Mudflats agreement A LONG-term agreement between Environment Canada and the Vancouver Port Corp. will transfer management of the port’s Maplewood site to the federal department’s Conservation and Protection Service. The announcement was made Thursday by North Vancouver-Seymour MP Chuck Cook. The site consists of 58 acres of infilled industrial lands adjacent to the Maplewood mudflats. Environment Canada will use five acres in the north- east corner of the site to establish an environmental science centre to house some of its regional scientific operations. Environment Canada and the Port of Vancouver will develop, in consultation with the public, a management plan for the site to address site contamination, rehabilitation and public access. Cypress rescheduled B.C. PARKS has cancelled the May 6 meeting concern- ing Cypress Bowl Recreations Ltd’s (CBRL) commercial expansion plans for the North Shore’s Cypress Bowl area. But CBRL president Wayne Booth has said in a letter te the News that bis company still plans te present its plan to the public on May 6 starting at 7 p.m. at Van- couver's Robson Media Centre. Ia a press release sent out Thursday, B.C. Parks noted that CBRL's recently submitted plan for the Cypress Bowl ski area was incomplete and depended entirely on expansion of the company’s commercial permit area within the Class A provincial park. B.C. Parks had requested CBRL prepare a com- prehensive plan for lands currently within the company’s permit area, land originally leased to CBRL. CBRL maps and conceptual drawings relating to ex- pansion beyond the company’s permit srea were sched- uled to be on display until April 19 and then again from April 24 to 26 at Park Royal Shopping Centre’s south mail. CBRL expansion pians are an integral part of a new Cypress Provincial Park master plan that was originally projected te be completed by July. B.C. Parks fas tentatively rescheduled the May 6 meeting to the fall. The government agency says it is continuicg with Cypress Provincial Park planning and will formulate several park management options to be presented to the public at the fall meeting. NV golf ciub joins sanctuary program Wildlife habitat enhancement THE SEYMOUR Golf and Country Club (SGCC) is out to dispel recent bad publicity that claims golf courses are dangerous to liviag things pesticides. The golf club is the first in Canada to be accepted in the New York Audubon Society’s Cooper- ative Sanctuary Program. The aim of the program is to manage and enhance wildlife habitat on golf courses. “It’s more than politics. Some of our members are very interest- ed in the wildlife. We are at least trying to publicize the fact that golf courses, in- general, are en- vironmentally friendly things,’’ said SGCC general manager Bruce Jaffary. Jaffary said SGCC was ac- cepted into the program in Febru- ary and now must install bird feeders, 5O nesting boxes, and make other changes to the course to encourage wildlife before the Audubon Society fully sanctions it. He said the 130-acre golf course already has ‘‘tremendous’’ numbers of nesting birds, ducks, “4ots of coyotes,’? and about six resident deer. Approximately 280 goif courses and filled with harmful By Anna Marie D’Angelo News Reporter in the United States have also ap- plied to join the program. Meanwhile, plans to install a practice range net on the Mount Seymour Parkway side of the golf course have been approved. Jaffary said the 80-foot-high net should be set up in approxi- mately two months. He said the net will be partially screened by trees, some of which are 50 to 60 feet high. North Vancouver District has widened Mount Seymour Parkway and thinned out the tree buffer at the end of the golf practise area. Since then, golf balls have hit houses and one car last year. SGCC leases its golf course land from the district. The golf club owns the clubhouse and parking lot land. SGCC is open to the public on Mondays and Fridays. (These writs were filed with the court registry in’ Vancouver be- tween April 13 and April 15, 1992. Information is taken from the statements of claim.) Plaintiff: The Bank of Nova Scotia, 180 East 2nd Ave. at Main, Vancouver, B.C. Defendant: Denys Dodds, #4 - 1945 West 12th Ave., Vancouver, B.C. and Daniel H. Walcott, 5325 Montiverdi PI., West Vancouver, B.C. Claim: Judgment against defen- dants for $159,949.35 plus 13.25% per annum interest from and in- cluding March 16, 1991. Plaintiff: T.G.L. Holdings I[nc., 50 - 1725 Southmere Cres., Sur- rey, B.C. Defendant: Kenneth R. Lee, 101-131 West 6th St., North Van- couver. Claim: The sum of $99,000 owing to the plaintiff for shares sold to the defendant by the plaintiff pur- suant tO an agreement dated September 1989. Plaintiff: Malvern Pacific Holdings Ltd., c/o 404-1199 West Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C. Defendant: Harpo’s Restaurant Ltd., c/o 1710-1177 West Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C. and Harvey Kardos, 4170 Ripple Rd., West Vancouver, B.C. and Robert Kotek, 501-1215 Beach Ave., Vancouver B.C. and Patrice Suhner, 6550 East Blvd., Van- couver, B.C. Claim: $45,000 for leasehold im- provements and fixtures and $4,953 for damages caused by the removal of trade fixtures. Plaintiff: TLC Lease Corp., 300-1497 Marine Dr., West Van- couver, B.C. Defendant: Rollins Machinery Lid., 2100 One Bentall Centre, 505 Burrard St., Vancouver, B.C. Claim: Damages for breach of contracts in the amount of $22,593.25. Plaintiff: Frederick Kranz, 4315 Prospect Rd., North Vancouver, B.C. Defendant: Corporation of the City of Nelson, 502 Vernon St., Neilson, B.C. 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