It's April 1st. Over the years I have undertaken a
number of pranks. My most recent was in 2013 when I was still marketing Hollyburn Mews. I inserted the above as part of a marketing advertisement with the cooperation of the North Shore News: The copy read as follows;
Vancouver developer Michael Geller has been
in secret discussions with members of the West Vancouver Council appointed
Upper Lands Working Group regarding a proposal to blanket much of the property
above the 1200 foot level with duplexes and coach houses linked by a network of
gondolas. The housing would be similar to his development that is just now
being completed on Esquimalt Avenue, across from West Vancouver United Church.
While Geller was reluctant to comment on
the record, he admitted to attending recent meetings of the Upper Lands Working
Group. He observed that given West Vancouver’s changing demographics, cottage-style
duplexes and coach houses are a very desirable form of housing. He added that
he thinks West Vancouver has thousands of acres covered in trees, especially in
the Upper Lands, which should be converted to housing. If Geller’s proposal is approved by Council,
West Vancouver’s population could double over the next two decades.
Geller is no stranger to controversial
developments. In 1989 he managed the failed Spetifore Lands proposal that was
rejected by Delta Council following 27 nights of Public Hearings. Since then he
has been involved with two other mountainside developments at Furry Creek and
SFU’s UniverCity on Burnaby Mountain.
Metro Vancouver`s Director of Planning Brent
Bartholomew applauded the proposal. He said building on mountainsides is
preferable to building on farmlands. He also liked Geller’s proposal to link
the new housing to Dundarave and Ambleside villages with a network of gondolas
similar to those proposed at SFU.
He noted that for far too long West
Vancouver has been an enclave for the rich and very rich. By adding 14,000 new
homes in the Upper Lands it should be possible to accommodate more lower and
middle income households, including the children and parents of the rich and
very rich.
Councillor Craig Cameron, one of two
council members on the Upper Lands Working Group, said it was premature to
comment on Geller’s massive proposal. “The Working Group has only just started
its deliberations” he said, although he acknowledged more projects like Hollyburn
Mews might be preferable to the
sprawling monster homes being built around the District.
Geller will be presenting his proposal to
Council at its meeting tomorrow on April 1st. aka April Fools’ Day!
What I didn't anticipate is that many didn't read the story to the end. Both Business in Vancouver and the Vancouver Sun contacted me for more details about the gondola proposals. Many local residents phoned up the newspaper and some District Councillors to complain about this outrageous proposal. To keep goodwill, I had to insert a subtle 'apology' the following week. It read as follows:
I would like to thank all of you who took
the time to read my tongue-in-cheek pre-April Fool’s Day advertisement in the
Sunday March 31st
edition of the North Shore News. To those of you who may have spilled your
morning coffee at the initial thought of
14,000 new duplexes and coach houses in the Upper Lands, rest assured no such
development is being planned. I am also sorry to disappoint any of you who
believed for a moment that there might be a network of gondolas to help address
West Van’s increasing traffic congestion. And if any of you were insulted by
the insensitive comments of Brent Bartholomew, the Metro Vancouver Director of
Planning, please rest assured no such person exists!
Two other favourites were tied to the marketing of Elm Park
Place, a condominium project I developed in the 90's at Larch and West 41st in
Kerrisdale.
In 1998, Prince Charles came to Vancouver, so I paid for an 'advertorial' in the Courier that the Prince was rumoured to have purchased a Kerrisdale condominium near a park. A number of excited purchasers contacted me to ask whether he had bought at Elm Park place. However, my favourite call was from a purchaser who was furious that I would sell to a member of the royal family without consulting with other purchasers. "How are we going to manage with all the extra security?" she wanted to know.
The following year I wrote an 'advertorial' that the provincial government had secretly approved a SkyTrain extension along West 41st with a station at Larch and West 41st. A surprising number of people were fooled, including one of my daughter's Crofton House classmates who brought in a copy of the Courier as her 'show and tell' story.
"There's going to be a SkyTrain to Crofton House" she exclaimed. My daughter had to explain that it was just one of her dad's April Fools' Day jokes. Unfortunately, the girl had never heard of April Fools' Day.While some people get quite upset about April Fools' Day pranks, I think they can be wonderful.
In 1998, Prince Charles came to Vancouver, so I paid for an 'advertorial' in the Courier that the Prince was rumoured to have purchased a Kerrisdale condominium near a park. A number of excited purchasers contacted me to ask whether he had bought at Elm Park place. However, my favourite call was from a purchaser who was furious that I would sell to a member of the royal family without consulting with other purchasers. "How are we going to manage with all the extra security?" she wanted to know.
The following year I wrote an 'advertorial' that the provincial government had secretly approved a SkyTrain extension along West 41st with a station at Larch and West 41st. A surprising number of people were fooled, including one of my daughter's Crofton House classmates who brought in a copy of the Courier as her 'show and tell' story.
"There's going to be a SkyTrain to Crofton House" she exclaimed. My daughter had to explain that it was just one of her dad's April Fools' Day jokes. Unfortunately, the girl had never heard of April Fools' Day.While some people get quite upset about April Fools' Day pranks, I think they can be wonderful.
However, I must confess I was
fooled in 2010 by an April Fools' Day joke that was no joke! It was a story on the Vancouver Sun website (dateline April 1)
and I was about to post it as a very clever April Fools Day prank.
But I subsequently realized it was a story in the April 2 edition.
City considers building a shelter for homeless chickens Now that some homeowners are allowed to keep the birds, officials expect some to be abandoned when reality sets in.
By TIFFANY CRAWFORD, Vancouver
SunApril 1, 2010Comments (43)
VANCOUVER
- Anticipating a wave of buyers’ remorse, city staff are recommending the city
build a special shelter for hens they expect will be abandoned by owners having
second thoughts.
The
36-page report to city council details every change the city will have to make
before backyard egg farmers will be allowed to set up shop. In March 2009,
council lifted a 30-year prohibition on keeping urban hens and directed staff
to develop the guidelines.
The
report deals with everything from the decibel levels of crowing roosters, which
will not be allowed, to pest control techniques to ward off marauding rats
hunting for chicken feed.
Apartment
dwellers will not be allowed to keep chickens on their patios, as the
guidelines say only single- and multi-family homes will be allowed to house
hens.
The
report recommends the city spend $20,000 of the community services budget to
build a facility at the Vancouver Animal Control shelter to house seized or
abandoned hens.
“Even now
we get the odd hen or rooster in the shelter,” said Tom Hammel, the city’s
chief licence inspector. “So there will be more.”
To keep
the numbers down, as well as reduce the risk of avian flu, the report says
residents may keep no more than four hens, which must be older than four
months.
“We don’t
want people buying cute fuzzy chicks on impulse and then finding out they don’t
want them,” said Hammel.
Jordan
Maynard, manager of Southlands Farm in Vancouver, says some urban chicken
farmers may get fed up with their hens if they buy the wrong breed.
“If they
get birds that are bred for meat they won’t be suitable for the backyard. Those
birds are pathetic. They don’t walk properly and they grow too fast and they
will just lay on their side and not lay eggs,” he said.
Also,
hens usually stop laying eggs after about six years and residents may not want
to kill them, but they may not want to keep them either, he said. “It depends on
whether people come to think of them as pets.”
People
who tire of their chickens won’t have a problem finding them new homes, Maynard
said. “I’ve heard that someone on Saltspring Island is starting a retirement
home for chickens.”
Hammel
said the city does not recommend people give away their hens to large chicken
farms because of the risk of spreading avian flu to commercial stocks.
The
report includes guidelines to minimize odour, stating that coops must only be
kept in a back or side yard, and that owners must remove the manure and keep
the food and water inside the coop.
Those who
want to kill their hens must take them to a veterinarian or farm for slaughter.
The
guidelines will go before the planning and environment committee next Thursday.
Should the committee approve, the report will go to public hearing May 18.
Health
concerns and noise complaints were the main reasons urban chickens were not
allowed in the past. But now the city says chickens have important
environmental benefits.
The
about-face comes as the city strives to be the greenest in the world. According
to the report, by providing eggs for urban residents and fertilizer for urban
gardens, backyard hens contribute to local food production, which “reduces the
city’s carbon footprint.”
Hammel
said there will be an online registry that owners must sign so the city can
locate the chickens in case of an outbreak of disease. There will be no licence
fee to keep the birds.
ticrawford@vancouversun.com
© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun
After reading this story I had to contact Patricia Graham at the Vancouver Sun to see if it was a delayed prank or a real story. After checking, she wrote back to say it was for real!
HAPPY APRIL FOOL'S DAY!
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