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November 30, 2007

Coldest winter in years: Environment Canada

Filed under: , , Chinatown, environment — admin @ 11:35 pm
Oh boy, we are going to experience much chill this winter :P
CTV - The weather phenomenon La Nina will bring Canada the coldest winter in nearly 15 years, Environment Canada warned Friday.

Environment Canada's temperature forecast shows the majority of the country will experience a "temperature anomaly" of below-normal temperatures through the months of December, January and February.

Much of Nova Scotia, Saskatchewan, Alberta and parts of British Columbia and southern Ontario will also see above-normal precipitation.

David Phillips, senior climatologist with Environment Canada, told The Canadian Press that the temperature and precipitation abnormalities are likely the result of the weather phenomenon La Nina.

La Nina, meaning the little girl, is the appearance of cooler-than-normal waters in the eastern and central Pacific Ocean.
Full story here.

Victoria BC Canada Real Estate - Property Transfer Tax & Building Green

Filed under: , , BC Real Estate Update, Real Estate Victoria — admin @ 4:44 pm

We have talked in many previous blogs about all the taxes and fees that come in to effect when purchasing Real Estate in Victoria BC and British Columbia in general. As REALTORS® we have and are lobbying the provincial government through various associations and boards to do something constructive with the almost one billion dollars the government collect in Property Transfer Tax (PTT). This tax is also commonly referred to as Property Purchase Tax.

Recently the British Columbia Real Estate Association, The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver and Canadian Homebuilder’s Association of BC put forward recommendations for using the provincial tax system to encourage sustainable communities. Some of the highlights of this are;

  • Improving the quality of life in our communities is a key priority for both the real estate and home building professions. That’s why we support a quality of life program that includes five interrelated principles:
    •  ensuring economic vitality;
    •  providing housing opportunities that support affordability;
    •  preserving the environment;
    •  protecting property owners; and
    •  building better communities
  •   Benefits of Green Building.Buildings that meet a green standard are more energy-efficient and environmentally sustainable.They reduce operating costs, optimize building performance and create markets for green-products and services. They are also healthier and in the long-term reduce our health care costs,for example, by improving indoor and outdoor air quality and water quality.
  • Challenges That Comes With Building Green.While builders, buyers and renovators see the benefits of green homes and buildings, they also know that they cost more to build, buy and renovate.2 The decisions we make today have long-term impacts on how livable and vibrant our communities will be for generations to come.
  • The Solution. With estimated revenue of about $1 billion this year, the Property Transfer Tax (PTT) offers a unique opportunity for the BC Government to play a major role in improving the quality of life in our communities. We encourage the BC Government to tackle the challenge head on by reinvesting PTT and PST revenues in a provincial, tax based pilot program, that we’re calling the Green
    Building Tax Incentive and Rebate Program. It will help us respond to the challenges of growth in our communities by promoting the design, construction, renovation and purchase of green, environmentally sustainable, residential and commercial buildings.

There is much more to this recommendations, please read more about it on the British Columbia Real Estate Association website.

If you have any comments or thoughts on what the British Columbia Government should do with the 1 billion they collect just drop us a note below. Questions about Victoria Real Estate in general, you can contact us anytime. 

Cheers, Anders

Anders Treiberg, Associate Broker, REALTOR®                                                           

Properties in Victoria Professionals - Royal LePage Coast Capital.   

Anders Treiberg has been a REALTOR® in Victoria since 1990. He has extensive Real Estate Expertise and can be reached on his website  or via email at anders@PropertiesInVictoria.com

Photo of the Day - Cross-eyed kitty

Filed under: , , Chinatown, photos — admin @ 2:10 pm
(A cross-eyed Siamese mix breed kitten peers from its cage at the Edmonton Humane Society on Wednesday Nov. 28, 2007. The kitten which has not been named yet, is one of the many available animals the Humane Society has up for adoption. CP)

Full text of Canada’s ‘comfort women’ motion

Filed under: , , Canada, Chinatown, Japan, WWII, comfort women, history, war crimes — admin @ 7:16 am
Final version of the "comfort women" motion that was passed by the parliament of Canada on Nov 28, 2007:

i. During its wartime occupation of Asia and the Pacific Islands, from the 1930s through the duration of World War II, the Imperial Armed Forces of Japan officially commissioned the acquisition of young women for the sole purpose of sexual servitude, who became known as 'comfort women'; and

ii. That some Japanese public officials have recently expressed a regrettable desire to dilute or rescind the 1993 statement by Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohei Kono on the `comfort women', which expressed the Government's sincere apologies and remorse for their ordeal; and

iii. That Japan has made progress since 1945 in recognizing and atoning for its past actions, and for many decades has been a major contributor to international peace, security, and development, including through the United Nations; and

iv. That the Canada-Japan alliance continues to be based on shared vital interests and values in the Asia-Pacific region, including the preservation and promotion of political and economic freedoms, support for human rights and democratic institutions, and the securing of prosperity for the people of both countries and the international community; and

v. That the Government of Canada should therefore encourages the Government of Japan to abandon any statement which devalues the expression of regret from the Kono Statement of 1993; to clearly and publicly refute any claims that the sexual enslavement and trafficking of the 'comfort women' for the Japanese Imperial Forces never occurred; to take full responsibility for the involvement of the Japanese Imperial Forces in the system of forced prostitution, including through a formal and sincere apology expressed in the Diet to all of those who were victims; and to continue to address those affected in a spirit of reconciliation.

Finally, something good about the Tories

Filed under: , , Chinatown, Conservatives, comfort women, human rights, politics — admin @ 6:52 am
(caption: Secretary of State Jason Kenney greeted former "comfort women" in Ottawa. Ming Pao.)

The 'comfort women' motion was finally passed yesterday. It was a day of excitement and happiness.

I really have to commend the Tories this time. As someone who've been following the story very closely right from the start, I knew how reluctant the Tories were to offend their Japanese friends at the beginning.

I might disagree with the Tories on many issues, especially ideological ones, but examples after examples, I have to admit that they are efficient and are able to get things done.

The important thing is, they listen. On the comfort women issue, I don't care whether they did it out of political considerations (Chinese ballots etc) or genuine respect on human rights. The reality that they agreed to sit down and talk and tried hammering out a final version that was acceptable to all parties has already won many hearts.

And they did it fast. At first we all thought the Tories would try to drag the issue on forever and let Motion 291 died in the womb. But suddenly they were willing to talk with Olivia Chow and ALPHA. And suddenly they were bargaining about the final wordings of the motion. Then yesterday, it was passed! All these came in within a couple of months.

Honestly, I was surprised.

It was a very different story under the Liberals. During those years, concerns and requests of the Chinese Canadian community weren't effectively relayed to the top. Instead of trying to persuade the top to address the community's concerns, Liberal messengers rather chose to "comfort", "console" and "suggest" the community to drop its requests.

If the Tories can stay further and further away from their ideology and keep closer and closer to the centre, and given the continuously disappointing performance of Stephane Dion and gang, the Tories do have a good chance.

They should know by now the majority of Canadians belong to the middle. Don't preach your neo-Con teachings. Just be a good government.

The only skepticism remains, though, is the general worry that the Tories might reinstall policies that match their ideologies if they get a majority (such as bringing back the same-sex marriage controversy etc).

I think the Tories still have much to work on in improving their image.

The next item on my wishlist for the Tories: Improve relationship with China. :)

‘Comfort women’ used to prevent military revolt: Japanese scholar

Filed under: , , Chinatown, Japan, WWII, comfort women, history, human rights, war crimes — admin @ 5:42 am
Yonhap - The Japanese military used sex slaves to satisfy disgruntled frontline soldiers during World War II and discourage military revolt, a Japanese historian claimed Friday.

Yoshiaki Yoshimi, a professor of modern Japanese history at Chuo University in Tokyo, made the remark at a forum here organized by the Association for Korean Modern and Contemporary History and Northeast Asian History Foundation.

The remark comes as criticism mounts over the Japanese government's failure to properly apologize for the atrocities committed against sex slaves and compensate the surviving victims.

Canada's parliament unanimously passed a motion Wednesday demanding that Japan sincerely apologize to those forced into military brothels during World War II. The U.S. Congress and Dutch Parliament adopted similar resolutions earlier this year.

The term comfort women is a euphemism for sex slaves. Historians say hundreds of thousands of women from Korea and other countries were forced to serve frontline Japanese soldiers during the war.

Yoshimi found documents dealing with comfort women at a library of the Defense Agency in Tokyo in early 1990s, proving for the first time that the Japanese Army ran "comfort stations" to provide sexual services to frontline soldiers.

The Japanese Army established the comfort stations to prevent venereal diseases and rape by Japanese soldiers, to provide comfort to soldiers and head off espionage, Yoshimi said.

"The comfort stations were not actual solutions to the first two problems. Rather, they aggravated the problems," he said, adding providing comfort to soldiers was the most important thing for the military.

"They (the Japanese soldiers) were in a war of aggression with no promising future in sight. They never knew when they would return home. They were not taken care of well and their basic human rights were trampled on," he said.

"The Japanese Imperial Army feared most that the simmering discontentment of the soldiers could explode into a riot and revolt. That is why it provided women," he said.

Yoshimi stressed the need for further studies to explore in depth why the comfort women became indispensable for the Japanese Imperial Army.

"Many issues are involved here, including the modern expeditionary force, imperialism and the oppression of other peoples, the Japanese Emperor, male dominance and sexual emancipation," he said.

Citing a Japanese military report in 1941 dealing with the venereal diseases of soldiers, Yoshimi said most of the victims of sexual slavery were women from countries under Japanese colonial rule, including Korea and China. More than 50% of the women are estimated to be Korean, he added.


The Province: Give Yao Baoying justice

Filed under: , , Amanda Zhao, Chinatown, justice, murder — admin @ 4:47 am
Thank you Fabian! :)

Give this grieving mom the justice she richly deserves

The Province, editorial - To say that the wheels of justice often turn at a laborious pace is an understatement when it comes to the case of Amanda Zhao Wei, the 21-year-old Burnaby student found murdered five years ago, one year after coming here from China.

Just ask Amanda's mom, Yang Baoying, who has pleaded with federal Justice Minister Rob Nicholson for action to bring her daughter's accused killer, 19-year-old Li Ang, to justice: "We lost our only daughter. Five years are gone and justice still isn't served. Is this fair?" No it is not. It is a tragic injustice that again brings into question the effectiveness of the RCMP and Canada's overall justice system, especially in a case that crosses international boundaries.

Zhao's body was found in October, 2002, stuffed in a suitcase in the Mission area. But just three days later, Li, her boyfriend, was allowed to leave for China. In 2003,Li was charged with second-degree murder in Zhao's killing. And early the following year, he was taken into custody in Beijing, but was later released. Later in 2004, Li's cousin, who was accused of helping him dump Zhao's body, walked free after a B.C. judge ruled the RCMP improperly gathered evidence against him.

Recently, two NDP MPs urged Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day to work harder with Chinese authorities to secure justice for the Zhao family. But Day suggested the MPs pressure B.C. Solicitor-General John Les instead. Les told Province reporter Andy Ivens the matter rested with federal authorities.

In other words, all Zhao's anguished mother seems to have got from our justice system so far is a lot of buck-passing. She deserves better.

November 29, 2007

Victoria BC Real Estate - Home Owner Protection Act Ammendments

When buying Real Estate in Victoria BC. or any other province or territory in Canada one should always try to be familiar with what regulations etc. applies. In British Columbia we have the Homeowner Protection Office.

The Homeowner Protection Office (HPO) is a provincial Crown Corporation formed in 1998 in response to the need to introduce basic consumer protection legislation and regulatory improvements within the residential construction sector. The HPO was established under the Homeowner Protection Act (Act), which was passed on July 28, 1998 for the main purposes of:

  • strengthening consumer protection for buyers of new homes
  • helping bring about improvements to the quality of residential
  • construction, and
  • supporting research and education respecting residential
  • construction in British Columbia.

There has been some recent changes to the Homeowner Protection Act and they became law on the 19th of November 2007. They are:

  • Selling an “as is” home during construction
    An owner builder is not permitted to sell a home during construction “as is” without permission from the Homeowner Protection Office (HPO).
  • Occupancy requirements
    An owner builder must occupy the new home for at least one year after obtaining an occupancy permit. The home cannot be sold or rented during this one-year period.
  • Warranty insurance
    Home-buyers should understand that only owner builders who purchase 2-5-10 home warranty insurance from a warranty provider have the backing of a new home warranty.
  • Disclosure
    Owner builders must provide a disclosure notice from the HPO to prospective buyers within the first ten years after occupancy. Subsequent buyers are also required to provide a disclosure notice if they sell the home within the ten-year period. The disclosure notice states that the home was built by an owner builder. It also states whether there is a home warranty insurance policy.
  • Defects
    Owner builders who sell their homes within the first ten years are obligated to subsequent buyers for defects in the new home during that ten-year period. These obligations are similar to those of a Licensed Residential Builder under a policy of home warranty insurance and include two years for material and labour, five years for defects in the building envelope and ten years for structural defects.
    Buyers can take legal action against owner builders to correct defects, except those set out in the regulation; for example, those caused by natural disasters.
  • New homes under construction
    New homes under construction but not complete cannot be listed or sold unless the home is covered by home warranty insurance or has received an exemption.
    This includes new homes that originally had home warranty insurance coverage, but are de-enrolled because the builder’s contract was cancelled, the owner is bankrupt or the warranty provider cancelled the builder’s acceptance. These homes cannot be offered for sale or sold “as is.” The owner must contact the HPO for the Registrar’s permission, which may be subject to conditions; for example, the home can only be sold to a Licensed Residential Builder who then enrolls the home in a new home warranty.
  • Registry of new homes
    A searchable registry of new homes will soon be available to home-buyers on the HPO website at www.hpo.bc.ca . Details will include whether that home is owner-built, exempt as a purpose-built rental or built by a Licensed Residential Builder with a home warranty insurance policy in place.

If you have any comments about HPO or real estate in general, you can contact us anytime. Cheers, Anders

Anders Treiberg, Associate Broker, REALTOR®                                                           

Properties in Victoria Professionals - Royal LePage Coast Capital.   

Anders Treiberg has been a REALTOR® in Victoria since 1990. He has extensive Real Estate Expertise and can be reached on his website  or via email at anders@PropertiesInVictoria.com

‘Comfort women’ motion passed!!!!

Filed under: , , Canada, Chinatown, Japan, WWII, comfort women, history, war crimes — admin @ 3:55 am
CP - Members of all federal parties unanimously passed a motion Wednesday recognizing that Japan used women as sex slaves during the Second World War.

The motion also encourages the Canadian government to press Tokyo to make a “formal and sincere apology” in its legislature to all victims, referred to as comfort women. The women were rounded up from Japan's occupied territories, including China, during the 1930s and '40s.

New Democrat MP Olivia Chow (photo) spearheaded the motion, and was backed by the secretary of state for multiculturalism, Jason Kenney. The two hosted a delegation of comfort women on Parliament Hill this week.

“There are over 200,000 women who have been suffering through this kind of torture,” Chow said during question period in the House of Commons.

“Four of the survivors of sexual slavery are on Parliament Hill asking us to join them in asking Japan to give a formal sincere apology.”

Said Kenney: “We commend them for their courage, their bravery and their dignity considering what terrible things took place. They inspire us all, I hope in all parties, to join together in combating contemporary forms of slavery, sexual servitude and human trafficking.”

The declaration ruffled the feathers of Japanese embassy officials, who point out that a senior government official made a historic and public apology in 1993 to women who suffered under the Imperial Forces. A fund was set up by that government (NOTE by editor: the fund was not funded by the government and the fund was run not by the government) in 1995 that dispersed $20,000 to 285 former comfort women.

“We're not trying to reject or camouflage the past - we want people to know what happened over the past 15 years,” the official said.

But those previous gestures were overshadowed in March, when Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe denied the government coerced the women into sexual slavery. He later retracted the statement, but since then the U.S. Congress and the lower house of the Dutch legislature have both passed motions calling on Japan to apologize to the women.

The Canadian motion carefully underlines the good relations between Canada and Japan, but says Japan should “abandon any statement which devalues the expression of regret.”

See also:




November 28, 2007

Vancouver 2010 mascots - look like Beijing’s?

Filed under: , , Chinatown, Olympic — admin @ 8:32 pm
So these are OUR mascots... I like the "MukMuk" which wasn't even on the launch party today.

Quatchi, Miga and Sumi. These are the names of the three critters who will meet and greet athletes, visitors, and fans in Vancouver and Whistler for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games.

Each of the creatures is distinct and special – both in personality and in appearance. One is big, gentle and shy . . . one is small, mischievous and outgoing . . . and one is a natural-born leader with a passion for protecting the environment. All three are mythical creatures with roots in local legend. One is a sasquatch. One is a sea-bear. And one is an animal guardian spirit. They are all, to say the least, unique.
Interesting video here.

I think Miga looks like Beijing's mascots... ;)

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