Monday, June 8, 2026

Project Jetsetter

If you missed the news, read the post below from Ontario:  

Today, Durham Regional Police Service (DRPS) announced the results of Project Jetsetter – a coordinated enforcement and investigative response focused on criminal tourism.

Project Jetsetter is the culmination of multiple major investigations into organized criminal activity in Durham Region and across the Greater Toronto Area. This initiative targeted organized groups travelling to Canada for the purpose of executing high-profit crimes, often connected to international criminal networks. These activities are deliberate, coordinated, and profit-driven; not random or opportunistic. Through more than nine separate investigations and over 5,000 investigative hours, the DRPS Financial Crimes Unit has tracked more than 200 incidents tied to criminal tourism, resulting in over $2.61 million in confirmed financial losses in Durham Region alone.


I feel Canada has always prided itself on being welcoming — a country built on immigration, diversity, and compassion. But there is a growing crisis that Canadians are talking about more openly: people entering the country, committing crimes, and then slipping back out before facing justice. It’s a problem that doesn’t target any nationality or community — it targets the loopholes that allow bad actors to take advantage of our openness.

And Canadians are right to demand better. Surrey's problems are definately the result of a weak and inconsistent border strategy. We hear young men are offered $1,000 to fly to Vancouver, carry out an extortion shooting and fly right back to India. I don't know if that is true, but Durham catches them and Surrey and Vancouver don't.

Canada’s border system is designed around the assumption that most visitors are honest, law‑abiding people. And the truth is, the overwhelming majority are. But a small number have learned how to exploit the gaps:

  • Enter Canada legally as visitors

  • Commit crimes — often theft, fraud, organized retail crime, or coordinated property offences

  • Leave the country before charges are laid or before police can identify them

Police departments across the country have raised alarms about transnational crime groups who fly in, carry out targeted operations, and fly out again. These aren’t refugees or immigrants building a life here — these are individuals using Canada as a temporary playground for criminal activity.

The problem isn’t that Canada welcomes newcomers. The problem is that our systems haven’t kept up with modern criminal networks.

1. Slow identification

By the time police gather evidence, the offenders are often already gone.

2. Weak exit controls

Canada does not have the same strict exit‑tracking systems that countries like the U.S. or U.K. use.

3. Visa‑free travel loopholes

Some visitors don’t require visas — only an eTA — making it easier to enter quickly and anonymously.

4. Cross‑border crime rings

Organized groups know exactly how long they can stay before raising suspicion.

This isn’t about ordinary travellers. It’s about organized, intentional exploitation.

Communities across Canada — including right here in B.C. — are feeling the effects:

  • Retailers losing millions to coordinated theft

  • Seniors targeted by fraud schemes

  • Police stretched thin trying to track offenders who are already back overseas

  • Residents feeling less safe in their own neighbourhoods

Canadians are generous, but we are not naïve. We know when something isn’t working.

We need:

Stronger exit controls so offenders can’t simply fly home

Faster information‑sharing between police and border agencies

Mandatory biometric checks for high‑risk travellers

Harsher penalties for organized crime groups operating across borders

Better tracking of repeat visitors connected to criminal networks

Enough police officers and Border Service Agents to make this happen


Sunday, June 7, 2026

Cable TV is gone

I was helping a neighbour lower their cable bill.  They only watch sports and news and don't use a computer.  They were paying $250.00 a month!  They had been loyal customers of Shaw that is now owned by Rogers.  They don't want to commit to a two year contract because they are elderly.  

I went online and saw there were seniors packages for $25.00.  If you live in an area with Eastlink you can get this package.  If you live in an area with Telus or Shaw/Rogers you can no longer get cable tv.  It's now "internet" TV as the technology has improved.

The cheapest package you can get is $140.00.

Rogers Xfinity Internet Starter 100 (Rogers Xfinity Gateway rental included) 105.00

Rogers Xfinity Gateway (Gen 2) Rental                                                                 0.00

Rogers Xfinity TV Essentials (Rogers Xfinity Entertainment Box Included)      35.00

That's better than $250 they were paying but it's still expensive.  You can get it cheaper if you want to install a satellite dish or a TV antenna.  TV is their entertainment and the signal is excellent.  

No wonder so many people have stopped ordering TV packages and are streaming. 

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Changes at Tsawwassen Mills Mall

 



I read there were changes at Tsawwassen Mills.  They added an Asian Food Court 24,000 square feet!   It's located at the Restaurant Entrance between Montana's and Boston Pizza.  When we got to the shopping centre we wondered why there were so many cars.   When we went inside, they were all at the new food court.  There were lots of tables but they were all in use.  We had a nice walk around but didn't stay for lunch.

The old food court in the middle of the mall is still there.  There were very few people at the food court.  One vendor had left and I wonder if the others will stay.  

We like walking Tsawwassen Mills for exercise.  Usually it's pretty quiet on a weekday but it sure wasn't yesterday.  There is plenty of parking and lots of great stores.

Mall Entrance


Friday, June 5, 2026

Dogwood trees

In 1956 British Columbia adopted the Pacific Dogwood as it's official floral emblem.  I always loved the dogwood.  When we lived in Steveston the neighbour across the street planted a dogwood tree in his front yard that I admired every year.

When we moved to where we live now the landscaping was already done.  We had a tree that was planted very close to our house.  Every year it made putting up our Christmas lights difficult.  I went onto the city website and found the tree was planted too close to our house.  We could remove it but we had to replace it.  We went to a nursery and bought a pink dogwood.  It's only three years old and look how well it's doing!


Our neighbours liked our tree so much, they got permission to remove their tree and replace it with a dogwood.

Cheryl and Dave have a beautiful dogwood tree, but it bloomed before our and I didn't get a picture of it.  My friend Ann in Langley has a gorgeous dogwood in her yard:

What a beautiful tree!


Thursday, June 4, 2026

Statistics Canada - another survey!

I just got another survey from Statistics Canada.  It was send to "To the Householders" at my address.  It is a travel survey.  I went online to fill it out and they only wanted to know what we did from May 1, 2026 to May 31, 2026.  One month.  Just a few questions, did we go outside Canada?

I had my trip journal ready to tell them what I'd done in the last 10 years, but they just wanted to know about last month.  That was easy.  We stayed home.   

The interesting thing was they certainly knew my address.  They wanted to know how many people lived at this address and names, birthdates and my favorite two questions we now get.  What gender were you at birth and what gender are you now!

Changing the subject but talking to another Government agency about a male relative she asked his identity.  I gave her his name.  She said no, how does he identify, and again I gave her his name.  She meant is he now male, female, LGBTQ or ??  It went right over my head.  I said he was born male and he's still male.  When did these even become anyone's business?  

If this survey was sent to me before Trump was disrespectful to Queen Elizabeth and wanted us to become the 51st state, my answers would have been much different.  Before the "Elbows Up" campaign I would go to the US at least every ten days.  We would go through the Nexus lane, have a nice lunch somewhere in the US, get gas at Costco in Bellingham and only buy US butter and other items at Costco that we can't get in Canada.  US butter is much cheaper, wrapped in 1/4 lb packages and spreads much easier than Canadian butter.  I'm still trying to find out why our butter is harder to spread.  I'm hoping because it's better quality but I haven't been able to find out.   I really miss Ivar's Clam Chowder!

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Oakridge Park

Yesterday we wandered through the newly opened Oakridge Park, the long‑awaited redevelopment of the old Oakridge Shopping Centre. After ten years of construction, the doors are finally open — at least partly — and stepping inside feels like entering a completely different world. The mall is bright, modern, and undeniably gorgeous, with soaring ceilings and polished finishes that make you feel like you’ve arrived somewhere special.

We went in with a simple mission: find Walmart or Winners. That didn’t happen. What we did find was a parade of luxury storefronts that read like a who’s‑who of global fashion. Aritzia, Boss, Bvlgari, Chanel, Canada Goose, Coach, Crate & Barrel, Dolce & Gabbana, Harry Rosen, Louis Vuitton, Prada, Rolex, Swarovski, Tiffany & Co., Versace — and that’s just scratching the surface. It’s the kind of place where window shopping feels like an event all on its own.

One store that caught our eye was Sporting Life. With a name like that, we were hoping for sports equipment, but it turned out to be mostly clothing. Beautiful clothing, mind you — high‑quality pieces that you want to touch, admire, and imagine yourself wearing on some crisp fall day.

We had planned to have lunch at Time Out Market, but the line snaked so far that we knew we’d be waiting a long time. Still, it was fun to peek inside. The space is bright, lively, and buzzing with energy. Even with the crowds, I didn’t notice many people carrying shopping bags. Maybe everyone was like us — exploring, curious, taking it all in, and getting their steps in without pulling out their wallets. As impressive as the new Oakridge is, it stirred up memories of the mall that once stood there. The old Oakridge was a true community hub. Woodward’s was the anchor store, and at Christmas it felt magical — the kind of place where families lingered, children pressed their noses to decorated windows, and the season felt a little more special. There was a White Spot, too, and a collection of shops that made everyday errands feel easy and familiar. The new Oakridge Park is stunning, no doubt about it. But for those of us who remember the old mall, there’s a soft spot that gleams just as brightly as any luxury storefront. It’s a reminder that places change, cities evolve, and yet the memories stay — tucked away like little treasures we carry with us.



Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Surrey police board ousts Chief Norm Lipinski as head of force!


Now our former Police Chief
I hear people saying Surrey is the wild wild west.  The gang shootings and extortion have escalated.  The City of Vancouver is smaller in area and has just a few more people than Surrey.  Vancouver has 1,452 sworn police officers.  Surrey has 685 sworn police officers.  We have no dog squad, no gang squad and no helicopters.  Our city is not safe and it's because we were forced with a police force with no business plan and a Police Chief who kept on lying to the mayor!  Let's hope this mess gets fixed.

Here is the press release from the Province of BC stating the Surrey Police Service will make Surrey safer:


This is from the Vancouver Sun:

Surrey Police Chief Norm Lipinski has until Thursday at 4 p.m. to resign or be terminated without cause from his position, Postmedia has learned.

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Lipinski was placed on leave following a meeting on Monday morning with the Surrey police board. He turned in his badge and left police headquarters, according to a source who did not want to be identified because they are not authorized to speak on the matter.

Members of the police board were not available to comment and it is not clear why Lipinski is being forced out. Postmedia was also unable to confirm how much money Lipinski could receive as compensation if he resigns or is terminated.

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Lipinski has been the first chief of the new municipal force since 2020.

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Surrey Police also wouldn’t comment, stating that was up to the police board as the employer of the chief.

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“It’s not for SPS to comment on,” Staff Sgt. Lindsey Houghton said.

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The former chief has over 45 years of experience in policing. Prior to joining the SPS, Lipinski served in several senior roles, including as a deputy chief of the Delta Police Department, as a deputy chief of the Edmonton Police Service, and as an assistant commissioner of the RCMP.

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SPS was started by former mayor Doug McCallum and opposed by current Mayor Brenda Locke.

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Locke ran and won on a campaign to stop the policing transition away from the RCMP to a municipal force. However, the city was forced to continue the transition by the province. Locke took the province to court, but ultimately lost the case after the courts dismissed her petition for a judicial review in 2024.

Project Jetsetter

If you missed the news, read the post below from Ontario:   Today, Durham Regional Police Service (DRPS) announced the results of Project Je...