2011 YEAR IN REVIEW: Top stories in Surrey from the past year

 

Top stories for Surrey from 2011

 
 
 
 
10. Teachers' strike / funding: Teachers weren't carrying picket signs on the first of school but Sept. 6 was the beginning of job action.
The BCTF and the B.C. Public School Employers' Association, the bargaining agent for the school boards in the province, started negotiations for a new collective agreement in April.
But the two sides failed to make any progress. BCPSEA, at the provincial government's behest, proposed a zero-net mandate, a wage freeze, and some union leaders were suggesting a double-digit raise in order to catch up to their counterparts in other provinces.
In June, teachers voted overwhelmingly to take job action to back up their demands.
The BCTF started phase one of job action in September with a refusal to do non-teaching duties such as supervision and paperwork and a boycott of those services continues. The impact of teacher job action was felt at report card time last month when report cards were sent home without letter grades, containing only non-academic information such as attendance.
Meanwhile, there was some good news for the Surrey school district this fall when the province injected roughly $110 million in capital funding to build new schools and ease chronic overcrowding.
 

10. Teachers' strike / funding: Teachers weren't carrying picket signs on the first of school but Sept. 6 was the beginning of job action. The BCTF and the B.C. Public School Employers' Association, the bargaining agent for the school boards in the province, started negotiations for a new collective agreement in April. But the two sides failed to make any progress. BCPSEA, at the provincial government's behest, proposed a zero-net mandate, a wage freeze, and some union leaders were suggesting a double-digit raise in order to catch up to their counterparts in other provinces. In June, teachers voted overwhelmingly to take job action to back up their demands. The BCTF started phase one of job action in September with a refusal to do non-teaching duties such as supervision and paperwork and a boycott of those services continues. The impact of teacher job action was felt at report card time last month when report cards were sent home without letter grades, containing only non-academic information such as attendance. Meanwhile, there was some good news for the Surrey school district this fall when the province injected roughly $110 million in capital funding to build new schools and ease chronic overcrowding.

Photograph by: Marisa Babic , Surrey NOW

Here are the ten biggest stories of the year for Surrey and the surrounding areas.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
10. Teachers' strike / funding: Teachers weren't carrying picket signs on the first of school but Sept. 6 was the beginning of job action.
The BCTF and the B.C. Public School Employers' Association, the bargaining agent for the school boards in the province, started negotiations for a new collective agreement in April.
But the two sides failed to make any progress. BCPSEA, at the provincial government's behest, proposed a zero-net mandate, a wage freeze, and some union leaders were suggesting a double-digit raise in order to catch up to their counterparts in other provinces.
In June, teachers voted overwhelmingly to take job action to back up their demands.
The BCTF started phase one of job action in September with a refusal to do non-teaching duties such as supervision and paperwork and a boycott of those services continues. The impact of teacher job action was felt at report card time last month when report cards were sent home without letter grades, containing only non-academic information such as attendance.
Meanwhile, there was some good news for the Surrey school district this fall when the province injected roughly $110 million in capital funding to build new schools and ease chronic overcrowding.
 

10. Teachers' strike / funding: Teachers weren't carrying picket signs on the first of school but Sept. 6 was the beginning of job action. The BCTF and the B.C. Public School Employers' Association, the bargaining agent for the school boards in the province, started negotiations for a new collective agreement in April. But the two sides failed to make any progress. BCPSEA, at the provincial government's behest, proposed a zero-net mandate, a wage freeze, and some union leaders were suggesting a double-digit raise in order to catch up to their counterparts in other provinces. In June, teachers voted overwhelmingly to take job action to back up their demands. The BCTF started phase one of job action in September with a refusal to do non-teaching duties such as supervision and paperwork and a boycott of those services continues. The impact of teacher job action was felt at report card time last month when report cards were sent home without letter grades, containing only non-academic information such as attendance. Meanwhile, there was some good news for the Surrey school district this fall when the province injected roughly $110 million in capital funding to build new schools and ease chronic overcrowding.

Photograph by: Marisa Babic, Surrey NOW

 
10. Teachers' strike / funding: Teachers weren't carrying picket signs on the first of school but Sept. 6 was the beginning of job action.
The BCTF and the B.C. Public School Employers' Association, the bargaining agent for the school boards in the province, started negotiations for a new collective agreement in April.
But the two sides failed to make any progress. BCPSEA, at the provincial government's behest, proposed a zero-net mandate, a wage freeze, and some union leaders were suggesting a double-digit raise in order to catch up to their counterparts in other provinces.
In June, teachers voted overwhelmingly to take job action to back up their demands.
The BCTF started phase one of job action in September with a refusal to do non-teaching duties such as supervision and paperwork and a boycott of those services continues. The impact of teacher job action was felt at report card time last month when report cards were sent home without letter grades, containing only non-academic information such as attendance.
Meanwhile, there was some good news for the Surrey school district this fall when the province injected roughly $110 million in capital funding to build new schools and ease chronic overcrowding.
9. Chaos erupts at Kwantlen: A battle for control of the Kwantlen Student Association ramped up to unprecedented levels this fall as someone even went so far as setting off a pepper spray bomb and pulling the fire alarm - twice - to disrupt a special general meeting to decide the matter.
The Nov. 30 meeting went ahead after dozens of students were covered in pepper spray and the gym was evacuated. Firefighters and police were called to the scene, although no one had to be treated for injuries and no one was arrested. 
The meeting ended with a unanimous vote to oust members of the KSA executive.
The matter ultimately dates to 2005-06 when members of that year's executive, led by Aaron Takhar, were suspected of financial improprieties. An independent audit was done, and found irregularities. A lawsuit was launched to try to recover some of the money spent in loans and investments not endorsed by the student membership.
The ousted members were suspended by the university pending an investigation. That executive board put an end to the lawsuit within days of taking office.
A new permanent executive will be elected in the first week of February.
8. Tent city protests SFPR: A temporary tent village sprung up along the banks of the Fraser River in North Delta's Sunbury neighbourhood in April as roughly 40 environmental activists made a stand against the South Fraser Perimeter Road project.
In the weeks prior to the encampment, great swaths of forest had been cut from the hillside between Gunderson Slough and the Alex Fraser Bridge, beside River Road, to make way for the four-lane expressway. 
Hoping to persuade the provincial government to kill the road project rather than more trees, the campers arrived on Earth Day and pitched their tents not far from the historic Glenrose Cannery, next to one of the oldest Coast Salish archaeological sites in B.C. The cannery has since been torn down.
The protestors managed to halt construction work on the SFPR before pulling up their stakes and breaking camp in early May.
The $1.2-billion South Fraser Perimeter Road is scheduled to be completed in 2013 and will connect with highways 1, 15, 17, 91, 99 and the Golden Ears Bridge.
Seven environmentally sensitive streams are in its way.
The government has expropriated many homes to make way for the highway.
7. Stunning new library in Surrey: Surrey got a new, sleek $30-million library this year. 
The modern 77,000-square-foot library, designed by architect Bing Thom and his design team, is a stylishly bright and friendly space that doubles as a community centre where people can drop by to relax and have fun. 
"There's a feeling of openness, maybe it's a sense of sanctuary; you come in and you feel this sense of quiet calm but yet there is subliminal excitement, but the excitement is not overwhelming," Thom said in an interview with the Now. "You're visually teased to explore." 
Thom said the curves of the library follow the curvature of University Boulevard, and although the two designs on that street are originals, they "talk to each other." 
The library is stocked with about 100,000 books, with room for 150,000, and lots of technology, including more than 80 public computers. The library, which officially opened in September, boasts a number of green features, including a green roof, and will aim for LEED Silver certification. 
The library also features a large children's library, teen lounge, coffee shop, group study areas and classroom space for SFU Surrey's continuing studies department.
6. Arrest in Szendrei murder: It was arguably the biggest arrest in 2011.
Rarely - if ever - had North Deltans been so collectively freaked out as when 15-year-old Burnsview student Laura Szendrei was viciously beaten in broad daylight in Mackie Park last year.
More than 55 police officers worked on the case, sifting through some 500 tips. 
Public forums were held, cops flooded into side streets looking for clues and the mayor had crews clear some unkempt lots of underbrush in an effort to prevent such a crime from happening again.
In the meantime, the community at large grew increasingly on edge as days turned into weeks, and weeks into months, with no arrest.
Finally, all that bottled-up pressure was released in February with the arrest of an 18-year-old North Delta man. The accused was 17 when Szendrei was killed, so it is illegal to publish his name as the Youth Criminal Justice Act shields his identity.
The accused remains in custody. His preliminary hearing is set for April and May in Surrey provincial court.
As a sidebar, hundreds of people participated in a Walk, Run and Roll event held in Szendrei's memory a couple months after the arrest.
5. Fatal shootings involve police: It's a rare occurrence, but Surrey Mounties were involved in two fatal shootings within a few weeks of each other back in March.
Adam Brian Purdie, 28, was killed during a shootout with police on March 2, near King George Boulevard just north of Highway 10.
Saanich police were asked to investigate the case and found the Surrey Mountie who fired 30 rounds at Purdie to be criminally blameless in his death.
"The officer involved in this shooting was left with no alternative other than the use of deadly force," A/Sgt. Dean Jantzen said at the conclusion of the investigation. The cop's name was not revealed. He now works in another province.
The police investigation into the shooting revealed Purdie was upset about breaking up with a girlfriend and had been within two blocks of her new boyfriend's home when he hit the traffic check.
Meanwhile, Brandon Samuel Beddow, 23, was shot dead on March 23 after the Surrey RCMP was called to a domestic fight call on McBride Avenue in Crescent Beach. Vancouver police department is still investigating that shooting.
"We will issue an update when it is concluded in the New Year," Const. Jana McGuinness said.
4. HST polarizes the province: Even in a province used to political turbulence, the Harmonized Sales Tax ranks as one of the most polarizing issues in recent times.
The HST controversy was a major factor in then premier Gordon Campbell's plunge in popularity, and it also led to the re-emergence of former premier Bill Vander Zalm into the political limelight to lead the anti-HST fight.
Campbell and then Finance Minister Colin Hansen announced the government's plans to harmonize its provincial sales tax with the federal Goods and Services Tax on July 23, 2009. The HST would combine the seven per cent PST with the five per cent GST, for a single tax rate of 12 per cent.
Although the tax was largely supported by the business community, the public balked. Confusion about the tax further fueled the conflict. The HST came into affect on July 1, 2010. Growing opposition to the tax led to a referendum on the issue in the summer of 2011; a total of 1.6 million voters cast ballots. On Aug. 26, Elections BC announced that 54.7 per cent voted to get rid of the tax and 45.3 per cent voted to keep it.
After the defeat, Finance Minister Kevin Falcon announced the province was making plans to revert back to the old PST and GST system, a transition that would take about 18 months.
3. Canucks' ride marred by riot: June 15 was marked by bitterness, disappointment and destruction in the wake of the Vancouver Canucks' Game 7 loss to the Boston Bruins, ending an otherwise spectacular Stanley Cup run.
As the team moved ever closer to the ultimate playoff series, more and more people turned up to celebrate at "Canucks Corner," at Scott Road and 72nd Avenue on the Surrey/Delta border. There were so many that police began closing down the intersection in anticipation of the fans who turned out - win or loss, rain or shine.
Aside from some liquor violations, the celebrations were relatively short and good-natured.
The City of Surrey began showing the games on a massive outdoor screen at Central City, much like sites in Vancouver. These too were notably upbeat and family-oriented, even though many people worried about a possible repeat of the 1994 Stanley Cup riot.
In spite of large crowds in Surrey and Delta, the post-game rioting was confined to Downtown Vancouver. Surrey sent 100 Mounties and Delta police sent 25 officers to help overwhelmed Vancouver police subdue the riot.
So far, 14 people from Surrey and one from Delta are facing charges, with more expected to be announced in January.
2. Wild ride for the political left: This past year was somewhat of a roller coaster ride for those on the left wing of Surrey's political spectrum.
Federal New Democrat leader Jack Layton's seismic popularity created a political tsunami - dubbed the Orange Crush, after the NDP's colours - that helped sweep local MP incumbents Sukh Dhaliwal (Liberal, Newton-North Delta) and Dona Cadman (Tory, Surrey North) out of office.
Jinny Sims, a resident of North Delta and a former president of the B.C. Teachers' Federation, is the first NDP MP to hold the Newton-North Delta riding. 
The federal NDP took a big hit in August, though, when Layton, 61, died of cancer.
But far from benefiting from any type of "Orange Crush," Surrey's left-wing civic political candidates were crushed in November's elections.
Surrey First Education slate kept its firm grip on school board, while Surrey Civic Coalition incumbent Ijaz Chatha was replaced by his slate running mate Charlene Dobie, the only SCC candidate to be elected that time out.
The near shutout at the polls has left the slate to do some serious soul-searching. Most notably, Surrey's elder civic statesmen Bob Bose, 79, lost his city councillor's seat, being one rung short of re-election.
1. 'Dubya' visit sparks protest: Former U.S. president George W. Bush coming to Surrey tops the list of news items this year. "Dubya" came to the city to speak at Surrey's 2011 Regional Economic Summit with former U.S. president Bill Clinton. The summit, to which tickets were  $599 a pop, featured a variety of other speakers as well. 
Several Surrey and Lower Mainland residents expressed their anger leading up to the event, calling Bush a war criminal. 
Gail Davidson with Lawyers Against the War urged Surrey Mayor Dianne Watts to withdraw her invitation to Bush, but Watts stood her ground.
Watts was also insistent that the event, on Oct. 20, cost taxpayers nothing - that it was all paid for by admission fees and sponsorship.
A few hundred protesters showed up outside Sheraton Vancouver Guildford Hotel during the event - far fewer than expected. Dozens of police officers barricaded the entrance to the hotel during the protest. 
Chanted phrases included "Arrest George Bush," and, "Do your job, enforce the law," as well as, "Diane Watts. Shame on you."
Many speculated that Watts allowing Bush to come to the summit would hurt her in the upcoming civic election, but she won by a landslide.
 
 
 
 
 
 

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