YEARS of INNOVATION 1894 2019 the NEXT 125 YEARS the New St

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

YEARS of INNOVATION 1894 2019 the NEXT 125 YEARS the New St REIMAGINING OUR INNOVATIVE PIONEERS AT THE NEW ST. PAUL’S or our 125th anniversary issue front cover, we’ve reimagined Dr. Doris Kavanagh-Gray, St. Paul’s first female cardiologist and department head, in a state-of-the-art surgical suite at the new F St. Paul’s. Applying her innovative approach to medicine, imagine what she’d accomplish in a hospital that’s purpose built to put people first… Before surgery, Dr. Kavanagh-Gray uses virtual reality (VR) tools – and a true-to-life VR replica of the patient’s heart – to discuss the procedure with the patient and her surgical resident. With fingertip access to top-of-the-line equipment and vital, real-time patient information, she performs the complex surgery with ease. Afterwards, her research discoveries are translated quickly to St. Paul’s staff SPRING / SUMMER 2019 to improve medical techniques and patient outcomes. Meanwhile, new remote robotic surgical systems allow St. Paul’s surgeons in Vancouver Dr. Doris Kavanagh-Gray (1959) superimposed on a rendering of a new St. Paul’s surgical suite (2026). to perform operations on patients anywhere in the world. As one half of a two-part computer system, a surgeon sitting at a console (pictured at right) directs a robot’s “hands” to operate on the patient wherever they are. Robot-assisted surgery has enormous benefits for patients and caregivers. It will decrease surgery wait times, long-distance travel, and hospital stays; reduce pain, discomfort, and the risk of infection; and promote faster recovery. At the new St. Paul’s, YEARS OF we’ll bridge our past with our future. And we will continue to push the INNOVATION boundaries of medicine, research, and teaching to build a hub of health innovation grounded in truly DRIVEN BY COMPASSIONATE CARE compassionate care. PM 40065475 The founding Sisters could never have imagined the medical advances that 1894 1904 1914 1931 1960 1987 2007 would take place at St. Paul’s over 125 O N D seeing the construction to honour both the bishop and T I R I V hen the Sisters The area where St. Paul’s Street. The largest hospital A E V N years, and we honour O of their hospital, and in 1894, the saint. In the almost 100 years N B of Providence was to be built was nothing more redevelopment in BC’s history, N Y I purchased the than the charred remains of the St. Paul’s Hospital opened its that followed, 12 more buildings the new St. Paul’s will deliver their legacy by building 1894 2019 land on Burrard forest that had been destroyed doors. On November 22, the were constructed on the same patient-centred care in a brand for the next 125. WStreet in 1892 – seven lots (6.6 in the Great Vancouver Fire modest wooden structure – site (see just some of the many new, state-of-the-art hospital C YEARS O E located where the Providence renovations above). Join us.” R acres) for the sum of $9,000 – of 1886. But once the Sisters and medical campus, purpose M A P C A S E Wing now stands – was blessed In 2026, St. Paul’s will move built to serve the people of British S I O N AT it was a vast piece of wilderness picked the site, they moved ever IMAGINE on the outskirts of town. forward, raising money and over- by Bishop Paul Durieu and named to an 18.4-acre site on Station Columbia for the next 125 years. O N D T I R I V A E V N FROM THE TEAM INSIDE O N B N Y THE FUTURE I 2026 4 125 YEARS OF INNOVATION 1894 2019 THE NEXT 125 YEARS The new St. Paul’s IMAGINE a purpose built hospital NOW, IMAGINE YOU ARE How A St. Paul’s beginnings YEARS at the Jim Pattison C that streamlines servicest is with and a mixtureprograms of pride, PATIENTgratitude, and HERE. At the new125 St. years Paul’s, ago inspires our plans O E R Medical Centre M A for the next chapter – in a new, PA C that share resources,hope where for the the greatest future that wecare commemorate will come to you. You will be diagnosed S S I AT E state-of-the-art hospital. O N medical minds are integratedthe 125th together anniversary of thealmost founding immediately of and start precision EDITOR I BY KRIS WALLACE Michael McCulloughto care for patients,St. Paul’s collaborate Hospital. on new treatment on the spot. Thanks to the 12 125 YEARS OF DISCOVERY CONTRIBUTING EDITORSresearch, and trainFrom the next the outset,generation the Sistersbest-in-class of Providence caregivers, were equipment, Sarah Burgess, Sara Turcotte,of physicians, nurses,innovators, and allied establishing health a traditionand of procedures, care driven youfirst are already St. Paul’son the has pioneered research Kris Wallace, Sonia Woodwardprofessionals. and foremost by compassion. Everroad since, to recovery. Providence Afterwards, inyou often-neglected can areas of CREATIVE DIRECTOR Health Care has been inspired andreturn guided home by totheir recuperate comfortablymedicine, and the pace of new Rick Thibert breakthroughs is picking up. IMAGINE a complexexample. of Wherebrand-new we see gaps inwhile care, westill fill under them the in watchful eyes of ART DIRECTOR BY JESSICA WERB Edwin Pabellon buildings entirelyany devotedway we can.to health In so doing, we yourhave teambecome via leading video technology and CONTRIBUTING WRITERS care, life sciences,researchers research, and technology, practitioners inin-community areas that have wellness support.17 125 YEARS OF TEACHING Joseph Dubé, Melissa Edwards, Carly Krug, Kris Wallace, Jessicaand Werb, innovation. been A place traditionally where PHC’s underserved, passedBut we on don’tour hard- have to imagine Almost this, from its start, St. Paul’s was Sonia Woodward rich culture of collaborationwon expertise among through the teachingbecause and this training future of starts now.a teachingIt starts hospital. At the new CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS/clinicians, researchers,the next and generation life science of health carewith professionals, you. Let’s build the new St. Paul’s,Paul’s that knowledge transfer ILLUSTRATORS will reach even further. Peter Holst, IBI Group, Brianpartners Smith, meansand discoveries taken care in ofour patients fromto every transform corner lives of BC. and livelihoods for BY CARLY KRUG Jeff Topham labs can travel quickerWe’ve than been ever able to to do this despiteyou, for operating your family, and for all British our patients. out of a facility built in another century.Columbians. Imagine, 21 125 YEARS OF then, what we’ll be able to accomplishOne in hundred the new and twenty fiveCOMPASSIONATE years CARE IMAGINE the St.entire Paul’s campus at the seededJim Pattison Medicalafter Centre:the Sisters a brand demonstrated The great Sisters of Providence were with the latest new,technology state-of-the to facilitate art health campuscourage that and will leadershipbe to providemoved com to serve- by compassion. radical advancespurpose in research built to and put treat people- first.passionate care to everyone, weWe wonder continue to find ways to alleviate suffering and make 178 –1081 Burrard St, Vancouver, BC,ment; V6Z 1Y6. where staff Theand foundingstudents Sisters will could neverif they have could imagined have imagined the future Website: www.helpstpauls.com life better for our patients. Phone: 604-682-8206 have access to the medical advancestools of that wouldthat take awaits place us at at the new St. Paul’s.BY MELISSA EDWARDS the future: thingsSt. Paul’slike virtual over 125 reality, years, and we honourNow it’s their our turn to be courageous, robotics and artificiallegacy byintelligence building for to the next 125.to be Join leaders. us. The journey 26to the 125 new YEARS OF GIVING improve patient care in real time. St. Paul’s can’t happen without From you. selling medical insurance in logging camps to today’s BE A PART OF targeted donations, St. Paul’s has always found innovative ways 230, 4321 Still Creek Drive to fund its life-saving work. Burnaby, British Columbia, V5C 6S7 DICK VOLLET BY JOSEPH DUBÉ 604-299-7311 Fax: 604-299-9188 KATHRYN YOUNG PRESIDENT AND CEO,helpstpauls.com/newstpauls BOARD CHAIR, ST. PAUL’S FOUNDATION; ST. PAUL’S FOUNDATION PARTNER, BOYDEN VANCOUVER ISSN: 1703-6151. Canadian Publications Mail Product Sales Agreement No. 40065475. SPRING/SUMMER 2019 | PROMISE 3 SPRING/SUMMER 2019 | PROMISE 31 O N D T I R I V A E V N O N B 1894 Y N The first St. Paul’s Hospital I 1894 2019 C YEARS O E R M A P C A S E S I O N AT n 1894, five nuns from the Sisters of Providence in Montreal stepped off the train in Vancouver The journey with nothing except what they could carry and a courageous mandate to treat the sickest and most vulnerable residents. They were guided by a Isimple truth: If not us, who? If not now, when? to the future It’s almost impossible to imagine the harsh conditions and the desperate need for care that met the Sisters upon their arrival. The city was still rebuilding after a devas- tating fire eight years earlier. The population had boomed starts in to 14,000 from less than 1,000 at the time of the fire. The streets were teeming with prospectors, Chinese labour- ers, and new arrivals. Crowding, inadequate plumbing, and a lack of sanitation sparked epidemics of smallpox the past and typhoid. Undeterred, Sisters from other orders soon came to BC with similar missions. he first St. Paul’s Hospital T building was designed by Mother Joseph of the Sacred Heart (inset), an accomplished architect and carpenter who had planned more than 30 hospitals, schools, and This year, we celebrate a remarkable homes for orphans, the elderly and 125-year legacy of compassion, innovation, the sick.
Recommended publications
  • The Great Vancouver Fire of 1886 East
    Maclean had been mayor one month. Vancouver had Roundhouse clearing on False Creek, drying for weeks been incorporated as a city for just over two months. in the hot early summer sun. It had all the ingredients The crazed clearing of the land and frantic building of a gigantic fire waiting to ignite. had begun about six months earlier. The old residents By that Sunday morning in June, there were pyramids of of Granville and Hastings Mill were a little bewildered. logs, stumps and roots piled high for controlled burning The newcomers, mostly men of British and Eastern on the edge of the old townsite. Many were already Canadian origin had been arriving in droves since alight and their smoke hung heavy in the streets. But the fall of 1885 in anticipation of fortunes to be made the smoke of clearing fires was not unusual; it had been with the coming of the railway and the expansion of smoky for weeks, so people went about their business, the new Vancouver. Once sleepy Granville, which lay even if the smoke was heavier that day. Meantime, out in a hollow set against the forest below today’s Victory of their view, a CPR crew at the Roundhouse site was Square, bustled with surveyors and speculators, and fighting a desperate battle with a clearing fire, while the construction of new buildings, the lumber green, just to its west, that tinder-dry mass of fallen trees unpainted, and fresh with sap. There were plenty of new was getting dangerously hot. In town, people attended homes with new wells and new hotels, where a tall beer church and enjoyed other Sunday pastimes, not knowing called a schooner could be had for five cents for thirsty hell’s cauldron was brewing on the other side of the hill dealmakers and woodsmen alike.
    [Show full text]
  • Alshayeb Abdulaziz 2017U
    THE GREAT FIRE OF VANCOUVER VANCOUVER ABDULAZIZ ALSHAYEB ARCH 4374 WORLD CITIES URBAN DISASTERS BRITISH COLUMBIA CANADA VERA ADAMS FALL 2017 BEFORE DURING AFTER April 6 City Incorporated 1886 June 13 Great Fire of 1886 Vancouver 1914 Komagata Maw Incident The Brush Fire in present time Main and Cambie Streets (Mackie 2015) Map of Vancouver during the fire, created by the Major (Mackie 2015) The first City Hall of Vancouver (Mackie 2015) “A few score men had been on guard with water and BUCKETS between this dwelling and the cabin, but when the wind became 1918 General Strike “Vancouver didn’t burn…it EXPLODED” (Vancouver n.d.) “In 20 minutes, Vancouver had been wiped off the earth. In 12 a gale they were forced to FLEE FOR THEIR LIVES...” (Mackie HOURS, IT WAS RISING AGAIN” (Laniwurm 2009) 2015). PROBLEMS... DURING... AFTER... Battle of Ballontyne 1000 Wooden buildings were burned down along The City reacted quickly aer the fire and started rebuilding 1935 The City used a brush fire to try to clear out some land from Pier with the whole city aer 12 hours aer the fire a forest area in the east The fire kept burning until there was nothing le of The Major appointed firefighters and police in the city There were some workers watching and containing the fire the city to burn except for 3 buildings that were but were poorly equipped made from stones “The Great Fire” was viewed as a positive, as an origin story to the great city, and also a “redo” to a city plan Bloody Sunday A sudden blast of wind strikes the fire from the west and 1938 Vancouver disappeared in under 40 minutes with towards the city carrying out the fire out of control and with 28 Deaths Buildings were now built out of stones, streets were creat- flying debris ed, modern water, and better electricity There was $1.3 million lost in destroyed property The entire city was constructed out of wood 1946 Vancouver Island Earthquake 1971 Gastown Riots 1994 First Stanley Cup Riot The Great Vancouver Fire (Mackie 2015) Present day Vancouver (https://www.tourismvancouver.com/).
    [Show full text]
  • Vancouver Moving Theatre with the Carnegie Community Centre & the Association of United Ukrainian Canadians & a Host of Community Partners
    11TH Downtown Eastside A N N U A L Oct.29-Nov.9 2014 Produced by Vancouver Moving Theatre with the Carnegie Community Centre & the Association of United Ukrainian Canadians & a host of community partners KEEPING THE FIRE IGNITED Ancestors, ghosts Fill the entire house And along with the present Join together www.heartofthecityfestival.com Sharing beauty in art and culture 604-628-5672 Spreading love, joy, compassion, passion, Dance, poems, testimonies, drums and songs INSIDE The heart beat of the community The very heart and soul of the Downtown Eastside Welcoming Statements .............................................. 2 & 3 Is free because of and in spite of our struggles Schedule at a Glance ................................................. 4 & 5 We continue onward in being challenged Locations & Venues, with Map ........................................ .6 We are the fl aming force Keeping the home res burning ..................................... .7 The fl ame fl ickers on Keep the fi re ignited Pre-Festival Events ..................................................... 8 & 9 Our nations share one message Festival Events .........................................................10 – 42 Committed to standing above and in harm’s way The Raymur Mothers .............................................. 12 & 13 Forces in the world are sounding the answer Handy Guide to Walking Tours .......................................44 The call Visual Arts ............................................................... 46 & 47 The plight of the Downtown
    [Show full text]
  • 2 BC BOOKWORLD SPRING 2011 Awards STANDING up for SCIENCE
    2 BC BOOKWORLD SPRING 2011 awards STANDING UP FOR SCIENCE eligion won’t save us. Or politics. R Or business. According to David Suzuki, the 74-year-old environmentalist who re- ceived the 18th annual George Wood- cock Lifetime Achievement Award in February, it all comes down to science. If politicians had listened to Suzuki and other scientific-minded futurists about thirty years ago, Kyoto Protocol standards would have been achievable. Now Suzuki still clings to a “very slen- der thread” of hope. The human race can still endure, IF we immediately en- act rational strategies. “Science is by far the most important factor for shaping our lives and society today… (but) decisions are made for po- litical expediency,” he says. “What’s hap- pening now is absolutely terrifying.” Suzuki recalled the advice of 300 cli- matologists who met in Toronto in the 1970s and identified global warming as the greatest threat to human survival, next to atomic bombs. “(But) the fossil fuel industry, the auto sector and neo- conservatives like the Koch brothers in Margaret Atwood New York began to invest tens of mil- presents this year’s George lions of dollars in a campaign of decep- Woodcock Award to tion,” Suzuki said. “You can find the best scientist and educator evidence of this in Jim Hoggan’s book, David Suzuki, at the Fairmont Climate Cover-Up, and in Nancy Hotel Vancouver. “We are Oreskes’ Merchants of Doubt.” going backwords,” he PHOTOGRAPHY D “Now we have public opinion on warned the audience. these issues driven by organizations like WENDY The Fraser Institute, the Heartland In- stitute, the Competitive Enterprise In- Campbell with a set of leather bound stitute.
    [Show full text]
  • S. Macpherson
    From Spectator to Citizen: Urban Walking in Canadian Literature, Performance Art and Culture Sandra MacPherson Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctorate in Philosophy degree in English Department of English Faculty of Arts University of Ottawa © Sandra MacPherson, Ottawa, Canada, 2018 ii Abstract This dissertation examines urban walking in Canada as it deviates from a largely male peripatetic tradition associated with the flâneur. This new incarnation of the walker— differentiated by gender, race, class, and/or sexual orientation—reshapes the urban imaginary and shifts the act of walking from what is generally theorized as an individualistic or simply transgressive act to a relational and transformative practice. While the walkers in this study are diverse, the majority of them are women: writers Dionne Brand, Daphne Marlatt, Régine Robin, Gail Scott, and Lisa Robertson and performance artists Kinga Araya, Stephanie Marshall, and Camille Turner all challenge the dualism inscribed by the dominant (masculine) gaze under the project of modernity that abstracts and objectifies the other. Yet, although sexual difference is often the first step toward rethinking identities and relationships to others and the city, it is not the last. I argue that poet Bud Osborn, the play The Postman, the projects Ogimaa Mikana, [murmur] and Walking With Our Sisters, and community initiatives such as Jane’s Walk, also invite all readers and pedestrians to question the equality, official history and inhabitability of Canadian cities. As these peripatetic works emphasize, how, where and why we choose to walk is a significant commentary on the nature of public space and democracy in contemporary urban Canada.
    [Show full text]
  • Vancouver Historical Society NEWSLETTER ISSN 0042 - 2487 September 2012 Vol
    Vancouver Historical Society NEWSLETTER ISSN 0042 - 2487 September 2012 Vol. 52 No. 1 Indigenous History of the Vancouver Area September Speaker: Rudy Reimer/Yumks ow far back can we push social history, the complex social But, what does the archaeological HVancouver’s history? To 1886? organization and that conflict could record tell us? To first non-indigenous contact in be resolved through intermarriage 1791? and potlatching. We also know that Through archaeologist’s eyes, trade was carried on for millennia our September speaker will give If we push Vancouver’s history back but more recent trade brought in us a snapshot of some longtime to over three thousand years to the diseases that significantly reduced the Vancouver places and spaces, through beginnings of native settlement, the population resulting in the necessity of a perspective of archaeology as deep majority of the city’s current residents consolidation to fewer habitation sites. history. As such, he will offer insight will find themselves on how we should view unaware of the long and and acknowledge these ancient history beneath concepts of settlement, their feet, in their yard, resource sharing and hiking trail or coffee everyday living on a shop. Many Coast Salish broader everyday scale. peoples lived, gathered a wide variety of resources Rudy Reimer/Yumks is and marked this place of the Squamish Nation with habitation sites, and is Assistant Professor resource use areas, place in the First Nations names, road networks, Studies and Archaeology and gave meaning to Departments at Simon prominent landmarks. Fraser University (SFU). Stanley Park, for He did his BA and MA example, is a microcosm at SFU and PhD at of the native presence.
    [Show full text]
  • A Long Legacy of Leadership
    “Our relevancy stems from staying true to our original 1887 focus.” Board of Trade CEO Iain Black, pg. 4 april 2012 • VOlUME 52 • NUMBEr 3 THIS ISSUE A long legacy of leadership A proposal for a new policy model · 3 In the past 125 years, The Vancouver Board of Trade has helped create a local airport authority, Message from the saved the Canada Line, and paved the way for the NEXUS lane. And that’s only the beginning. president and CEO· 4 munity, and it has done so under the leadership First Narrows for shipping, had lobbied for a new BY WENDY LISOGAR-COCCHIA People and sustainable of some of Vancouver’s greatest visionaries and city hall and post office, and had helped estab- mining · 5 Forty-five thousand, four hundred and eighty- dignitaries. lish the University of British Columbia’s Faculty five. That’s how many days will have passed This legacy of leadership began with The of Commerce. That was just the beginning. TD’s chief economist between The Vancouver Board of Trade’s in- Board of Trade’s first president, David Oppen- In the years following, The Board fought for gives financial forecast · 6 corporation in 1887 and the moment this issue heimer, a national historic figure and the city’s fairer freight rates and expanded markets for of Sounding Board rolls off the printing press. second mayor. Prior to the creation of The Board B.C.’s products. In the 1930s, then-president This year, The Vancouver Board of Trade is of Trade, Vancouver was overshadowed by the T.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Investigating the Geographies of Community-Based Public Art and Gentrification in Downtown Eastside, Vancouver
    Investigating the Geographies of Community-based Public Art and Gentrification in Downtown Eastside, Vancouver By Teréz Szöke A Thesis presented to The University of Guelph In partial fulfilment of requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Geography Guelph, Ontario, Canada ©Teréz Szoke, September, 2015 ABSTRACT INVESTIGATION THE GEOGRAPHIES OF COMMUNITY-BASED PUBLUC ART AND GENTRIFICATION IN DOWNTOWN EASTSIDE, VANCOUVER Teréz Szöke Advisor: University of Guelph, 2014 Dr. Kate Parizeau Infamous as Canada’s poorest postal code, Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside (DTES) is considered a blank slate fertile for urban redevelopment. In response to this narrative, visually expressive demonstrations and community-based public art (CBPA) actively reclaim urban space for its inhabitants, and boldly resist gentrification. This thesis advances scholarly understandings of the impact of CBPA by exploring artists’ intended impacts of CBPA projects and how they are interpreted in the minds of the public. Through semi-structured interviews and two consecutive circle discussions, I identified three significant social functions of CBPA in the DTES. The 301 surveys completed by passersby at three CBPA sites revealed that CBPA projects act as both a barrier and a conduit for gentrification. Key concepts that emerged throughout this thesis include: therapeutic landscapes and visual democracy. This research seeks to challenge dominant discourses that construct the DTES as a passive community subject to externally-prescribed solutions to local issues. iii Land Acknowledgement It is with honour and gratitude that I acknowledge that this research has taken place on the traditional territories of the Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), selílwitulh (Tsliel-waututh, People of the Inlet), and xʷməθkʷəy̓ əm (Musqueam, People of the River Grass) Nations Figure 1: Indigenous Street Art in the DTES (Photos by Teréz Szöke.
    [Show full text]
  • Bchn 1979 04.Pdf
    MENBER SOCIETIES Alberni District Museum and Historical Society, Mrs. C. Holt, Secretary, Box 284, Port Alberni, V9Y 7M7. Tel. 723—3006. Atlin Historical Society, Mrs. Christine Dickenson, Secretary, Box ill, Atlin. BCHA, Gulf Islands Branch, Helen Claxton, Port Washington, VON 2T0. BCHA, Victoria Branch, Miss F. Gundry, Secretary, 255 Niagara, Victoria, V8V 1G4. Tel. 385—6353. Burnaby Historical Society, Ethel Derrick, Secretary, 8027—17th Avenue, Burnaby, V3N 1145. Tel. 521—6936. Campbell River & District Historical Society, Gordon McLaughlin, President, 1235 Island Highway, Campbell River, V9W 2G7. Chemainus Valley Historical Society, Mrs. E. Pederson, Secretary, P.O. Box 172, Chemainus, VOR lKO. Tel. 245-3205. Cowichan Historical Society, W.T.H. Fleetwood, Riverside Road, Cowichan Station. Creston & District Historical and Museum Society, Mrs. Margaret Gidluck, Secretary, Box 164, Creston, VOB lG0. Tel. 428—2838. District #69 Historical Society, Mrs. Mildred E. Kurtz, Secretary—Treasurer, Box 74, Parksville, VOR 2S0. Tel. 248—6763. Elphinstone Pioneer Museum Society, Box 766, Gibsons, VON 1VO. Tel. 886—2064. Golden & District Historical Society, May Yurik, Secretary, Box 992, Golden. Historical Association of East Kootenay, Mrs. A.E. Oliver, Secretary, 670 Rotary Dr., Kintherley, ViA 1E3. Tel. 427-3446. Kettle River Museum Society, Alice Evans, Secretary, Midway, VOH 1MO. Tel. 449—2413. Maple Ridge & Pitt Meadows Historical Society, Mrs. T. Mutas, Secretary, 12375—244th St. Maple Ridge, V2X 6X5. Nanaimo Historical Society, Len Nicholls, Cor. - Secretary, Box 183, Qualicum Beach. 1jotk Soimd Historical Society, Beverly Roberts, Secretary, Box 712, Gold River, B.C. VOP 1GO. North Shore Historical Society, David Grubbe, President, 815 West 20th Street, North Vancouver, V7P 2B5.
    [Show full text]
  • The GVBOT Economic Recovery Plan 2020
    The GVBOT Economic Recovery Plan 2020 Table of Contents Economic Recovery Plan .................................................................................................................................. 3 Overview Of Recommendations ...................................................................................................................... 3 Greater Vancouver ......................................................................................................................................... 10 Helping Businesses Survive ............................................................................................................................ 11 Business Support Programs and Government Measures in Response to Covid-19 ................................ 11 Utilize Government Contracts to Support Businesses ....................................................................... 13 Travel: Focus on Economic Drivers ........................................................................................................... 13 Ease the Regulatory Burden and Stop the Layering of Taxes .................................................................. 14 Explore Solutions to Bridge the Childcare Gap ......................................................................................... 15 Transforming our Region ............................................................................................................................... 16 Measures to Better Connect BC ..............................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Museum of Vancouver 2016 Annual Report 1
    Museum of Vancouver 2016 Annual Report 1 Contents Letter from the Chair of the Board ..........................................................................................2 Letter From the CEO ...............................................................................................................3 2016 Board of Directors .........................................................................................................4 Feature Exhibitions ................................................................................................................5 Your Future Home: Creating the New Vancouver ................................................................................... 5 All Together Now .................................................................................................................................... 6 Vancouver in the Seventies ..................................................................................................................... 7 School & Education Programs .................................................................................................8 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 8 ESL Audience ........................................................................................................................................... 8 Animating History ..................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Walk21 Program Interior Pages.Cdr
    Table of Contents 2 Welcome 3 Sponsors 4 Acknowledgements 6-9 Orientation Information 10 Receptions 11-22 Program Schedule 11 Monday 3 October 15 Tuesday 4 October 19 Wednesday 5 October 23 Plenary Speakers 31 Pre-conference Walkshop 32 Posters - Monday 3 October 38 Breakout Sessions and Walkshops - Monday 3 October 51 Posters - Tuesday 4 October 55 Breakout Sessions and Walkshops - Tuesday 4 October 68 Breakout Sessions and Walkshops - Wednesday 5 October 83 Post-conference Workshops - Thursday 6 October 84 Destination Walks 88 Map of Metro Vancouver Venue Map on Back Cover Walk 21 XII, Metro Vancouver, Canada Table of Contents 1 Transforming the Automobile City Welcome Mayor Gregor Robertson, Mayor of Vancouver On behalf of the citizens of Vancouver, and my colleagues on City Council, I want to extend my warmest greetings to all those attending the Walk21 Conference. As Mayor, I am very pleased Vancouver was chosen to host this conference. We are very proud of the reputation Vancouver enjoys as one of the world's most beautiful and unique meeting destinations. Vancouver is the ideal location for the Walk21 conference. We take pride in our healthy-lifestyle attitude and Mother Nature is never more than a hop, skip and a jump away. I hope that in addition to attending the conference you are able to experience the many cultural and recreational activities the City has to offer. I know everyone involved in organizing the conference will ensure your time with us is special. Once again, welcome to Vancouver, and I hope you have a great time. Jim Walker, CEO, Walk England It was more than 20 years ago that I first visited Vancouver, appropriately with boots on my feet, a pack on my back and not much else other than, I admit, a plan to head for the hills as soon as I could (the mountains looked so inviting from the train!) But I got a great welcome, ended up staying much longer than I had intended, and really got to know this great City.
    [Show full text]