2020 09 14 Regular Council Agenda PACKAGE
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Vancouver Canada Public Transportation
Harbour N Lions Bay V B Eagle I P L E 2 A L A 5 A R C Scale 0 0 K G H P Legend Academy of E HandyDART Bus, SeaBus, SkyTrain Lost Property Customer Service Coast Express West Customer Information 604-488-8906 604-953-3333 o Vancouver TO HORSESHOE BAY E n Local Bus Routes Downtown Vancouver 123 123 123 i CHESTNUT g English Bay n l Stanley Park Music i AND LIONS BAY s t H & Vancouver Museum & Vancouver h L Anthropology Beach IONS B A A W BURRARD L Y AV BURRARD Park Museum of E B t A W Y 500 H 9.16.17. W 9 k 9 P Y a Lighthouse H.R.MacMillan G i 1 AVE E Vanier n Space Centre y r 3 AVE F N 1 44 Park O e s a B D o C E Park Link Transportation Major Road Network Limited Service Expo Line SkyTrain Exchange Transit Central Valley Greenway Central Valley Travel InfoCentre Travel Regular Route c Hospital Point of Interest Bike Locker Park & Ride Lot Peak Hour Route B-Line Route & Stop Bus/HOV Lane Bus Route Coast Express (WCE) West Millennium Line SkyTrain Shared Station SeaBus Route 4.7.84 A O E n Park 4 AVE 4 AVE l k C R N s H Observatory A E V E N O T 2 e S B University R L Caulfeild Columbia ta Of British Southam E 5 L e C C n CAULFEILD Gordon Memorial D 25 Park Morton L Gardens 9 T l a PINE 253.C12 . -
The Ground Slate Transition on the Northwest Coast: Establishing a Chronological Framework
Portland State University PDXScholar Dissertations and Theses Dissertations and Theses Summer 10-10-2014 The Ground Slate Transition on the Northwest Coast: Establishing a Chronological Framework Joshua Daniel Dinwiddie Portland State University Follow this and additional works at: https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds Part of the Anthropology Commons Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Dinwiddie, Joshua Daniel, "The Ground Slate Transition on the Northwest Coast: Establishing a Chronological Framework" (2014). Dissertations and Theses. Paper 2076. https://doi.org/10.15760/etd.2075 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of PDXScholar. Please contact us if we can make this document more accessible: [email protected]. The Ground Slate Transition on the Northwest Coast: Establishing a Chronological Framework by Joshua Daniel Dinwiddie A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Anthropology Thesis Committee: Kenneth M. Ames, Chair Shelby L. Anderson Virginia L. Butler Portland State University 2014 © 2014 Joshua Daniel Dinwiddie Abstract This thesis establishes the earliest appearance of ground slate points at 50 locations throughout the Northwest Coast of North America. Ground slate points are a tool common among maritime hunter-gatherers, but rare among hunter-gatherers who utilize terrestrial subsistence strategies; ground -
Aboriginal Relations Committee Agenda Package
GREATER VANCOUVER REGIONAL DISTRICT ABORIGINAL RELATIONS COMMITTEE REGULAR MEETING Thursday, October 6, 2016 1:00 p.m. 2nd Floor Boardroom, 4330 Kingsway, Burnaby, British Columbia R E V I S E D A G E N D A1 1. ADOPTION OF THE AGENDA 1.1 October 6, 2016, Regular Meeting Agenda That the Aboriginal Relations Committee adopt the agenda for its regular meeting scheduled for October 6, 2016, as circulated. 2. ADOPTION OF THE MINUTES 2.1 February 4, 2016, Regular Meeting Minutes That the Aboriginal Relations Committee adopt the minutes of its regular meeting held February 4, 2016, as circulated. 3. DELEGATIONS 4. INVITED PRESENTATIONS Corrected 4.1 Allyson Rowe, Associate Regional Director General, Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada Subject: Effective Partnerships with Municipalities Additions to Reserve/New Reserves Policy, Safe Drinking Water for First Nations Act (formerly Bill S-8), and First Nations Commercial and Industrial Development Act (FNCIDA) 4.2 Anita Boscariol, Director General, Negotiations West, Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada Subject: Developments in Treaty and Negotiations 1 Note: Recommendation is shown under each item, where applicable. October 7, 2016 ARC - 1 5. REPORTS FROM COMMITTEE OR STAFF 2017 Budget and Annual Work Plan – Aboriginal Relations Designated Speaker: Ralph G. Hildebrand, General Manager, Legal & Legislative Services/Corporate Solicitor That the Aboriginal Relations Committee endorse the 2017 Aboriginal Relations Work Plan and Budget as presented in the report “2017 Budget and Annual Work Plan -
Alberni-Clayoquot Regional District
Alberni-Clayoquot Regional District BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEETING WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2014, 1:30 pm Regional District Board Room, 3008 Fifth Avenue, Port Alberni, BC AGENDA PAGE # 1. CALL TO ORDER Recognition of Traditional Territories. 2. APPROVAL OF AGENDA (motion to approve, including late items required 2/3 majority vote) 3. DECLARATIONS (conflict of interest or gifts) 4. ADOPTION OF MINUTES a. Board of Directors Meeting – September 10, 2014 7-15 THAT the minutes of the Board of Directors meeting held on September 10, 2014 be adopted. b. Alberni Valley Committee Meeting – September 19, 2014. 16-18 THAT the minutes of the Alberni Valley Committee meeting held on September 19, 2014 be adopted. 5. PETITIONS, DELEGATIONS & PRESENTATIONS (10 minute maximum) a. Presentation – UBCM Longtime Service Award – 35 years, Director Mike Kokura, Electoral Area “B” (Beaufort) b. Mr. Lefty Williams, Jericho Road Church, regarding Unity Celebrity Event 6. CORRESPONDENCE FOR ACTION a. REQUEST FOR NOMINATION 19-23 Port Alberni Junior Hockey Society, September 15, 2014 regarding invitation to appoint a representative to the Hockey Society. THAT the Board of Directors put out an expression of interest in November 2014 for a volunteer to sit on the Alberni Valley Bulldogs Society representing 1 ACRD Board Agenda October 8/14 Page 2 the Alberni-Clayoquot Regional District Board of Directors. 7. CORRESPONDENCE FOR INFORMATION a. ISLAND COASTAL ECONOMIC TRUST 24-32 Voting with their Fee: Actual Quality of Life Rankings Tech Incubator will Help Create, Grown Companies on the Island Artisans at Work: Économusée Model Helps Tourists Experience the Best of BC b. -
Admiralty Point Federal Lands
City of Report to Committee Richmond , I To: General. Purposes Committee Date: April 16, 2013 From: Dave Semple File: 01-0157-20- General Manager, Community Services EPAR1/2013-Vo101 Re: Admiralty Point Federal Lands Staff Recommendation That a letter be sent to the Federal Government in support of the request to transfer the Admiralty Point Federal Lands in fee simple to Metro Vancouver, or lease the lands in perpetuity, to ensure the preservation of these lands for park-use by future generations of Metro Vancouver's citizens. r, Community Services Att.l REPORT CONCURRENCE INITIALS: REVIEWED BY CAO 3837483 GP - 14 April 16, 2013 - 2 - Staff Report Origin The 99-year lease between the Government of Canada and Metro Vancouver for the use of the 76 hectare Admiralty Point Military Reserve recently expired. The Government of Canada is considering options for disposition of the land including the potential disposition to a third party. The Admiralty Point Military Reserve land is an important waterfront portion of Belcarra Regional Park. The Council of the Village of Belcarra recently passed a resolution requesting the Government of Canada lease or transfer the land to Metro Vancouver in perpetuity to ensure the preservation of these lands for park-use by future generations. The Village of Belcarra is seeking support for this position from other regional municipalities including Richmond. Analysis Metro Vancouver staff recently presented a report to the Metro Vancouver Environment and Parks Committee recommending the following: That the Board: a. affirm the importance ofthe Admiralty Point waterfront lands as part ofBelcarra Regional Park and the Regional Parks system (as described in attachment 1 - Statement ofSignificance),' and b. -
Ioco Townsite Historical Timeline Researched and Written by Ralph Drew, Belcarra, BC, February 2021
Ioco Townsite Historical Timeline Researched and written by Ralph Drew, Belcarra, BC, February 2021. 1791 — The Spanish Pilot José María Narváez explores English Bay (outer Burrard Inlet) and assigns the name ‘Boca de Florida Blanca’ to Burrard Inlet. Narváez also meets some aboriginals who tell him their name for the North Arm (Indian Arm) of Burrard Inlet is ‘Sasamat’. 1792 — Captain George Vancouver explores Burrard Inlet on June 13th and names it ‘Burrard’s Canal’ on his chart. 1792 — The Spanish Captains Galiano and Valdés enter Burrard Inlet on June 22nd and explore Burrard Inlet’s North Arm (Indian Arm), and assign the name ‘Brazo de Florida Blanca’ on their chart. 1802 — The Spanish publish a map showing the 1792 survey by Captains Galiano and Valdés, and assign the name ‘Canal de Sasamat’ to Burrard Inlet and its North Arm (Indian Arm). 1858 — The first two groups of Royal Engineers leave England in September and arrive in time to take part in the declaration of the Colony of British Columbia at Fort Langley on November 19th with James Douglas as Governor. 1859 — Colonel R. C. Moody proclaims the site for the capital for the new Colony of British Columbia on February 14th and names it Queenborough (today’s New Westminster). 1859 — Lieutenant G. S. Blake, R.M.A. (Royal Marine Artillery) conducts the first inland expedition between the Fraser River and Burrard Inlet in April, exploring up the Brunette River to Burnaby Lake and along a three-mile stretch of Still Creek. The expedition served to determine the most suitable overland route (the ‘North Road’ route) between ‘Queenborough’ and Burrard Inlet. -
Bibliography of British Columbia Archaeology
Bibliography of British Columbia Archaeology In the first BC Studies "Special Issue" on archaeology in 1970 I compiled an initial twenty-five page "Bibliography of Archaeology in British Colum bia" which listed most publications about British Columbian prehistory up to that time. That bibliography proved a useful tool for British Columbia archaeologists, and was partially updated in the 1980-81 "Special Issue." That included another twenty pages of references, although there was no intent to make that listing fully comprehensive. In tune with the accelerating pace of change in almost all aspects of modern life, since 1981-82 there has been a veritable explosion in the quantity of material written about British Columbia prehistory. Keeping abreast of that information has been distinctly challenging for even pro fessional archaeologists, and much of it has fallen beyond the reach of other British Columbians, including the politicians and bureaucrats who exert some control over how archaeology is carried out in this province. At the very least, there should be a basic bibliographic file of professional articles and papers so that interested observers can easily determine what has been written about their favourite area or topic. Thus, I hope the following bibliography will provide an initial view of the large body of written information about British Columbia's prehistory, and prove a useful tool for both archaeologists and non-archaeologists. I have tried to compile all significant monographs, books, and journal articles of any date not listed in the two previous bibliographies, although naturally most references post-date 1980. I have also included many graduate theses bearing on British Columbian prehistory from the three universities (British Columbia, Simon Fraser, and Victoria) as well as many of the longer and more significant unpublished "permit-reports," or "Cultural Resource Management reports," submitted to government or industry. -
Historical Archaeology
ISSN 0047-7222 Vol. XVII, No.4 October, 1985 HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY - On the Chilkoot Trail ... page 2 - All about Bricks . .. page 7 The Midden Publication of the Archaeological Society of British Columbia Editor: Kathryn Bernick Subscription is by membership in the Subscriptions and Mailing: Toni Crittenden A.S.B.C., or $10.00 a year (5 issues). Overseas $12.00 a year. Check or postal Submissions and exchange publications should be directed to money order in Canadian funds payable to the A.S.B.C. Address to: Midden the Editor. Contributions on subjects germane to B.C. Subscriptions, P.O. Box 520, Station Archaeology are welcomeq: maximum length 1,500 words, no A, Vancouver, B.C. V6C 2N3. footnotes, and only a brief bibliography (if necessary at all). Guidelines available. Telephone inquiries: 873-5958. The contents of The Midden are copy· The next issue of The Midden will appear mid-December. righted by the A.S.B.C. It is unlawful to reproduce all or part by any means whatsoever, without permission of the Contributors this issue: John Adams, Jennifer Hamilton, Jeff Society, which is usually gladly given. Murray, Terry Spurgeon. Publication of The Midden is made Production assistance: Sharon Keen, Phyllis Mason, Brad possible in part by a grant from the British Columbia Heritage Trust. Smart, Terry Spurgeon. THE COVER: The Stampeders' tent camp on Lake Bennett in the spring of 1898. Photo: Public Archives Canada, C-674. The Society The Archaeological Society of British President: Don Bunyan (321-8127) Columbia is dedicated to the protection of Vice President: Colin Gurnsey (980-7429) archaeological resources and the spread of Membership Secretary: Molly Hay (738-1095) archaeological knowledge. -
Developing Bowen Island's Crippen Regional Park, 1978-2005
The Recreation/Ecology/ Heritage Triangle: Developing Bowen Island’s Crippen Regional Park, 1978-2005 J.I. Little* anada’s parks historians have focused mostly on national and provincial parks,1 but it is particularly in the country’s regional protected spaces, as historians Keith Thor Carlson andC Jonathan Clapperton point out, “that important issues about the meaning of ecology, bio-diversity, human activity and even heritage, are being negotiated.”2 As in the United States, where the rapid postwar expansion of suburbia fostered the open-space movement,3 the growing population of British Columbia’s Lower Mainland led to the creation of a regional parks system in 1967.4 In the words of the executive director * My thanks to Ben Bradley for sharing his extensive knowledge of BC parks history; to the journal’s two readers for their helpful comments; and to Bowen Island’s Sue-Ellen Fast, Will Husby, David Smith, Maureen Nicholson, and John Rich for their responses to my questions; as well as to Cathy Bayly of the Bowen Island Museum and Archives and Janice Dudas of the Metro Vancouver library for their generous assistance. 1 On national parks, see, for example, the essays in Claire Elizabeth Campbell, ed., A Century of Parks Canada, 1911-2011 (Calgary: University of Calgary Press, 2011). On British Columbia’s provincial parks, see James D. Anderson, British Columbia’s Magnificent Parks: The First100 Years (Madeira Park, BC: Harbour Publishing, 2011); and BC Studies 170 (Summer 2011), special issue on provincial parks. As an atypically large urban park, Stanley Park has also received considerable attention from historians. -
Newsletter of the Entomological Society of British Columbia
Boreus Newsletter of the Entomological Society of British Columbia June 2009 Volume 29 (1) Table of Contents The Executive ............................................... 2 Publications of the ESBC .............................. 3 Society Business........................................... 5 Message from the President ......................... 5 Mt. Maxwell Ecological Reserve, Salt Spring Island, May 13, 2009. ESBC 2009 Elections.................................... 6 Candidates for ESBC Director 2009 – 2011... 6 Candidate for ESBC President-Elect 2009 – 2010................................................................ 9 Announcements .......................................... 10 2009 Entomological Society of B.C. Annual General Meeting and Symposium ............................................ 10 ESBC 12th Annual Graduate Student Scholarships .. 12 Joint Annual Meeting of the Entomological Society of Canada and Entomological Society of British Columbia Vancouver, October 31 – November 2, 2010............ 16 Upcoming meetings and conferences......... 17 Carina Maslovat, takes a photograph of the Red-listed Year 2009 ...................................................... 17 plant, Lomatium grayii, at Mt. Maxwell Ecological Reserve, Year 2010 ...................................................... 19 May 2009. Year 2011 ...................................................... 19 Notes from the Field.................................... 20 Entomological Humour................................ 23 In Memory.................................................. -
Reconstruction of Prehistoric Diet in British Columbia Using Stable-Carbon Isotopic Analysis
RECONSTRUCTION OF PREHISTORIC DIET IN BRITISH COLUMBIA USING STABLE-CARBON ISOTOPIC ANALYSIS Brian Stewart Chisholm B.A. Simon Fraser University 1 977 THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in the Department of Archaeology @ Brian Stewart Chisholm 1986 SlmlN FRASER WI VERSITY Mvember 1986 All rigttsremml. Thiswork may not be rep- in whole or in part, by photoapy or other means, without permission of the author. Approval Name: Brian Stewart Chisholm Degree: Ph.5. Archaeology Title: Reconstruction of prehistoric diet in British Columbia using stable-carbon isotopic analysis. Examining Committee: Chairman: Prof. Phi 1 Hobler Dr. D.Erle Nelson Dr. Richard Shutler Jr. ' )# Senior Supervisor - / Dr. Rolf Mathewes Department of Biology Simon Fraser University Date Approved: November 19 , 198 6 b' " Dr. Tom Pedersen External Examiner Department of Oceanography University of British Columbia PARTIAL COPYRIGHT LICENSE 1 hereby grant to Slmn Fraser Unlverslty the right to lend my thesis, proJect or extended essay (the tltle of which is shown below) to users ot the Simon Fraser University Library, and to make partial or single copies only for such users or In response to a request from the library of any other university, or other educational Institution, on its own behalf or for one of Its users. I further agree that permission for multiple copying of thls work for scholarly purposes may be granted by me or the Dean of Graduate Studies. It is understood that copying or publication of this work for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permlsslon. -
Regular Meeting of Council
REGULAR MEETING OF COUNCIL TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2017, AT 6:30 P.M. COUNCIL CHAMBERS, 1027 ALDOUS STREET, SMITHERS, B.C. A G E N D A 1. CALL TO ORDER 1.1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT The Town of Smithers acknowledges the Gidimt'en Clan and the Witsuwit'en people, on whose unceded traditional territory we live, work and play. 1.2 APPROVAL OF AGENDA (including Supplemental Items) 1.3 PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD (one minute per speaker regarding agenda items only). 2. PUBLIC HEARING 3. APPROVAL OF MINUTES 3.1 REGULAR - NOV 28 Minutes of the Regular Meeting of Council held November 28, 2017. 4. BUSINESS ARISING FROM THE MINUTES 4.1 OUTSTANDING COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE TOPICS • Fairgrounds Management Agreement between the Town and the BVAIA • Revitalization Taxation Exemption Program - February 20, 2018 (tentative) • Ranger Park Building Upgrade • Economic Development Strategy. Page 1 of 239 Agenda of the Regular Meeting of Council being held December 12, 2017. 4.2 ITEM 7.1.1 - REGULAR - NOV 28 - LIBRARY/ART GALLERY FACILITY The following motion was postponed at the November 28, 2017, Regular Meeting of Council: R.17.509 Wray/Browne THAT Council directs Staff to prepare a report regarding possible reductions in parking requirements in public zones, prior to issuing the Request for Proposals for the proposed Library and Art Gallery Facility, for Council's consideration. 5. PETITIONS AND DELEGATIONS 5.1 ACCESS SMITHERS UPDATE Presentation by G. Snowdymond providing an update on Access Smithers' projects. 6. COUNCIL REPORTS 6.1 COUNCILLOR ATRILL 6.1.1 ACCESS SMITHERS - OCT 10 Minutes of the Access Smithers meeting held October 10, 2017.