19
HALIFAX NEWS WORTH SHARING. Monday, April 15, 2013 metronews.ca | twitter.com/metrohalifax | facebook.com/metrohalifax Local residents and members of an international hacktivist group called for both criminal justice and social change dur- ing a protest Sunday in honour of a Cole Harbour teen who took her own life. “There’s a responsibility by the public in the way kids are brought up and what they’re taught in the home,” said a masked, unnamed member of Anonymous, referring to the four boys who allegedly gang- raped Rehtaeh Parsons when she was 15. “But there’s also a responsibility by the judicial system to act when there’s a problem and do a thorough in- vestigation, which is not what happened here.” Parsons killed herself earlier this month, two years after she was allegedly raped and then harassed by classmates about the incident. RCMP did not initially lay charges but have said they’ll re- open the investigation, based on new information. About 100 people joined the peaceful protest outside HRP headquarters Sunday, castigat- ing police for their efforts. “We urge the RCMP to act like guardians and set the prop- er example for the young men of Nova Scotia, and to send a very clear message that this be- haviour will not be tolerated,” said a protester named Dave. Kim Wall, 45, said it’s time for adults to start teaching young boys and men respon- sibility for their own behaviour. “I’m really tired of phrases like, ‘Boys will be boys,’” she said. “It is time that we start teaching our sons respect so that we’re not all teaching our daughters to protect them- selves against those sons.” RUTH DAVENPORT/METRO Responsibility. Demonstrators say parents, police and educators have role to play in ensuring teen tragedy isn’t repeated Protest for Rehtaeh urges real change CHALLENGES AWAIT TRUDEAU AFTER LANDSLIDE WIN AS NEWLY ELECTED PARTY LEADER, HARD WORK OF REVIVING LIBERAL BRAND HAS JUST BEGUN PAGE 5 For Will and Jaden Smith, future is now Father and son joining Metro in honour of Earth Day to envision what the world will look like hundreds of years from now PAGE 12 About 100 people showed up for a protest demanding justice for Rehtaeh Parsons, including her mother Leah Parsons, third from left, on Sunday. For more coverage, see page 3 or visit metronews.ca. JEFF HARPER/METRO Response Later on Sunday, an apparent counter-protest materialized at the same location. A handful of people stood on the sidewalk carrying signs reading “Listen!” and “2 sides to every story,” apparently in support of the boys involved in the alleged assault.

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HALIFAX

News worth

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Monday, April 15, 2013 metronews.ca | twitter.com/metrohalifax | facebook.com/metrohalifax

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HFX-Metro-5y-10x164-CLR.pdf 1 13-04-08 11:45 AM

Local residents and members of an international hacktivist group called for both criminal justice and social change dur-ing a protest Sunday in honour of a Cole Harbour teen who took her own life.

“There’s a responsibility by the public in the way kids are brought up and what they’re taught in the home,” said a masked, unnamed member of Anonymous, referring to the four boys who allegedly gang-raped Rehtaeh Parsons when she was 15. “But there’s also a responsibility by the judicial system to act when there’s a problem and do a thorough in-vestigation, which is not what happened here.”

Parsons killed herself earlier this month, two years after she was allegedly raped and then harassed by classmates about the incident.

RCMP did not initially lay charges but have said they’ll re-

open the investigation, based on new information.

About 100 people joined the peaceful protest outside HRP headquarters Sunday, castigat-ing police for their efforts.

“We urge the RCMP to act like guardians and set the prop-er example for the young men of Nova Scotia, and to send a very clear message that this be-haviour will not be tolerated,” said a protester named Dave.

Kim Wall, 45, said it’s time for adults to start teaching young boys and men respon-sibility for their own behaviour.

“I’m really tired of phrases like, ‘Boys will be boys,’” she said. “It is time that we start teaching our sons respect so that we’re not all teaching our daughters to protect them-selves against those sons.” rutH dAvenport/metro

Responsibility. Demonstrators say parents, police and educators have role to play in ensuring teen tragedy isn’t repeated

protest for rehtaeh urges real change

challenges await trudeau after landslide winas newly elected party leader, hard work of reviving liberal brand has just begun PAGE 5

For Will and Jaden Smith, future is nowfather and son joining Metro in honour of earth day to envision what the world will look like hundreds of years from now PAGE 12

About 100 people showed up for a protest demanding justice for Rehtaeh Parsons, including her mother Leah Parsons, third from left, on Sunday. For more coverage, see page 3 or visit metronews.ca. jEff hArPEr/mEtro

Response

Later on Sunday, an apparent counter-protest materialized at the same location. A handful of people stood on the sidewalk carrying signs reading “Listen!” and “2 sides to every story,” apparently in support of the boys involved in the alleged assault.

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03metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013 NEWS

NEW

S

Glen Canning, left, father of Rehtaeh Parsons, is comforted outside St. Mark’s Anglican Church after his daughter’s funeral on Saturday. ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS

Celebrate Rehtaeh’s life, priest urges at funeralFamily and friends of Rehtaeh Parsons were urged at her fu-neral on Saturday to celebrate her life, but also to use her story to draw attention to larger problems in society.

More than 100 people filed into St. Mark’s Anglican Church in Halifax’s north end to say goodbye to Parsons.

In his eulogy, Rev. John Mor-rell noted that social media contributed to Rehtaeh’s de-pression and death, but said it also allowed her family to share

her story around the world.“It is a time of celebration

and thanksgiving of her short life amongst us,” Morrell said in the eulogy. “However, given the worldwide attention to the events leading up to this tra-gedy, it is appropriate to focus on what happens tomorrow, and the day after and weeks and years to come.”

After the service, pallbear-ers in dark suits carried an urn encased in a glass box down the church steps and into a hearse

as family members followed behind.THE CANADIAN PRESS

For a grieving father, coming to a small candlelight vigil for Rehtaeh Parsons was his way of trying to “right a wrong.”

David Wilson was one of a few participants in a small vigil at Dundas Square in Toronto on Sunday night for Parsons, the Cole Harbour teen who killed herself after a photo of her al-leged rape was circulated on-line.

Wilson’s daughter Lindsay Wilson was stalked and killed by her ex-boyfriend on April 5 in Bracebridge, Ont.

“He warned her he had a gun,” Wilson said. “He had stalked her previously.”

His daughter’s ex-boyfriend shot her in her driveway, then shot himself. “Nothing but a complete coward,” Wilson said.

He said he’s calling on po-lice to intervene in domestic-

violence situations before threats become violence, and more women are killed.

“If that had been the case with my daughter, she would have been here today,” he said. “She was told by police a restraining order would do nothing whatsoever and (her ex-boyfriend) could still do any-thing he wanted to her. And as it turned out, he did.”

Wilson said in the wake of his daughter’s death he has learned more about the extent of violence against women and today is only the first day of a life of advocacy to stop it.

“This is the only way I know of constructively righting a wrong,” he said. “I’m primar-ily here to support Rehtaeh Parsons’ parents. It’s the worst thing that could ever happen.”

Grieving dad trying to ‘right wrongs’ against women

David Wilson and Tara Muldoon take part in a candlelight vigil for Rehtaeh Parsons at Dundas Square in Toronto on Sunday night. JESSICA SMITH/METRO IN TORONTO

Rehtaeh Parsons. Handful of people show up to honour teen at vigil in Toronto

Grateful for support

• Angella Parsons, Reh-taeh’s cousin, said since her death, the support from the community has been overwhelming, call-ing it “a true testament to the beauty of humanity.”

Parsons case reopened

Police ask for public help in investigationIn the light of “new and credible information,” Hali-fax police are reopening the Rehtaeh Parsons investiga-tion.

An investigative team made up of Halifax Regional Police and RCMP has been assigned to review the new information, RCMP Cpl. Scott MacRae said on Friday.

“We have information that we can verify, we can substantiate, we can work with and there’s something real that the police can

actually look into,” MacRae said.

“Where we’ll go, that’s a whole other story.”

MacRae emphasized the information did not come from an online source.

The hacker group Anonymous has said it has identified the four boys in-volved in the alleged attack,

but MacRae said he didn’t think it was connected to the new information.

MacRae also repeated the Parsons family’s request for privacy during this time.

Anyone with specific in-formation about the case is asked to call police or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.THE CANADIAN PRESS Rehtaeh Parsons FACEBOOK

A need to speak up

‘It’s happening too much’The organizer of Sunday’s vigil in Toronto says the story

of Rehtaeh Parsons’ alleged rape hits close to home.

“I have friends this has happened to. This has hap-pened to me. It’s happening too much,” she said.

“We’re hear for Rehtaeh. We felt that with a story that’s really taken the country, the biggest city really needs to speak up and say something.” JESSICA SMITH/METRO IN TORONTO

From one parent to another

“I’m primarily here to support Rehtaeh Par-sons’ parents. It’s the worst thing that could ever happen.”David Wilson, who attended a vigil in Toronto for the Cole Harbour teen

JESSICASMITHMetro in Toronto

Page 4: 20130415_ca_halifax

04 metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013NEWS

BUILDING A BRIGHTER FUTURE

Your support will help create exhibits and programming that will inspire our children and grandchildren to build a better world. Their passion for furthering human rights is our hope for a brighter future.

PLEASE DONATE

The Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg, Manitoba will be a national and international destination—a centre of learning that will encourage and educate the next generation of human rights champions.

The Nova Scotia Liquor Com-mission has announced it will be donating $29,891 to the Canadian Mental Health Association with the money accidentally charged to cus-tomers in March.

After a computer glitch during a price adjustment on March 30, the company decid-ed to donate the extra money to a non-profit organization chosen by Nova Scotians.

“A big thank-you to every-one who participated in our ef-forts to make things right,” said

Bret Mitchell, NSLC president in a release Friday.

More than 67,000 votes were cast in the weeklong voting process, which ended April 11. the canadian press

donation. nova scotians choose mental health charity in nsLc poll

No serious injuries

Man assaulted after being asked for cigaretteHalifax police say a 29-year-old man wasn’t seriously hurt after he was assaulted by two men in Halifax early Saturday morning.

At about 2:30 a.m., po-lice say the victim walked past two men who asked him for a cigarette on Brunswick Street and Divas Lane. When he stopped to give them one, both men assaulted him and stole his wallet and apartment keys. The victim didn’t require medical help. metro

man clings to life after stabbing

A 40-year-old man is in hospital with life-threatening injuries after he was stabbed multiple times in downtown Halifax.

Shortly after 10 p.m. Satur-day, the victim was on Spring Garden Road near Dresden Row talking with friends. He was then approached by the suspect, police say, and stabbed repeatedly in the up-

per body with a knife.A witness to the stabbing

— which happened in front of Jennifers of Nova Scotia — called the incident “crazy.”

“The one guy was just giv-

ing it to him,” said the witness, making a stabbing motion.

The male suspect, 38, fled the area, and the victim was rushed to hospital by a con-cerned citizen.

Police had taped off the corner of Jennifers of Nova Scotia as they investigated Saturday night.

Staff Sgt. Bill Morris said on Sunday the victim and suspect are known to each other. He wouldn’t say if they were known to police. He also wouldn’t give an update on the victim’s condition.

Police are still searching for the suspect, who is wanted on charges of attempted murder and various weapons offences.

Multiple stab wounds. Suspect and victim known to each other

The head of a local business group is urging the prov-incial regulator to take a measured approach to the Halifax Regional Water Com-mission’s (HRWC) rate hike application.

Hearings begin at the Util-ity and Review Board on Mon-day into the HRWC’s proposed increases for water, waste-water and stormwater fees.

“(The UARB) have to bal-ance the need for money for infrastructure repair along with the economic impacts,” said Luc Erjavec, Atlantic vice-president of the Canadian Restaurant and Foodservices Association.

“I think we have to look at what does the community as a whole need, in terms of rate payers, business owners and the water commission.”

The increase for an aver-age residential user will be

11.2 per cent on July 1, 2013, and 16.7 per cent in 2014.

HRWC spokesperson James Campbell said the com-mission needs $2.6 billion over the next 30 years to up-grade and expand crumbling infrastructure. He said HRM’s rates are among the lowest in the country, and the com-mission isn’t asking for more than is necessary.

“Do we continue to pass

on the legacy of failing infra-structure to our kids and grandkids, or do we step up to the plate now and pay for the infrastructure we’re get-ting the benefit from?” he said. “It’s our assertion that we’re the ones who are using it now, we should be the ones who pay for it.”

Erjavec said the increases for commercial users are too steep to bear, estimat-ing they’ll cost the average restaurant owner an extra $5,000 a year.

He suggested the HRWC should focus more on con-servation education, which would reduce the load on the aging system.

“If we could all reduce it a little bit, maybe the city could get by with a smaller pipe instead of a bigger pipe,” he said. ruth davenport/metro

hearings on hrWc water rate hike set to begin this week

Choosing a charity

300The number of charities nominated in the weeklong voting process.

Woman OK after rescued with Jaws of LifeThe Jaws of Life were needed to free a woman from her vehicle following an accident in Dartmouth on Prince Albert Road near Portland Street on Sunday afternoon. Police say the female driver drove into a street sign and lost control. The fire department removed the woman from the vehicle, and she was taken to hospital with non-life threatening injuries. Sean DeWitt/cOntributeD

Justification

“This is infrastructure that people don’t see … where you don’t see it, you don’t really think about it, until it doesn’t work.”HRWC spokesman James Campbell

CLARk [email protected]

Spring Garden Road and DresdenRow. JeFF HarPer/metrO

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05metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013 NEWS

Justin Trudeau will walk into the House of Commons on Monday as the new leader of the Liberal party — with ex-pectations for him flying as high as his decisive victory in the leadership race.

Trudeau handily won the job that his late father, Pierre Trudeau, held for 16 years in the 20th century. His victory, then, is already historic: a rare family dynasty in the making in Canadian politics.

But the task now facing Trudeau is the more pressing question about the future: whether he can rebuild the Liberals from their third-place standing back to the powerful political force they once were in Canada.

Before about 1,000 cheer-ing Liberals gathered in Ot-tawa on Sunday night, Tru-deau said that task shouldn’t be underestimated.

“Let us be clear-eyed about what we have accomplished. We have worked hard and we have had a great campaign. We are united, hopeful and

resolute in our purpose,” he said. “But know this: We have won nothing more and noth-ing less than the opportunity to work even harder.”

Trudeau conducted a leadership campaign that at-tracted nearly viral levels of public attention and crowds of adoring fans: 10,000 volun-teers alone and thousands of new party supporters signed up in the past six months.

He served notice that he intends to campaign as Liberal leader in the same way as he campaigned for the job: with optimism rather than nega-tivity, and beyond the nasty, personal partisanship that prevails in Ottawa.

Trudeau will be in the Com-mons on Monday to take up his role as leader and to face reporters’ questions in the foy-

er afterward. His campaign ad-visers said he intends to spend the next few weeks putting a transition plan in place.

Trudeau said he’s ready for the Conservatives’ now-familiar brand of attack ads on Liberal leaders.

“The Conservative Party will now do what it does. It will try to spread fear. It will sow cynicism. It will attempt to convince Canadians that we should be satisfied with what we have now,” Trudeau said in his acceptance speech.

The New Democrats, keen to keep the Liberals down in third place, will also have Tru-deau in their sights as they present themselves as the main progressive opposition to the Conservatives.TorsTar News service

Liberals have their saviour

Justin Trudeau and his wife, Sophie Gregoire, greet supporters at the federal Liberal leadership announcement inOttawa on Sunday. AdriAn Wyld/The CAnAdiAn Press

Leadership race. Justin Trudeau seizes victory, but now must deliver on the hype

Vote count

Landslide victoryJustin Trudeau is the Liberals’ undisputed star, sweeping more than 80 per cent of the available points in a final field of six candidates.

Liberal MP Joyce Murray, whose leader-ship platform included co-operating with New Democrats and Greens to unseat Harper in the next election, finished a very distant second behind Trudeau with 10 per cent of the vote.

Just the prospect of the fluidly bilingual Montreal MP’s victory had already boosted the Liberals back into contention in public-opinion surveys. They are now running even with or ahead of the ruling Conservatives.

The Conservative party immediately put out a release congratulating Trudeau on his leadership win and then slamming his inexperience.The caNadiaN Press

It’s not me; it’s you

“It is not my leadership that Mr. Harper and his party fear. It’s yours. There is nothing that (they) fear more than an engaged and informed Canadian citizen.”Justin Trudeau, addressing his supporters in his acceptance speech.

Russian officials are becom-ing increasingly concerned about polar-bear poachers in their country using Canadian documents to disguise illegally hunted pelts.

“I think it is a real problem,” said Nikita Ovsyanikov, one of Russia’s top polar-bear scien-tists and a member of the Polar Bear Specialist Group, the lead-ing international research con-sortium on the animals.

Ovsyanikov claims that Can-adian documents required to bring hides into the country are being pulled off shipments and

sold separately. The certificates are then applied to skins from Russian bears to make them ap-pear as if they have been legally hunted and imported.

Canada is the only country in the world that allows sport hunting of polar bears, which makes it the only country to issue certificates under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) that allow polar-bear products to cross borders.

“I’m aware of two cases where not pelts but certificates were offered for sale on the In- ternet,” Ovsyanikov in an inter-

view with The Canadian Press from Moscow. “The price was $1,000, so it was quite a profit-able business.”

Russian officials, supported by the International Fund for Animal Welfare, used concerns over the Canadian documents to argue that all trade in polar-bear parts should be banned at the recent CITES meeting in Bangkok.

Environment Canada said it has been monitoring the allega-tions but has no knowledge of its documents being misused. The caNadiaN Press

Demand

Polar-bear hides sell in Russia for up to $50,000, researchers say.

• Such pelts are increas-ingly popular among Russia’s elite. Canadian auction houses have said they can’t meet demand for the hides, most of which go to Russia.

Canada is the only country in the world that allows sport hunting of polarbears. elishA dACey/MeTrO File

canada’s polar-bear trade likely aids poachers: russia

$18 million annually

7-year break on gun licence fees to endThe Conservative govern-ment is ending a seven-year waiver on gun licence renewal fees next month in an effort to collect about $18 million annually from firearms owners.

The changes were quietly posted in the Canada Gazette on the weekend that restore

the $60 licence fee for non-restricted weapons.

Two other measures will be extended by one year: Gun owners who let their posses-sion-only licences expire will still be allowed to re-apply without having to pay to go through a safety course; as will an amnesty on criminal charges for failing to license or register non-restricted weapons for people “who were taking steps to comply.” The caNadiaN Press

British Columbia

Women getting poor HIV care: StudyBritish Columbian research-ers have found that women with HIV-AIDS are more likely than men to receive sub-standard treatment.

Tracking nearly 3,900 people who were starting antiretroviral drug regimens, the B.C. Centre for Excel-lence in HIV-AIDS found

women were 25 per cent more likely to get sub-opti-mal care.

Nearly half of the women in their first year of treat-ment hadn’t been tested to see if they’d be resistant to the drugs, compared to 36 per cent of cases among men. The study also found that women were given drug regi-mens that were not recom-mended for their particular cases nearly twice as often as men. The caNadiaN Press

Quebec

Judges ban tweets, texts, email in courtQuebec courtrooms are set to become Twitter-free zones on Monday.

As other areas weigh whether to allow tweets and texts from inside the court-room, Quebec judges have decided to end the practice.

The new directives ban emails, tweets and text mes-

sages from the courtroom without the consent of a judge, although lawyers and journalists will be able to use electronic devices for taking notes.

In the rest of Canada, rules vary from province to province, but many have opened the door to social media being used in court. This year, Ontario Superior Court allowed tweeting for journalists and lawyers only.The caNadiaN Press

Page 6: 20130415_ca_halifax

06 metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013NEWS

Saudi Arabia

Prince supports women driversSaudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal has indicated support of allowing women there to drive. He wrote on his Twitter account that would “save more than 500,000 jobs” and help the kingdom’s campaign to cut down on foreign workers. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Guyana

Canadian killed in plane crashAviation officials say an American pilot and a Canadian technician died when their small plane crashed into a home shortly after taking off from a municipal airport east of Georgetown. They were doing work for a hydroelectric project in Guyana. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Venezuela election

Chavez nominee still the favouriteVoters who kept Hugo Cha vez in office for 14 years were deciding Sunday whether to elect the de-voted lieutenant he chose to carry on the revolution that endeared him to the poor but that many Venezuelans believe is ruining the na-tion. Nicolas Maduro, 50, is still favoured, but his early

big lead in opinion polls halved over the past two weeks. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A Venezuelan voter looks for his name Sunday. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Somalia’s top court stormed

A barrage of bullets and two car bomb blasts rattled Moga-dishu on Sunday when nine al-Shabab Islamic extremists stormed Somalia’s main court complex, officials said, in a two-hour attack that shows the country’s most dangerous militant group may be down but not defeated.

A preliminary death toll stood at 16, including all nine attackers. Six of the attackers detonated suicide vests and three others were shot and killed during the assault.

The attack on the Su-preme Court complex began at around 12:30 p.m., spark-ing running battles with

police and army forces. One car bomb detonated outside the court. The militants took an unknown number of hos-tages during the siege. Many other government workers and civilians in the court complex hid while fearing for their lives. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

16 killed. Assault most serious in Mogadishu since al-Shabab was forced out of the capital in August 2011

Declining influence

Al-Shabab controls far less territory today and its influence appears to be on the decline.

• Al-ShababruledMogadishufrom2006until2011,whenAfricanUnionandSomaliforcespushedthemoutofthecity.Sincethentheal-Shababextremistshavelaunchedsuicidebombingsonthecapitalcityeveryfewweeks.

Somali soldiers carry a wounded civilian from the entrance of Mogadishu’s court complex after he was injured during a siege by militants, Sunday. FARAH AbDI WARSAmEH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Syria crisis. Activists say regime airstrikes kill 25, including 12 childrenSyrian government war-planes carried out airstrikes on a rebellious neighbour-hood in the capital and a vil-lage in the country’s north-east on Sunday, killing at least 25 people, including a dozen children, activists said.

With its ground forces stretched thin, President Bashar Assad’s regime has relied heavily on its fighter jets and helicopters to try to stem rebel advances in the

country’s civil war. The air raids frequently hit civilian areas, drawing criticism from the international community.

A Human Rights Watch report last week accused the Syrian government of com-mitting war crimes by using indiscriminate and some-times deliberate airstrikes against civilians, killing at least 4,300 people since the summer. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Page 7: 20130415_ca_halifax

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Wealthy Canadians with money stashed overseas have come forward in droves to confess after se-cret lists began circulating with the names of people apparently evading taxes in foreign banking havens.

The CRA has seen the number of disclosures rise dramat-ically since 2007, when it received a list from Liechten-stein naming 106 Can-adians with accounts in secretive banks there. The agency in 2010 received an-other list from France with information about more than 1,000 Swiss accounts linked to Canadians.

Revenue Minister Gail Shea is pursuing yet an-other massive list, acquired recently by the CBC, that the broadcaster says has the names of 450 Canadians with money in foreign tax havens. THE CANADIAN PRESS

There’s a battle brewing in Can-adian academia.

On one side stands Access Copyright, a collective that has provided institutions access to a pool of protected intellectual work for more than two dec-ades while distributing royal-ties to the writers, artists and publishers it represents.

On the other is a group of universities that no longer feel the need to pay for the services offered by the collective, opting instead to navigate the world of intellectual property rights without a middle agent.

Tensions are threatening to boil over as Access Copyright takes one of Canada’s largest universities to court, a move some see as a warning to others

who have ended relations with the agency.

Access Copyright is claim-ing Toronto’s York University, which opted out of an agree-ment with the collective, has improperly been reproducing and authorizing the copying of protected works.

The issue goes beyond a sin-gle institution, though.

To combat unauthorized copying, Access Copyright has also filed two applications to the Copyright Board of Canada requesting tariffs that would require schools and universities that don’t have an agreement with Access Copyright to pay to use works the agency handles the rights for.

Institutions wouldn’t have to pay the tariff if they have direct licence agreements with publishers, use openly access-ible work or copy a portion of a work small enough to be con-sidered “fair dealing.”

The entire situation could have wide-ranging implications for students and educational institutions across the country.

“At the end of the day, if Access Copyright is successful — although I have to say that based on where the law is at, that seems unlikely — we’re talking about millions and mil-lions of dollars being paid by taxpayers to this group,” said Michael Geist, a University of Ottawa law professor who is an expert on intellectual property.

The deal at issue, effective until December 2015, requires institutions to pay $26 per full-time student annually — an increase from a previous rate of $3.38 per full-time student plus a 10 cents per page royalty for copying protected works. THE CANADIAN PRESS

Whose lines are they anyway? Expert says legal action intended to ‘scare’ schools into re-licensing with agency

Access Copyright is taking York U to court. TorsTar News service file

Employees position a model CS100 as Porter Airlines heads Bob Deluce and Don Carty take questions in Toronto on Wednesday after announcing the purchase of 12 of the jets. chris YouNg/The caNaDiaN Press

Min. Gail Shea The caNaDiaN Press

Porter Airlines’ expansion plans may be headed for months of turbulence, but not the fierce opposition it faced a decade ago to change at the waterfront air-port, a political observer says.

On Wednesday, the airline announced it had placed a con-ditional order for 12 Bombar-dier CS100 jets, with 18 options worth about $2.11 billion. The aircraft will allow it to fly to Los Angeles, Florida, Calgary and the Caribbean from Toronto.

The plan stirred vocal op-position from local political

and community leaders. But University of Toronto assistant professor Zack Taylor said this time around, the success of the airline may blunt some of the outcry. “This airport is a lot less threatening to people than it used to be,” said Taylor, whose focus is on local politics. He said people have become used to the service, except perhaps island residents and those in nearby condos.

He said other issues will likely dominate the next muni-cipal election. THE CANADIAN PRESS

Copyright collective to battle universities

Tax-haven lists prompt disclosures

Porter. Fewer hurdles expected for Toronto island airport’s new jets

Page 8: 20130415_ca_halifax

08 metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013VOICES

On April 19, 1989, a 28-year-old woman named Trisha Meili went for a jog in New York’s Central Park. She was raped and violently assaulted.

Partly because of the attack’s brutality, partly because of news reports the perpetrators were a gang of “wilding” black youth and partly be-cause of who the victim was — white, a Yale MBA, a Wall Street investment banker — “the Central Park Jogger” case stirred global pre-so-cial media passions and angry demands police arrest someone — now.

The police did charge five teenaged boys, four blacks and a Hispanic. Though some were juveniles, police and media publicly identified them anyway. Four confessed. They were all con-victed and sentenced to lengthy prison terms.

“Justice” had been done.Flash forward 13 years. The boys, now men, had served their sentences and been re-

leased.

That’s when another man confessed to the crime. His DNA matched that found at the crime scene.

The original convictions were — too late —vacated.

What went wrong? In the rush for “justice,” certain inconvenient facts got overlooked. The confessions, which often contradicted one an-other about what had happened and were all later recanted, had been coerced by a police force under intense public pressure to nail the bas-tards. None of the crime scene DNA matched any of the suspects; the only DNA collected came from one, then-unknown-now-known person.

Why am I telling you all this?Because, at a time of understandable, social-

media-inflamed passion about the tragic suicide of Rehtaeh Par-sons, we need to be cautious about what we think we know.

The no-name hactivists at Anonymous who, ironically, threat-en to name Parsons’ alleged rapists if their hang-’em-high version

of justice isn’t done — and done quickly — claim to know who did it. They also claim names of alleged perpetrators being circulated by others are wrong. How do they really know either?

And would what they imagine they know actually stand up in court, where the evidence bar rises above an email allegation, a Facebook post or a 140-character tweet?

By all means, let’s have an independent public review of how police, prosecutors, the school and others handled this case.

But let’s not assume its outcome. Or presume mob vengeance is justice for Rehtaeh or anyone

else.

LET’S NOT JUMP TO CONCLUSIONS

WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU: Send us yourcomments: [email protected]

President Bill McDonald • Vice-President & Group Publisher, Metro Eastern Canada Greg Lutes • Editor-in-Chief Charlotte Empey • Deputy Editor Fernando Carneiro • National Deputy Editor, Digital Quin Parker • Managing Editor, Halifax Philip Croucher • Managing Editor, News & Business Amber Shortt • Managing Editor, Life & Entertainment Dean Lisk • Regional Sales Director, Metro Eastern Canada Dianne Curran • Distribution Manager April Doucette • Vice-President, Sales and Business Development Tracy Day • Vice-President, Creative Jeff Smith • Vice-President, Finance Phil Jameson • METRO HALIFAX • 3260 Barrington St., Unit 102, Halifax NS B3K 0B5 • Telephone: 902-444-4444 • Fax: 902-422-5610 • Advertising: 902-421-5824 • [email protected] • Distribution: [email protected]• News tips: [email protected] • Letters to the Editor: [email protected]

URBAN COMPASS

Stephen [email protected]

Anonymous threatens to release names of alleged perpetrators

Because, at a time of understandable, social-media-infl amed passion about the tragic suicide of Rehtaeh Parsons, we need to be cautious about what we think we know.

Letters

As a reporter in the Canadian media please take some responsibility in covering issues that affect the daily lives of Canadians.

As I’m sure you are aware, 54,500 Canadians lost their jobs in March, and the government’s budget cuts are going to make it harder for Canadians to find work. Finance Minister Flaherty promised the cuts wouldn’t affect Canadians, but independent research shows that Human Resources and Skills Development will lose nearly a third of its workforce at a time when Can-adians most need training and jobs.

If our government thinks they can hide their plans from public

scrutiny they will be more likely to do things that Canadians don’t want.

When Prime Minister Harper ran for office in 2006, he promised to clean up Ottawa. He created the Parliamentary Budget Office so Canadians would know what our government is doing with our money. From F-35s to prisons, Kevin Page, our first federal budget watchdog, showed that he could hold government accountable for fiscal mismanagement. But Harper let Kevin Page’s term expire just before his government released this secretive and misleading budget, and the entire process to replace him is veiled in secrecy.Sarah Lowes, Toronto

ZOOM

Fluorescent falls lights up forestThe future of photos is brightThis spectacular waterfall is a shot from the Neon Luminance series — a collection of photographs using similar techniques. Produced by two young California-based photographers, the series brings the local forest areas to life with creative lighting.

Their method relies on long exposures (seven minutes) and dropping glow sticks into the water at strategic points, in some cases tying several together. METRO

We take a moment to salute crafty Twitter fiction writers who take the brevity and strict character limit forced upon us as a challenge. Here are three of the more reliable sources for entertaining stories squeezed into small spaces.

Clickbait [email protected]

@arjunbasu:A Montreal author with an enviable ability to summon all the humour, wis-dom and poignancy 140 characters will allow. Sample: “She uses hurtful words. Words that lead to self-doubt. One day this color combination will be fashionable! I yell, over the sound of the TV.”

@crimershow:If you can tolerate translating the mes-sage board meme speak, Crimer Show is a hilarious cop drama that follows the misspelled exploits of a villainous

sun-glasses enthusi-ast and the “detetcive” he nimbly eludes.

@nanoism:Weekly selections from a longtime cur-ator of single-tweet story submissions come with the added bonus of tipping you off to interesting writers. Sample: “Vows etched on a matchstick. ‘What do I do with this?’ he asks. Engine run-ning, suitcase in hand, she says, ‘Burn it, and think of me.’”

[email protected]

enthusi-

SEAN LENZ/KRISTOFFER ABILDGAARD/REX FEATURES

Best falls in California

• Yosemite Falls. One of the tallest known falls with a total drop of 2,425 feet — it forms one of the main at-tractions at Yosemite National Park.

• Vernal Fall. A popular but deadly 200-foot fall, famously power-ful, the Vernal causes a startling number of deaths as visitors stray too close.

• Horsetail Fall. Another fall situated in Yosemite National Park, it is a well-traffi cked hiking route. Often referred to as “fi refall” as it glows red in early spring.

STEVECOUTTS/FLICKR

Page 9: 20130415_ca_halifax

09metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013 SCENE

SCENE

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I AM SO THE BOSS OF

YOU An 8-Step Guide to Giving Your Family the “Business”

presents

www.kathybuckworth.com

What movie actually wants you to whip out your phone while it’s playing?

The new horror film App.Viewers download an

app on their smartphones, which uses a digital audio cue — inaudible to human ears — that sends texts and other surprises tied to what’s on screen. The film’s producer hopes it will “transform cinema around the world.”

He’s not alone. A survey by Nielsen in June 2012 re-vealed that 41 per cent of tablet users and 38 per cent of smartphone users fiddle with their devices while watching TV.

Studios believe if they can target the audience to their products, they can not only enhance the viewing experience but gain more viewers.

This isn’t the first time we’ve seen the second screen experience.

U.S. channel AMC offers a Story Sync feature for some of their programs includ-

ing The Walking Dead and Breaking Bad. Using their wireless devices, users can vote in polls, answer trivia questions and re-watch key moments.

The information updates in real time as the viewer is watching the episode. AMC-owned channel IFC also offers a similar IFC Sync for their program Port-landia.

“Portlandia fans are some of IFC’s most engaged view-ers and we’re excited to give them an even more robust, immediate way to connect with the show and especially with Fred and Carrie,” Craig Parks, IFC’s vice-president

of digital media, said. Now, some companies

are branching out into the gaming world.

The plot of the SyFy

Channel series Defiance, revolves around a world where humans and aliens live together after years of strife and conflict.

While the TV show explores characters and dramatic storylines, a directly tied first-person shooter video game will allow viewers to fully im-merse themselves in the universe.

And Starz’s Da Vin-ci’s Demons will offer a video-game-like app called Citizens of Florence that will allow viewers to ex-plore the history of Florence and the legacy of Leonardo da Vinci.

More content will be unlocked as the series progresses and more real people and inventions are introduced.

Almost 50 videos can be unlocked on the app through mini-game chal-lenges throughout the first eight episode run.

Phone use in the movies? There’s an app for that

Apps off er lots of opportunity for interactive elements to complement movies and TV shows. ISTOCK

Future of fi lm. New horror fi lm’s clever use of interactive elements is just the next step in enhancing viewer experience with smartphones

Dutch fi lm App has an app that viewers download to enhancethe movie experience. HANDOUT

MICHELLECASTILLOMetro World News in New York

Defi ance has a fi rst-person shooter game to complement the show. HANDOUT

Page 10: 20130415_ca_halifax
Page 11: 20130415_ca_halifax

12 metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013scene / DIsH

Ask the Experts

101-647 Bedford Hwy. | Halifax, NS | B3M 0A5 | 902.405.4114 | 1.88.620.2855 | recyclefrog.com

Tips from an Insider Thinking of selling your old Gold and Silver? You Should, But Be Smart About It.

Over the past five years, the price of gold and silver has seen a dramatic increase. Over the past couple of years, you no doubt, have noticed an increase in the number of companies eagerly

willing to take that old gold and silver off your hands for you.

My name is Matthew MacQuarrie. I am the President of Recycle Frog, and yes, we buy gold and silver. I began working with precious metals at the Royal Canadian Mint, and later went on to hold a Vice President position with one of the worlds largest refining groups. If you’re considering selling gold and silver, whether you decide to deal with us, or not, consider the following tips.

They may just be worth their weight in... nah, I won’t go there.

Deal Locally: Local companies depend greatly on word of mouth advertising and are much more likely to treat you fairly. A company that simply travels city to city will often take advantage of potential customers whenever possible. The reason is simple, typically buyers are paid on commis-sion, (so the lower your payout, the higher their payout). And why not, its not like they’re ever going to see you again. Harsh but true.

Don’t Let the Material Out of Your Sight: Many gold buyers will lure you to their location and ask

you to wait while one of their “experts out back” determines the value of your material. Negotia-tions then take place while your material is no where to be seen. This approach is often accompa-nied with the “hard sell”. In the worst cases, customers have even reported missing items after material is returned. Avoid putting yourself in this position.

Guaranteed Highest Payouts!!! v.s. Being Treated Fairly: Remember what your mother told you, “If it sounds too good to be true..”: Most of the advertising our industry uses is aimed at the greedy sidein all of us. Everybody wants the most money, but the fact

is, no one in this business is doing it for free. In my experi-ence, the companies boasting the loudest about their payouts are usually the ones paying the least, regardless of their “posted rates” or “highest price guarantees”. So be realistic, and deal with a company that has a good reputation.

There is no question, selling gold and silver at current prices, just makes sense. And, our industry is like any industry, there are good companies and there are bad companies. Recycle Frog has always prided itself on providing consumers with relevant information and treating its customers fairly.

For more information or to schedule an expert evaluation at their Terrace Professional Centre offices on the Bedford Highway, please call 902.405.4114 or visit recyclefrog.com to find out about their public events. You'll be glad you did.

Justin Bieber all photos: getty images

‘Inspired’ Justin hopes Anne Frank

was a ‘belieber’

Justin Bieber visited the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam Saturday. According to the Facebook page for the mu-seum, he wrote the follow-ing in the guestbook: “Truly inspiring to be able to come here. Anne was a great girl. Hopefully she would have been a belieber.” Of course Anne Frank would have totally been obsessed with you, Justin, if only she could have found the time in between trying to survive the Holocaust and all. Dorothy robinson/Metro

Pop goes the week

Threesomes, Love and Swift on romance

James Gandolfini and Steve Carell will star in an HBO movie about feuding paleontologists. How excit-ing. Dinosaur bonezzzzzzz.

Sears Portrait Studios have closed down. “Dammit,” said my mullet and the burgundy jacket with the shoulder pads and gold buttons.

Courtney Love claims she’s been approached

to become a judge on a TV talent show. Guesses as to which show it may be include X-Factor, The Voice, American Idol and Where The Bleep Am I And Where Are My Bleep-ing Pants?

Taylor Swift says she doesn’t know if she’ll ever get married or stay single and “you know, paint in a cottage by the ocean by myself.” Or, you know, mut-ter to yourself in a leaky mansion while surrounded by one-eyed cats.

Russell Brand says he’d like a threesome with the Kar-dashians. Learning too late that it always pays to be specific, Russell is caught off guard when Kris Jenner and Scott Disick show up.

METRO DISHOUR TAKE ON THE WORLD OF CELEBRITIES

stargazIngMalene [email protected]

Big news for Big Willie Style fans: Jaden Smith will join forces with his father, Will Smith, as special guests of Metro next Monday, April

22. The Smiths will riff off the theme of “the future,” creating exclusive content for Metro in honour of Earth Day and the duo’s action film After Earth.

Their film is set on — yes — Earth, 1,000 years after humanity has fled, with Jaden on a mission to find help for his injured dad, bat-tling animals and an alien.

As special guests, Jaden and Will Smith will imagine what the world will look like hundreds of years from now, when it comes to en-vironmental impact, advan-ces in technology and trans-port, and media.

The pair will also sit for an exclusive Q&A with Met-ro. Metro

Metro special guests. Will and Jaden Smith join Metro on April 22

Gettin’ jiggy with Earth DayWill and Jaden Smith, here in their film After Earth, will be Metro’s guests in the Earth Day edition April 22. handout

Page 12: 20130415_ca_halifax

13metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013 FAMILY

LIFETravel tidbit

Power down?

A tablet or large screen smartphone is an amazing entertainment and distraction tool when travelling with chil-dren, particularly on crowded

airplanes, where the “parent-ing in public” challenges are magnified due to the enclosed space and normally short tempers of the surrounding travellers.

Most planes and some airports still don’t have WiFi, so take the time to download games before you leave.

It’s also important to remember that all electron-ics have to be powered down prior to take off and landing,

and in some cases this can be half an hour or more. Thirty minutes in “toddler time” is a long time. Don’t rely entirely on electronic diversions for the kids, or yourselves.

Take age appropriate reading materials, activities and toys to fill the time. Snacks are a great distrac-tion also, and as there can be unexpected delays, relying on buying food for a hungry little mouth while on board can

be risky. Finger foods such as cereal, dried fruit and cut up vegetables can provide tactile and nutritious ways to pass the time.

One final thought: al-lowing your child to pass the time by practising their soccer kicks on the seat in front of them is not an option. KATHY BUCKWORTH IS AN AWARD WINNING WRITER. VISIT KATHYBUCKWORTH.COM OR FOLLOW KATHY ON TWITTER @KATHYBUCKWORTH.

Julia Sweeney goes from It’s Pat to adventures in motherhood

In her new book, Julia Sweeney writes about, among other things, adopting her daughter. GETTY IMAGES

ºJulia Sweeney titled her new memoir after a pillow embroidered with If It’s Not One Thing, It’s Your Mother, given to her by her mom that she hated until she had a daughter — who now dis-likes the pillow herself.

The former Saturday Night Live (It’s Pat!) and Broadway (God Said ‘Ha!’) star writes about her long path to a nontraditional family with insight and warmth.

Also, refreshingly can-did humour: She received her adopted child, Mulan, in China, from a man who entered a crowded ballroom holding the baby aloft in the air, while a muzak version of

Celine Dion’s My Heart Will Go On played from a boom box.

That must’ve been an over-whelming and complicated moment. Did you even register the humour of it at the time? Yes! I was so fixated on it that I missed some of the emo-

tional moment. And that, I would say, is something I do.

You write about investigat-ing your genealogy. How has adopting a child af-fected your thoughts about it?I’ve been in conferences about it and they say, “In this room of 300 people,

if you go back five genera-tions, you’ll have one person in common with all of you.” You’re related to everyone. It’s terribly meaningful. And also completely meaningless. When I adopted Mulan, I felt like I had to not care about my family history. But then I realized I do care.

I just took my niece and nephew to the cemetery and said, “This is your great grandfather.” Mulan added, “And my great grandfather.” I replied, “Yes!” But then I thought, “Is it?” It’s a grey area.How does Mulan feel about being in your book? Right now she likes it, but if we butt heads, she’ll say, “And I will resent you for the rest of my days because you wrote that book.”

Because of the book, does Mulan like the pillow more? No! She still hates it. And I just looked at it and thought, I should put it in the next bag to Goodwill. Then I remem-bered, “Oh no, but it’s the pillow! I’ve infused it with all this meaning now. I guess I have to keep it.”

New book. The former SNL star shares her insight into being a mom to an adopted child in If It’s Not One Thing, It’s Your Mother

Exclusively online

Since your birth, Mommy spends all day, every day, battling the laundry Matter-horn in the basement. Follow along with the comedic (mis)adventures of mommyhood online with Reasons Mommy Drinks at metronews.ca/voices

New research

Kids say the darndest thingsChildren learn to swear before they have mastered the alphabet, according to research from scientists in California.

But they are only follow-ing the example of adults, said Dr. Melissa Mohr of the University of Stanford.

English language speakers use a swear word for every 140 words they speak — or 0.7 per cent of the time — her research found. And that’s why most children know a profanity by the age of one or two. Al-though, said Dr. Mohr, the level of juvenile swearing really takes off at the age of three and four.

Her book, Holy Sh*t: A Brief History of Swearing, says the upper classes are just as likely to swear as anyone else, although those identifying as middle class are less likely to. METRO

IT’S ALL RELATIVEKathy Buckworth, kathybuckworth.com

JANEBORDENMetro World News in New York

Page 13: 20130415_ca_halifax

14 metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013FOOD

Healthy eating

Choose it and lose it

Equivalent

One Tim Hortons old-fashioned glazed doughnut is equal in fat to 13 Special K chocolate delight granola bars.

Tim Hortons old fashioned glazed doughnut320 calories/19 g fat /22 g sugar Made without yeast, this is more dense, resulting in higher calories, fat and sugar.

Everyone’s favourite Canadian coffee shop has so many delicious treats to choose from. But you should know what you’re biting into.

ROsE REismanfor more, visit rosereisman.com or follow her on twitter @rosereisman

Tim Hortons honey dip yeast doughnut210 calories / 8 g fat / 11 g sugar The yeast allows for a lighter doughnut, which has half the fat and sugar.

1. In the base of a tagine or large Dutch oven over medium-high, heat the oil. Add the on-ion and garlic, then sauté until tender and lightly browned, about 2 to 3 minutes. Add the lamb and brown on all sides, about 15 minutes.

2. Stir in the rosemary, to-matoes, chickpeas and broth, then bring to a simmer. Cover,

reduce heat to maintain a bare simmer and let cook for 2 hours, or until the lamb is fork tender.

3. Season with salt and pepper, then divide between serving plates. Squeeze 1 or 2 lemon wedges over each serving, then top with parsley and a dollop of yogurt. The AssociATed Press

Ingredients

• 2 tbsp olive oil

• 1 large yellow onion, diced

• 1 head garlic, minced

• 2 lbs lamb leg or stew meat, trimmed of fat and cut into 1-inch pieces

• 2 tbsp chopped rosemary

• 15-oz can chopped or diced

tomatoes

• 15-oz can chickpeas, drained• 3/4 cup chicken broth

• Salt and ground black pepper

• 1 lemon, cut into wedges

• Chopped fresh parsley, to garnish

• Plain Greek yogurt, to serve

Make it a lamb tagine night

This recipe serves eight. matthew mead/ the associated press

Page 14: 20130415_ca_halifax

15metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013 WORK/EDUCATION

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Eager to learn? Organizations of today want people who are empathetic andwork well in a team environment. istock

Skills that will set you up for success in any settingYou want ’em? I got ’em! Today’s top transferable talents every employee should perfect

The great web of work

• CareerBearisCanada’spremier source for people who want a new career butaren’tsurewheretostart.

• Visitorstothewebsitecanbrowse careers by industry, salary, outlook or alpha-betical listing and find job profiles, quick career facts and training pro-grams near them.

Bust out your boss moves

“Since more than one quarter of employees don’t perform well man-aging others, employers are looking for leader-ship skills when they are promoting from within.”Stefan DanisCEO of Mandrake and NEXCareer

YlvA vAN BUURENCareerBear.com

Chances are, you’ll make be-tween five and eight career changes before you retire — and according to Stefan Danis, CEO of Mandrake and NEXCa-reer, it will be your transfer-able skills that will net you the next job.

“In fact, “ says Danis, “un-less you work in a highly spe-cialized area, having these generic skills may be the dif-ference between getting a job or promotion, or not.”

Simply put, transferable skills are the versatile skills — sometimes thought of as “soft skills” — that will serve you well in many different roles. You learned these skills at school, through social inter-actions, playing sports and just plain living. Here are the transferable skills Danis looks for:

Emotional intelligenceEI is the ability to relate to people. It includes skills such as empathy, participation, col-laboration, communication and negotiation. Being able to perceive, control and evalu-ate emotions is important in certain job functions. “I think EI and interpersonal skills are increasingly a focus in school because today the workplace is more about teamwork than ever before.”

Resiliency quotient You don’t control many work-place changes, but you do control how you respond to these changes. “The change gets communicated and then there’s that time delay be-tween the communication and your buy-in ... how much time that takes is determined by how resilient you are,” says Danis. People with a high re-siliency quotient are flexible, adaptable and can multi-task. “Unfortunately, many people are change-adverse. They don’t react well and get stuck when their jobs or agenda change. They can emote tox-icity that employers want to avoid.”

Leadership skills Although teamwork is the corporate play of choice these days, someone needs to be accountable for getting a pro-ject done, says Danis. “Having leadership skills means you have the ability to engage in-dividuals and lead projects.” It also means you are indus-trious and a self-starter, and have initiative. “Since more than one quarter of employ-ees don’t perform well man-aging others, employers are looking for leadership skills

when they are promoting from within. In order to lead effectively, you need willing followers.”

Analytical skillsThis is your willingness to look at the details of a situa-tion from all angles and put together a response to what you see. “Rather than get over-whelmed or miss patterns of what’s in front of them, some-one with strong analytical skills can make sense of what appears complex. There may be numerous approaches and usually there is one better answer for an organization. If you have strong analytical skills you’ll get to that answer quickly,” Danis says.

Multicultural sensitivity“Canadian workforces are in-creasingly multicultural — in Toronto, 54 per cent of the population is a visible minority — so someone who has what I call ‘multicultural sensitivity’ is a huge corporate asset.” Com-parable to the need for gender awareness in the workplace 10 or 20 years ago, having no cul-tural barriers in the way you think is highly prized, particu-larly if you’re working in an area that involves customer service, sales and human re-

sources, says Danis. “It’s about having a more holistic perspec-tive about different points of view, and empathy about how one thinks culturally.”

Being organizedBeing organized is important because life is so complex with so many distractions. “You’re able to get organized, imple-ment, allocate the time to the right areas, pick a completion date, and deconstruct a project with key milestones and inter-vals,” says Danis. These skills include project management and time management capabil-ities, and understanding what comes first.

Page 15: 20130415_ca_halifax

16 metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013insurance guide

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This ad prepared by: SGL Communications • 2 Bloor St. West, Toronto, Ontario • phone 416.413.7495 • fax 416.944.7883 File Location: SGL_N-Z:Volumes:SGL_N-Z:RBC_SRB COR:RBC_Divisions:INSURANCE:Insurance_2013:Insurance_Newspaper_2013:P29802_MPS 425 with stores:ROB_RIN_P13897I.indd

JOB SPECIFICS

Client: RBC - INSURANCECreative Name: Insurance Spring 2013 Cam-paignAgency Docket #: ROB RIN P29802Main Docket #: SRB COR P29802Art Director: John TerryCopy Writer: NonePrint Production: Kay IzzardRetoucher: Jano KirijianLive: NoneTrim: 6.61” x 8.57”Bleed: NoneArtwork Scale: 1:1Print Scale: 100%

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This proof was produced by the following department:

PREPRESS

Car

Home

Life

Save an average of $425 when you combine your insurance.

Introducing Family Friendly Pricing TM on insurance.Insurance costs can grow faster than your family. But with RBC Insurance®, you can save an average of $425 per year on coverage for your home and more than one car, plus term life insurance. Start with one product and every time you add more, you save more. Because not only do you have a lot to protect, you have a lot to save for too.

To get your quote go to rbcinsurance.com/save425 or call 1-877-769-2543, or visit an RBC Insurance store

I HOME I AUTO I LIFE I HEALTH I TRAVEL I BUSINESS I RETIREMENT ITM

Home and Auto Insurance is underwritten by RBC General Insurance Company or RBC Insurance Company of Canada. Life Insurance is underwritten by RBC Life Insurance Company.®/™ Trademark(s) of Royal Bank of Canada. Used under licence. As a result of government-run auto insurance plans, RBC Insurance does not provide auto insurance in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and British Columbia. This offer is only available to residents of Canada. The savings is only applied to the cost of insurance and represent the average total savings when compared to our standard individual product rates. Each product must be separately underwritten. $380 is the average total savings for RBC Insurance clients in Canada (excluding Ontario) on home and auto insurance when more than one vehicle is insured. $425 is the average total savings for those same home and auto clients (and their spouses) when they also purchase a new RBC Simplifi ed® Term 10 or Term 20 or Term 100 life insurance policy. This offer can’t be combined with any other offer and may be changed or cancelled without notice. Certain conditions apply.

TM

At 50 Tacoma Driveoff of Gordon Avenue, Dartmouth

At 287 Lacewood Drivenear Dunbrack Street, Halifax

T:6.61”

T:8.57”

Precautions. Your home is a valuable asset With spring underway, it’s a time when many Canadians start looking for a new home or thinking about renovations. Either way, it’s an ideal time to start thinking about home insurance.

“Your home is your most valuable asset. With severe weather on the rise, it is more critical than ever to ensure that your home is properly protected,” says Ralph Palum-

bo, vice-president, Ontario, Insurance Bureau of Canada (IBC). “If your home is ever damaged or destroyed, it’s very important that it is insured to its accurate replacement value. Taking a few insurance pre-cautions now can help get you through a very hectic time if you do need to make a claim.”

The IBC recommends:• Whenever you increase the value of your home through

renovations or new content purchases (such as artwork, jewelry), notify your insur-ance professional as soon as possible to ensure you have adequate coverage. • Know your policy renewal date and allow yourself at least 60 days to review your cover-age with your insurance pro-fessional. • Make a list of key details about your home and contents

as that information may be needed when calculating the amount of insurance you need. • If you are in the process of moving and packing up your possessions, it’s an ideal time to do a home inventory. This may help you determine the right amount coverage you need. Take pictures or video your possessions since that information can be helpful in the event of a claim.

• Read your policy carefully. Ask questions. Have your in-surance representative explain certain exclusions on your policy. Know what isn’t cov-ered.• In the event you have a claim, know the amount of your policy deductible. Talk to your insurance representative about any deductible adjust-ments and the impact it could have on your policy.

• Shopping for insurance of any kind is always recom-mended. It’s important to compare prices and products finding the right policy that fits your needs. If you find one that fits your needs better then it’s best to wait until your existing policy expires before changing companies to avoid any possible midterm cancel-lation fees. Insurance Bureau of canada

You can help combat insurance fraud by reporting any suspiciousactivity. iStockphoto/thinkStock

Take the time. Report the crime. That’s the message to consumers from Insurance Bureau of Canada (IBC).

IBC’s goal is to reduce in-surance fraud. According to the Ontario Auto Insurance Anti-Fraud Task Force Final Report, auto insurance fraud in Ontario is estimated to cost consumers up to $1.6 billion per year in insurance pre-miums. These estimated costs do not include additional health-care, emergency servi-ces and court costs.

“Consumers can help by learning about the different types of insurance fraud and then reporting any suspicious activity,” says Rick Dubin, IBC’s vice-president of inves-tigations. “When someone makes a false or exaggerated claim, honest policyholders pay for it. We all have an in-terest in reducing insurance fraud.”

Five common types of in-surance fraud are:

1 Unscrupulous auto repair shops that intentionally

cause additional damage to

a vehicle involved in an ac-cident or bill several differ-ent insurers for repairing the same prior damage to a vehicle;

2 Medical clinics that ask claimants to sign blank

accident benefit forms, then bill insurers for services never provided;

3 Individuals who privately sell a stolen vehicle to an

unsuspecting consumer after changing the vehicle identi-fication number to hide its true identity;

4 Collisions that don’t seem to make sense,

where a driver intentionally causes a collision with an un-suspecting driver and makes it look as if the innocent driv-er is at fault for the collision;

5 Medical clinics that forge the signatures of legitim-

ate medical practitioners and use their names and college registration numbers without their knowledge or consent on accident benefit forms and then bill insurers for services never provided.Insurance Bureau of canada

Steer away from insurance fraud

Page 16: 20130415_ca_halifax

17metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013 SPORTS

SPORTS

Weegar’s time with Herd helps heal family wounds

For MacKenzie Weegar, re-turning to Ottawa last week was more than just a home-coming.

The Halifax Mooseheads defenceman had more on his mind than closing out his team’s second-round playoff series against the Gatineau Olympiques.

The experience of returning back to his roots served as an epiphany of sorts for a young man who suddenly realized just how far he’s come over the past couple of years.

“To see my family, teachers,

coaches and friends coming out to support me after everything I’ve come through, it was emo-tional. I feel really lucky,” Wee-gar said.

It’s just been during Wee-gar’s stint with the Mooseheads that his parents Scott and Lou-ise, who divorced eight years ago, have come together in sup-port of their son.

“Mac in his own way has brought us back together,” said Scott.

He holds no hard feelings toward either of his parents, understanding early on that sometimes relationships fall apart and in the end there’s no one to blame.

Weegar, who moved in with another family after the divorce, also knows that both his parents did their best, call-ing him as much as they could, showing up to as many of his Junior A and B games as pos-sible.

Sitting with his parents just hours before Game 4 against Gatineau last Wednesday, Wee-gar described his mother as the most important person in his life.

“She’s always been there for me as a single parent with my sister (Emily),” Weegar said. “She’s always been the one to pick me up and get me back standing on my feet again.”

Louise simply feels blessed that her son found a way to thrive.

“I think the three of us sit-ting here and relishing in this moment is pretty surreal,” she said. “He’s got the best mental game of any player on that ice. I’m pretty proud; very proud.”

Scott couldn’t agree more. “You think, Wow, he’s

worked so hard, he’s made a commitment, and there’s been lots of travel time and so much practice and preparation on and off the ice.”

There have been other be-lievers too, like one of his earli-er coaches Mike Dagenais, who put him on a nutrition program and ensured he made the next step in his career.

He earned his spot on the nation’s top-ranked junior team via the waiver system after be-ing passed over in consecutive Ontario Hockey League drafts.

The Mooseheads’ gamble has paid off. During the regu-lar season he was tops in the QMJHL at plus-55, ranked 10th in scoring among both rookies and blue-liners with 44 points.

In the meantime he’s man-

aged to heal some old wounds within his family.

“It’s about the four of us, and having some fun with his career as opposed to it being a struggle now,” said Louise.

That’s not something lost on her son.

“I’m proud not just for my-self but for my sister too,” Wee-gar said. “We’ve all come a long way.”

‘We’ve come a long way.’ Team’s visit to Gatineau more than just about hockey for No. 52

Halifax Mooseheads defenceman MacKenzie Weegar sits next to his mother Louise inside their family home in Ottawa last week. DEVAAN INGRAHAM/FOR METRO

[email protected]

Semifi nal matchup

Huskies up next for MooseDominique Ducharme knows his squad will be facing a Rouyn-Noranda Huskies team firing on all cylinders in Saturday’s semifinal opener at the Metro Centre.

But the Halifax Moose-heads coach said preparation would remain the same as always for the best-of-seven series.

“We keep moving forward, we continue to

work on small details and perfecting our game,” said Ducharme. “Our approach doesn’t change.”

The Huskies finished off the Quebec Remparts at home on Friday night to take the quarter-final series in five games.

Game 2 goes Sunday in Halifax, with the series switching to Rouyn-Noranda for Games 3 and 4 next Tues-day and Thursday.

Tickets for the first two games go on sale Thursday at 10 a.m. METRO

Quoted

“Mac in his own way has brought us back together.”MacKenzie Weegar’s father, Scott

Page 17: 20130415_ca_halifax

18 metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013SPORTS

NHL

Crawford outduels Elliot as Hawks stop BluesCorey Crawford came away with the shutout in this one, not Brian Elliott.

Chicago’s goalie stopped 30 shots and Bryan Bickell and Marian Hossa scored to lead the Blackhawks to a 2-0 win over the St. Louis Blues on Sunday, ending Elliott’s bid for a fourth straight shutout.

Elliott had shut out the Red Wings, Predators and Wild in succession on the road for a franchise record scoreless run of 189 minutes and 23 seconds. His overall shutout string ended at 214 minutes in the second period. The AssociATed Press

Jays can’t dig in vs. RoyalsJose Bautista of the Toronto Blue Jays bats during a game against the Kansas City Royals on Sunday in Kansas City, Mo. The Royals beat the Blue Jays 3-2 to avoid a three-game sweep. Jamie SquiRe/getty imageS

Adam Scott became the first Australian to win the Mas-ters, beating Angel Cabrera on the second hole of a play-off on a soggy Sunday at Au-gusta National.

The Masters went to a sudden-death playoff for the second year in a row when Scott and Cabrera made match-ing birdies on the 72nd hole.

They both made par on the first extra hole, returning to No. 18, before Scott rolled in a 12-footer for birdie to win it.

Scott pumped his fists in the air, screaming toward the grey, darkening sky, and em-braced caddie Steve Williams, who was on the bag for 13 of Tiger Woods’ 14 major titles.

For Scott, this is the first, making up for his major meltdown at last year’s Brit-ish Open, where he bogeyed the last four holes to lose by a stroke to Ernie Els.

“I found my way today,” Scott said.

The Aussie made a 20-foot putt at 18 and celebrated with Williams as if it were over. Cabrera, in the final group, watched from the fairway knowing he had to hit a bril-liant shot. He did.

Cabrera’s ball pulled up three feet from the cup for an easy birdie that sent the two players to the playoff tied at 9-under 279.The AssociATed Press

Golf. Aussie Scott makes up for British Open meltdown with steely Masters win over Cabrera in sudden death

Adam rises above Angel at Augusta

Adam Scott celebrates alongside caddie Steve Williams after making a birdie putt on the second sudden-death playoff hole to defeat Angel Cabrera andwin the Masters on Sunday in Augusta, Ga. andRew Redington/getty imageS

Tiger tails off

Tiger Woods came up short again. He hasn’t won the Masters since 2005, or any major since 2008.

Marian Hossa, left, and Corey Crawford celebrate Sunday’s win in Chicago. the aSSociated PReSS

Page 18: 20130415_ca_halifax

19metronews.caMonday, April 15, 2013 PLAY

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How do I become a ________?Dentist

Across1. April 15th, 1912: RMS __8. Picturesque14. North Vancou-ver attraction, __ Suspension Bridge15. Skill16. Turbulence17. Pencil part18. Prefix to ‘hazard’19. Evening, in Italy20. Prefix to ‘cul-ture’ (Beekeeping)21. Accounting firm, __ & Young23. Loser in a num-bers game: 3 wds.28. Envision29. Move to and fro30. Curt31. “Gotcha!”33. Comedian Mr. Meyers35. Maiden name indicator36. Belfast shipyard that built #1-Across, __ and Wolff40. Grooms-to-be, maybe42. “I __ _ bit hun-gry, actually.”43. Time __ __ the essence45. Lamb’s laugh46. Raring to go48. Construct50. 6s, Roman-style53. __, Manitoba (Polar Bear Capital of the World)55. Golden coatings

57. Bar brew58. Four-ringed logo car60. ‘San’ add-on (Ms. Bullock)61. “Lawrence of __” (1962)64. Where many of the unsinkable ship’s victims are buried in Halifax, __ Lawn

Cemetery66. Create, like Michelangelo67. Closed-off areas68. Strife69. “__ __ forget that...” (We should remember...)

Down1. Fleshy-snouted

animals2. Apple product3. Neckwear4. “Take _ __ look around.”5. Place for pews6. One after another: 3 wds.7. Pina drinks, like the ‘70s song8. Prepare, as broccoli

9. Ship that rescued Captain Smith’s ship’s survivors10. “Seinfeld” role11. Belonging to Omaha’s li’l state12. ‘Comb’ completer (Put together)13. Middle, mini-ly14. Rubik’s __22. Fancy envelope’s

waxy blob24. Salon supplies25. Yes __ __ ques-tion26. __-friendly (Easy to operate)27. Starts to golf, __ up29. Without32. Barrettes: 2 wds.34. Toothpaste holder36. Hic, __, hoc37. Type of nurse-maid38. Spaghetti sauce brand39. Two music notes flanking Re41. Rudyard Kipling tale, Rikki-Tikki-__44. Popular Mideast chickpea dish47. Maple: French49. __ National Park and Reserve, in the Yukon51. Simon Cowell’s ‘popera’ quartet: 2 wds.52. Heartbreak Ho-tel’s locale, Lonely __54. Preliminary races55. The Spice __56. Cuts59. Book of word meanings, for short61. Burdened beast62. Purchaser’s li’l slip63. ‘Cent’ add-on (Man/horse creature)65. Vehicle variety

Friday’s Sudoku

How to playFill in the grid, so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1-9. There is no math involved.

Sudoku

Horoscopes

Aries March 21 - April 20 The Sun, Venus and Mars all leave your sign over the coming week, suggesting a major change of emphasis in your life events. Put simply: you’ve had your fun, now you must find ways to pay for it.

Taurus April 21 - May 21 No matter how much fun you are having at the moment the real fun has hardly begun.

Gemini May 22 - June 21 Luck will come your way when you most need it this week, so don’t worry about how you are going to pay your way because the universe will provide. You’ve still got to make some effort though.

Cancer June 22 - July 23 Your likes and dislikes will be clear for all to see over the next few days. Don’t try to hide them

Leo July 24 - Aug. 23 You need to transform the working pattern of your life and the planets will help you in a big way over the next seven days. You don’t have to do much yourself – just expect opportunities and act quickly when they arrive.

Virgo Aug. 24 - Sept. 23 There will be several opportunities to indulge your desires this coming week, and you should take advantage of each and every one of them. Life is supposed to be fun, so make having a good time your top priority.

Libra Sept. 24 - Oct. 23 This could be and should be a fortunate time for you but you must also be careful. There is a tendency to take too much for granted and maybe overextend yourself financially. Remember your Libra sense of balance.

Scorpio Oct. 24 - Nov. 22 Spend more time with partners and loved ones and relatives. You are so plugged into life and it’s many possibilities that you sometimes neglect those who really count. Make it up to them – put them first today.

Sagittarius Nov. 23 - Dec. 21 You must not, repeat not, push yourself beyond your limits over the next few days.

Capricorn Dec. 22 - Jan. 20 There are various times when it all comes together and this is one of them. Over the next few days you will find that your energy peaks and you have more enthusiasm for life in general – and creativity in particular.

Aquarius Jan. 21 - Feb. 19 The cosmic emphasis is about to shift to domestic matters but there is still time to do something special in the world.

Pisces Feb. 20 - March 20 Get moving quickly today because once you get going you won’t want to stop and you will accomplish much more than you expected. SALLY BROMPTON

Friday’s Crossword

Crossword: Canada Across and Down BY KeLLY ANN BuchANANSee today’s answers at metronews.ca/answers.

Page 19: 20130415_ca_halifax