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Vancouver, BC Retail Q2 2018
MARKETBEAT Vancouver, BC Retail Q2 2018 ECONOMIC INDICATORS Market Overview An indicator of British Columbia’s booming economy and strong retail National 12-Month sales growth is that several Metro Vancouver shopping centres are 2017 2018 Forecast currently either expanding and/or redeveloping. Despite the rise in GDP Growth 1.3% 2.3% eCommerce, shopping malls across the region such as Park Royal, CPI Growth 1.5% 2.6% Oakridge Centre, Brentwood Town Centre, Lougheed Town Centre Consumer Spending and others, are redeveloping to refresh their looks, add square 1.5% 1.5% Growth footage, or build condominium towers on mall parking lots. Retail Sales Growth 3.8% 4.3% The second phase of McArthurGlen Group’s outlet mall near 12-Month Vancouver International Airport is tentatively set to open by the spring Regional Q2 17 Q2 18 Forecast of 2019 and will be 84,000 square feet (sf). A future third phase is Median Wage Rate $22.39 $26.58 planned, which will add another 65,000 sf. This outlet centre is the Labour Force Population 1.4% 1.6% number one sales performer in Canada with a reported $1,220 in Growth sales per square foot (psf) per annum, which also ranks it in third Unemployment Rate 5.1% 4.7% place in B.C. only behind Oakridge Centre at $1,579 psf and Pacific Source: Statistics Canada Centre at $1,531 psf. Source: International Council of Shopping Centres (ICSC) Shape Properties and HOOP (Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan) Economy are redeveloping a 28-acre site in Burnaby, referred to as “The British Columbia’s economy, fueled in large part by a strong Amazing Brentwood”. -
Belcarra Regional Park Meeting Location
BELCARRA REGIONAL PARK L B A U K N Twin Islands E T Buntzen B V Z U I E N E N Lake HOW TO GET THERE W T L Z A T E K D R N E I A INDIAN ARM From St. Johns St/Barnet Hwy in Port INDIAN ARM E T I L Z L PROVINCIAL MARINE PROVINCIAL PARK R A V . K Moody, go north on Ioco Rd. At the m PARK I E S r T T fourth light, turn left onto Ioco Rd, A R A A S I continue to 1st Ave and turn right. T L R n A I Follow 1st Ave, which becomes Bedwell L a Racoon Island W i LA Bay Rd, to the White Pine Beach C d R entrance. To get to Belcarra Picnic Area, n A SADDLE E I B continue on Bedwell Bay Rd to the RIDGE TR. e BUNTZEN LAKE 3-way stop. Turn left, travel uphill to v o RECREATION AREA C Tum-tumay-whueton Dr and keep right. r D (BC HYDRO) e I r EZ r V a I F ST A S T R Jug Island Beach A SUGAR MOUNTAIN TRAIL IL BELCARRA Jug Island A C PICNIC AREA A D Cosy Cove E SASAMAT M OUTDOOR CENTRE Y . R T MAT LK T R A S LOOP A A E I S G L ID R B L UN N I TZE A R T y d a R Sasamat H B y a l B Lake Whiskey C l ll A e e Bus Stop Cove E w w B d d e e (SEASONAL SERVICE) D B B BELCARRA N A Sunnyside Rd L IS WHITE PINE Hamber L ANMORE G BEDWELL RAI U T J EN Island HAV BEACH BAY TRAIL OD WO BELCARRA PICNIC AREA INSET y a T JUG ISLAND um BEACH TRAIL B -tu well Bay Rd m Bed a a Boulder r y r - Woodhaven w h y Island a IL ue c A Swamp to a IL l R n B e T D A D r R B R a T A r O r Y B t G a A IN c B L R l I P Meetinge place S e L A B L E l R T W ve n T D A E I N B I 1 O IOCO REFINERY P d Y r Cod Rock T L a A Bed R w r I ell Bay Rd r Periwinkle M D ADMIRALTY u A Notch BURRARD POINT B THERMAL ay TRAIL -tum -whu Maple Beach ADMIRALTY PLANT um eto POINT LANDS T n Dr Admiralty Point (PARKS CANADA) SPRINGBOARD TRAIL Whiteshell Bank PORT MOODY t Moody Por Ioco Rd Burns Point Carraholly Point BARNET MARINE PARK BURNABY Barnet Hwy PORT MOODY 0 0.5 1.0 km ROCKY POINT PARK 01/18 Information Picnic Shelter Viewpoint Hiking Trail Municipal Hiking Trail Parking Fishing Boat Launch Hiking/Cycling Trail Regional Park Toilets Scuba Diving Municipal Hiking/Cycling Trail Picnic Area Swimming Playground. -
Belcarra Barnacle
Belcarra Barnacle June 2021 Belcarra’s Community Newspaper Volume 42 Issue 5 Page 2 The Belcarra Barnacle June 2021 Words from the Editor: Welcome to your Community Newspaper! Published ten times yearly by Thank you all for your continuing support of your local THE BELCARRA BARNACLE. newspaper by sending us photographs and articles. Our purpose is to inform and involve. Please remember that the deadline for submissions is the 20th of The Barnacle welcomes all contributions about our local the month! community. Thanks to the residents who contribute, to the residents who If you would like to submit an article to the Editor, please proofread & to all residents who read the Barnacle! be advised that your name will be listed as the author. We also reserve the right to edit for brevity, accuracy, Michelle Montico, Editor clarity or taste. (604 528 0659) Photos and original art will be returned if requested. [email protected] HOW TO REACH US: Put submissions in the Barnacle Box outside the Village Office. Mail: The Belcarra Barnacle, 4084 Bedwell Bay Road, Belcarra, B.C. V3H 4P8. E-Mail: [email protected] For Out of Town Delivery: ADVERTISING RATES: (Ads must be copy ready) The Belcarra Barnacle is available for mail, for $20.00 per year to cover mailing expenses. Please send cheque and mailing information. Per Month 5 Issues 10 Issues (In Advance) (In Advance) DEADLINE: The 20th of each month. Black and White VOLUNTEERS: Card (2” x 3”) $20 $75 $120 Editor: 1/4 Page $25 $90 $150 Michelle Montico 604 528 0659 1/2 Page $50 $200 $300 Advertising: Sandra Rietchel 604 931 4262 Colour Members: Treasurer and Distributor: 1 Page (Back Page) $225 $1000 $1900 Clive Evans 604 931 7396 1 Page (Centre) $200 $900 $1750 Nora Boekhout 604 937 1127 1/2 Page (Centre) $150 $700 $1400 Deborah Struk Bonni Marshall Isabel Wilson Classified ads are free for Belcarra Residents. -
Biographies of the Richmond Oval Board Members
Biographies of the Richmond Oval Board Members MEMBER BIOGRAPHY Michael O’Brien (Chair) Michael O’Brien has been part of the executive group of the Airport Authority since immediately before the not-for-profit Authority assumed responsibility for the operation of Vancouver International Airport (YVR) in 1992. In the years since then, as the Authority transformed YVR into one of the world’s leading airports (including construction of a new runway, a new international terminal and creation of a customer driven organization) Mr. O’Brien has acted as Corporate Secretary to the Board of Directors and has been variously responsible for law, government relations, strategic planning, communications, community and environmental issues. Mr. O’Brien graduated from Trinity College, University of Toronto, with a Bachelor of Arts degree, and Osgoode Hall Law School at York University, with a Bachelor of Law degree. He is a member of the Bars of Ontario and British Columbia. Prior to working for the Airport Authority he spent six years in Ottawa in the headquarters of three different federal departments, including the Department of Transport. He started his career as a barrister with the Toronto law firm of Cassels, Brock. Mr. O’Brien serves on the Boards of the Fraser Basin Council, Providence Health Care Legacy Project and the Richmond Gateway Theatre Society, and is a member of the Richmond Olympic Business Advisory Committee. Roger Barnes Roger Barnes is a consumer marketing research and planning professional. His career has been with Nestle UK, as Marketing Director with Nabob Foods, and for the last 15 years he has operated Roger Barnes Marketing Planning, providing research and marketing advice to major tourism organizations and consumer products companies. -
Sergeant John Percy Hampton Bole
Sergeant John Percy H. Bole – WW1 Veteran: Vimy Ridge, Lens, 2nd Passchendaele By Catherine Elson, Belcarra South, BC, November 17th, 2017. Shortly after I submitted an article for the April 2017 issue of the ‘Belcarra Barnacle’ on the ‘Battle of Vimy Ridge’, I received Percy Bole’s “full/complete” CEF (overseas) military file. Wading through this information and the official War Diaries of the ‘54th Battalion’, as well as, doing quite a bit of digging and fact checking, I decided to update my original article… April 9th, 2017, marked the 100th Anniversary of the ‘Battle of Vimy Ridge’, and it is worth noting that a long-time Belcarra resident was one of the 97,000 Canadians who fought in this pivotal battle of World War 1 (WW1). John “Percy” Hampton Bole, the son of Judge Wm. Norman Bole who named ‘Belcarra’, was well-known in his own right as the patriarch of the “Bole Estate”, a 143-acre property that stretched south along the shoreline from the Belcarra picnic grounds to the ‘Admiralty Point Military Reserve’ and across to Bedwell Bay. He was also one of 620,000 Canadian soldiers who served in WW1. Percy “joined-up” in January 1916 (before conscription) and spent almost three years overseas. In 1917, he spent 10 months on the front lines, in France and Belgium, and fought in three major battles that took place that year: the ‘Battle of Vimy Ridge’ (April), the ‘Battle of Lens’ (August), and the ‘2nd Battle of Passchendaele’ (November). J.P.H. Bole, 1925 (CVA Port P185) ‘Witley Camp’, Surrey, England, October 17th, 1916. -
2018 Environmental Decisions
2018 Environmental decisions The following list details environmental decisions made by the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority for the period January 1, 2018 to December 31, 2018: On July 13, 2015, the port authority launched the project and environmental review (PER) process which includes four categories (A, B, C and D) of review to match the scale and potential impacts of the project under review. PER Date of # Proponent Project Location Cat. number decision 1 VFPA Infrastructure Delivery Centerm Expansion Project Vancouver D 15-012 4/18/2018 2 Fraser Grain Terminal Ltd. Fraser Grain Terminal - Grain Export Facility Surrey D 15-041 11/9/2018 3 VFPA Habitat Enhancement Program Tsawwassen Eelgrass Project Delta C 15-167 2/26/2018 4 Neptune Bulk Terminals (Canada) Ltd. Berth 2 Wharf Upgrade North Vancouver B 15-286-1 10/24/2018 5 Metro Vancouver GVS&DD Conveyance for North Shore Wastewater Treatment Plant District of West Vancouver C 17-090 4/20/2018 6 Imperial Oil Ltd. Burrard Inlet Pipeline Removal Port Moody C 17-091 1/19/2018 7 Columbia Containers Ltd. Columbia Containers Grain Elevator Removal Vancouver B 17-092 10/26/2018 8 Zhong Zhang and Xue Lian Sun Partial Demolition of Accessory Building and Construction of a Retaining Wall District of North Vancouver B 17-098 7/26/2018 9 Columbia Containers Columbia Containers Partial Bight Infill Vancouver C 17-102 6/15/2018 10 South Coast British Columbia Transportation SeaBus South Terminal Seismic and Accessibility Improvements Vancouver B 17-116 3/27/2018 Authority (TransLink) 11 Kiewit Ledcor TMEP Partnership (KLTP) KLTP - Temporary Construction Staging Parking & Barge Loading Vancouver C 17-122 5/22/2018 12 East South Dyke Holdings Ltd. -
Belcarra's Municipal Water System — a Journey That Spanned More Than a Century Researched and Written by Ralph Drew, Belcarr
Belcarra’s Municipal Water System — A Journey That Spanned More Than A Century Researched and written by Ralph Drew, Belcarra, BC, December, 2012. Belcarra’s journey toward construction of a municipal water system has spanned more than a century of pursuing that most basic domestic need — potable water. The first decade of the 20th-century was a period of explosive growth and prosperity in British Columbia. From 1900 to 1910, the population of Vancouver quadrupled from 25,000 to over 100,000 people, and it seemed like everybody was involved in property speculation and other money-making ventures. It was during that boom cycle that it became fashionable for newly moneyed Vancouverites to have a summer home on the spectacularly beautiful fjord of Indian Arm. In 1906, a syndicate of prominent Vancouver businessmen purchased District Lot 229 in Belcarra, also known as “Bole’s Ranch”, (1) and in 1908 the Bidwell Bay and Belcarra Company Limited created the subdivision (Plan 1095, DL 229) we have today around the shores of Belcarra Bay, Turtlehead Peninsula and Whiskey Cove. When the properties went to market, the domestic water source was supposed to be Sasamat Lake, but that water source was not pursued. In 1909, when sale of properties in the new subdivision at Belcarra began, newspaper advertisements indicated that a “water service” was planned: “A fine spring of the purest water bubbles out of the rocks by the beach [Medicine Man Spring]. Tenders are now being obtained for a water service, which will be installed almost immediately.” (2) By 1912, water was being supplied to the concession buildings and rental cabins at the Belcarra Park picnic grounds by the Belcarra Water Company owned and operated by Arthur Charles (A.C.) Ray, manager of the Bidwell Bay and Belcarra Company. -
AT a GLANCE 2021 Metro Vancouver Committees
AT A GLANCE 2021 Metro Vancouver Committees 19.1. Climate Action Electoral Area Carr, Adriane (C) – Vancouver McCutcheon, Jen (C) – Electoral Area A Dhaliwal, Sav (VC) – Burnaby Hocking, David (VC) – Bowen Island Arnason, Petrina – Langley Township Clark, Carolina – Belcarra Baird, Ken – Tsawwassen De Genova, Melissa – Vancouver Dupont, Laura – Port Coquitlam Long, Bob – Langley Township Hocking, David – Bowen Island Mandewo, Trish – Coquitlam Kruger, Dylan – Delta McLaughlin, Ron – Lions Bay McCutcheon, Jen – Electoral Area A Puchmayr, Chuck – New Westminster McIlroy, Jessica – North Vancouver City Wang, James – Burnaby McLaughlin, Ron – Lions Bay Patton, Allison – Surrey Royer, Zoe – Port Moody Finance and Intergovernment Steves, Harold – Richmond Buchanan, Linda (C) – North Vancouver City Yousef, Ahmed – Maple Ridge Dhaliwal, Sav (VC) – Burnaby Booth, Mary–Ann – West Vancouver Brodie, Malcolm – Richmond COVID–19 Response & Recovery Task Force Coté, Jonathan – New Westminster Dhaliwal, Sav (C) – Burnaby Froese, Jack – Langley Township Buchanan, Linda (VC) – North Vancouver City Hurley, Mike – Burnaby Baird, Ken – Tsawwassen First Nation McCallum, Doug – Surrey Booth, Mary–Ann – West Vancouver McCutcheon, Jen – Electoral Area A Brodie, Malcolm – Richmond McEwen, John – Anmore Clark, Carolina – Belcarra Stewart, Kennedy – Vancouver Coté, Jonathan – New Westminster Stewart, Richard – Coquitlam Dingwall, Bill – Pitt Meadows West, Brad – Port Coquitlam Froese, Jack – Langley Township Harvie, George – Delta Hocking, David – Bowen Island George -
Future Forward: the Rise of Urban Enclaves in Metro Vancouver
FUTURE FORWARD THE RISE OF URBAN ENCLAVES IN METRO VANCOUVER AN AVISON YOUNG TOPICAL REPORT SPRING 2019 2 Future Forward: The Rise of Urban Enclaves in Metro Vancouver Coquitlam Port Moody Coquitlam Centre FUTURE Flavelle Mill Brentwood Lincoln FORWARD Amazing Brentwood Concord Brentwood Solo District Gilmore Place Metro Vancouver has long Brentwood suffered from a shortage of Gilmore Town Centre Holdom Burquitlam developable land due, in large Lougheed part, to geographic and political The City of Lougheed SOCO boundaries that have limited Lougheed urban sprawl in the region. As land Town Centre prices have risen and the availability of development sites declined, investor Metrotown Oakridge-41st Station Square Coquitlam Avenue Oakridge Concord Metrotown interest has grown exponentially in the Oakridge Centre Patterson Fraser Mills Oakridge Transit Centre Langara-49th redevelopment of typical low-rise shopping Cambie Gardens Metrotown Avenue centres and the adjacent surface parking lots Langara Gardens Edmonds that form a substantial part of most traditional Southgate City car-centred regional malls. Edmonds New urban enclaves are emerging throughout Metro Vancouver as former regional shopping centres and transit-oriented sites Gateway are being redeveloped into mixed-use communities that house Surrey Bridgeport thousands of residents, and offer extensive experiential-retail King George Hub Georgetown opportunities, community amenities and entertainment and Surrey hospitality options – all of which will be accessible via existing Central transit lines. One of the largest such sites, Oakridge Centre, which Aberdeen Richmond King George Richmond Centre is currently being redeveloped by QuadReal Property Group and Lansdowne Centre Atmosphere Westbank in Vancouver, is already being marketed as Oakridge, The Lansdowne Living City. -
2019 Climate Action Revenue Incentive Program (CARIP) Survey
2019 Climate Action Revenue Incentive Program (CARIP) Survey 2019 Climate Action Revenue Incentive Program (CARIP) Survey Overview INTRODUCTION: The 2019 CARIP survey highlights and celebrates local government climate action in British Columbia. Local governments are required to submit the 2019 CARIP/ Carbon Neutral Progress Survey by June 1, 2020. Detailed survey instructions, FAQs and definitions can be found in the CARIP Program Guide for 2019 Claims. Once the survey is complete, please download a copy of your responses (you will be given the download link at the end of the survey). SURVEY CONTENT: 1. Section 1: Local Government Information 2. Section 2: Narrative Focus 2019 Corporate Climate Action2019 Community-wide Climate Action2019 Climate Change Adaptation Action 3. Section 3: 2019 Carbon Neutral Reporting Section 1 – Local Government Information Name of Local Government:* ( ) 100 Mile House, District of ( ) Abbotsford, City of ( ) Alert Bay, The Corporation of the Village of ( ) Anmore, Village of ( ) Armstrong, City of ( ) Ashcroft, The Corporation of the Village of ( ) Barriere, District of ( ) Belcarra, Village of ( ) Bowen Island, Municipality ( ) Burnaby, City of ( ) Burns Lake, The Corporation of the Village of ( ) Cache Creek, Village of ( ) Campbell River, City of ( ) Canal Flats, Village of ( ) Capital Regional District ( ) Cariboo Regional District ( ) Castlegar, City of ( ) Central Coast Regional District ( ) Central Saanich, The Corporation of the District of ( ) Chase, Village of ( ) Chetwynd, District ( ) Chilliwack, -
For Leaserichmond, Bc Anchor & Cru Opportunities in New Development No
FOR SALE RETAIL STRATA INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY LANSDOWNE ROAD & GILBERT ROAD FOR LEASERICHMOND, BC ANCHOR & CRU OPPORTUNITIES IN NEW DEVELOPMENT NO. 3 & LANSDOWNE | RICHMOND, BC Aberdeen Centre Lansdowne Centre Lansdowne Road (11,195 VPD) Richport Town Centre Richmond Centre No. 3 Road (26,132 VPD) CACTUS CLUB CAFE DERICK FLUKER* JONATHAN BUCKLEY* 604 638 2125 604 630 0215 [email protected] [email protected] *Personal Real Estate Corporation FORM REAL ESTATE ADVISORS FOR LEASE ANCHOR & CRU OPPORTUNITIES IN NEW DEVELOPMENT NO. 3 & LANSDOWNE | RICHMOND, BC OPPORTUNITY VANCOUVER River Rock The site is located on the corner Lansdowne and No. 3 Road, directly across the Casino street from the Lansdowne Skytrain Station and Lansdowne Centre Mall. Plans VANCOUVER include approximately 22,000 sf of retail space on the ground floor, 78,000 sf INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT of office, and 360 units of residential in four towers above. The site also benefits Richmond Olympic Oval Yaohan Centre from its prominent corner location, underground parking, and a streetfront plaza SUBJECT SITE area planned for Lansdowne Road. Aberdeen Centre LOCATION Central at Lansdowne Mall Garden City Gilbert Road Richmond The subject site is located in the heart of Lansdowne Village in Central Richmond, Westminster Highway Hospital Richmond Centre an area that is designated Downtown Mixed-Use in the Richmond Official Canada Line Community Plan. The area is forecast to grow by 9.3% by 2021, and 18,490 people Garden City Road currently reside within a 1 km radius of the site. Plans for the Central Richmond area include high-density development consisting of a mix of uses including residential, office, and retail. -
Student Handbook 2019-2020
STUDENT HANDBOOK 2019-2020 Copyright: Richmond School District ©2019 No part of this may be reproduced without permission from the Richmond School District (#38) Richmond, BC, Canada 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS WELCOME TO THE RICHMOND SCHOOL DISTRICT ............................................................................ 5 RIE CONTACT INFORMATION ............................................................................................................. 6 RIE DISTRICT ADMINISTRATORS .................................................................................................................... 6 RIE ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTS AND COORDINATORS ............................................................................. 7 SCHOOL-BASED RIE COORDINATORS ................................................................................................. 8 SCHOOL YEAR CALENDAR ................................................................................................................... 9 B.C. GRADUATION PROGRAM .......................................................................................................... 11 CHOICE AND FLEXIBILITY ............................................................................................................................. 12 LOCALLY DEVELOPED COURSES .................................................................................................................. 12 EXTERNAL LEARNING CREDITS ...................................................................................................................