Surrey Board of Trade followed suit. Then, this week, the Surrey Board of Trade
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B.C. premier Christy Clark. The resolution also calls for a third, mid-day passenger train service between Vancouver and Seattle to complement the current morning and evening runs. The council vote endorses preservation of the boarded-up 100-year-old train station in Blaine, but makes it clear that is not the only option for the city. see page 5
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Surrey School District superintendent Mike McKay was named official trustee of the Cowichan school district on July 1, after the provincial government fired the nine school trustees for submitting a deficit budget. “It’s regrettable that the Cowichan Valley board chose to put political advocacy ahead of their obligation to submit a balanced budMike McKay get,” Education Minister George superintendent Abbott said in a statement Sunday morning. “I know (McKay) will be a great asset to the Cowichan Valley in this role and I am very pleased that he has agreed to take on the responsibility.” Surrey school chairperson Laurae McNally told Peace Arch News that Abbott contacted her a few days before the firing to advise her of McKay’s possible appointment. “He was hoping it wouldn’t come to that,” McNally said Tuesday. McNally said she informally advised the other trustees, and there were no objections. see page 4
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July 31, 2012 (Vol. 37 No. 61)
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Settling in: Spurred by her own struggles adapting to Canada years ago, Surrey’s Harvinder Sandhu now works to help new immigrants adjust to life in a new country. see page 11
16-year-old in hospital
Teen injured in crash Dan Ferguson Staff reporter
Dan Ferguson photo
Members of the Surrey Fire Service help cordon off the area of a serious gas leak on 24 Avenue and 160 Street on Monday afternoon.
City crews cut through high-pressure line in South Surrey
Gas leak forces evacuations Kevin Diakiw Black Press
Dozens of South Surrey businesses were evacuated Monday afternoon after a natural gas line under 24 Avenue was severed. City of Surrey crews were working in the area of 24 Avenue and 160 Street when they hit the high-pressure FortisBC line around 12:30 p.m. The city was working at capping off a water main at the southeast corner of the intersection when the incident happened. Witnesses reported hearing a loud, prolonged noise prior to being evacuated. They described the sound of the leak from the four-inch pipe as “like a jet engine.” Fire crews closer to the scene said it was “deafening.” Employees and customers of businesses within a 1½-block radius of the leak – including the Peace Arch News – were ordered to clear out. Surrey and White Rock RCMP officers helped contain the scene, blocking off area roads – 24 Avenue, from King George Boulevard to 168
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fortunately they prevented it getting any further,” Lemire said. “They did a good job – we had three units on the scene and a good swift response went a long way to minimizing the extent of the damage.” He said the cause of the fire is “undetermined but suspicious in
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Surrey Fire Capt. Brent Davidson speaks with an RCMP officer on the scene of the gas leak. Street, and 160 Street, from about 22 to 27 Avenue. Surrey RCMP Sgt. Drew Grainger said the evacuation was in the interest of safety. The gas discharging from the pipe was “highly flammable,” he said. “This is about as big as it gets,” Grainger told Peace Arch News of the risk.
e o a o o peop e
“The potential for disaster is obviously huge.” If it detonated, the results would be “catastrophic,” Grainger said. Veronica Moretti was at work at Turner Geox in Grandview Corners when the leak occurred. The area was quickly overwhelmed by a foul odour, she said. “The smell of gas was way, way, way too much,” Moretti said. “We were all running around (asking) ‘what’s happening, what’s happening?’” Repair teams from Fortis arrived about 2:15 p.m. and the gas was shut off in about an hour. Power to the area was shut off shortly after. For some businesses, it remained off until after 6 p.m. The roads remained closed until about 5 p.m. Vincent Lalonde, Surrey’s general manager of engineering, said he was investigating how and why the pipe was damaged. “We always use (BC)1-CALL. Right now, we’re interviewing the crews to make sure exactly what happened,” Lalonde said. - with files from Tracy Holmes
A 16-year-old driving a Honda Civic suffered serious head injuries when he lost control of his vehicle in the 4300-block of 152 Street Saturday morning. Surrey RCMP said the vehicle was seen driving erratically while heading north on 152 around 7 a.m. July 28. After passing on the shoulder, the Civic crossed the centre line and collided with an oncoming Jeep Wrangler. The southbound Jeep hit the Civic’s passenger-side door. The driver of the Honda was transported to hospital, where he is expected to remain for several days. The driver of the Wrangler suffered less severe injuries, police said. Southbound traffic on 152 just before the train crossing at Colebrook Road was blocked off for approximately two hours. The investigation into the crash is continuing, RCMP said. As yet, no charges have been laid.
Child falls from window A toddler is fortunate to have escaped injury after falling from a third-storey window on the weekend. Police say the two-year-old girl was playing in a room on the third floor of an apartment complex in the 12100-block of 75A Avenue at about 2 p.m. on Saturday. Her mother went to check something on the stove, and the toddler climbed on some furniture and leaned against a screen panel, which gave way. The girl tumbled out, landing in a bush, and was taken to hospital where it was determined she hadn’t broken any bones or suffered any other serious injury.
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Lemire said alert residents called in around 3:15 a.m., after noticing a glow from the lane reflected in surrounding windows. Firefighters arrived to find flames had breached the back wall and soffit (external roof ceiling) and were into the roof ’s truss space, he said. “That was a little bit tense, but
Summer Olympics bronze for South Surrey-White Rock competitors
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and a portion of the roof. The bad news is the store will have to remain closed while restoration contractors inspect the premises and assess the damage. “They sound optimistic, so I’m hoping it’ll be open again soon,” Johnston said. White Rock Fire Chief Phil
Bronze medals for (clockwise from above) marathon swimmer Richard Weinberger (21), the national women’s soccer team (coached by John Herdman) and weightlifter Christine Girard.
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nite closure of the popular thrift store, at 15163 Prospect Ave. The good news, manager Patricia Johnston told Peace Arch News, is that White Rock firefighters caught the blaze – which appears to have started among unsolicited donated items left in the back lane – before it could spread from the back wall
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