Giants Steps - The Laval News
Transcription
Giants Steps - The Laval News
Introducing, our new Pilaros Pita! Also available in pie format It’s not a trend, it’s a tradition! www.pilaros.com 1.888.PILAROS • 450.681.6900 Laval’s English Paper, Since 1993 Vol. 24 • No. 01 • January 9, 2016 • Tel.: 450-978-9999 • www.lavalnews.ca • E-mail: editor@newsfirst.ca • 34, 200 copies Giants Steps celebrated Xmas with Alex Galchenyuk See page 2 See pages 11 - 14 PHOTO: Martin C. Barry • Newsfirst Alex Galchenyuk is seen here with his sister, Anna, and Giant Steps School director Thomas Henderson. 4591, boul Samson, Laval 450 934-7004 COME SEE US IN PERSON AND ExPERIENCE THE DIFFERENCE Diabetes centre Ostomy centre Blood pressure measuring Glucose and cholesterol testing Pregnancy tests Vitamins & Natural products Medical & Orthopaedic supplies Pharmacist consultation Free transfer & pharmacological analysis of your file • Free delivery OPEN: MONDAY TO FRIDAY 9 A.μ. - 7 P.μ. SATURDAY 9 A.μ. – 5 P.μ. SAMIR BOURAS HAROUTIOUN SPIROS FENGOS KALAIDJIAN Habs star lends support to school for autism disorders PHOTO: Martin C. Barry • Newsfirst M a r t i n C. B a r r y The students at Giant Steps School in west end Montreal got a special treat just before Christmas last month: the Montreal Canadiens’ star forward Alex Galchenyuk dropped by on Dec. 16 to hand out gifts, pose for photos and autograph souvenir items. A new experience “I think this is a little bit different from being on the ice,” Galchenyuk told a small gathering of photographers and journalists who turned up for the event held at the Montreal region’s largest and best-known school for young people afflicted with autism spectrum disorders. “But I think it gives me personally the exact same feeling as playing on the ice in front of 21,000 people,” he continued. “Whether you score a goal or not, you try to do the best you can and put a smile on the kids’ faces to make them happy and so that they enjoy their day.” Making a difference There are a lot of ways a professional athlete can make a contribution towards helping to make the world a better place, added Galchenyuk, “but by being here I can see these kids for myself and get a chance to talk to them.” Galchenyuk said he was impressed with the work accomplished at Giant Steps. “What they do here is to try developing everyone’s full potential. I know that during my career there were a lot of people who pushed me on and helped make me who I am right now. My sister (Anna) has helped me to become involved in community events like this to get me to visit places like Giant Steps. That’s one of the reasons I’m here to help see that these kids get what they need to help fulfill their dreams in life.” Exceptional Results The Habs’ Alex Galchenyuk, left, brought gifts and signed souvenirs for Giant Steps students, including Samuel Lavigne, centre, seen here with Giant Steps staff member Brigitte Lagarde. Raising awareness School director Thomas Henderson said the students and staff were thrilled to have Galchenyuk as a guest. “It means a great deal to us when people like Alex get involved in the community,” he said. “It raises awareness of our school and of autism in general. We’re always involved in different kinds of projects in the community: we’re working with municipalities Excellent Service MLS: 13502697 as well as other organizations to try to bring support to the larger autism community. We do everything we can.” Giant Steps Foundation board member Nicholas Katalifos also expressed his gratitude for the visit by Galchenyuk. “As a school community, we were thrilled to welcome Alex Galchenyuk to Giant Steps and were very impressed with his heartfelt interaction with our students,” Katalifos said in an e-mailed response. MLS: 26648232 Voula MLS: 26539083 Kottaridis Real Estate Broker SALES MASTER PRESIDENT’S SALES ACHIEVEMENT GOLD AWARD AWARD AWARD 2013 2011 2010 CLASSIC D L SO Chomedey Bungalow close to all amenities. Garage and good size lot. Call me for an appt. MLS: 18854797 • STE-DOROTHEE MEGA CENTER • TERIYAKI franchise for sale. Restaurant with 35 seats. Vast Parking. Very Clean. Motivated Seller! MLS: 25439828 • REDUCED $179,000 • CHOMEDEY CONDO 4½, close to everything. Close to shopping, schools and transportation. Easy to show!! MLS: 27083898 Bungalow situated close to everything. 3+1 bedrooms, finished basement, garage, good size lot. Very quiet area. Easy to visit! Asking 299 000$ MLS: 21570263 NEW LISTING L’Île-Perrot: Prestigious, open concept, corner lot with many pluses. 2 + 1 bedrooms, 2 full bathrooms. Hardwood floors, huge kitchen, dining room. Semi-finished basement, with possibility of other 2 bedrooms. 2-3 car garage & 10 feet high doors. Beautifully landscaped. A must see! MLS: 24862328 • LACONIA, GREECE • 514.993.5010 450.687.4904 • REDUCED $529,000 • agentvk@gmail.com 2 MLS: 21500396 • CHOMEDEY • REAL ESTATE AGENCY FREE evaluation of your home with no obligation! “Needless to say, the kids were very excited about meeting a local sports hero and the Canadiens organization has much to be proud of,” he added. “This was a wonderful way for us to end off an active and successful 2015 and we look forward to a new year that will include a major conference, continuation of our municipal project and annual auction.” D L SO • STE-ROSE • Impeccable cottage with 4+1 bedrooms 2+1 bathrooms. Beautiful open concept, living room, dining room, kitchen, dinette with bistro. Gorgeous backyard with huge deck, cabanon and above ground pool. Close to transportation, schools, shopping. A must see!! Call me for an appointment. A year-end treat ILES PATON: - REDUCED! Beautiful Condo close to everything. Offering 2 bedrooms and garage. Asking $169,000. • The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 • VIMONT • Spacious well kept property, 4 bedrooms on one level with mezzanine, huge kitchen with isle. Building on a corner private lot with 15 ft cedars and huge terrace. Irrigation system. Possibility of other bedroom downstairs. Situated close to everything.Pave-unis garage and entrance. Must See! Very attractive and well built VILLA located in a very nice town of Metamorfosis in Lakonia Greece.The town exists since 375 AD,originally named ASOPOS or LEFKI.Actually the area has been inhabited since the Bronze Age,3000 B.C by the Leleges. There are Ancient Greek,Byzantine and Roman Artifacts found. It is built at the end of the Molaoi planes. Liberals announce details of new summer jobs program Laval-area Liberal MPs (from the left) Angelo Iacono (Alfred-Pellan), Eva Nassif (Vimy), Yves Robillard (Marc-Aurèle-Fortin) and Fayçal El-Khoury (Laval-Les Îles) have announced that a larger number of students will be able to find work this summer under a federal program providing employment subsidies to non-profit groups and small businesses. Laval’s four Liberal Members of Parliament gathered together recently to announce a federal program that will allow small businesses in Laval to obtain subsidies for the hiring of students 15 to 30 years of age this summer. M a r t i n C. B a r r y Jobs doubled “We are currently working together to place the largest number of students in our four ridings,” Yves Robillard, the MP for MarcAurèle-Fortin, said during a press conference held by the four to announce the program. “This isn’t just a question of repeating something that’s already been done in the past,” added Alfred-Pellan Liberal MP Angelo Iacono. “Our government, our Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, has decided to double the number of jobs and to show an even greater sense of openness towards young people who are our future. Groups and businesses “During the summer of 2016, more students and more organizations will be able to benefit,” he continued. “What is also great is that we will be helping businesses with fewer than 50 employees to get started at the same time. This is an initiative that will be helping a lot of people, many of whom are in Laval. That’s why our hat is off to our government.” Iacono said the new Liberal government decided to double funding for the program taking into account the high level of unemployment among young people today. “If you look at the amount of unemployment among those 15 to 24 years today, which for 2015 is more than 13 per cent, it is more than double the rate for those 25 years of age and older,” he noted. Gaining experience According to Vimy Liberal MP Eva Nassif, those applying for the grants will have to meet criteria established by the federal agency handling the program: Service Canada. “These opportunities will give a chance to students to enter the workforce while gaining confidence in themselves and learning about work environments,” she said. “By investing in our cultural industries and the creative sector in order to create employment while reinforcing our rich Canadian identity, we can also build the strength of the summer employment program in these key sectors which are becoming increasingly important in the economy for young people,” said Nassif, while adding that the program will also be taking into account the 150th anniversary of Canadian confederation in 2017. Money for studies As part of the program, the federal government will be paying up to 100 per cent of the salaries of students employed by non-profit organizations and 50 per cent for those employed by businesses, said Laval-Les Îles Liberal MP Fayçal El-Khoury. “Youths sometimes have trouble saving money for their studies,” he said. “This program should help them. We have two goals: helping more students to acquire work experience in their chosen field, while providing support to non-profit businesses and small businesses which need workers for the summer. We believe that this is one of the most beneficial programs around.” How to apply Applications for the program are being accepted from Jan. 4 to Feb. 26, with decisions from Service Canada expected to be announced by early May. Additional subsidies will also be paid to non-profit groups and businesses that hire students who are handicapped. Additional information and application forms can be viewed and downloaded from the Service Canada web site:www.servicecanada.gc.ca/eec. ...simply the best S Y A W OT & FRESH L A H Everyday available a huge variety of treats and coffees Enjoy Mr. Puffs served with the topping of your preference: Honey, caramel, sugar, Chocolate, Maple syrup Spinach pies - Cheese pies - Croissants Bougatsa (Greek custard pie with phyllo) Café latte - Espresso - Cappuccino - Freddo Cappuccino Don’t forget your favorite Café Frappe to go ! ...ideal for ALL OF YOUR EVENTS 4879 Boul. Notre-Dame, Chomedey, Laval • 450-934-7007 • www.mrpuffs.com The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 • 3 Opinion & Editorial Trudeau shines as our photo-op PM But if Joe and Jane Frontporch sense that Trudeau's all sizzle, and no steak, he's toast Most people - most normal people, anyway - pay little or no attention to politics. They're Joe and Jane Frontporch, and they're busy. Ferrying the kids to and from hockey practice, getting stuck in traffic, worrying about paying the mortgage or the rent, trying to catch up on their sleep. Busy. They don't have time for voluminous political party platforms or sitting through ministerial speeches or reading departmental press releases. In the digital era, they're overwhelmed by too much information - what U.S. writer David Shenk calls "data smog" - so they just tune it all out. That's why the politicians who attract the most attention are the Donald Trump and Rob Ford types - guys so outrageous, they break through the data smog and capture everyone's attention. But smoking crack or making racist statements - while indisputably newsworthy isn't always the best way to win elections. So politicians and politicos instead devote most of their waking hours to dreaming up ways to pierce the smog and capture the attention of voters. They concoct ways to simplify what they're doing, or what they want to do. Thus, back in 1992, Bill Clinton was all about the economy, stupid. At any point in his 40-year career, Jean Chretien was the unity guy - vive le Canada! And in 2008, Barack Obama represented "real change." Justin Trudeau's Liberals liked Obama's 2008 slogan so much that they stole it in 2015. "Real change" was their mantra, repeated over and over, until it became their brand. In the early days of the new Grit government, real change is taking place, to be sure - in fiscal policy, on law and order issues, on the refugee file. No question, it's a real change from what preceded it. But something else is happening, too. And it's this: Justin Trudeau's government is the TV Government. TV is pictures, and pictures are power. More than any prime minister in our lifetime, Trudeau seems to understand that they best way to captivate Canadians - the best way to pierce the data smog - is to be all about pictures. The feds have, in recent years, cut back on investment in affordable housing programs. More dangerously, Canada’s existing stock of affordable housing (roughly 620,000 units) is at the end of their contractual lives and risk falling into disrepair or being converted into high-priced condos. But, the truth of the matter is, governments are not the originating source of the problem. And their efforts, while necessary, are only addressing the most obvious symptoms of a deep-seated disease in modern capitalism. Ever since the ‘70s and the rise of monetarist-inspired economics with its ‘free market’ dogmas, Western wage earners has been losing ground to global capital. MIT economist Peter Temin believes these dogmas have created a Dual Economy. There’s one economy for the upper third of society. These people own capital, their own businesses and/or homes and other forms of capital. Or they have professional qualifications that guarantee them an upper middle-class lifestyle. These folks can afford to buy houses, educate their children at the best schools and lead the good life. For the remaining two thirds the situation is quite different. They tend to live paycheck to paycheck and are slowly being priced out of home ownership. Their children have little hope of rising up the ladder into the elite classes. Distressingly, as real estate prices continue to outpace the economy in general, these families are falling - in increasing numbers - down the property ladder; many are being forced into ‘core need’. Ironically, this was not a problem in the past. From 1948 (when records first starting being kept) until the early ‘70s, productivity and wages tended to grow in lock step. In other words rising wages in Western developed economies like Canada were keeping pace with the growing post war economy. Middle class home ownership was common and affordable on one family income. From 1973 onward wage growth has slowed almost to a crawl while productivity continues its steady rise. What does all this mean? It means inequality is structural and the affordable housing crisis is expected to become more acute in future. How do imbalances in capitalism create a problem in housing? If we think of our economic productivity as the ‘value’ of labour and wages as the ‘cost’ of labour, it’s clear that since the ‘70s there’s been a massive transfer of value from labour to the owners of capital. This transfer is disadvantaging wage-earners by keeping wage growth well below its true value. But that’s not all: this additional value is not being consumed and spread evenly throughout the economy. It’s accumulating as surplus and plowing into assets; creating unsustainable bubbles in the property and stock markets, thereby compounding the affordable housing problem. These kinds of structural flaws in our economy weren’t supposed to happen in Canada. After all, we’re the ‘rich’. Economists describe Canada as part of the ‘developed’ world; other poorer nations are classified as ‘developing’ hoping, one supposes, to become as ‘rich’ as the industrialized West. We got to our present state of prosperity in Canada by being innovative, fair and inclusive. It’s now time to dust off these traditional values and correct these imbalances in modern capitalism before it’s too late. Robert McGarvey Canada’s affordable housing crisis about to get worse The affordable housing crisis is an obvious symptom of a deep-seated disease in modern capitalism Canada is a modern success story; with a functioning democracy, a tolerant, multi-ethnic society and an economy that’s the envy of the world. So how can it be that so many of our citizens can’t afford to put a roof over their heads? It’s shocking to learn that many working Canadians are unable to gain a foothold on the property ladder. What’s going on? According to a recent study (covering six provinces) conducted by a coalition of affordable housing groups and the Vancouver City Savings Credit Union, Canada’s housing crisis is bad and about to get worse - much worse. The study determined that increasing numbers of Canadian families are in distress. Shockingly, more than one in five Canadian families are spending more than half their gross income on shelter costs, while (more than) 40 per cent of renters are in ‘core need’ (paying more than 30 per cent of gross monthly income on accommodation). Ironically, this problem is more acute in suburban centres than it is in the superheated inner core of major cities. It is common in academic circles to blame the federal government for the problem. 3860, boul. Notre-Dame, # 304, Laval, QC H7V 1S1 Tel: 450-978-9999•Fax: 450-687-6330 E-mail: editor@newsfirst.ca 0 34,20 Copies 4 Distributed in Chomedey, Ste-Dorothée, Fabreville, Laval-sur-le-Lac & Val des Brises H7W•H7T•H7V•H7S•H7X H7Y•H7P•H7R•H7E Publishers: George Bakoyannis George S. Guzmas Graphic Design: Anne Marie Kmeid Elena Molter General Director: George Bakoyannis Sales Manager: Peter Stavropoulos peter@newsfirst.ca VP Sales & Marketing: George S. Guzmas sales@newsfirst.ca Advertising Consultants: Jean Paul Chamberland Sylvia Petridis Editorial Staff: Martin C. Barry Savas Fortis Fabienne Mercier Kavul Sheikh Nancy Girgis James Ryan Alberto del Burgo Cynthia Abraham Admin. Assistant Alexandra Sevapsidis So, there he was, greeting Syrian refugees at Toronto's airport in the middle of the night. Or sitting on the steps of Parliament, talking to a school kid having a bad day. Or posing for Vogue magazine or taking a Maclean's magazine pop quiz. Or taking a bunch of hospitalized kids to see Star Wars. Or - day after day after day cheerfully posing for selfies with average folks. Some people are not impressed. Interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose sniffed: "While on the international stage, we saw leaders of the western world come together, coalescing around the fight against ISIS, the impression that was left with Canadians and the international community was that our prime minister was consumed with taking selfies," Ambrose said, hastening to add: "I mention this because it was mentioned to me many times by constituents." She added that last bit, of course, because she knows it's working. Trudeau does, too. Asked about the selfies at town hall event run by Maclean's, Trudeau verbally shrugged. "It's not about image, it's about substance," he said. "You have to get to know people." Of course. For sure. But it's more than that. Trudeau was pretty young when his dad rubbed shoulders with U.S. President Ronald Reagan, 30-odd years ago. But even a little kid could understand that Reagan was much more preoccupied with images than words. One of Reagan's most influential advisers, Michael Deaver, didn't hide it. "I have always believed that impressions are more important than specific acts or issues . . . I believe TV is a great boon to us in judging our leaders. It lets us see all the dimensions that, in the past, people could only see in person: the body language, the dilation of the eye, the way they perspire. We see them when they are tired, worried, under great crises. If television focuses on somebody every day, it shows all the dimensions." So too Justin Trudeau, whom the camera loves and - to his critics - loves the camera right back. Trudeau knows, perhaps, that leaders are measured by the impressions they create, not the policies they promulgate. There's a risk in all of this, naturally. If, six months from now, Trudeau is branded as Prime Minister Selfie - if his administration is simply regarded as a four-year-long photo op, punctuated only by state dinners and the occasional foreign trip - he'll be in trouble. He needs to be more than the callow and shallow caricature his opponents suggest he is. But if his visuals strategy works - and it's working so far - he's golden. He can end up in 2023 as Reagan did: beloved by his partisans, and remembered as the great communicator by all. So far, so good. But it can all end pretty swiftly, if Joe and Jane Frontporch sense that you're all sizzle, and no steak. Warren Kinsella The opinions on THIS PAGE reflect the consensus of Editorial Board. Layout: Media Trek Distribution: TC. TRANSCONTINENTAL Printing: TC. TRANSCONTINENTAL National Representation: Member of Quebec Community Newspapers Association & Canadian Community Newspapers Association TEL: 1 800 361-6890 ext. 615 FAX:(514) 597-1932 w w w . l a v a l n e w s . c a Deadline for commercial advertising by Friday at 3 p.m. Deadline for classified advertising by Friday at 3 p.m. ISSN number : 1923-0605 Annual subscription : $7995 • Per copy : $1 • The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 Publishers’ Liability for Error: The publishers shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. The publishers’ liability for other errors or omissions in connection with any advertisement is strictly limited to publication of the advertisement in any subsequent issues or the refund of any monies paid for the advertisement. Articles published reflect writers’ opinions, but not necessarily the opinion of this newspaper. Entire Contents Copyright 2016 Centre de pédiatrie sociale de Laval gets $1,500 grant christmas trees collection LDR Liberal MNA Saul Polo praises centre for efficiency (TLN) Laval-des-Rapides Liberal MNA Saul Polo was at the Centre de pédiatrie sociale de Laval recently to announce a $1,500 subsidy from the Liberal government to the organization. “After making several visits to the Centre de pédiatrie sociale de Laval, I could see the efficiency of the services provided by its members, but also the different needs being met by these services,” said Polo who is also parliamentary assistant to the Minister for Economy, Innovation and Exports. “That’s why I decided to offer the financial support of $1,500 so that the clients of the centre could continue to benefit from quality services,” he continued. “During this holiday season, the needs of our residents are at the heart of my priorities.” The subsidy was made available through the Quebec government’s Soutien à l’action bénévole program. It was welcome news for Centre de pédiatrie sociale executive-director Mylène Du Bois. Polo also noted the financial support provided to the centre by Dynacare, a company specializing in health care solutions. Government of Canada increases duration of Employment Insurance compassionate care benefit The Honourable MaryAnn Mihychuk, Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Labour, announced the coming into force of a previously announced increase in the duration of the Employment Insurance (EI) compassionate care benefit, which will provide additional financial security to Canadian workers and their families in times of need. The Minister also said that the Government will work towards providing more generous leave for caregivers in the future. The Government has committed to making the compassionate care benefit more flexible, easier to access and more inclusive, she said. Compassionate care benefits provide temporary income support to eligible individuals who must be away from work to provide care for a gravely ill family member at risk of death. Effective January 3, 2016, the enhanced benefit, announced in 2015, allows claimants to collect up to 26 weeks of benefits, up from the current 6 weeks. Further, the period during which benefits can be taken is expanded to 52 weeks (up from 26 weeks). Benefits can be shared between family members. Eligibility for compassionate care benefits remains the same, including the requirement for a medical certificate signed by a doctor attesting to the family member’s condition. Corresponding changes to the Canada Labour Code will come into force at the same time to ensure that the jobs of employees in federally regulated enterprises remain protected while they avail themselves of compassionate care benefits under the EI program. Quick Facts It is estimated that up to 6,900 claimants per year could benefit from the enhanced measure that will take effect in January 2016. In 2013–14, program costs for the current compassionate care benefit amounted to $12 million. An additional $37 million is being added annually to extend the duration of the compassionate care benefit over and above the current program costs. The measure will have a negligible impact on the EI premium rate. Quote “I am glad to announce the coming into force of an increase in the duration of the compassionate care benefit. Going forward, we have pledged to work toward giving Canadians more support by making this benefit more flexible, easier to access and more inclusive.” – The Honourable MaryAnn Mihychuk, Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Labour January 4-22 Same day aS the recycling collection remove all decorations and put your tree (not in a plastic bag) at the outer end of your property before 7 a.m. the trees will be reduced to woodchips, which will then be transformed, among others, into building materials, litter for animals or to be used for gardening. ? 311 ― www.laval.ca The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 • 5 City hopes to break ‘ice-jam’ with permit regulations overhaul PHOTO: Martin C. Barry • Newsfirst Major changes announced at Laval real estate developers forum Left, Laval mayor Marc Demers and Pierre-Luc Girard, president of the Laval Chamber of Commerce and Industry which co-sponsored the real estate forum. The Espace Montmorency project was unveiled during Laval’s real estate forum. M a r t i n C. B a r r y Contemplating the advances and changes made by his administration in the past two years to encourage real estate development in Laval, Mayor Marc Demers compares the city to an ice-clogged river in the springtime. Trusted care since 1996 Dr Martin Scutt, DPM PODIATRIST & Assoc. 17 Years Experience New York College of Podiatric Medicine (1996) Clinician at UQTR FOOT PAIN? We can help! • HYPROCURE PROCEDURE (Flat Feet) • BUNION & HAMMERTOE SURGERY (minimum incision) • • • • Foot, Ankle and Knee Pain Custom high quality orthotics Ingrown Toenails EFFECTIVE treatments for Plantar Warts • LASER TECHNOLOGY (fungal nails) • Pediatric Foot Problems 450.937.5055 podiatrelaval.com 4084 le Corbusier, Suite 4072 Laval Rosemere 450.979.0303 6 “Ice jams accumulate,” he said in an address at the Château Royal on Nov. 24 for the opening of a day-long real estate forum at which hundreds of developers and consultants were the guests. “In the case of the city, instead of ice let’s just say it was problems,” he added. Rebuilding confidence In Demers’ opinion, the biggest problem contributing to the jam was that “Laval lacked political leadership for many years.” While former mayor Gilles Vaillancourt and a host of accomplices now face long, drawn-out criminal trials on charges of corruption, the new mayor’s task is to rebuild a bond of confidence between the city and property developers. “We need your help,” he told the developers. “The City of Laval will be built collectively by the people who are present in this room. Your success is our success. We are absolutely certain of this.” The city is obviously aware of some of the key issues that developers are complaining about regarding their interaction with the municipality. The forum’s organizers placed cards on each of the tables where the developers were seated, calling to their attention such problems as “long delays in construction permits being issued.” Streamling the system That alone is one of the most frequently-heard complaints in almost any municipality – not just Laval. But it could easily be worse now in Laval, given various precautions and safeguards municipal administrators have had to put into place in the wake of the corruption scandal. In his speech, Demers said the forum was being held largely to unveil to the developers the end result of a year of work and consultation by a city council committee mandated to find solutions to problems like the one just mentioned. “But this is just a first step,” he added. “It’s not the end, not the conclusion, and we have to be in continuous movement to improve ourselves, to remain adept and to be a municipality that works with people who are building the city ... Our goal, as I said, is that everyone in the room here can say at some point or another that things have become faster and more efficient to do business with the City of Laval. Because in business time is money.” New procedures coming In an interview with the Laval News, Demers • The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 Left, Laval city councillor Raynald Adams, development consultant Robert Libman, Laval executive-committee vice-president David De Cotis, and Laval city councillor Paolo Galati shared thoughts during the real estate development forum held by the City of Laval on Nov. 24. said: “We’re going to have new procedures, new rules for the issuing of different permits, and this should allow us to react faster. When people want to have a permit to build something, we should be able to deliver that permit in a much faster time – in half the time it used to take.” Demers said the city is also working to make the rules simpler than they were before. “Before when you wanted to build something, you had to get one permit at engineering, another permit at environment, another at urban planning. “But now we will gather all of them in one permit,” he continued. “And if you have a big project, there will be somebody at the city who will take your case in charge and help you with all the procedures. Our main goal is to make it much easier and much faster to deal with the City of Laval than it was before.” According to Laval executive-committee vice-president David De Cotis, the City of Laval now feels confident enough to offer developers a pledge that on average within 30 days of applying for a permit “there will be an official answer from the city,” he said. The policy came into effect on Dec. 1. mayor of the City of Côte St. Luc, Libman also sat on the City of Montreal’s executive-committee with responsibility for urban planning, before Côte St. Luc demerged from Montreal a decade ago. Five-year-long backlog ‘Espace Montmorency’ project At the same time, though, De Cotis acknowledged that the city has a backlog of permit applications which in some cases stretch back as long as five years. “We’re promising that within the next six months the backlog will be reduced to 50 per cent and we’re hired additional employees for this purpose,” he said. “This is very promising and part of Mayor Demers’ vision for Laval to grow into one of the most prominent cities within Quebec.” Perhaps because it’s still too early to see much improvement, one Montreal area real estate development consultant who attended the forum was sceptical of the city’s efforts. “It’s painful and tortuous, or at least it has been for the past few years,” said Robert Libman who has witnessed the issue from two angles. A former Former mayor now consultant Libman, who now works in Montreal as an architectural and real estate development consultant, said he was “very hopeful and optimistic that this new process will start to streamline and improve the efficiency of project approval” in Laval. All the same, according to Libman, his client is still waiting for approval for a 500-unit condo project on Souvenir Blvd. at the corner of Ampère in Pont-Viau after four years, as the city tries to decide whether to extend Souvenir Blvd. During the forum, an example of the sort of development the city hopes will become more commonplace in Laval was unveiled. The project is the result of a partnership of financiers and developers that includes Claridge Investments, Montoni Development and the Quebec Federation of Labour’s Solidarity Fund. Set to rise next to the 10,000-seat Place Bell in Laval des Rapides, Espace Montmorency, costing an estimated $420 million, will have 10 buildings as high as 20 storeys, with shops, offices, a hotel and entertainment facilities. It will be constructed on a 277,000-square-foot property near the Montmorency Métro to which it will also be connected. “Espace Montmorency fits right in with our vision of a modern project that creates a genuine living environment and that has the potential for tremendous spinoffs,” said Pierre Boivin, president and CEO of Claridge. On the Montoni web site, the company says Espace Montmorency will be 20 minutes from downtown Montreal and “will help create a new downtown in Laval.” Coupal turns independent, while dumping Mouvement Lavallois Souvenir-Labelle rep joins ranks of disaffected city councillors PROGRAMS AT CULINARY & BUSINESS CENTRE M a r t i n C. B a r r y Laval city councillor for SouvenirLabelle Jean Coupal, who was elected with the victorious Mouvement Lavallois in the 2013 municipal election, has decided to leave the governing party. Coupal joins the ranks of a growing number of disaffected city councillors who prefer sitting as independents rather than with the council majority or the official opposition, which is perceived by some former members and critics as ineffective. Business Hours: Mon. to Fri. 8am to 10pm R E G I S T E R T O D AY ACCOUNTING 5731 (1350 HRS) Mayor Demers reacts “Mr. Coupal had views which were very much his own on a number of subjects,” Mayor Marc Demers said in a statement to the Laval News reacting to Coupal’s decision. “He had difficulty staying with the majority, which ended up isolating him within the team. I believe he will be more at ease as an independent and I wish him good luck. However, it’s still a fact that the citizens of his district voted for a candidate from the Mouvement Lavallois, which they no longer have.” Was critical of ML In a statement Coupal issued last Monday, he said he has been sitting as an independent since December. Coupal said he did this “in order to better represent the interests of the residents” of his district, as well as the interests of all Laval residents, and “not just from behind the closed doors of the Mouvement Lavallois caucus.” Coupal said what ultimately made him decide to leave the ML was Laval city council’s recent awarding of a sole bidder computer services contract to an IT consultant who will be receiving nearly $3,000 a day for a total of more than $400,000 for 1,000 hours of work. History repeating? “In the beginning, the Mouvement Lavallois was created to oust Mayor Vaillancourt’s PRO des Lavallois,” Coupal said, referring to the former mayor’s defunct municipal party. “This was carried off with brilliance in November 2013. “Since then, unfortunately, the Mouvement Lavallois has been determined to repeat the era of one-party rule in council,” he added, “by means of money which allows it to eliminate all opposition and to manage public funds without having to worry about the capacity of taxpayers to pay and the equity between them and public servants.” Keeping count Immediately following the 2013 election, the Mouvement Lavallois held 17 of the 21 council seats. Action Laval won two (Aglaia Revelakis in Chomedey and Paolo Galati in St-Vincent-de-Paul) and formed the official opposition, while Jacques St-Jean (Saint-François) and Michel Trottier (Fabreville) sat as independents. In August 2014, Galati decided he was no longer interested in Action Laval and formally joined the Mouvement Lavallois. Since then, he’s been prominent at a good number of public functions where he’s STARTING A BUSINESS 5764 (330 HRS) PROFESSIONAL SALES 5821 (900 HRS) visibly become close to the second most powerful elected official in Laval: executive-committee vice-president David De Cotis. Trottier forms new party While Jacques St-Jean remained steadily independent during this time, Michel Trottier – who was one of the most outspoken, demonstrative and vocal council members from the beginning – decided to forego his autonomy in July 2014 and join Action Laval which was and continues to be led by 2013 mayoral candidate JeanClaude Gobé, who has said he intends to run for mayor again in 2017. For the opposition party, this made up for the loss of Galati. Then in September 2015, Trottier decided he’d had enough with Action Laval and announced he would be sitting again as an independent, leaving Aglaia Revelakis as the only Action Laval member sitting on city council. By last month, Trottier was announcing the creation of a new political party, the Parti Laval, in preparation for the November 2017 municipal elections. For the time being, he is the interim leader of the party. ML loses three more In the meantime, the Mouvement Lavallois has lost the support of three other councillors who were originally elected under the party’s banner. In September 2014, Laval-des-Rapides city councillor Pierre Anthian decided to leave the ML to sit as an independent. But he was present alongside Michel Trottier in December when the latter announced the formation of his new party. In November 2014, Councillor Alain Lecompte (l’Orée-des-Bois) also decided to quit the ML, citing a climate of distrust within the ruling party, to sit as an independent. Councillor Jean Coupal is the latest member of Laval city council to go down the same route. HOTEL RECEPTION 5783 (735 HRS) SECRETARIAL 5712 (1485 HRS) LEGAL SECRETARIAL 5726 (450 HRS) TRAVEL SALES 5736 (1245 HRS) PROFESSIONAL COOKING 5811 (1470 HRS) CONTEMPORARY PROFESSIONAL PASTRY MAKING 5842 (450 HRS) FOOD & BEVERAGE 5793 (960 HRS) WINE SERVICE 5814 (450 HRS) 514.381.5440 9955 Papineau Ave, Montreal Qc H2B 1Z9 www.piuscentre.com Follow us on The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 • 7 The 2016 STL Budget: Staying the course and developing public transportation in Laval TLN-The Société de transport de Laval’s Board of Directors has adopted a new fare policy as a part of its 2016 budget. Our new budget is set at 136.6 million dollars which is a 4.2% increase over the 2015 budget. Despite these changes, the development of public transit and customer satisfaction remain our core priorities. “Our Laval-based administration truly understands the importance of being dedicated to the promotion of public transit and 2016 will be no exception” said David De Cotis, President of the STL’s Board of Directors. “Municipal contributions to the STL will be increased by 7% while local rate increases are limited to 1.6% on average. This is our way of thanking the people of Laval for their ever-increasing loyalty to public transit.” The results of the most recent Origin Destination (OD) Survey bear witness to the revitalizing effect of public transit in Laval. Between 2008 and 2013, Laval has seen a 28% increase in the use of public transit. In comparison, the entire metropolitan area only had a 10% growth rate. Over this same period, Laval has seen a marked population growth that expanded faster our fleet of buses. This is a unique situation for the entire Montreal region. The share of market played by public transit has increased by two points. From 18% in 2008, to the current 20%, this means that one out of every five Lavallers takes the bus every morning during rush hour. We are predicting a 1% increase in ridership for 2016. Our service offer will be increased by Get Up to 2% including the addition of a fifth accessible bus line for people with reduced mobility and people in wheelchairs. The largest project yet 2016 will see the beginning of largest project the STL has ever taken on. “We will be implementing a series of preferential measures for buses (PMB) which will mean faster travel times for our clients” says Guy Picard, Director General of the STL. “In total, 227 intersections will be upgraded to smart traffic lights that will prioritize our vehicles when they are running behind schedule. Compared to driving, these measures will make the STL even more fluid, efficient and competitive.” Guy Picard adds “This will send a clear message about the quality of our service and that the STL is re-affirming its vow to quality. This formal commitment will mean punctual service, cleanliness, the provision of meaningful information, the right to express opinions and be heard and most importantly, comfort. To pursue these goals, we will be continuing the acquisition and replacement of bus shelters which contributes to the sustainability of public furniture at bus stops and ensures the comfort of our clients. The STL will also be acquiring 28 new air-conditioned hybrid buses to make travelling more comfortable.” 2016 will also see the completion of our 20-million-dollar garage expansion project with will allow us to house an additional 60 buses. This three-year capital expenditure program will come to $165.5 million in total. 30 Sustaining the Horizon 65+ fare The fare initiatives introduced in 2014 will remain in effect for 2016. The Horizon 65+ fare which has been a rousing success with 19,000 Lavallers to date is being maintained. The STL is the only transportation company in Canada to provide residents 65 years of age and older to travel for free using the Horizon 65+ fare which is valid throughout its service area with no restrictions. The STL will also be expanding its family fare policy by allowing families to travel without having to pay a fare for children on weeks when school is out to help improve social inclusion. The STL will also be reducing its fares by 40% in July and August for youths between the ages of 12 and 16 and it will be maintaining the $1 smog day fare. Not other transportation company has gone so far to encourage its riders to use public transit. Metropolitan governance 2016 will be a landmark year for public transit as the foundation of a new Metropolitan Governance is being established that will see the adoption of Bill 76 which is designed to improve the efficiency of public transit. The STL wholeheartedly believes in the guiding principles of this project and it intends to collaborate fully with the Transition Committee to improve this ambitious reform. The STL will however continue to ensure that this new governance plan does not limit its ability to innovate through technological of fare policies. It will therefore remain attentive and ensure that seniors can continue to ride for free throughout Laval. Rigour and continuous improvement The STL has undertaken several actions over the past few years to improve its management practices and ensure Lavallers that the funds it has been allotted are managed with rigour and efficiency. This care is equally true of its planning methods, heritage management projects and in the management of its preventative and curative maintenance programs. All sectors of the company are subject to continuous improvement activities. These efforts were lauded by the 2015 Grands Prix québécois de la qualité where we were awarded the Grande Mention. This recognition is the highest distinction awarded annually by the Government of Quebec to private businesses and public organizations selected according to the quality of their management and their overall performance. “We are particularly proud of this prize which recognizes the work done by all of our employees at the STL as it reflects more than fifteen years of hard work to continuously improve and innovate” says David De Cotis. “Our budget includes several measures dedicated to the improvement of our services but the people of Laval deserve more. 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MAARTEN | ARUBA 2254/1015 8 • The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 2015: A year of sweeping change and rising austerity If 2015 was a year when people wanted change, they ended up getting it with the election of a new federal government led by Justin Trudeau. But it was also a year that was defined by a growing awareness of terrorism, the City of Laval’s 50th anniversary, and the financial impact of an “austerity” program imposed by the Quebec Liberal government. officers were ticketing driv- News about the enforcement. Although the JANUARY ers who coasted through stop notices of infraction he received from the city The year was often dominated by news of global terrorism. In early January, the first edition of 2015 of the Laval News included coverage on its front page of then-Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s reaction to the attack on Charlie Hebdo in Paris early in the new year. In his statement, Harper was unequivocal in referring to the shootings as a terrorist attack, while others weren’t initially so certain. Prompted by a reporter during a press conference called to react to the shootings, official opposition leader Tom Mulcair agreed that the available facts fit the definition of terrorism. Laval mayor Marc Demers was among the local political leaders to express condolences and solidarity with the attack’s victims. “Even if this attack is infinitely sad, it is also revolting, since it was committed with the idea of muzzling freedom of expression,” he said. In a gesture of solidarity the city’s flags in front of city hall were half masted including the flag of France. In possible anticipation of an indirectly related situation that would change significantly by year’s end, NDP MPs from Laval complained the Harper Conservative government appeared to be deliberately delaying refugee and immigration applications from Syria. For their part, the Tories said they had security concerns. “I have eight immigration files from Syria and not one of them is progressing,” Marc-AurèleFortin NDP MP Alain Giguère, who would be defeated in the November election, said in an interview with The Laval News. He said he suspected Islamophobia on the part of the government as being behind the delay. FEBRUARY In February, the Laval Police Department wasn’t apologizing despite the fact its traffic signs – even when icy road conditions made coming to a complete stop difficult. According to Demetris Tsekeris, well-known owner of the Atomic Restaurant on Souvenir Blvd., the LPD’s ticketing operation was the talk of Chomedey. The Feb. 21 edition of The Laval News drew attention to another injustice allegedly committed by officials with the city. This time car shelters were the focus. A crackdown by the City of Laval on car shelters set up a few inches too close to the sidewalk drew reaction from some citizens. “ We ’ v e been living in this house since 1985 or 1986 and since that time we’ve never had a problem,” George Giorgiou complained in an interview with The Laval turned out to be only warnings, beginning in the winter of 2016 the city is handing out tickets to new offenders with penalties in the hundreds of dollars. February 2015 was also a big month for members of Chomedey’s Holy Name of Jesus Parish: it was the 50th anniversary of the church which was founded during the same year the City of Laval became a municipality. During a gala celebration held at the Château Royal, an historical account of the church’s beginnings was delivered by Deirdre Rochefort, a parishioner from the beginning. Fr. John Colford was Holy Name of Jesus Parish’s first pastor. Current pastor Fr. Peter Sabbath is only the second pastor in 50 years. ► Continued on page 10 The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 • 9 Château Royal to help send him to the Special Olympics World Summer Games taking place in July in Los Angeles. In all, $9,000 was raised from the $20 a ticket spaghetti dinner event which drew 320 friends, supporters and admirers of Perez, 25, whose swimming exploits have been reported by the Laval News for at least the past eight years. With 2015 being an election year, NDP leader Thomas Mulcair shot out of the starting gate early to declare to Τhe Laval News in a featured interview in the March 21 edition that Prime Minister Stephen Harper is “playing a dangerous game by targeting Muslims” in his remarks as well as with the Conservative government’s anti-terrorism measures. ◄ Continued from page 9 MARCH The front page of the March 7 edition of the Laval News featured a news story in which the city’s executive-committee vice-president, David De Cotis, accused Quebec of short-changing Laval in funding for autoroute and highway repair projects. “Laval is the third most important city in the province,” De Cotis said in an interview following a press conference in Montreal where the annual funding allotments were announced. “I feel like Laval got the short end of the stick in terms of our only having $60 million compared to Montreal which got $1.8 billion and the Montérégie got over $550 million.” “He’s finger-pointing at them and he’s singling them out and it is undignified of a Canadian prime minister to say that about one faith group as opposed to another,” declared the candidate for the prime minister’s office who was leading in the polls at that point. Mulcair, who used to represent Chomedey in the Quebec National Assembly, suggested that Canada should be careful not to implement measures which could end up polarPJC 297_pub journal coul. ang:Layout 10:58 Page 1 During the same month, supporters of Andrew izing1its 25/06/08 citizens. Perez, a Chomedey resident with autism who has As many people are aware, March 17 is St. excelled at swimming, held a fundraiser at the Patrick’s Day. But for one woman who lives EKATERINE KARAINDROS PHARMACY PJC 297_pub journal ang:Layout PJC journal coul. coul. ang:Layout 1 1 PJC 297_pub 297_pub journal coul. ang:Layout 1 25/06/08 25/06/08 25/06/08 10:58 10:58 10:58 Page 1 Page Page 1 1 in Laval’s Auteuil district, the date is also very important as it’s her birthday. On March 17 last year, Germaine Gauthier celebrated her 100th birthday. leave behind for future generations on the occasion of Laval’s 50th anniversary,” Demers said of the project. “The residents of Laval told us they wanted more public gathering places, and that is what we are giving them outside the place that is their own home.” Elected officials from the city were on hand at her home in a senior citizens’ retirement residence to bestow their congratulations. Laval executive-committee vice-president David De Cotis called Gauthier’s milestone “an achievement in itself. I am actually envious of Mme Gauthier. I hope that I can have as healthy and prosperous a future as she.” Although winter sometimes starts out mild, it can also keep the worst for the later part of the season – which can be as late as March. On March 21 (which is officially the first day of spring), the Laval News featured a story about a SainteRose resident who had to go without running water for three weeks because the exceptionally cold weather had frozen his pipes. Sandro Cappadoro’s home on Sainte-Rose Blvd. was just one of the many households in his area where the water pipes remained frozen despite attempts by city work crews to thaw them. With the federal election taking place in October, electoral fever started to take hold in Laval with the announcement of some of the first candidates. News of Conservative candidates Roland Dick’s and Anthony Mavros’s campaign launches was covered in our April 4 edition. While the two did not go on to win in the Oct. 19 election, their supporters included Conservative Senator Leo Housakos and a good number of Laval city councillors, including executive-committee members. 4691 Samson Blvd. 4691 Samson blvd. 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Addressing a gathering of more than 100 parents who turned out at the CSDL’s École d’éducation internationale to hear the grim news, Lortie went so far as to suggest that graduation rates at CSDL schools could begin falling as a result of the cuts. Chomedey-based professional wrestler Christopher Angelakis, a.k.a. Chris Cruze, Chris Angel and most recently Chris Aros whose day job is at a Samson Blvd. fish market, was the subject of a feature article in which he spoke of his aspirations to join the ranks of the world’s top wrestlers. Wrestling is half art mixed with sport, according to Aros. “Everyone knows it’s pre-determined,” he said in an interview. “But the one thing that even me and others of my generation take offense at is when some people say it’s fake. Because we do actually put our safety on the line all the time.” Although the NDP’s performance in the federal election was a bitter disappointment for the party’s supporters, many believed in May that the party was on its way to a federal electoral victory because the Alberta NDP had just triumphed in a provincial election and formed a government. “When Canadians have a thirst for true change, they turn to the NDP,” Mulcair said in a speech at Montreal’s Palais des Congrès. “They said we wouldn’t be able to pierce through in Alberta. The NDP has just formed the government. And now they’re saying we still can’t win at the federal level. Let’s wait to see on Oct. 19.” Another big news item in May was the appointment of Sen. Leo Housakos as official speaker of the Senate by the Harper Conservative government. “Senator Housakos has represented Quebecers and all Canadians in the Upper Chamber with dignity and dedication for over six years,” said Harper. “The experience he has gained as a member of several standing committees and as Speaker pro tempore of the Senate will serve him well as he takes on this important role.” Housakos’s tenure was short: following the election, a new speaker was appointed by the Liberal government. JUNE Four associations of English-speaking Quebecers with a common interest in getting the Liberal government to reconsider its decision to abolish school board elections announced this month that they were creating a panel that would examine and analyze options for choosing future school commissioners. Jennings said the panel started out with the assumption that Quebec’s English-speaking minority has a constitutional right to steer its own course in education. “The framework is our constitutional protection, which states very clearly in our constitution that the Englishspeaking minority community of Quebec has the right to control and manage its education.” The 2015 edition of the Sir Wilfrid Laurier Foundation’s most popular fundraiser, the Lobster Shack, raised nearly $27,000 for educational resources and projects at the Sir Wilfrid Laurier School Board. “To our communities, business partners, educators, administrators, parents and volunteers, thank you for being here tonight to ensure our children have a bright future ahead with unlimited possibilities,” SWLSB chairwoman Jennifer Maccarone said in an address. “Our students are at the heart of our actions and our priorities.” Agape, the largest English-language charitable services organization in Laval, said in its annual report issued this month that the provincial government’s sweeping reorganization of social services in Laval meant Agape’s loss of a $15,000 subsidy for a dependencies abuse program. However, thanks to a grant from Health Services Canada, Agape was able to continue working with persons dependent on drugs, gambling and alcohol. The Bloc Québécois in the riding of LavalLes Îles announced on June 18 that it had chosen Nancy Redhead, a woman originally from Peru, to represent the party in the federal election. During a meeting held at St-Léopold church in Sainte-Rose, Redhead expressed strong support for the Bloc’s mission to safeguard Quebec’s francophone language and culture by seeking political autonomy and independence from Canada. She also expressed great admiration for the historical legacy of the Québécois. JULY AUGUST Quebec’s latest investment in the Société de Transport de Laval, $13.6 million, was announced on Monday July 6 at STL headquarters in the Laval industrial park. “The STL, which has shown vision, must be congratulated for the pertinence of these projects,” said Laval-des-Rapides Liberal MNA Saul Polo. “The population of Laval and especially transit users will benefit the most.” “I can only say how happy I am with the subsidy given by Quebec to the STL,” Mayor Marc Demers added. “The projects affected by this subsidy will allow the transit agency to again improve its service.” More than $12.9 million will be going towards the completion of a third phase of the STL’s ongoing garage and administrative building expansion project. In the same Laval News issue, the STL announced that former Sir Wilfrid Laurier School Board chairman Steve Bletas had been named to the STL’s board of directors to represent users of adapted transportation. “I use adapted transportation so I live the situation that I will be dealing with on the board of the STL,” said Bletas. “Being a frequent traveler in adapted transit, he can bring us good feedback and good recommendations,” said STL board chairman David De Cotis. Our paper featured Georgia Kanellopoulos a 12-year-old Fabreville girl who graduated in June at the head of her class from Our Lady of Peace Elementary and who being the leading gymnast in the province for her age category, hopes to take part in Canadian national gymnastics competitions and perhaps even the Olympics. With election day drawing closer, incumbent Prime Minister Stephen Harper made a campaign stop in Chomedey at the Spectra Premium auto parts plant where he announced economic stimulus measures focusing on employment. “Apprenticeships play a vital role in our post-secondary education system and help provide skills and knowledge to grow our economy,” he said in an address. Harper took time to take some swipes at Liberal leader Justin Trudeau. “Justin Trudeau opposed every single tax cut we introduced,” Harper said. As the City of Laval continued its 50th anniversary celebrations, a significant gesture by the provincial government that was timed to coincide with the festivities was the renaming of the region’s principal autoroute after the first mayor of Laval. A ceremony to rename the roadway after Jean-Noël Lavoie was held at Laval city hall on Aug. 6, 50 years to the day since the formation of the city from towns and villages scattered over the island. With a little more than two months to go until election day, incumbent Laval-area NDP MP José Nunez-Melo was unceremoniously dumped by his party while being excluded from the nomination process. When the newly-formed Vimy riding association held a nomination meeting, Nunez-Melo was told to leave after stating he believed the meeting went against party regulations. He also maintained that senior NDP brass were determined not to have him on the ballot as a candidate for nomination. During the Aug. 4 Laval city council meeting, a Laval real estate agent who is also a resident complained to the mayor about the abandoned former Récréathèque building in Chomedey being an unsightly eyesore that was driving away potential investors. Mayor Demers refused to discuss specifics on the future of the Récréathèque, but said the city has major plans for the area in question, including a Metro station eventually. HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA WITH DISTANCE EDUCATION Can’t come to school during the day? 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Pearson School Board Riverside School Board New Frontiers School Board Central Quebec School Board Sir Wilfrid Laurier School Board Western Quebec School Board Eastern Shores School Board The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 • 11 SEPTEMBER With the election campaign in full swing, the Laval News reported in its Sept. 5 edition on Liberal candidate for Laval-Les Îles Fayçal El-Khoury’s visit to the Royal Canadian Legion’s Branch 216 in Laval-Ouest. “You know, the Liberal Party of Canada likes to go by the position of Lester B. Pearson and of Pierre Elliott Trudeau and Jean Chrétien to not send our soldiers to fight in dangerous situations,” he told them. “Canada must remain a peaceful country. We must send our soldiers only to keep the peace.” In the same edition, we reported on incumbent NDP MP for Laval-Les Îles François Pilon’s campaign launch which was attended by a large number of labour union members. “In my riding alone,” said Pilon, “there are many people who work at Bombardier or at Mirabel or Dorval. They are at least 500. And if they are married, that means 1,000 votes in Laval-Les Îles for the NDP.” In news of interest to air travel consumers, our publication reported on Sept. 5 on the impact the sudden collapse of Canadianowned discount airline SkyGreece had on some Laval residents. Sofia Markantonakis booked airline passage for the members of her family in May with SkyGreece. But by August after they took the flight over, they found that getting back to Canada would be expensive: $24,000 on another airline, compared to $6,876 when reserved three months earlier with SkyGreece. A nine-year streak of sunny weather remains unbroken at the Agape Classic golf tournament. On Sept. 9, the sun managed to come out briefly and only a little rain fell before the more than 60 golfers hit the course. “We didn’t see a drop of rain,” said Agape Daycare director Kevin McLeod who organizes the tournament each year. “A perfect golf day for nine straight years. The good lord likes something that we’re doing.” Liberal leader Justin Trudeau’s campaign passes through Laval a real boost for the three Liberal candidates in Laval: Angelo Iacono (Alfred-Pellan) Eva Nassif (Vimy) and Fayçal El-Khoury (Laval-Les Îles) OCTOBER This month, the City of Laval said it wanted Ottawa to know that it was seeking a commitment from each of the federal political parties to try to meet certain requests should they form the next government following the Oct. 19 election. At the top of the wish-list, Laval wanted half a million dollars to help pay for its 50th anniversary celebrations. Although the incumbent Conservative government was asked last year to provide the funding, the appeal fell on deaf ears. The city was also seeking a total of $200 million in infrastructure funding to fill a longstanding need for adequate social housing which is badly lacking in Laval. On October 19, Justin Trudeau and his team won with a clear majority of 184 seats across Canada. In Laval the Liberal ‘red wave’ swept clear through the city electing all four Liberal candidates:Angelo Iacono in Alfred-Pellan, Eva Nassif in Vimy, Fayçal El-Khoury in Laval-Les Îles and Yves Robillard in Marc-Aurèle-Fortin. In partnership with the Laval chapter of l’Appui pour les proches aidants d’ainés (ALPA), Chomedey-based Agape held another cycle of information workshops for caregivers of seniors. In its Oct. 31 edition, The Laval News reported on the City of Laval’s legal efforts under Mayor Marc Demers to recover nearly $13 million that disgraced former mayor Gilles Vaillancourt and some associates are accused of pilfering from Laval through kickback schemes and contract corruption. “We believe that Mr. Mergl and Vaillancourt, Asselin and De Guise owe the city and the citizens of Laval $12,851,725,” Demers told journalists during a press conference. The city claims that Vaillancourt overrode the public bidding system and decided on his own which contractors would get contracts. NOVEMBER DECEMBER On Nov. 9, Liberal Party of Quebec candidate Monique Sauvé won a by-election in the riding of Fabre which was called following the resignation of former PLQ MNA Gilles Ouimet. “I am very happy and very proud because this was a major team effort in a positive campaign with a great number of volunteers who worked hard along with the support of the Laval Liberal caucus,” Sauvé told journalists. Sauvé said she was somewhat surprised by the results, taking into account that it was the first time she ran for office. In November as the Demers administration completed half of its four year mandate, The Laval News featured an exclusive interview with Laval Mayor Marc Demers under the title: Mayor Marc Demers- Walking the straight line. The interview was done by our editorial contributor and former Chomedey city councillor (19851993) Dr. Savas Fortis. Close to 800 people gathered in the Salle André-Mathieu at Montmorency College to take part in ceremonies marking the close of the yearlong festivities held for the City of Laval’s 50th anniversary. “We gave ourselves an ambitious challenge when we took the decision to organize festivities as large as the ones held in Laval in 2015 and we can henceforth say that we met the challenge,” said Mayor Marc Demers. Internationally-renowned soprano Marie-Josée Lord set the tone for the evening with a rousing interpretation of the classic hymn Amazing Grace. She was accompanied by an ensemble of 12 musicians from the Orchestre symphonique de Laval. Those attending were able to re-experience highlights of the past year’s celebrations thanks to projected images accompanied by music from Insula, the light and music show commissioned by the city for the anniversary. On Nov. 19, Mayor Marc Demers led guests and media on a tour of the partially-built Place Bell arena/amphitheatre which is scheduled in September 2017. “Laval residents will soon have access to a unique complex consisting of a large amphitheatre as well as two community rinks accessible to citizens, one of which will be of Olympic size,” said Demers, while adding that construction is proceeding as planned and within budget. The City of Laval will be raising property taxes by an average 1.9 per cent in 2016, meaning an extra $55 on the average tax bill, the Laval News reported in its Dec. 12 edition. “In 2014, we did a house cleaning, in 2015 we restored the administration’s credibility while letting citizens have their say, and in 2016 we will be committing ourselves fully to the economic, social and environmental development of our city,” said Mayor Marc Demers. The City of Laval announced it is teaming up with the province’s leading school for children with autism spectrum disorders to launch a pilot project that will make Laval one of the first inclusive cities for people with autism. Working closely with the Giant Steps School, Laval will be focusing on training members of its various departments, with emphasis on police officers and firefighters in particular, in how to deal with emergency situations involving autism. Following the October federal election, the new Liberal government led by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced it is making good on a campaign pledge to lighten the financial load for Canada’s middle class. Paycheques for nearly a third of Canadian workers will look a little different starting in the New Year. With the passing of a House of Commons motion, the tax rate for middle income earners will drop in 2016 to 20.5 per cent from 22 per cent. The changes also create a new bracket for income above $200,000 with a rate of 33 per cent. Laval city council enacted a new by-law to control the proliferation of clothes donation deposit boxes which have become a common sight in many parts of the city in recent years. Public works crews began removing donation boxes set up at unauthorized street corners. The new by-law designates areas where the boxes will have to be located from now on. The city is also investigating each of the organizations sponsoring the boxes to determine if they are legitimate charities or fronts for profit-earning businesses. M a r t i n C. B a r r y CHECKS LOWEST PRICE in the market! 1000 for $217 your e c a Pl oday! t r e d or 450-978-9999 info@media-trek.com 12 • The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 www.media-trek.com Half of all children will be autistic by 2025, warns senior research scientist at MIT For over three decades, Stephanie Seneff, PhD, has researched biology and technology, over the years publishing over 170 scholarly peer-reviewed articles. In recent years she has concentrated on the relationship between nutrition and health, tackling such topics as Alzheimer’s, autism, and cardiovascular diseases, as well as the impact of nutritional deficiencies and environmental toxins on human health. At a conference last Thursday, in a special panel discussion about GMOs, she took the audience by surprise when she declared, “At today’s rate, by 2025, one in two children will be autistic.” She noted that the side effects of autism closely mimic those of glyphosate toxicity, and presented data showing a remarkably consistent correlation between the use of Roundup on crops (and the creation of Roundup-ready GMO crop seeds) with rising rates of autism. Children with autism have biomarkers indicative of excessive glyphosate, including zinc and iron deficiency, low serum sulfate, seizures, and mitochondrial disorder. A fellow panelist reported that after Dr. Seneff’s presentation, “All of the 70 or so people in attendance were squirming, likely because they now had serious misgivings about serving their kids, or themselves, anything with corn or soy, which are nearly all genetically modified and thus tainted with Roundup and its glyphosate.” Dr. Seneff noted the ubiquity of glyphosate’s use. Because it is used on corn and soy, all soft drinks and candies sweetened with corn syrup and all chips and cereals that contain soy fillers have small amounts of glyphosate in them, as do our beef and poultry since cattle and chicken are fed GMO corn or soy. Wheat is often sprayed with Roundup just prior to being harvested, which means that all non-organic bread and wheat products would also be sources of glyphosate toxicity. The amount of glyphosate in each product may not be large, but the cumulative effect (especially with as much processed food as Americans eat) could be devastating. A recent study shows that pregnant women living near farms where pesticides are applied have a 60% increased risk of children having an autism spectrum disorder. Other toxic substances may also be autism-inducing. You may recall our story on the CDC whistleblower who revealed the government’s deliberate concealment of the link between the MMR vaccine (for measles, mumps, and rubella) and a sharply increased risk of autism, particularly in African American boys. Other studies now show a link between children’s exposure to pesticides and autism. Children who live in homes with vinyl floors, which can emit phthalate chemicals, are more likely to have autism. Children whose mothers smoked were also twice as likely to have autism. Research now acknowledges that environmental contaminants such as PCBs, PBDEs, and mercury can alter brain neuron functioning even before a child is born. This month, the USDA released a study finding that although there were detectable levels of pesticide residue in more than half of food tested by the agency, 99% of samples taken were found to be within levels the government deems safe, and 40% were found to have no detectable trace of pesticides at all. The USDA added, however, that due to “cost concerns,” it did not test for residues of glyphosate. Let’s repeat that: they never tested for the active ingredient in the most widely used herbicide in the world. “Cost concerns”? How absurd—unless they mean it will cost them too much in terms of the special relationship between the USDA and Monsanto. You may recall the revolving door between Monsanto and the federal government, with agency officials becoming high-paying executives—and vice versa! Money, power, prestige: it’s all there. Monsanto and the USDA love to scratch each others’ backs. Clearly this omission was purposeful. In addition, as we have previously reported, the number of adverse reactions from vaccines can be correlated as well with autism, though Seneff says it doesn’t correlate quite as closely as with Roundup. The same correlations between applications of glyphosate and autism show up in deaths from senility. Of course, autism is a complex problem with many potential causes. Dr. Seneff ’s data, however, is particularly important considering how close the correlation is—and because it is coming from a scientist with impeccable credentials. Earlier this year, she spoke at the Autism One conference and presented many of the same facts; that presentation is available on YouTube. Monsanto claims that Roundup is harmless to humans. Bacteria, fungi, algae, parasites, and plants use a seven-step metabolic route known as the shikimate pathway for the biosynthesis of aromatic amino acids; glyphosate inhibits this pathway, causing the plant to die, which is why it’s so effective as an herbicide. Monsanto says humans don’t have this shikimate pathway, so it’s perfectly safe. Dr. Seneff points out, however, that our gut bacteria do have this pathway, and that’s crucial because these bacteria supply our body with crucial amino acids. Roundup thus kills beneficial gut bacteria, allowing pathogens to grow; interferes with the synthesis of amino acids including methionine, which leads to shortages in critical neurotransmitters and folate; chelates (removes) important minerals like iron, cobalt and manganese; and much more. Even worse, she notes, additional chemicals in Roundup are untested because they’re classified as“inert,” yet according to a 2014 study in BioMed Research International, these chemicals are capable of amplifying the toxic effects of Roundup hundreds of times over. Glyphosate is present in unusually high quantities in the breast milk of American mothers, at anywhere from 760 to 1,600 times the allowable limits in European drinking water. Urine testing shows Americans have ten times the glyphosate accumulation as Europeans. “In my view, the situation is almost beyond repair,” Dr. Seneff said after her presentation. “We need to do something drastic.” THIS WEEKEND ONLY AnnaBelle Sectional* Laval I 1877, Curé-Labelle Blvd I 450.688.1891 Saint-Léonard I 6025 Jean-Talon Est. I 514.259.1890 Pierrefonds I 15757, Gouin West Blvd I 514.620.1890 Montreal I 3400, Cremazie E. Blvd I 514.722.1890 Vaudreuil-Dorion I 501, Harwood Blvd I 450.455.9299 PRILLO.CA *Available in grey, chocolate or black $ SAVE $ 300 1699 The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 • 13 Community Calendar Send your announcements of events two weeks prior 2015 Deadline January 18th to editor@the-news.ca Michael Get ready for a high energy evening at the Sir Wilfrid Laurier Foundation annual gala! Celebrations Proceeds will benefit the students of the Sir Wilfrid Laurier School Board. BACKBEAT SHO W B A N D y a d s r Thu 6 1 0 2 , 1 2 y r a u n a J m Moments Précieux We wish our sweet boy Michael a Happy 7th Birthday and we love him very much. From Mom, Dad, his brother Nicolas and sister Zoe Megan 6 pm Purchase your tickets online: www.fondationlaurier.com Ticket: $225 (Tax receipt of $112.50) Château Royal Reception Halls 3500 Souvenir Blvd.Laval (Québec) H7V 1X2 Information | RSVP info-foundation@swlauriersb.qc.ca Susan O’Keeffe 450 621-5600 ext: 1351 Deadline Monday 1pm Happy 11th Birthday to our amazing daughter, bringing so much joy and sunshine to our hearts every day! We are so happy to see that our little princess has grown into a beautiful young lady! We love you so very much Mommy, Daddy and Sabrina Free Free Free Email us your pictures to announce your celebrations: celebrations@the-news.ca (To view it full size, visit www.lavalnews.ca) Upbringing? Hey, guys. I need advice and I can’t think of someone who would not take sides. Ninety-nine percent of my childhood memory is my dad beating my mom. Not just a push or slap, but a beating until she sometimes bled. My sister and I used to get between. My brother would apply wet towels to mom’s wounds afterwards. My dad had affairs, didn’t work much, didn’t drink and never smoked. He attended school meetings, woke up the village dentist when our teeth ached at midnight and made sure boys who harassed my sister and I regretted it immediately. My sister thinks he’s a great father. Mom went to work, and with my brother’s support, took charge financially while us girls went to school. They worked and worked and you could say we became an upper class family after 20 years. All this time, at home and publicly, the beatings continued. When mom got sick, dad took the work reins. He now controls every cent. If we, his kids, ask for anything, he gives. Readily. Mom, however, is afraid to buy anything if he’s around. I’m currently visiting them and asked if he still hits her. Years ago I threatened to get him jailed if he did it again. She said he threatens but doesn’t do it. Then she told me about their other problem, untidiness. If you didn’t know him, you’d think he’s an extreme hoarder. So I thought I would have a calm, understanding chat with him about it. His response took me by surprise. He accused me of being ungrateful, taking my mother’s side and promised to “leave us all soon.” Those words took me back 20 years to the time he beat her and then locked himself up with a bottle of poison and threatened to drink it. I wanted to tell him he could go die right now. Honestly I’m so angry at her for staying with him. I don’t understand their relationship. I’m still young yet twice divorced. Being alone is hard, but it’s so much easier than being in an abusive, unhappy relationship. Mom continues to complain but chooses to do nothing. I told her I won’t listen to her complaints anymore unless she does something, and this hurts her. Marlia Marlia, every time you visit your parents, it puts you back in your child self. “My father and mother are doing this to each other, and I am powerless to stop it.” Both parents have traumatized you. That the damage is in part unintentional, unthinking or unnoticed doesn’t make it any less. There is no reason to explain why you are twice divorced. You didn’t have good role models. You don’t have the same baseline as the daughter of parents who loved her and cared about her and loved each other. Listening to your mother complain and letting her vent doesn’t help her leave, it helps her stay. She is hurting you. When she complains, say, “Who are we going to call? But if we are not calling someone, if I am not taking you somewhere else, if you are not filing for divorce, I don’t want to hear about it.” When your mother took over the financing and the breadwinning, what was her husband there for? Your mother wouldn’t leave even for the sake of her kids. So what is most important to her? The man. Not her kids. All she wants is to have him fixed. Your letter really is about you, not your mother. Your mother chooses abuse and you cannot stop her. You need to heal as much as you can so your future life is as good as it can be. You need to stop being abused. The real victims in situations like this are the children. They are the innocent ones. That is why the most important thing you can do is change your point of view. Wayne & Tamar Wayne & Tamara Mitchell are the authors of YOUR OTHER HALF (www.yourotherhalf.co m )• Send letters to: Direct Answers, PO 964 Springfield, MO 65801-0964 or email: DirectAnswers@echowork.com 14 • The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 LPD blue Cynthia Abraham Armed Robbery at Birks Carrefour Laval Operation Dia: Police Arrest 10 DrugTrafficking Suspects Dec 23 – A man with a gun burgled Birks jewellery store in Carrefour Laval on one of the busiest shopping days of the year. Witnesses reported hearing gunshots and glass shattering, but police later confirmed no shots had been fired. The robber smashed at least eight display cases and stuffed expensive watches and jewellery into a duffel bag then jogged to the exit near the Harry Rosen store. Panicked shoppers scattered as the man ran through the mall waving his gun in the air. The suspect is described as being about 5’7” tall with curly hair. He was wearing sunglasses at the time. Authorities estimate that the burglar made off with thousands of dollars of merchandise. No one was injured. Laval Pilot Dies in Crash Dec 29 – Provincial police say the pilot who died from injuries sustained in the crash of a small plane at Mascouche on Monday is a resident of Laval. The 40-year-old Laval man was accompanied by a nine-year-old boy who survived the crash and is expected to make a full recovery. The plane’s flight path originated in the United States, but the Transportation Safety Board could not confirm where. Dec 23 – Six months after the launch of anti-drug project Dia, several suspects have been arrested on suspected cocaine trafficking charges, as well as a number of other criminal charges. Laval police spearheaded the inquest, with the participation of police officers from Terrebonne, Mascouche, St-Jérôme, and Montreal. About 80 officers were involved in cracking the well-structured organization and executing raids in homes and businesses in Mascouche, Terrebonne, St-Jérôme, and Montreal. A preliminary inventory of the assets seized during the raids included a significant amount of cocaine and marijuana, several bank accounts, six vehicles, and around $40,000 in cash. In the end, 10 people were arrested in connection with the crimes: 4 women and 6 men. The youngest suspect arrested was 22 years old and the oldest was 60 years old. Several suspects have already appeared at the Laval courthouse to face drug trafficking charges. Laval residents with any information about drug trafficking or any other crime can contact the Laval police department at 450-662-INFO (4636). All calls are confidential. Christmas Drive-By Shooting Dec 25 - The Sûreté du Québec is searching for witnesses after a shooting on Christmas morning on Highway 15 South in Laval. The event happened around 4 a.m. The victim was shot at while driving on the highway, and took a Laval exit off the highway. No one was injured. The SQ is asking anyone who witnessed the incident to call 1-800-659-4264. 15 years at your service! 395 95 $ 24 hour monItorIng AlArm system InstAllAtIon + 6 months monItorIng! System Includes: • • • • 1 1 1 1 Control panel keypad Motion detector Front door contact • 1 Battery • 1 Siren • 1 Transformer T. 514-289-8585 F. 514-289-9445 The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 • 15 Deadline: 000-199 Real Estate Classifieds 200-299 Automotive MONDAY before publication at 1 p.m. 300-399 For Sale 400-580 Services 600-650 Courses Nouvelles PARC-EXTENSION News 700-750 Employment 800-890 Misc. Building a World of Justice Building a World of Justice 900-990 Notices Building a World of Justice Building a World of Justice real estate houses & apartments for sale rooms for rent automotive for sale services articles wanted financial services courses employment & business opportunities notices health & wellness snow removal Monday-Thursday 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Place an ad 3860, Notre-Dame Blvd., in person at: suite 304, Laval, Quebec Minimum 4 lines $15.00 (140 characters) Any subsequent line $3 ( block of 35 characters) By email: classifieds@the-news.ca By fax: 450-687-6330 Legal notices For company dissolution: Minimum $45+tx 1 888 234-8533 978•9999 450 For namewww.devp.org change: Minimum $75+tx 1 888 234-8533 www.devp.org Payment must be received prior to publication. 1 888 234-8533 www.devp.org Building a World of Justice Building a World Payment: of Justice 1 888 234-8533 www.devp.org www.newsfirst.ca Building WANTED a World Building a World Building a World of Justice of Justice of Justice 0080 Association) can place CHOMEDEY 80TH. ave, between Curé-Labelle and Lévesque boulevards, close to all services, 4½, very quiet, renovated, clean, with parking. 514-919-3232. weekly papers throughout Quebec - papers just like the one you are reading right now! One phone call does it all! Call Marnie at QCNA 514-697-6330. Visit: www. qcna.org 0305 ARTICLES WANTED APARTMENTS FOR RENT your classified ad into 23 1 888 234-8533 www.devp.org CHOMEDEY: 4½, renovated, new floors, freshly painted, very clean. $540.00 Not heated. Call 514-919-3232. SAWMILLS FROM only $4,397. - MAKE MONEY & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. Free info & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT. 1-800566-6899 ext:400OT. 1 888 234-8533 www.devp.org 0300 FOR SALE QCNA (QUEBEC Community Newspapers ABRACADABRA TURN your hidden treasures into ready cash. International buyer wants to purchase your antiques, paintings, china, crystal, gold, silverware, jewellery, rare books, sports, movies, postcards, coins, stamps, records. 514-501-9072. 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Want to run your classified World ads? 1 888 234-8533 www.devp.org Building Find our FAKE AD a CALL of Justice & WIN 450. 978.9999 0700 EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES 1 888 234-8533 www.devp.org Building a World GOOD LUCK! of Justice Find the new fake ad in our classifieds section by January 18th, 2016 and you could be going to the movies! 16 Fax: (450) 687-6330 E-mail: contest@newsfirst.ca or mail to: The News, C/O Fake Ad Contest, 3860 Notre-Dame Blvd., #304, Laval H7V 1S1 LA S T W E E K ` S AN SW E R S F O R LAST IS SU LUCKY W E’S INNERS: Nathaly Fedida John Cu nningha m Christie Lane LOOK ING FO Rw a manager. Onl ork as y work Monday able to to Friday 9:00 -17:00, M ust have 1 hour lunch and two 15min brea ks da ily. I requ ire a pa rk ing sp ace, al lowance for lunch. I work over time, do not never on holidays, and require 4 weeks vacatio n per year (preferably pa id). interv iew, plea For an se at: 450- 688- 64 ca ll me 24. 1 888 234-8533 www.devp.org Building a World of Justice INCLUDE FULL MAILING ADDRESS. • The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 1 888 234-8533 1 888 234-8533 www.devp.org 1 888 234-8533 www.devp.org Classifieds Building a World of Justice Building a World of Justice MONday before publication at 1 p.m. real estate 978•9999 450 Deadline: 1 888 234-8533 www.devp.org houses & apartments for sale rooms for rent automotive for sale services articles wanted financial services courses FOR SALE 1 888 234-8533 www.devp.org employment & business opportunities notices Nouvelles PARC-EXTENSION News health & wellness snow removal psychics vacation & travel matchmaking misc. 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ONE PHONE CALL DOES IT ALL! Soula Tellides George Tellides Carol Deros 514-927-3721 514-258-1829 Chartered Real Estate Broker Real Estate Broker 514-258-8845 Real Estate Broker Consult all our listings at www.tellides.com PLATEAU MONT ROYAL Detached corner street building excellent location in the heart of Le Plateau Mont Royal. 2 commercial units on the main floor as well as 4 apartments upstairs consisting of 2x 4.5 and 2x 3.5. Ideal for owner occupant wishing to operate their own business. Great potential!!! SOL PLACE your classified IN 23 WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS just like the one you are reading RIGHT NOW! CALL MARNIE AT QCNA 514-697-6330 • www.qcna.org CHOMEDEY Beautiful, large home ideal for a growing family. Main floor open concept living/dining room, kitchen with wood cabinets and dinette open to family room, 4 bedrooms on top level of very good size, master with ensuite bathroom + second bathroom on same level, large, beautifully finished basement with 3rd full bathroom, very quiet street (cul de sac). FABREVILLE BRIGHT corner unit condo South-West orientation lovely view of UFO golf course, built in 2005 well maintained building complete with elevator, inground pool, recreation room & gym. Spacious unit of 1102 SF large living room, kitchen with dinette, master bedroom with walk in, full bath with separate shower, powder room, separate laundry room. Prime location of Chomedey bungalow on a large, corner lot 2 bedrooms on main level with possibility of converting the dining room into a 3rd. Wood flooring on main floor, large basement with fireplace, furnace completely replaced with heat pump. D SAINTE ROSE JUST LISTED Detached 3plex great location of Ste-Rose 2x 5 1/2 1 x 4 1/2 always rented close to schools, transportation well maintained throughout the years oak cabinets in kitchens roof 2002 6 car driveway all brick/stone construction, electric heating paid by tenants, low maintenance building, very good investment opportunity! JUST LISTED CHOMEDEY Large duplex with bachelor and double garage in a very desirable area of Chomedey close to services such as public transport, schools, churches, shopping and parks. Well maintained throughout the years. Priced to sell!!! The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 • 17 THE BIG SHORT JOY G | 2 hrs 11 mins | Drama | G | 1 hr 44 mins | Comedy-Drama | When four outsiders saw what the big banks, media and government refused to, the global collapse of the economy, they had an idea: The Big Short. Their bold investment leads them into the dark underbelly of modern banking where they must question everyone and everything. POINT BREAK G | 1 hr 54 mins | Action-Thriller | Struggling to raise three children on her own, Joy Mangano (Jennifer Lawrence) becomes famous for inventing the Miracle Mop. JOY is the wild story of a family across four generations centered on the girl who becomes the woman who founds a business dynasty and becomes a matriarch in her own right. Betrayal, treachery, the loss of innocence and the scars of love, pave the road in this intense emotional and human comedy about becoming a true boss of family and enterprise facing a world of unforgiving commerce. Allies become adversaries and adversaries become allies, both inside and outside the family, as Joy’s inner life and fierce imagination carry her through the storm she faces. THE HATEFUL EIGHT 13+ | 2 hrs 47 mins | Western | A federal agent infiltrates a gang of thieves who participate in extreme sports. STAR WARS: EPISODE VIITHE FORCE AWAKENS G | 2 hrs 15 mins | Action-Adveture | Two bounty hunters in post-Civil War America, who have captured Daisy Domergue (Leigh), and are en route to collect their reward. After they become stranded in a blizzard, they seek shelter at an establishment, where they encounter a collection of colorful individuals where a plot of betrayal and deception unfolds and tensions run high. ALVIN AND THE CHIMUNKS: A continuation of the saga created by George Lucas set thirty years after Star Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Jedi (1983). THE ROAD CHIP G | 1 hr 26 mins | Animation | CONCUSSION G | 2 hrs 03 mins | Drama | A look at how American football players suffer from major head injuries and life-long debiliating problems as a result of repeated concussions and efforts by the National Football League to deny it. Through a series of misunderstandings, Alvin, Simon and Theodore come to believe that Dave is going to propose to his new girlfriend in New York City... and dump them. They have three days to get to him and stop the proposal, saving themselves not only from losing Dave but possibly from gaining a terrible stepbrother. THE REVENANT 13+ | 2 hrs 36 mins | Adventure | DADDY’S HOME G | 1 hr 36 mins | Comedy | When a divorced guy’s ex-wife re-marries someone way more uptight, he re-enters her life and wreaks havoc. 18 • The Laval News • www.lavalnews.ca • January 9, 2016 Deep in the unchartered American wilderness, hunter Hugh Glass (Leonardo DiCaprio) is severely injured and left for dead by a traitorous member of his team, John Fitzgerald (Tom Hardy). With sheer will as his only weapon, Glass must navigate a hostile environment, a brutal winter and warring tribes in a relentless quest to survive and exact vengeance on Fitzgerald. t h e L . I . G . H . T . E . R Aries March 21-April 19 ________________________________________________________ Your popularity grows Sunday noon (PST) to Tues. afternoon, Aries. Other than a possible tiff Sunday suppertime, this interval blesses you – your optimism rises, and love might arrive via a friendly group meeting. International, cultural and intellectual affairs also thrive. Jump in Monday! But avoid these things Tues. eve to Thurs. suppertime – instead, retreat, rest, be spiritual and charitable. Great luck in work – ask for more, and a pay raise. Your energy and charm rise Thurs. night to Sat. night – get out, make contacts, see and be seen, impress someone or tackle a difficult task that you’ve neglected. Remember, start nothing new before January 25. Taurus April 20-May 20 ________________________________________________________ Jokes of the week! s i d e Teacher’s Promise Libra Sept. 23-Oct. 22 ______________________________________________________________ Teacher: Whoever answers my next question, can go home. Start no new projects nor relationships before January 25, Libra. The general emphasis lies on home, children, real estate, garden, nutrition, security, retirement. Spend a lazy Sunday morning. From noon this day (PST) to mid-afternoon Tues. romance, pleasure, creativity and risk-taking lure you – not too successfully Sun. pm, as arguments might occur – but a letter, call or conversation (or short errand) might bring you to love’s nirvana – or to the person who could be it for you. Tackle chores Tuesday late afternoon to Thurs. suppertime. You’ll get a lot done, but go slow Wed. to about 1 pm, when practical and communication barriers exist. Sunday morning’s easy. But from Sun. noon (PST) to Tues. mid-afternoon, be ambitious, display your skills, butter up the boss (all best Monday). But remember, don’t start any projects nor relationships before January 25. A sudden, lucky financial or management event might bless you. Beware an argument (or cuts) Sunday eve. Happiness, popularity, social delights, light, flirtatious romance (perhaps destined to turn heavy and deep later) entertainment, optimism and possible wish fulfillment – these tickle you Tues. eve to suppertime Thurs. Enjoy, but don’t invest nor push for sex Wed. daytime. Romance, however, blossoms with luck. One boy throws his bag out the window. Teacher: Who just threw that? Boy: Me and I’m going home now. Scorpio Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ___________________________________________________________ Remember, Scorpio, start nothing new, relationships nor projects, before January 25. You’re generally tied up now in errands, messaging, paperwork and details. Carefully check addresses, figures, phone numbers, schedules, etc. Make a list before leaving home. Sunday noon (PST) to midafternoon Tues. features home, kids, parents, landscaping, garden, security, etc. Don’t be overbearing Sunday eve. Monday’s best. You could stumble upon a great money-work situation or bonus. Tuesday late afternoon to Thurs. suppertime brings romantic notions, freedom of speculation and creative urges, beauty and charming kids. Take care Wed. morning, Gemini May 21-June 20 ___________________________________________________________ expression, Remember, start no new projects nor relationships before January 25. Sunday noon (PST) to mid- noon hour, as barriers exist and vivacity flags. afternoon Tues. brings a mellow, wise mood, and success (mostly Monday) with international affairs, legal, publishing and intellectual matters, far travel, and love. (Love, though, is colored with Sagittarius Nov. 22-Dec. 21 _____________________________________________________ intimate yearnings and possible unethical urges, especially if a former “lust mate” is involved. But an innocent, friendly, marriage-capable love could also blossom now. You’ll know the differ- The general accent remains on money, earnings, possessions, memory, and sensual attractions. ence – it’s in your moral intuition.) Beware an argument of false friend Sunday eve. Be ambitious, Remember, start nothing, relationships nor projects, and make no major purchases, before January hold up your end of career projects and duties, display your skills (but start nothing new) Tues. 25. Sunday noon (PST) to Tues. mid-afternoon brings errands, trips, calls, visits, paperwork and eve to Thurs. supper time. Take care Wed. morn and midday, with partnerships, public affairs and details – be sure to check figures, appointments. Make a list before you set off on your errands. Caution Sunday eve – argument, accidents need to be avoided. Monday’s fine. You could attract contracts: sign nothing. Land, property, home, garden, might yield a dream come true! someone deeply – your charming side is uppermost until the 23rd. Home, kids, garden, rest, naps and nutrition draw you Tues. afternoon to supper time Thurs. – yet it is your money, earnings, and Cancer June 21-July 22 ____________________________________________________________ career that spring luck upon you both Wed. The general accent lies on relationships – but don’t start any new ones (nor any new projects) before January 25. You might wake Sunday morning with a smile on your face as you think of a Capricorn Dec. 22-Jan. 19________________________________________________________ recent encounter. This noon (PST) to mid-afternoon Tues. brings secrets, intimate clinches, financial actions/investments/debt, research and investigation, medical diagnoses, and life style changes. Start no new projects nor relationships before January 25, Cap – and avoid major purchases, too. Your charisma, energy and clout remain at a yearly high – but the best place you can put (Remember, though, start nothing new.) Dig into the past for nuggets. An unexpected work plum might come – grab it! Your mellow, wise side emerges Tues. pm to Thurs. supper time – seek your energy is into projects already begun last year, or into something you can reach and grab intellectual, legal, far travel, publishing, or cultural goals – and love. But tread lightly with partner, from the far past. It’s an excellent time to correct old mistakes, a poor time to plan new things. chores and work commitments midday Wed. Your career and worldly standing are accented Thurs. You wake with strength and vigor Sunday. Noon (PST) this day, to mid-afternoon Tues., brings money, earnings, buying and selling, memory tricks, and sensual attractions. (Before pursuing suppertime to Sat. night. him/her, picture life a year or ten down the road. Leo July 23-Aug. 22 _________________________________________________________________ Start nothing new before January 25, Leo. (That is just about when a whole month of new people, opportunities and horizons will appear, so waiting is, in a sense, a good thing.) The general accent this week lies on work, dependents, service personnel (e.g., the plumber) and daily health. Eat and dress sensibly. Relationships fill Sunday noon (PST) to midday Tues. Careful Sunday pm, arguments are possible, especially at or about home. A sudden appearance or revelation could spell love. Life’s secrets, sexual yearnings and financial actions, health diagnoses, lifestyle changes and commitments fill Tues. afternoon to Thurs. supper time – sign nothing, a be cautious of new investments. Virgo Aug. 23-Sept. 22_____________________________________________________________ Start no new projects nor relationships before January 25, no matter what I might write below. Sunday morning’s romantic, or kids charm you. This noon (PST) to mid-afternoon Tues., brings work and daily health concerns. Eat and dress sensibly. Drive carefully, seek no sex nor invest Sunday afternoon/supper time. Otherwise, this interval flows productively and easily. If a former real estate bargain or other investment re-appears, jump on it, it’s a good one. Relationships fill Tues. eve to suppertime Thurs. – with splendid luck! An old flame might appear. But avoid action, and anyone who appears between dawn and 1 pm Wed. (PST). HOROSCOPE Marriage Certificate Wife: “What are you doing?” Husband : Nothing. Wife : “Nothing...? You’ve been reading our marriage certificate for an hour.” Husband : “I was looking for the expiration date.” Grey Hair A curious child asked his mother: “Mommy, why are some of your hairs turning grey?” The mother tried to use this occasion to teach her child: “It is because of you, dear. Every bad action of yours will turn one of my hairs grey!” Aquarius Jan. 20-Feb. 18 __________________________________________________________ Continue to lie low and rest, Aquarius. Your interior world is undergoing a huge transformation, but a slow one – it takes from 2009 to 2024 to evolve. January, every year to 2024, will emphasize this interior change. Eventually, it will “open” and grant you a new worldly standing, a leadership role big or small. (E.g., in 2024-2043, many powerful politicians will be Aquarian.) Remember, don’t make any major purchases nor start any new projects or relationships before January 25. Your energy and charisma rise somewhat Sunday noon (PST) to mid-afternoon Tues. Monday’s best. Don’t argue nor tweak a boss, cop or parent Sunday suppertime. A friend could help a wish come true. The child replied innocently: “Now I know why grandmother has only grey hairs on her head.” Pisces Feb. 19-March 20 ___________________________________________________________ Homework Remember, Pisces, don’t buy anything major, and start no new projects nor relationships before January 25. (No matter what I say in the rest of this – the “don’t start” dominates.) You remain in a happy, upbeat interval (until Jan. 20) so DO aim your life toward pleasure, adventure, love, friendship and entertainment. Everyone needs a rest from cares and duties. Now the universe is giving you a “pass” – take it, enjoy life! Even your parents and/or bosses are saying (maybe under their breath!) you deserve a break, and a bit of praise. (And, says the cosmos, a bit of love and romance, too.) A major wish might come true. Probably involves a legal, educational, travel, cultural, love, popularity or intellectual matter. One day teacher asked Sam if his father helped him with his homework. Sam simply said - “No, he did it all by himself”! Website: www.astralreflections.com - E-mail: timstephens@shaw.ca - For a reading: (604) 261-1337 ACROSS 1. Egg on 5. Pivot 9. Relating to a hair 14. ___ line (major axis of an elliptical orbit) 15. Look at with amorous intentions 16. “Gladiator” setting 17. Stage at which a substance will receive no more of another substance 20. “All My Children” vixen 21. Washes 22. Duration 25. “I do,” for one 26. Any port in a storm 28. Extinguish 32. Enumeration follower 37. Water wheel with buckets attached to the rim 38. In a self-indulgent manner 41. Fry quickly in a little fat 42. Berate 43. Barely gets, with “out” 44. Brilliantly colored terrestrial birds with short wings and tail and stout bills 46. Family head 47. All together 53. Very thin slices 58. Fits 59. Sexists 62. Liquid excretory product 63. Beethoven’s “Archduke ___” 64. One of the two main branches of orthodox Islam 65. Give a shine to 66. “Our Time in ___” (10,000 Maniacs album) 67. Baby DOWN 1. Some are inert 2. Eyeball benders 3. Buzzing 4. Devil 5. Marienbad, for one 6. Affranchise 7. Obtained from urine 8. Come about 9. Fruit with yellow flesh 10. “Pumping ___” 11. Island rings 12. Author Rice 13. “Darn it all!” 18. Backstabber 19. Advertising sign 23. Wild goose having white adult plumage 24. Dispassionate 27. Safe place 28. Lady of Lisbon 29. Song and dance, e.g. 30. Fish sperm 31. British system of withholding tax 32. “___ quam videri” (North Carolina’s motto) 33. Heavy, durable furniture wood 34. Game name 35. New newts 36. 20-20, e.g. 37. Colo. neighbor 39. When repeated, like some shows 40. F.B.I. operative 44. “Fiddlesticks!” 45. Hereditary 46. Cubes 48. “Gee whiz!” 49. To take to graze or pasture 50. Bar offering 51. Arrive, as darkness 52. English exam finale, often 53. Like a stuffed shirt 54. Benjamin Disraeli, e.g. 55. History Muse 56. Addition column 57. Produced without vibration of the vocal cords 60. Compete 61. Carbonium, e.g. 57. “Act your ___!” 58. Depress, with “out” 59. Altdorf is its capital ! THIS WEEK’S ANSWERS ON THE CLASSIFIEDS IN THE NEXT EDITION Custom made printing 1000 Post Cards $97 4’’ x 6’’, Full colour, 2 sided 1000 Flyers $167 100 Posters $87 8.5 x 11, 100lb, 2 sided 12’’ x 18’’, One sided Taxes extra. Prices are for PDF files. Format based on specifications. Graphic design not included but very affordable. Minimum order $100. Delivery charges may apply. 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