Trashed woods could be outdoor haven August 22, 2008
Posted by Stirling Dyer in Uncategorized.add a comment
The District of Mission is working on a feasibility study to transform Crown land along the west side of Stave Lake into an outdoor tourist haven. But it’s going to need a little work first to make it tourist-friendly.
“There are thousands of people in the Lower Mainland looking for camping opportunities and this place has the potential to be a great get away – it just needs a good plan put in place,” said Hawes.
He said he is willing to push and do whatever it takes to help the district get funding for the initiative.
Read the full article at the Abbotsford-Mission Times.
Homeless Outreach Program expands to Mission July 31, 2008
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An announcement last Friday is providing some hope in Mission for those who try to help the homeless.
The Homeless Outreach Program will be expanding to Mission, with expressions of interest call being issued to local non-profit societies to submit proposals to operate homeless outreach services, said Mission’s MLA Randy Hawes.
“The homeless outreach work has proven to be successful in more than 40 communities across the province, with more than 2,500 people connected to housing and other services since 2007,” said Hawes. “We need to break the cycle of homelessness in Mission, and establishing outreach services here will help to do that.”
Read the full article from the Mission City Record here.
New regs for berry cannons July 14, 2008
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To minimize potential conflicts with residential neighbourhoods, B.C. blueberry growers will now have to follow new regulations to decrease the level of noise created by loud bird deterrents.
The Ministry of Agriculture and Lands made a number of changes to the guidelines regulating “audible scare devices,” said Maple Ridge-Mission MLA Randy Hawes last Friday.
Hawes said he would like to see cannons banned altogether and will “not stop pushing this issue until they’re gone.”
Read the full article from the Abbotsford-Mission Times here.
Funding in place for improved bus service July 14, 2008
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Buses in many parts of Abbotsford and Mission will arrive at their stops twice as frequently, thanks to an arrangement between three levels of government to provide a 15-minute service on numerous routes in the two cities.
Provincial ministers officially announced yesterday that Victoria will provide $1 million of the $4.9 million needed for an extensive transit expansion, which will be added to $1.4 million from Ottawa and a further $2.5 million from the municipalities of Abbotsford and Mission.
Altogether, according to the province, it will mean a 27 per cent increase to the transit service and 13 new buses.
According to Hawes, more transit alternatives will be needed as communities expand.
“I’m pleased to see this increase in funding for those who rely on public transportation,” he said.
Read the full article from The Abbotsford News here.
100 Days until the new Abbotsford Regional Hospital and Cancer Centre opens! May 26, 2008
Posted by Stirling Dyer in Uncategorized.1 comment so far
Last Friday [May 16, 2008] a ceremony marked 100 days until the new Abbotsford regional hospital and cancer centre will open. It will be the first acute care hospital in British Columbia built from the ground up and fully integrated with a cancer centre, and what a remarkable facility it is.
Rooms are all orientated to views of Mount Baker, rooftop gardens run into beautifully landscaped courtyards, and all have very large windows to allow in maximum natural light. There are no rooms with more than two beds. The new acute care hospital expands OR capacity, maternity, ICU, pediatrics and psychiatric beds.
There are new services including geriatric beds, a cardiac care unit, oncology beds and a new dialysis unit. The cancer centre will house 12 chemotherapy chairs, four linear accelerators for radiation therapy as well as pain management and palliative care. Included with two new CT scanners will be the Fraser Valley’s first MRI scanner.
Already the hospital is attracting new physicians from across Canada and internationally. It’s attracted much other attention as well. The building is built to the greenest standards, and certification under the LEED program is being sought.
The $330 million project was built as a P3 with Access Health Abbotsford and was on time and within budget. It was named the top P3 of North America by the prestigious Project Finance magazine in 2005.
Fraser Valley residents have waited patiently for over 20 years and through numerous false sod turnings and announcements for this new facility. On August 24 of this year the hospital will see its first patients transferred from the old MSA Hospital.
-Randy addressing the House regarding the new Regional Hospital and Cancer Centre in Abbotsford
Watch this on Hansard!
PROTECTING B.C.’S CHILDREN May 15, 2008
Posted by Stirling Dyer in Legislative Assembly.add a comment
Every day in B.C. there are children that go home from school to houses in which the air is a toxic soup of chemicals and moulds. They go to bed at night with hugely increased risks of fires or of the door being kicked in by gangs coming to rip off their parents.
I’m talking about kids who live in grow ops. There are, incredibly, lots of times when we see grow ops taken down in British Columbia where there are children taken into custody, apprehended, because their parents have engaged in that activity with the kids living in the home.
For the most part, grow ops and the proliferation of grow ops have a connection to organized crime. Organized crime means guns, it means violence, it means fire danger, it means homes that are booby-trapped, and it means grow rips, which are when gangs try to rip off another gang for the cash and drugs that they have in their grow operation. These endanger innocent people and children every day in British Columbia, and every day we read about more and more violence coming from this kind of operation.
The other thing is that we all know people in neighbourhoods throughout our constituencies…. In fact, in our own neighbourhoods we know there has been a big proliferation of grow ops. We all know where there are some grow ops.
It doesn’t take much to walk around some streets. You can smell them, and you can see the windows are all boarded over. You get a pretty good idea…. If you’re living near one, and there’s very little activity except when it’s time to harvest, you know what’s going on.
When you phone the police, the police have so many grow ops on their list to track down that it’s very difficult. Frankly, the laws make it very difficult for police to move on these without having built a great body of evidence in order to get a search warrant.
But there is danger in these for others. Our fire departments are put at risk and our homes are put at risk if one of them catches on fire. For that reason, we created an act in 2006, the Safety Standards Amendment Act, which gave the ability for B.C. Hydro, who track hydro use for everyone…. They always do, and they know exactly where there is spiked electrical use all over British Columbia.
They have now got the ability to give that information to municipalities for use by the fire department to track down whether or not there is fire danger in these homes through illegal wiring. That has resulted in a tremendous number of grow ops being taken down.
I want to particularly mention Surrey where fire chief Len Garis, who has been a leader in this throughout British Columbia, has built teams of inspectors that go out wherever there is increased hydro usage in a home to inspect and to ensure that there is not some danger created from illegal wiring or at least to determine the cause of the increased hydro usage.
In Surrey about 80 percent of the homes that are inspected were grow ops. I think that’s a remarkable statistic and a remarkable success. What’s happening in Surrey is it’s driving grow ops from Surrey, as hundreds have been taken down. They’re driving them to municipalities that don’t have an inspection system like Surrey does.
In 2003 there were 14 fires in Surrey caused from grow ops, from illegal wiring in grow ops. By 2007 that figure had dropped to four fires. From 14 to four — I think that’s a remarkable success. I think we should be applauding that success. Abbotsford has very progressively followed suit and has put together inspection teams. They’re doing the same thing. Coquitlam is doing the same thing.
We all read in the paper in the last couple of weeks that there were a couple of families that were inspected. I know they took offence because they did not have grow ops. In one case it was a family who had rebuilt their swimming pool and hooked it up again, and it was heated by electricity.
You know, I kind of look at it as no harm, no foul. The inspection took place, and I know feelings may have been hurt by the inference that there could have been a grow op. But an 80 percent success rate in taking down grow ops through this inspection process or ensuring that the electrical use is not endangering anyone through improper wiring is, I think, a laudable thing that frankly overrides, in my view, the personal concern or the personal rights, actually — just as we override people’s rights to not incriminate themselves by forcing them to blow in a breathalyser when requested. This is a similar thing where personal rights should be set to the side for the betterment of all of us and for public safety reasons.
As we move forward, other cities are beginning to look at this process. As they look at the process, some of them are adopting it, and some of them are very concerned and not moving ahead because they’re afraid they could get sued or whatever. Those cities will become inundated with grow ops as the aggressive communities begin to move on high electrical usage and begin to shut down grow ops.
Those grow ops will find a place to go. Organized crime is there for money. That’s why every time you see on television that a big grow op has been taken down, you usually see a big cache of guns and also a big stack of money, because that’s what this is about. It’s all about money.
Your safety, my safety, your children’s and my children’s safety really don’t matter to these folks. In a case where there are children present, clearly their own children’s safety doesn’t seem to matter.
I’m looking forward to the response from the next speaker, and I would be happy to yield and listen to that.
-Randy speaking to the Legislative Assembly on Monday, May 12th.
Watch this clip at Hansard!
Dangerous offenders in minimum security institutions May 2, 2008
Posted by Randy Hawes in Uncategorized.add a comment
Much has been said about the recent walk-away from Ferndale minimum security institution. This is a declared dangerous offender who murdered in the United States, raped women twice when released on day parole from the Canadian System, and a couple of years ago when considered again for parole was found to have some 25,000 pornographic images on his personal computer. This man was housed in a minimum security penitentiary where he could simply walk away. How could this happen? How could a man who has repeatedly commited the worst of crimes be put in a setting where he could be considered a minimum risk? Why would we ever consider his rights ahead of his next potential victim?
There is also 9 other declared dangerous offenders in Ferndale. This is a status that the crown works very hard to obtain against criminals who have repeatedly shown no regard for the lives and safety of others. Frequently these are violent sex offenders.
Clearly something is very wrong within Corrections Canada. Thankfully the federal government is demanding a full review of how prisoners are classified. Hopefully this will result in high risk offenders being removed from minimum security settings. Giving the warden of the minimum security facility the ability to refuse transfers and making the warden responsible for those that are within the facility would go a long way to ensuring sensible placement. At least then communities would know who is accountable for these types of decisions.
Randy Hawes
100 Mile Diet May 2, 2008
Posted by Stirling Dyer in Legislative Assembly.add a comment
Ever since James Mackinnon and Alisa Smith spent a year eating only local foods and published their book The 100-Mile Diet, the whole concept has taken off. The notion of eating only locally produced fresh foods and calculating food miles has captured families throughout North America.
The hundred-mile diet has now come to Mission. Starting June 1, Paperny Films of Vancouver will be filming a dozen Mission families, including mine, who have committed to a total hundred-mile diet for 100 days. They’ll follow these families as they struggle to find sources of local foods to meet the challenge.
Just think — a hundred days with no coffee, no tea, no caffeine products, no sugar, no beer or distilled products, no soda pop, no chocolate, no fruits unless grown within a hundred miles, no prepared foods with additives manufactured outside of the hundred-mile limit and no McDonald’s, Burger King or A&W — just fresh locally produced and locally grown produce, dairy, meats and fish.
Already the Mission community is scouring the valley seeking farm-gate sources. Restaurants and food stores are getting ready to offer hundred-mile products and meals. James Mackinnon and Alisa Smith will be on hand through much of the hundred days to provide guidance, support and commentary. Mentoring committees are being formed and recipes exchanged.
A hundred more families are committing to 50 percent of the hundred-mile diet. This is an exciting project that’s uniting the community and making everyone more aware of the environmental and health consequences of food choices. The production will be aired on the Food Network in February and March of next year.
Provided we in Mission can all avoid caffeine rage and sugar withdrawal, I think we’re up to the challenge. We are all learning the wisdom of the often-spoken words of the member for Delta South, who frequently says: “We all have to eat to live.”
-Randy speaking of the 100 Mile Diet in the Legislative Assembly.
Watch this clip at Hansard!
UCFV’s wish granted – Mission Record April 24, 2008
Posted by Stirling Dyer in Uncategorized.1 comment so far
Maple Ridge-Mission MLA Randy Hawes said the news is great for Mission, as well as the Fraser Valley.
“It lets our kids get a university education without having to move,” he explained Tuesday.
“There’s more prestige when you have a degree from a university.”
Hawes gave credit to the Friends of UCFV Society for their relentless lobbying.
Read the full article here: http://www.bclocalnews.com/fraser_valley/missioncityrecord/news/UCFVs_wish_granted.html
Vancouver Sun Interview April 24, 2008
Posted by Stirling Dyer in Uncategorized.Tags: BC, British Columbia, Dangerous, Ferndale, Inmate, Liberals, Mission, Randy Hawes, Vancouver Sun
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Randy was interviewed by the Vancouver Sun regarding the 9 Dangerous Offenders at Ferndale.
Read it here:
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=04c2d826-b904-42b1-9ade-9ebd63fdb3e9&k=79609

